Ululations
At our first Black belt grading: Zoe and Boy literally strike a pose... |
Once upon a time I
was never going to start training in Tae Kwon-Do. I tried it, because I am
always curious about things and it seemed polite to pay some attention to the
profession of the man I was dating. All I ever seemed to hear was 'Are you
going to do Tae Kwon-Do then?' (In an annoying singsong fashion: not how it was
said, that's how I heard it…) Being a strong, independent, working mother I did
what I did, not what my boyfriend did: but I liked him enough to try a lesson.
Both things worked out rather well.
I never liked
gradings, though, they made me horribly nervous and full of distracted
mistakes, until I reached red belt, when, in spite of nerves and still with odd
errors, there was a confidence growing. It was the confidence of having made it
through all the previous gradings, the confidence of knowing my training was
ample. Also, before we grade, we have the ritual of the pre-grading, where the
Instructor tests the students to see if they are ready. At the Black Belt
pre-grading, a panel of Senior Instructors views the contenders. At the time,
they seem to be made of granite, with cold lasers for eyes. The first one I
did, I did shaking, with sick in my throat, almost hoping that one of my bones
would snap so I may be excused. Afterwards, the elation of survival flooded
through so powerfully it is a miracle I did not burst. The actual grading went
okay- that is how I remember it- nothing too weird or off balancing because I
already knew I could do it. I thought about how much I wanted that Black Belt.
Black Belt is
often thought of, in Western circles, as the culmination of the martial arts
process, but in our Art it is a beginning. Going through the colour belt
syllabus is like an apprenticeship, or like learning to drive. Who earns a
driving licence and never gets in a car again? So for two years I have been
training and learning as a novice Black Belt, and last week I earned my Second
Dan. The nerves are not eradicated, far from it: just a bit easier to override.
At the pre-grading I said to myself, if you dislike this process so much, go
for 2nd Dan, since you've got this far, and then never grade again, it's
enough, it's fine. But in the course of the extra training, I have learnt so
much, about my Art and about myself: by the day of the grading, regardless of
those irritating doubting fears, I was already looking forward to gaining a 3rd
Dan.
Usually, I write
about my world rather than myself but I want to have this record of how I waded
through a fearful place and got to somewhere exultant. I will need to read it,
three years from now.
All life journeys
have points where you can freeze or you can progress: it's easy to know that, a
little trickier to practice!
A picture of our wedding cake: in case anyone hasn't guessed or didn't know: I wed that man! |
Comments
Congrats on perseverance ... and wedding cakes.
Oh, Lis, I love this.
This was a great and inspiring post -- and fun to read to boot. I'm so glad you included the pic of the wedding cake. And I'm so glad the sing-song abated long enough for you to begin the romance of a lifetime! (With Tae Kwon Do, I mean. But it applies on many levels!)
Stephanie- a family of black belts is a marvellous thing! :-)
Suze- many levels indeed :-) I have started a response to your award, will probably post after the A-Z. Just can't resist a challenge!
xx