I realize a lot of people train for a lot of different reasons. Let me just say right up front that I think all of them are valid. I do not intend to tell anyone else what they should be training for.
I will also say that my own reasons for training have undergone several major revisions over the years.
Some train for physical fitness. Whether that is strength training or endurance training, flexibility, cardio or weight-loss, they train to get in better physical condition and to keep themselves fit once they do. And many kinds of martial arts training are pretty good for that!
Some train for self-defense. Some martial arts forms are specifically aimed at self-defense, too. Reality-based training is what I'm thinking of, modern systems based on surviving an attack on the street. Also quite good and I see nothing at all wrong with it.
Some train for sport or competition. There are many martial arts forms that either support the concept of sport activities or are actually based on the idea of competition, and those are also very cool.
Typically, people have more than one reason for training, and different systems sometimes offer more than one format - you can get in shape, for example, AND learn to spar for competition AND learn self-defense skills. It's not always either/or.
Some even train for camaraderie and friendship or fellowship. Once having become used to training with a particular group, it's difficult to impossible to say goodbye and change groups or walk away from training, just because of the close bonds that have been forged over time. That's great also!
I have partaken in all of those reasons for training. And some of them still apply. I certainly try to stay in some kind of athletic condition, and I strive to be in a position to defend myself. I no longer compete, but I think competition is fine, and I am always willing to help out judging or otherwise assisting at a tournament, especially when friends are involved. And I'm very tight with my friends at my dojo; I could not imagine myself training anywhere else.
However, for me, there is more to it than that.
It started for me years ago, when I read about the difference between a 'do' and a 'jutsu' in various online forums and web pages and so on. I really thought of myself at that time as being primarily interested in the art and science of applied violence, rather than the art of unarmed self-defense as a 'way' or 'do'.
Now it seems things have changed for me. I see that in Japan, flower-arranging, tea-making, calligraphy, and other arts are also a 'do' or a 'way'. And this is far more interesting to me than just the hitting, kicking, and so on. I do not propose to become a Zen practitioner or hold tea ceremonies; as much respect as I have for the culture and history of Japan, I am not Japanese and don't pretend to be. I like the hitting and kicking, believe me. But I begin to see that the 'do' of martial arts flows over from the dojo into my entire life. It has something to say about how I interact with others, or more particularly, how I should interact with others but often fail to do. It has something to say about how I do my work, how I think of myself, how I live.
I am not one given to deep introspection, really. I don't wear a monk's cowl or go on soul-searching missions or give myself mystical names or wear sandals and speak in fake accents. I don't even like tea. But I begin to see how my life's journey has brought me to this path, and I find that I like the path I'm on. Yes, I kick and punch. But I also walk along a road that is built of that, and yet which has very little to do with that, in all honesty. It's more about how to be a person and less about how to hurt people to avoid being hurt. It's just that the former includes the latter.
I will also say that my own reasons for training have undergone several major revisions over the years.
Some train for physical fitness. Whether that is strength training or endurance training, flexibility, cardio or weight-loss, they train to get in better physical condition and to keep themselves fit once they do. And many kinds of martial arts training are pretty good for that!
Some train for self-defense. Some martial arts forms are specifically aimed at self-defense, too. Reality-based training is what I'm thinking of, modern systems based on surviving an attack on the street. Also quite good and I see nothing at all wrong with it.
Some train for sport or competition. There are many martial arts forms that either support the concept of sport activities or are actually based on the idea of competition, and those are also very cool.
Typically, people have more than one reason for training, and different systems sometimes offer more than one format - you can get in shape, for example, AND learn to spar for competition AND learn self-defense skills. It's not always either/or.
Some even train for camaraderie and friendship or fellowship. Once having become used to training with a particular group, it's difficult to impossible to say goodbye and change groups or walk away from training, just because of the close bonds that have been forged over time. That's great also!
I have partaken in all of those reasons for training. And some of them still apply. I certainly try to stay in some kind of athletic condition, and I strive to be in a position to defend myself. I no longer compete, but I think competition is fine, and I am always willing to help out judging or otherwise assisting at a tournament, especially when friends are involved. And I'm very tight with my friends at my dojo; I could not imagine myself training anywhere else.
However, for me, there is more to it than that.
It started for me years ago, when I read about the difference between a 'do' and a 'jutsu' in various online forums and web pages and so on. I really thought of myself at that time as being primarily interested in the art and science of applied violence, rather than the art of unarmed self-defense as a 'way' or 'do'.
Now it seems things have changed for me. I see that in Japan, flower-arranging, tea-making, calligraphy, and other arts are also a 'do' or a 'way'. And this is far more interesting to me than just the hitting, kicking, and so on. I do not propose to become a Zen practitioner or hold tea ceremonies; as much respect as I have for the culture and history of Japan, I am not Japanese and don't pretend to be. I like the hitting and kicking, believe me. But I begin to see that the 'do' of martial arts flows over from the dojo into my entire life. It has something to say about how I interact with others, or more particularly, how I should interact with others but often fail to do. It has something to say about how I do my work, how I think of myself, how I live.
I am not one given to deep introspection, really. I don't wear a monk's cowl or go on soul-searching missions or give myself mystical names or wear sandals and speak in fake accents. I don't even like tea. But I begin to see how my life's journey has brought me to this path, and I find that I like the path I'm on. Yes, I kick and punch. But I also walk along a road that is built of that, and yet which has very little to do with that, in all honesty. It's more about how to be a person and less about how to hurt people to avoid being hurt. It's just that the former includes the latter.