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I don't think a title means nothing. I have been practicing almost every day and hopefully my hard work will pay off and I'll go up in rank sometime, cause that would be cool IMO
1) Nowadays there is no living school, noble or army which has the right to assign said title by virtue of unbroken tradition and/or current demonstration of martial validity upon a battlefield or judicial yard.
2) None of these persons can claim any right to entitle himself as such by virtue of experience at actual and earnest Medieval or Renaissance combat to the death
3) To do so notwithstanding the previous two reasons is an insult to the real Fechtmeister of the past and a fraud to modern beginners looking for an authority to guide them
DavidDavid Craig wrote:
Well, if it's your group then it's your rules. If your group felt that people should be kicked out for using the term fechtmeister inappropriately, then that would be your option. But it would still be my option to consider that an extreme overreaction.
Zach, clearly you have not been in the martial arts long. Rank is nothing. Knowledge is everything. But even then it is sometimes not enough. Even when you have been training for years and years, a new guy can still beat your a**. Dobringer has much to say about this. It is an old, old truth.
Not by earnest combat, but see my above point. On the other hand, what makes their fencing school experience so much different from that of 600 years ago? We have no living lineage, and no earnest combat in the world to keep us honest, but we have the manuals, damn fine ones, that we can adhere to, so we can keep from making things up, and have at least a partial recorded lineage
That last statement makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. Let me get this straight: this particular ARMA study group puts on a demonstration. The leader of the study group is referred to as "fechtmeister" by the other study group members. Audience members, hearing this, go up to the leader and start calling him "fechtmeister" based on what the other study group members were calling him. Now, in response, the leader states, "oh no, I'm not really a fechtmeister. That's just what the other study group members call me. I'm just an experienced student."
Either way, it makes a poor impression. What is the point of being addressed by a certain title unless that person has earned that title? In the military, do you think that, even as a joke, a captain will allow himself to be referred to as a general? SNIP If he does not deserve the title, then why call him that in the first place?
Are you suggesting that throughout class every time the person is referred to as "fechtmeister" by his fellow study group participants he retorts by saying, "but remember, I'm not really a fechtmeister."
If his fellow group members are affixing a title to him that he does not want or deserve, and they will not stop affixing this title, then at the very least he can do is leave the group.
I was simply saying that a study group leader, or any member of that study group for that matter, should make it clear to all other members that jokes that are hurmful to the orgainization and/or to its members are inappropriate. Friendship is not a consideration in this matter.
I don't consider myself in that number. But while I acknowledge the possiblity that somewhere, in Asia perhaps, there's a better swordsman that John Clements, I highly doubt it. Of course, if you had someone in particular in mind, by all means point out my error.Mike, comments like this is what often turns people off. We have some of the most advanced students yes, but there will always be someone better that you or I. A humble approach will often get more respect I beleive. It's certainly fine to toot our own horn but in a more tactful way.
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