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Health is Your Greatest Asset Health is Your Greatest Asset?By Kamau AustinIf you are like many people who take the entrepreneurialplunge, you do so most successfully when you are approachingor entering into middle age. Your middle-aged years are alsoironically around the time many ...
Kendo Dojos http://www.international-kendo.com Kendo, like most other martial arts, can only be learned with the help of a qualified sensei (teacher). There are many companies that sell kendo videos and kendo pictures, saying that it will teach a person how to be a ...
Kenshiro Abbe Sensei 50th Celebration Henry Ellis, a direct student of the legendary Budo master Kenshiro Abbe Sensei, from 1957 describes the great event at the Crystal Palace Sports Centre, London, to celebrate this great teacher and his arrival to Great Britain in 1955 and the subsequent ...
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I love nature and the outdoors. Here, you would be hard pressed not to, since nature is ever present and wild, and cannot be constrained. We live here among the big forests, the blue-black waters of Mother Superior. At my Center, we are about to dive into our first kangeiko, which is intensive winter training. The windows will be open, and the cold will surely come. The indoor sanctity of the dojo will be broken by the outdoors, the rude ways of the howling, northern winds. It occurs to me - we spend so much of our time trying to protect ourselves. When it is hot outside, we try to cool down; when it is cold, we try to keep our warmth. In Japanese martial arts tradition, kangeiko and its summer counterpart, shochugeiko, are ways of marking one’s training, and giving over to nature. When the sun is raging, and summer's heat is on - train fully, sweat, give over to the experience and hold nothing back; in the depths of winter's cold, do not tighten and try to stave it off, but accept the cold, relax into it and break through to a new understanding. But in this training, I believe, we find a mirror to life itself. Beautiful, chaotic, demanding - nature. Nature just is. About The Author Paul Smith is the Founder and Director of the Aikido Center of Marquette (www.aikido-marquette.com), located in the Upper Peninsula, Michigan. He is an avid outdoorsman, and is also the webmaster of www.a1-outdoors.com, a website serving as a resource for outdoor sports gear and information.
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Morton Grove martial arts school wins fight to stay openMorton Grove ChampionBy Nick Katz nkatz@pioneerlocal.com May 25, 2012 12:28PM Master Duck-Keun Yoon works with 9-year-old Angelina Gambacorta, of Wilmette, during a tae kwon do class at North Shore Martial Arts in Morton Grove. | Brian O'Mahoney~For Sun-Times Media As ...and more » |
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JOE's Five great martial arts filmsJOEThe Raid has been garnering rave reviews for its fantastic martial arts sequences so JOE decided to look back at five films that boast some great ass-kicking action. By Dermot Keys Most things diminish with age. Icons start to look dated, ... |
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