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- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!wam.umd.edu!usenet
- From: kckbxr@next09csc.wam.umd.edu (Robin Hood)
- Subject: Re: Tae Kwon Do, getting a Black Belt, etc...
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.225104.20711@wam.umd.edu>
- Sender: usenet@wam.umd.edu (USENET News system)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: next09csc.wam.umd.edu
- Organization: Workstations at Maryland, University of Maryland, College Park
- References: <Nov20.055635.8993@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 22:51:04 GMT
- Lines: 68
-
- In article <Nov20.055635.8993@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
- hurben@lamar.ColoState.EDU (Mike Hurben) writes:
- > I have been training in TKD here in Ft Collins for about a year now,
- and I am
- > presently a red belt (white,yellow,green,blue,red,black). This was not
- my
- > first MA experience...I took some wadu-ryu (sp) about 12 years ago, but
- only for
- > about a year. It seems very similar to TKD. My Do-jang is in the World
- T.K.D.
- > Federation, so we study the Tae Guek forms, and Koryo form.
- > I am very pleased with the progress I have made. When I was a yellow
- or
- > green belt, it was not uncommon for me to spend 12 - 15 hours/week
- training, but
- > now I am lucky if I get 8. Now, the way that testing is done here is
- that
- > for black, you essentially have to test twice. By the way, is this how
- most
- > schools do this? What happens is we have 'Black Belt recommend' which
- is what
- > you get if you pass test 1, and you also get to wear the belt. Then,
- the
- > second test is for '1st Dan.' Now, I don't believe that there is any
- way that
- > I can become 1st Dan in just 6 or 7 months, partially because I don't
- think
- > anyone should be able to get it within that short a time span. But I
- think that
- > if I really push, I might make recommend. Is this a reasonable goal?
- How
- > many years "should" it take? If nothing else, having this goal will
- make me
- > work much harder, and that will be good for me, regardless of how I do
- on my
- > test. I just don't want to waste my money. Any thoughts?
- >
- > Kom-sahm-nee-da
- >
- > Mike Hurben
- I've studied TKD since 1987 and I still haven't received my black belt.
- I'm a student, so the last two years have really been kinda off-and-on as
- the semesters roll-around. My school is also a member of the World Tae
- Kwon Do Federation, but I'm not sure that that means a standardized form
- of testing or belt levels. We have 10 belt levels. The belt system at my
- school is beginner, white (you have to test for white belt), yellow,
- green, blue, purple, red, brown, brown senior, and black. Then there are
- a variety of degrees of black, of course. For the first few belts, the
- average amount of time is a minimum of 3-4 months of training (at least
- two hours twice per week = 4hrs). Most schools advertise that students
- can earn themselves a black belt in ONLY two years, but, in most cases,
- it's all just a sales pitch. A real black belt takes a long time to earn.
- Too many times a kid/adult will prode the teacher into letting them test
- (and pass) and not really be qualified for a belt. I've seen kids &
- adults receive their belts and look absolutely pathetic...it all depends
- upon the student and his/her instructor. You might want to try competing
- in a local tournament to test your skills. When I received my white belt,
- I persistently asked my instructor to teach me more and more. Before most
- of my fellow classmates were even sparring each other, I was sparring my
- instructors (all multi-degreed black belts). Take the initiative to push
- yourself to your potential. Ask your instructor how you're progressing
- and ask to be shown additional techniques. For example, I knew my brown
- belt requirements when I was only a blue belt. My advice, would be to
- check out every potential resource (i.e. instructors, other students,
- tournaments, etc.) and set a goal that's both realistic and attainable for
- yourself. Good luck.
-
- bill
-