Tuesday, January 21, 2014

It's January... :(

News from the frigid ice bowl that is the state of Iowa…it is cold. That is all. Not really, but that does seem to be the biggest part of this week’s update.  If anyone actually enjoys the weather here in January, please raise your hand…I thought so.

I didn’t have a convention this past weekend (sad face), but Jillian and I did begin our school teaching tour for the year.  West Branch Upper Elementary and Middle School students were subjected to three days of arduous torture with “Sensei and Mrs. Sensei”, and the results were pretty much as expected.

The forty minute classes started off with basic rolling exercises (ukemi), from kneeling and then standing, followed by “bonus round”—where the kids got to choose between rolls, somersaults, cartwheels, one-arm cartwheels, round offs, handsprings, and in one case, aerials (I hate that kid!).

These exercises are my least favorite part of teaching in schools, but probably the most important.  Learning how to control a fall, and land without damage, is far and away the most practical self-defense that I teach in any school.  Hopefully no one will need to use the really cool “moves” that I teach them to defend themselves against a bad guy (statistically they have a better than 1 in 4 chance of needing it), but EVERYONE falls down.  Some of those kids don’t make it through an entire day without managing to faceplant or otherwise crash, and helping keep them from injuring themselves is a daunting but important task.

Most of the kids throw themselves into the rolls, if you’ll pardon the pun, and seem to enjoy the tumbling.  However, even the previously injured ones that aren’t supposed to participate in class are ready to jump in when it’s time to knock each other on their rear ends. J

This year’s self-defense edition featured a side entry knock down known as sokumenuchi in Japanese, roughly translated as “side entry” in English.  The younger kids practiced the move against someone grabbing both of their arms, and the older ones got to practice against the grab AND against someone punching at their faces.  This was, of course, closely supervised by both instructors and the PE teacher. 

No matter how effective the techniques are, the best (?) part of each move is the final count, after controlling the attacker, where the victorious student gets to perform his/her “Victory dance.”  This addition, made by the tall, frequently silly main instructor (me), may have gotten out of control, and grown way beyond the scope of what was originally envisioned.  By that, I mean that 4th graders were running into the gymnasium by the second day, shouting “Sensei’s gonna do Gundam Style!” and lining up expectantly. No matter how much trouble they had performing the technique itself, they all could do the dance. J

I didn’t see the harm…but Mrs. Sensei spent three days doing the long-suffering wife look paired with the rolling of the eyes technique that only women seem to really master.  She’s good at that move.  Of course, she’s had a lot of practice.


Oh well.  She has two days to recover, and then we start round two, with the little kids! On to the kindergarten through second grade!  I am brushing up on my dance moves…I was thinking about “the sprinkler.” It’s been a while…

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