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Black Belt Your Way to Success


Article # : 11316 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 5 / 1986  1,833 Words
Author : Elaine Baum
Elaine Baum is the editor and publisher of Your Child & Home. She is also the editorial director of Reese Communications and is responsible for fourteen magazines including Woman.

       Today's parents, concerned about their children's safety, physical fitness, and personal confidence, have become aware of the power of the martial arts in promoting general well-being. The children themselves are enthusiastic about this sport.
       
        "I love it," reports eleven-year-old George McAula, a Karate student for three years. "It makes me feel like I can do anything I want to, be anything I want to be."
       
        "It's amazing," comments nine-year-old Mark Jordan. "I never thought I could do some of those movements. I worked hard, then harder. I tried and I tried, and I got there. I feel like I'm a winner."
       
        And Paul Stevens, age twelve, points out, "The exercise is great but, what I like best is what the master has told us. He tells us we should try just as hard in school as we do in his classes. We should strive to raise our grades. When he talks like that, you can't help but want to do what he says. I've raised my grades--I really have."
       
        Although there are different approaches to the martial arts, including the Japanese school of thought, the Chinese, and the Korean tae kwon do, all seem to have a basic thread that ties them together. They call for the development of patience and character more than physical prowess. They insist on concentration and perseverance, so that each child pushes himself to the limit and no matter what his level, he must be persistent in achieving the movement and the control required. While it is a system of self-defense, it teaches nonviolence and encourages hard work in all areas of life, even the ... (1988 of 10572 Characters)
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