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Articles Articles by SRK Instructors

Supporting Others

By Kim Mandy

What is support?  This is the ability to give assistance and help. This includes talking to each other, working with each other & listening to each other.  It can vary from pro-active in which we jump around, scream and shout; to those on the quieter side who also support in their own way, mostly “behind the scenes”.  Both of these are valuable and necessary for our club to continue to grow and become bigger and better; and above all to help the students become better and continue in their training journeys to achieve all that they can.

How can we support others in their training?  By supporting and helping others we are also helping ourselves improve and further our learning process; whether it is by taking advice from instructors or fellow peers (students).  In order to achieve this we need to communicate, work with each other and if necessary ask for help!

Training support structure consists of a combination of peers and mentors who help you to progress in your training.  Support structure consist of instructors who you train with regularly or periodically, fellow students you discuss ups and downs of your training with and your training partners who help you push yourself past your limits and provide relative resistance and pressure to your training.

At every class the support network kicks in automatically as you will find the higher grade or more experienced student will assist or aid you in correction and help in improving your abilities.  More often than not students are paired up with someone of a higher or more advanced level who will show the way and will help where necessary and in return the lower grade or more inexperienced student is also helping the more advanced student.

Without a training partner some techniques or new skills cannot progress.  This is also true for the support of your club.  Without students, instructors and parent or spectator support, a club of any kind would not exist.  Support in various ways helps the growth and continuation of any club and especially with our club Seitou Ryu, we are a “family” and therefore have an excellent support network including all the above, i.e. instructors, parents and above all students.   An example of this was shown through the generous support when we had our sponsored bike ride in order to purchase our training mats!  Thank you to all who supported the club (and the students & parents who took part in the bike ride too!).

With training partners/fellow students, finding someone who has been or is at the same stage of training where you want to be can help you find your way faster than you might on your own.  To be a good, supportive training partner you need to be accessible and need to care as much about your training as each other.  You need to show trust and respect for each other, encouraging each other, helping each other and giving necessary assistance and you need to both have an area which you perform better in than each other so you can help and in turn support each other. You need to be able to ask questions and feel confident in offering advice and assistance.  Trust & respect are a big part of support. We need to be able to give good advice and a good supportive training partner knows how to work with you and not against you.

Karate is not a “single-person” sport; it ultimately involves people working together by repetitive training and understanding of the art.  We therefore support each other throughout our training journeys.  As a fellow student we support our peers through mental and physical encouragement; as an instructor we support our students by physically helping them, giving encouragement, positive & negative criticism; and above all as parents we support our children in their training by always being there to give them the encouragement and constant reassurance they required. Good advice given to and taken from fellow students helps develop our own training and understanding.

Support given by fellow students, parents & instructors help us develop and progress in our karate journey.  A grading is an example of how support can really help a student when under pressure and stresses of their particular grade.  Without our fellow peers and mentors there when we need them most we feel let down and somewhat disappointed and sometimes even unable to reach our specific goals. By supporting our club we are in effect helping students improve their skills & abilities and further their training journey.

By supporting and helping others we are also helping ourselves improve and further our learning process.
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Club Events News

Pink Karate – Breast Cancer Awareness Class 2013

Students from across all of our dojos have been giving back in a big way last month.

October was Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and on the last day of the month our advanced class in Wickford was opened up to all students on one condition…… that they traded in their usual grade belt for a pink one, supporting the Pink Karate Campaign for Breast Cancer Awareness.

The Pink Karate Campaign is a unique and unusual way for martial arts clubs to support a very important cause and was started in 2010 by Seamus O’Dowd of Ireland who observed the ribbon symbol resembled a karate belt. For further information go to www.nintai-productions.com, or Pink Karate – Breast Cancer Awareness on Facebook 

21 students from Grays, South Ockendon, Wickford and Chelmsford attended the special pink class; mostly brown and black belts, also 1 purple belt (Max Tucker), 2 blue belts (Helen Papandreoupoulos & Damien McMahon), 1 green belt (Claire Gillman) and 1 white belt (Amani Kambal).

Check out this video of the class below!

Together we raised £330 from belt sales, with a number of students purchasing belts even if they couldn’t attend the event. Most notable of these was Ian Burberry, who matched the amount raised, donating £330 to the Helen Rollason Cancer Charity  in Chelmsford www.helenrollason.org.uk.

This brought the total raised to £660. A huge thanks to everyone who was involved one way or another!

Seitou Ryu Karate students and instructors show their “unique” support for breast cancer awareness

 

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News

Thank you everyone!

Our project is now complete and our dojos now have 200 brand new training mats. It’s been a long journey and our club members and parents worked particularly hard riding 40 miles through all of our dojos to help raise the £2,280 needed to buy the mats.

We reached our target on 25th July 2013 and had to go through quite a long process for getting the mats ordered and shipped from China. They finally arrived at the port in Felixstowe where we picked them up and delivered them to the Wickford and South Ockendon dojos on 19th September.

Samuel Parker & Katy Bromfield helped deliver the mats to all the dojos.
Here’s the first 100 delivered to the Wickford Dojo

That’s a lot of mats at South Ockendon Dojo! 2.5 metres high! (Katy is 5’4″)

 

It didn’t take the students long to get stuck in with the new mats, as you can see they’ve been put to good use already!

Students from South Ockendon dojo putting the mats to a good first use with a hard and sweaty training session!

Students at the Grays dojo warming up for a session on the mats on Saturday morning

We’re working on a little video which will be released soon but in the meantime, we’d like to thank everyone who was involved in and donated to our fundraising project, and we’d like to make a special mention to the following people who made significant donations.

Aaron Cray, Adrian Long, Andrew Herring, Angie Watson, Charles Lambert, Chris Shepherd, Damien Kingsley-Tomkins, David Ali, Dawn Shepherd, Nathan Barnett, Hayley Wingrove, Iain Abernethy, Ian Burberry, Ilana Brink, James Lockhart, Jane & John Lawrence,  Kaizen Ryu Karate, Kurt Collins, Maggie Nicol, Mark Chessher, Mark Williamson, Michéle Hang Hong, Mick Simmonds, Members of the Royal British Legion South Ockendon, Richard Hang Hong, Roy Waterhouse, Simon Harker, Steve Dennis, Susan Humphreys, Tadas Pilka, Veronica Hicks, Yamin Mustafa.

 

From all the club members of Seitou Ryu Karate and the participants of the Inter-Dojo Bike Ride

Richard Hang Hong, Caroline Hang Hong, Alvin Shaw, Alfie Thompson, Charles Lambert, Charlie Meggs, Connor Frost, Damien McMahon, Danny Fear, Emma Ludkins, Helen Papandreopoulos, Jacquie Frost, Jack Fry, Jaiye Akinosho, Jessica Flatman, Kim Mandy, Kylie Mandy, Marc Jordan, Martin Lawrence, Megan Homer, Mick Simmonds, Mike Homer, Peter Thompson, Ronnie Thompson, Samuel Parker, Sarah Homer,  Tatum Mandy, Tommy Ludkins, Zoe Nolan

Riders of the 2013 Inter-Dojo Bike Ride after their 39 mile long journey through all the Seitou Ryu Karate dojos

 

 

 

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