Postby Shane Smith » Tue May 25, 2004 7:44 am
Excellent questions Jaron! Unfortunately,there are no easy answers although you seemed to hint at the answer to your own query. In my opinion, it is of the utmost importance to be able to drastically out-perform all of the prospective new members of your group on demand and as a rule unless they are perhaps friends of a long time that are willing to learn along with you on a co-equal basis(That's how the original three guys at VAB started...A true band of enthusiastic friends). I say that because if you are presenting yourself to the prospective Swordsman as an instructor(which most interested parties seem to be looking for),you must be completely competent in at least the basics in order to stay ahead of their learning curve,and even then,a wildly talented individual may overtake you one day.That said,by the time they do overtake you,their own path of attainment will have humbled them to the point where it is no longer an important matter weighing on their mind. They are your fellow Swordsman and friend and that is enough.
I for one, was hooked when I trained with the guys from VAB for the first time. I have always enjoyed intense competition that pits my will and skills against those of another(I'm a lapsed local TKD tournament fighter). After engaging in intense fencing with padded weapons with all of the guys from VAB and being SOUNDLY bested(I did well in the drills,I just wasn't good in freeplay), I knew that these guys had something I needed. I further knew that as they had proven their ability to actually DO what they were claiming, that they could teach me if I approached the art with a good attitude.
To my mind, that's what attracts and keeps a good and enthusiastic student/practitoner but then I've always been a "Show me that it works" kind of guy.I think it is important to be able to perform on demand and to best your newer guys on demand while maintaining an environment of good-humoured intensity.At VAB,we train pretty rough and tumble and we introduce new guys to that on their first day but it is ever done with a true sense of brotherhood and humility. It's a fine line I think...Some will be run off for fear of what they experience but then,I feel those people were never fighters in the first place perhaps.Others will experience the overwhelming sensation and be hooked by it...Those folks seem to make for good scholars and martial artists. It's kind of an accellerated evaluation program you could say wherein the prospective student chooses for you. I fear that if you go too easy on the natural martial artists in order to not run off the skittish,that you will succeed in retaining neither.If I must choose,give me stout-hearted fencers.
***Disclaimer***
In the above post, I am neither speaking for ARMA nor ARMA VAB .These are my own thoughts and opinions and some of my own in VAB may well completely disagree with me. If I struck a nerve for anyone,the hatemail comes to me alone <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
Shane Smith~ARMA Forum Moderator
ARMA~VAB
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