I used to accompany my nephew to his Taekwondo lessons every week. It’s a kiddie class, so it’s quite amusing to see these highly energetic and bouncy little ones running around the hall before the class and being taught about some martial arts by an instructor who had a hard time getting their full attention. In every class, they would do some stretching exercises as warm-ups, then proceed with learning some new moves –- stances, blocks, kicks and punches.
So there was I, just another bored creature in the corner, along with the other proud parents and doting yayas who waited patiently while the class was going on. Who would have thought I was to learn some lessons that day too?
Their instructor is a black belter from Argentina. He’s a bit matured and I do admire his patience with his young students. He’s not really that strict with them. After the warm-ups, he let them sit on the floor. Finally they were silent and behaved and he got their attention. He taught them some wise stuff for their young minds to digest. First, he reminded them of the precepts of Taekwondo. And then he told them a true story, one that I would never forget every time this sport would come to mind.
A student in one of his Taekwondo classes was really good but, unfortunately, he got proud about the skills he learned. He began to bully another boy in school who was physically smaller and weaker than him. “Don’t bully others.” This is one of the teachings of Taekwondo. But the proud boy was confident of his strength over the weaker boy. He harassed him, bullied him and said terrible insults against the boy’s parents. The weaker boy, though physically not strong, now got so angry at this show of disrespect. Even when he was already down and bruised, he suddenly hit the arrogant Taekwondo student very hard in the nose.
Guess what? The proud brat’s nose bled and he landed in the hospital. Well, the instructor didn’t say how badly damaged his nose was, though I hope the incident didn’t make him a candidate for rhinoplasty nose surgery. You bet his ego was badly bruised, so much more than his wounded and bleeding nose.
Then he concluded his story with these:
“Do not think of others as below you. Never look down on others.
Do not bully others.
Never say bad things against the parents of others. Parents are worthy of respect and have to be given importance.
When you do wrong, you lose your moral strength, then you become weak.
On the other hand, when you do the right thing, you gain moral strength, and then you can easily defeat your opponent.”
They were plain and simple life lessons which he purposely aimed for his kiddie students, but I’m sure they were also good reminders for us grown-ups who were there that afternoon.
5 replies on “Learning Taekwondo”
Nice lesson to learn. do not underestimate a person by his/her size or never underestimate anybody at all..
I remembe an old wild, wild west saying that goes like this, "god made big people, god made small people, but Mr. Colt made this (displaying his colt .45) to even things out", and with that beat the bigger man in a gunfight.
As a practising Taekwondo student, with two children that I train alongside with in a mixed class once a week, I'd have to say that all those adults I see sat on their behinds during every lesson are missing out. Join in – it's good for you!
you finally did "it" carey!nice job 🙂
about taekwondo lessons, why don't you enroll yourself in one..i used to have kickboxing and aikido classes in college and it was a great learning experience not just on kicking ass but on other aspects as well like those lessons the taekwondo instructor taught your nephew
that's a very nice story and lesson. it doesn't only apply in taekwondo but in real life. hardest thing to practice? humility 🙂
vic: looks are deceiving sometimes… some of our greatest heroes appear to be weak, yet look how they defeated their opponents.
a gun could be used to even things out, but only if it's in the hands of somebody who knows how to shoot and not miss the opponent. and if both of them have guns, then their physical sizes won't matter but how skilled they are with the weapon.
thanks for dropping by.
taekwondo: well, i can just imagine you with your kids, looks cool. i really have great respect for the sport, i know i'm missing out. 🙁 and about me joining… that's included in my future to-do lists.
your site is informative though some links are not working yet. thanks for dropping by.
raine: yep, finally, he he… it's challenging and fun at the same time.
wow, so you have studied some martial arts before… i seldom meet girls interested in this stuff. sure, mag-enroll ko, classmate ta! hehe…
tin-tin: yes, nice story indeed, and i like it how the instructor explained the logic regarding moral strength and defeating your opponent.
humility is surely a great virtue.