Monday, November 8, 2010
Day at the Martial Arts Center
A few weeks ago I was walking through Lincoln Square and saw a bunch of  kids coming out of a Martial Arts Center.  They looked so cute in their  "gi" that I went in to find out how much the classes were.  Oh no, it's  not that easy.  You have to go in for a private trial class and all that  jazz before they will reveal their pricing.  Yesterday was that day.   All four of us went, a real family event.  When we walked in I noticed  people bowing to nothing in particular.  I got that eerie feeling I get  at Michigan football games.  I am not the kind of person that likes  repetitive hand motions and chants just because everyone else is doing  it, feels a little too cult-ish to me.  When the kids walk in they have  to say "May I please have my attendance card Ma'am?" while maintaining  eye contact.  They also are required to learn how and where to do the  aforementioned bowing.  All of this pressure to be polite was odd to me  when essentially they are coming here to learn how to knock the lights  out of someone.  I guess the lessons in "Karate Kid" and "Way of the  Peaceful Warrior" were lost on me.  I sat in Cole's class.  At the  beginning he had to chant that he would keep his room clean (sales pitch  for the parents?  I think so!).  Then the teacher began showing him how  to stand and would ask him what position he's in.  Cole would softly  reply "I don't know" while shrugging his shoulders.  She would say to  use his left foot, he'd use his right.  I could tell he was fading  fast.  Reminded me of soccer when he would run to my lap in the middle  of class whining "I'm too tired!"  When class was over he stomped on the  teacher's mini hand held punching bag square thingy in a "I'll show  you!" kind of way.  The teacher replied "Cole, was that nice to do?"   Out in the hallway Cole and Noah were putting on their shoes and Cole  yells out "Where did Karate girl go?"  Not very polite or deferential.  I  felt the kind of embarrassment that I felt in my childhood church if  you laughed, coughed, or flinched the wrong way.  The social pressures  were too much.  As "Karate Girl" goes over the 1, 3, or 6 month payment  plans, Cole farts.  We sooo don't belong here.  On the way home everyone  is tired and has headaches.  John says he doesn't want to spend his  Saturdays at a place that smells like feet.  He tells me that when his  mom signed him up for Karate he hated it so much he would sit outside  the center while the class was going on (he walked there by himself, so  his mom didn't ever know).  Needless to say, we are tabling Martial Arts  for now.
Labels:
karate,
martial arts,
social pressure
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Wow, Anne. What a day. You know, if you want Cole to learn how to punch someone's lights out, I know a little blonde kid with a mean right hook....haha just kidding!!
ReplyDeleteToo funny!! Cole loves the kicking and yelling that he experienced in Kung Fu. I need to find something fun and laid back like that!
ReplyDeleteYou did it -- so glad you launched your blog!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jen! You inspired me!
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