I ran across this podcast and I listened too not only the first two shows but just listen to the live recording and it was very funny I mean super funny, be mindful that it is adult humor and there is some curse words and sex slang so listen at your own risk
www.wangspodcast.audioninjas.com
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
What is in a name
Recently I had one of my father’s students ask me why I did
not call my dojo by the same name as my father’s dojo. Now I am sure I could
answer this a few different ways, but let me give a bit of background first.
My father started his training in 1967 at the Jundokan of
Indiana / Anderson Goju-ryu Club. Later that year the dojo name was changed to
Komakai Academy of Judo and Karate, and by the 1970s it was just Komakai
Academy of Karate. In 1977 my father
asked his teacher for permission to open a branch dojo and use his sensei’s
dojo name (Komakai), throughout the years the dojo changed locations, but the
name always remained the same. In 1992, my father opened another dojo in
Indianapolis and again used the Komakai name. With the opening of the
Indianapolis Dojo, I was appointed as Chief Instructor for the Marion dojo,
until it was closed in January of 1994. At that point there had been ten (10) Komakai
branch dojo.
After my father closed the Marion dojo, I asked my father
permission to open the dojo back up, he granted me permission, but said I had
to ask Mr. Keeney for permission as well. I went to Mr. Keeney and asked
permission and was told that I could use the Komakai name if I wanted too, but then
he said to me “Mike, why do you need to use my name, you could use your own
name, be your own man.” at the time I thought what, no way, I have always been
Komakai, I wouldn’t know what to do without being that. I voiced my concern to
Mr. Keeney and he said – Well if you feel that you need to maintain a
connection to the name, you could also pick a name and then in smaller print,
under your name, you could put the phrase ‘a division of Glenn Keeney’s Komakai
Academy’. I then spoke with Mr. Keeney’s teacher, Mr. Phillip Koeppel and asked
him what he thought, he advised me to call it Mike Jones’ Karate-do Budokai. So
when I opened the dojo in January of 1994 that is what I called it.
On top of all of this in the 1990, I began training and
researching my roots of the Jundokan with seminars taught by Morio Higaonna
Sensei and also Teruo Chinen Sensei, It lead me to Natambu Bomani Sensei and
Lloyd Johnson Sensei, both Jundokan seniors, eventually I was granted
permission to open a Jundokan dojo in Indiana, and I have a certificate signed
by Eiichi Miyazato Sensei giving me Shibu-Cho status for the State of Indiana. So
I could have also called my dojo Jundokan. Over the years I joined other
associations and was given permission to use other names, but in the back of my
mind, what Mr. Keeney told me always kept popping up. So a short time after I
opened the dojo I began using a Japanese name for my dojo and I used that name
for 16 years, until someone chose to trademark the name and told me to stop
using it. So I could have went back to calling it Mike Jones Karate, or
Komakai, but I talked with Lloyd Johnson Sensei and Roy Hobbs Sensei about it. Hobbs Sensei suggested to me the
name Yushikan, he said he felt that the name exemplified my character. So after much deliberation, I decided to take his suggestion and re-name my dojo as Yushikan.
Now having said all of that and rambled on let me get back
to my point. What is in a name? Why do people get hung up on names, my style is
this or my style is that. I am from this dojo or I am from that dojo. People like a brand, which is the short and
sweet of it. People like to feel like they belong to something greater than
themselves.
In my dojo I teach Okinawan Goju-ryu Karate-do, in the
tradition of the Jundokan lineage, however, I have trained in several of the
other Goju-ryu kai-ha over the years and like some of what they do, so from
time to time, I may show an alteration from one of these kai-ha, as well, I
have trained in other systems and from time to time may throw in something not
in Goju-ryu proper, does that make me wrong?
What I have learned after 35 years of training is this, to
each their own. I have found that my karate is my karate, while I may strive to
emulate or even maintain the principles and traditions that I have been taught
to me by my teachers and seniors, I also have my own thoughts and ideas, I have
my own beliefs, I have come to my own realizations, after many years of
training. All of these things combined with the training I have received from
my teachers over the years have lead me to be me, lead my karate to be what it
is – My karate. I still have a long way to go on this journey and by no means do
I know it all, or have all the answers, but I keep trying.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Recent Training
I have not written much lately, I have been busy in my new
role at work, getting things in order and attending mandatory training courses.
It has been a busy last four months, but I have managed to get things under
control and almost too where I want them to be in my professional life, so I am
seeing the light at the end of the tunnel so to speak.
Earlier this month I had the opportunity to spend some time
with my good friend, Roy Hobbs Sensei. Aside from talking a bit and catching up
some, I was also invited to a private training session at the Denbukan dojo in
Indianapolis, where Hobbs Sensei spent a great deal of time training us in the
Dentokan (Hakkoryu/Kokodoryu) Jujutsu set of Sandan Gi. Hobbs Sensei is a very
detail oriented instructor and if you have never had the chance to share the
mat with him, you should, he is an excellent technician. Needless to say some
of the students had a rough way to go when trying to use the techniques on me
(I guess all of those years of hojo undo paid off), but not Hobbs Sensei, in
true form he had me up on my toes.
After the private workout, we went over to the dojo they use
for public classes and had an open seminar, there were a few more people at this
event then the private workout, and we continued to train in Sandan Gi Tachi
Waza.
After training we had dinner with Hobbs Sensei and our host
Andy Bryant. My wife was most gracious and agreed to let me attend the event on
our 19th Anniversary; she even hung around and took some pictures
for me. Hobbs Sensei also presented me with some gifts that he had brought back
from his last trip to Japan.
I had a great time, as I always do, and I can not stress enough that if he is ever in your area, you really should make the
effort to train with him, you will not be disappointed. I count myself very
lucky to have him as a close personal friend.
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