CrimsonPhoenix
Orange Belt
As a beginner, a student follows what their instructor tells them to do in order to learn the technique.
As a beginner, everyone is generally learning the same material. TheyÂ’re developing their martial arts foundation.
In your experience, at what point in their training does a student really start branching out – taking what they already know and experimenting with the possibilities? Trying new things in different ways? Thinking more for themselves? At what level does an instructor begin pushing them to make their training their own and not just follow along with the rest of the group?
I am dealing with this issue right now and it has gotten me thinking. I am a 3rd kyu brown belt getting ready for my 2nd kyu. For the longest time, my job was more or less to follow along and learn what my instructors showed me. It was more about the physical side of TKD – learning the techniques. Now, I am being pushed more and more towards the mental or internal side of TKD. It’s more about experimenting. Trying out new things and seeing what I can do as an individual. I know the techniques, now I have to build upon them.
A good example of what I’m talking about is in freestyle self defense, where someone comes at you with who knows what, and you react. It’s no longer “Do this, then that, and finally this.” It’s more about concepts than specific techniques. I’m struggling with the transition at the moment and trying to be less methodical and more about reacting.
Physical TKD vs. Mental TKD. Does the transition start at colored belt ranks?
As a beginner, everyone is generally learning the same material. TheyÂ’re developing their martial arts foundation.
In your experience, at what point in their training does a student really start branching out – taking what they already know and experimenting with the possibilities? Trying new things in different ways? Thinking more for themselves? At what level does an instructor begin pushing them to make their training their own and not just follow along with the rest of the group?
I am dealing with this issue right now and it has gotten me thinking. I am a 3rd kyu brown belt getting ready for my 2nd kyu. For the longest time, my job was more or less to follow along and learn what my instructors showed me. It was more about the physical side of TKD – learning the techniques. Now, I am being pushed more and more towards the mental or internal side of TKD. It’s more about experimenting. Trying out new things and seeing what I can do as an individual. I know the techniques, now I have to build upon them.
A good example of what I’m talking about is in freestyle self defense, where someone comes at you with who knows what, and you react. It’s no longer “Do this, then that, and finally this.” It’s more about concepts than specific techniques. I’m struggling with the transition at the moment and trying to be less methodical and more about reacting.
Physical TKD vs. Mental TKD. Does the transition start at colored belt ranks?