Interesting topic and conversation! Love it. Let's see:
1. How long have you been actively training and/or teaching?
2. What keeps you passionate about training and/or teaching?
3. Has your purpose, motivations, and incentives changed significantly over the years?
1.
How Long have you been actively training and/or teaching?
I have been training Kenpo Karate Jujitsu for almost twelve years and teaching it for about three years. I started training Wing Chun almost two years ago, and this month makes one year training Chen Tai Chi under one of Hong Jungshen's students.
2. What keeps you passionate about training and/or teaching
In training it's like Kung Fu Wang said:
Try to
- solve problems such as deal with boxer's punches, wrestler's single leg, MT guy's roundhouse kick, and ...
- be in good shape without body fat.
- remain flexibility, balance, strong, have good endurance, ...
- keep blood pressure normal (below 120).
- have fun.
- live till 100 years old.
- ...
I also like the idea of solving problems with the tools available. 20th Century painter Henri Matisse said "'Much of the beauty that arises in art comes from the struggle an artist wages with his
limited medium." That's true of martial arts, too. How can we solve these problems (dealing with a boxer, a grappler, an armed opponent, or just projecting an air of physical competence to deter attack) with the tools our arts give us? It's the gift that keeps on giving the longer I train.
Experiencing new arts helps keep me passionate about martial arts in general. Branching out into Wing Chun and Tai Chi has given me new insights into my foundational skills. It's also fun to be a student again instead of having the responsibility of the teacher.
Staying passionate about teaching is harder, I think. I'm a teacher by profession, and it takes a lot out of me. I'm an English professor, a job that ironically cuts deeply into my reading-for-education-and-pleasure time (thank goodness for Audible). As a martial artist, teaching turns training into a weightier responsibility and makes it more difficult to manage my personal journey when it is entwined with that of my students.
I laugh at anyone who goes into martial arts wanting to be a teacher or a black belt
more than wanting to actually do the martial art. I'd advise those people to just get a second job; it'll require less investment and pay more money in the long run.
I suppose two things keep me passionate about teaching. First, learning more about what I do by teaching it. Second, I want to raise up good students so that they can be good training partners for me. If they get to where they can dominate me then great! That pushes me to be better!
I can't even count the number of ways teaching martial arts has helped me teach college and vice versa. The first time I had to do a teaching demonstration for a job interview, the entire English department of that school marched into the room and sat in the back rows behind the students I was supposed to work with that day. They were looking at me and taking copious notes. It didn't phase me because I had just done a year of instructor candidacy in my dojo with more senior instructors monitoring me while I taught new students.
3. Has your purpose, motivations, and incentives changed significantly over the years?
Very much so. I stared because I was small, weak, and wanted something to give me physical and mental discipline. I still aim at that, but I'm more confident in myself now, more knowledgeable, and have a good idea of what I want out of martial arts. I am also looking to the future.
I'm in my thirties now but keeping my forties, fifties, and beyond in mind. I'm trying to cultivate good habits and take care of myself so that I can do this stuff well into middle age and beyond (fingers crossed)
I also know how to have fun with this more. We train for the 1% of our lives where we may need it. We should find something that speaks to us, satisfies us, and is fun to do for the other 99% of the time.
Looking forward to reading more comments!