Tag: Karate
Shoka Magazine: Your SKLS Instructors
Your instructor is the key to this training process. He or she will provide you with the inspiration, education, training, coaching, and support you’ll need. They have worked hard to get where they are and represent the highest values of martial arts training. They will show you how to succeed. The lessons you learn will stay with you your whole life. Your instructor is committed to training you and in return you must commit yourself to practicing what you learn. Your relationship with him or her is important, so pay attention to what they tell you. Always address your instructor as ‘Sensei.’ This term is one of respect. The literal meaning of sensei is “one who has gone before,” implying that your teacher has already succeeded at what you are about to attempt and can show you the proper way to do it. This prevents you from repeating the mistakes others have made in the past. Mistakes are an important part of learning and you’ll make plenty of your own, but learning from the mistakes of others is very important. Say hello and goodbye to your instructor, both when you come to class and when you leave. This shows respect and teaches you to communicate with people who hold positions above you in life.
Junior Instructor: A Junior Instructor is a youth under the age of 16 holding a minimum rank of 1st Degree Black Belt and is qualified to teach all levels. He/she reports to the Head Instructor, wears the Instructor Patch on their left shoulder and a Junior Instructor patch under the school patch.
Instructor: An Instructor is an adult over the age of 16 holding a minimum rank of 1st Degree Black Belt and is qualified to teach all levels. He/she reports to the Head Instructor wears the Instructor Patch on their left shoulder and an Instructor patch under the school patch on their left breast.
Senior Instructor: A Senior Instructor is an adult holding a minimum rank of 2nd Degree Black Belt and is qualified to teach all levels. He/she reports to the Head Instructor wears the Instructor Patch on their left shoulder and a Senior Instructor patch under the school patch on their left breast. There many be several Senior Instructors.
Junior Instructors, Instructors and Senior Instructors are members of the School Board of Review and the Instructional Board. They line up slightly back and to the right of the Chief or Head Instructor. All instructors wear 2 red chevrons on their left shoulder under their instructor patch.
Head Instructor: The Head Instructor is an adult holding a minimum rank of 2nd Degree Black Belt and is qualified to oversee all Instructors. The Head Instructor reports to the Chief Instructor.
The Head Instructor is a member of the School Board of Review, the Instructional Board, the Board of Examiners, and is an Adviser to the Student Leadership Council. When lining up, the Head Instructor stand slightly back and to the right of the Chief Instructor. He or she wears a Head Instructor bar above the School Patch on the left breast and 2 red chevrons on their left shoulder under their instructor patch. There is only one Head Instructor.
Chief Instructor: The Chief Instructor is qualified to oversee the instructional program. This position is for an adult who holds a minimum rank of 3rd Degree Black Belt and reports to the School Director. There is only one Chief Instructor.
The Chief Instructor’s role is to chair the School Board of Review, the Instructional Board and the Board of Examiners. He or she lines up front and center on the training floor and wears the Chief Instructor bar below the school patch on the left breast and 2 red chevrons on their left shoulder under their instructor patch.
Shoka Magazine: The Seven Habit of Highly Effective People
A summary of the bestselling book by Stephen R. Covey.
From The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey. Published by Simon & Schuster.
INTRODUCTION
Our character, basically, is a composite of our habits. Because they are consistent, often unconscious patterns, habits constantly express our character and produce our effectiveness – or our in effectiveness. In the words of Aristotle, “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”
I identify here seven habits shared by all truly effective people. Fortunately, for those of us not born effective (no one is), these habits can be learned. Furthermore, the collective experience of the ages shows us that acquiring them will give you the character to succeed.
Some years ago, I decided to read all the success literature published in the United States since its beginning in 1776 – hundreds of books, articles, and essays on self-improvement and popular psychology.
I noticed a startling thing: Almost all the writings that helped build our country in its first 150 years or so identified character as the foundation of success. The literature of what we might call “The Character Ethic” helped Americans cultivate integrity, humility, fidelity, temperance, courage, justice, patience, industry, and the Golden Rule. Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography is a prime example.
Compared with the early success literature, the writings of the last 50 years seem superficial to me – filled with social image consciousness, techniques, and quick fixes. There, the solutions derive not from the Character Ethic, but the Personality Ethic:
Success is a function of public image, of attitudes and behaviors, of skills that lubricate the process of human interaction. I don’t say these skills are unimportant. But they are secondary.
If there isn’t deep integrity and fundamental goodness behind what you do, the challenges of life will cause true motives to surface, and human relationship failure will replace short-term success. As Emerson once put it, “What you are shouts so loudly in my ears I cannot hear what you say.”
Changing our habits to improve what we are can be a painful process. It must be motivated by a higher purpose, and by the willingness to subordinate what you think you want now for what you know you want later.
As you open the gates of change to give yourself new habits, be patient with yourself This is not a quick fix. But I assure you that you will see immediate benefits. And if you see the whole picture clearly, you’ll have the perseverance to see the process to its conclusion. Have faith – it’s worth the effort. Remember what Thomas Paine said: “What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly; ‘tis dearness only which gives everything its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods.”
Acquiring the seven habits of effectiveness takes us through the stages of character development. Habits 1 through 3 make up the “private victory” – where we go from dependence to independence by taking responsibility for our own lives. Acquiring habits 4 through 6 is our “public victory”: Once independent, we learn to be interdependent, to succeed with other people. The seventh habit makes all the others possible – periodically renewing ourselves in mind body, and spirit.
Shoka Magazine: It Will Take All Your Life to Learn Karate
The mindset that will set up free
Marty Callahan
8th Degree Black Belt
“The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge while an ordinary man takes everything as a blessing or a curse.” -Carlos Castaneda
Niju Kun #9
This is the nineth of 20 precepts of Master Gichin Funakoshi, the Father of Modern-Day Karate. Master Funakoshi is known by millions of people all around the world and is considered to be one of the three most important martial art masters of the 20th century.
A lesson learned today is forgotten tomorrow, unless it is relearned tomorrow. It is human nature to forget. If you attend a lecture, you will remember only about 10% of what you hear. You have to experience things many times before you reach the point where you won’t forget them, where
they become automatic. For lessons to be truly understood they must be grasped by every cell in your body.
The potential lessons you can learn from karate are infinite. You could practice every day for the rest of your life and still not learn everything there is to learn. So, practice until every cell in your body absorbs the lesson you are working on, even if you feel like you’ve done it the best you could already. There is always, always, always… room for improvement.
We frequently say to do it 10,000 times. Do whatever you are attempting to learn 10,000 times. After this there will be no questions, you will have a complete understanding.
This is the concept of infinite. That you will go to infinite and beyond to learn what you need to learn and improve yourself as a result.
The person who will go to this extent is impossible to beat. His or her enemies might damage them in some way but can never stop them – even in death.
We just celebrated the Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday. I would say that he lived this way. Even in death he lives on. What he believed and what he stood for is still alive today.
This is how we must live. This mindset will set you free.
Shotokan Karate Leadership School® 3082 Marlow Road B1, Santa Rosa, CA 95403 707-575-1681
Shoka Magazine: The Art of War
The Art of War
By Sun Tsu
You can be sure of
succeeding your attacks
if you only attack the
places that are
undefended.
Shotokan Karate Leadership School®
Shoka Magazine: Dear Sensei Callahan
Dear Sensei Callahan,
Wishing you all the joys of the Season! My Guru calls this time of year, Happy Light in Everybody. The is honoring the Light in one another. Honoring the Light in you!
I’d like to take this opportunity to thank you for your incredible school of warriors that is such a Bright Beacon of Light on this planet. I have and continue to benefit greatly from!
Thank you for teaching and showing me that I can indeed be strong, and strong in all the ways, mind, body, and spirit.
Thank you for believing in me even when I fail to believe in myself.
Thank you for lifting me back when I fall down.
Thank you for much needed to hear lectures such as the “Drag yourself to class no matter what” lecture! That I always need greatly to hear.
Thank you for being good to us women.
Thank you the sweet twinkle in you eyes as you engage with the lovely karate children.
Thank you for the Blessing of you.
Most Sincerely and in Gratitude,
Caroline Chase
Shoka Magazine: Kindness Pays Off
Kindness Pays Off
I could live off compliments like this
Marty Callahan
8th Degree Black Belt
“Warriors are not what you think of as warriors. The warrior is not someone who fights, for no one has the right to take another life. The warrior, for us, is the one who sacrifices himself for the good of others. His task is to take care of the elderly, the defenseless, those who cannot provide for themselves, and above all, the children, the future of humanity.”
-Sitting Bull, Hunkpapa Lakota Indian Chief
I help people all the time in many different ways. I’ve done this my whole life. It’s who I am. I used to get bullied because of it. The bullies I had to deal with thought helping people was a sign of weakness. I suppose they thought that a leader had other people doing their beck and call. I didn’t believe this. I believed that a good leader served others and that this was their true strength.
This is part of what attracted me to karate in the first place. It empowered me. It gave me the power I needed to put bullies aside, so I could go on being who I was. This is often the case with bullies, they want to punish you for helping others, for doing the right thing, for picking other people up when they are down.
So, last summer I helped a grand-aunt find her grand-nephew. The child had trained with us and his mom pulled him out of our school, and surreptitiously took him and his brother to Arizona. She was hiding the children from the grand-aunt and uncle who had raised the boys for a while after their father, her husband, had died. It was a classic child custody battle. When I help people, I expect nothing in return. If I get a thank you or a compliment it feels all the better and I want nothing more than to do it again. I encourage everyone to do the same – help others and give sincere compliments like this. It will make the world a better place in some small way.
Hi Carol,
When you mentioned last evening that Connie’s husband is Marty and he’s a Shotokan Sensei, I wondered if his studio is on Marlow Rd? If so, I met him this past summer and found him to be one of the kindest people. He restored my faith in humanity by helping me to find my grand-nephews after their mother moved away with them without telling anyone in our family where she (or the children) were. My 8-year-old grand-nephew was in Marty’s Karate classes prior to being taken (as we found out) to Arizona by their mother. If this is the same Marty, please let him know he made a huge difference! Now that we have found the children, we have hired a lawyer and are pursuing our legal rights for Grandparent / Grand-Aunt visitation. They are the children of my deceased nephew, who lived with us after his divorce from their mother, and we miss them tremendously.
Thank you. Deborah WB
Hi Deborah,
Yes, that’s the right Marty, and he is, indeed, the kindest of men. I’ll forward this onto him with your permission. ~ C
Shoka Magazine Shoka News
Shoka News
Shotokan Karate Leadership School® Newsletter
February 1, 2023
A BIG Welcome to our newest students!
❖ Addie Santiago, Julian Santa Maria, Lily Digardi, Joshua Reeves, Samsaara Santiago, Skylar Morales, Khyle Phy-Birdsong
Upcoming Events and Activities
- Tournament Qualification Week, January 30th to February 4th
- Valentine’s Day, Tuesday, February 14th Celebrate. Give someone a valentine.
- Closed President’s Day, Monday, February 20th
- Exams Tuesday and Wednesday February 21st and 22nd
The Next Santa Rosa Invitational Karate Tournament – Saturday, April 1, 2023 Qualification Week: January 30 to February 4. Students must qualify to participate in the tournament. If you wish to participate you must let us know this week and demonstrate your commitment to train for the tournament and show up to compete.
Japan Trip – April 10 to 17, 2023
I will be joining some of our friends from Shotokan International Alliance and traveling to Japan to do some sightseeing and karate training. If you’re interested in going, let me know and we’ll see if we can make it work for you.
The Return of 7th Degree Black Belt Sensei Kevin Warner – April 28-29… more later.
Spring 2023 Award Ceremony and Potluck Dinner – Saturday, May 6th – Mark your calendars
Shoka Magazine (Formerly the Family Education Packet)
We hope you’re getting it. It’s being sent in the mail to your house. We may have your address wrong. If so, let us know and we’ll make sure you get on our mailing list.
Scams
Ms. Caroline Chase has alerted us to the existence of a scam that she nearly fell for. Be careful.
Mystery Crusher: Who Done It? – Detective Wanted
We have noticed, over the last few weeks that someone with small hands has been crushing the paper drinking cups we have on the table in the bathroom. So far, we have lost about 23 paper cups to the Mystery Crusher. Solving this is going to require some keen detective work. If you would like to take on this challenge, please let us know, we could use your help!
Our Covid Policy
Please wear a mask if you are unvaccinated. If you are vaccinated, it’s your choice. We will never ask you to do anything that will put you or your family at risk. You always have the opportunity to opt-out of any activity or event that you deem is unsafe.
Shoka Magazine Cover Letter
February 1, 2023
Marty Callahan
8th Degree Black Belt
“Let every nation know, whether is wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and success of liberty.” – John F. Kennedy 35th President of the United States
Parents, families, students and friends,
In our constant search for excellence, we have renamed this educational material the Shoka Magazine. Here’s what’s in it this month:
- Shoka News (our newsletter)
- Kindness Pays Off
- A letter from one of the kindest students in our school – Ms. Caroline Chase
- Another quote from the Art of War by Sun Tzu
- Niju Kun #9
- Introduction to Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
- Your SKLS Instructors
- Quote from Jordan Peterson, Canadian psychologist, author, media commentator
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Core Assumptions (Part 3 of 4)
- Banking Scam designed to take ALL your MONEY
Why we produce this magazine
Most people don’t have the faintest idea as to what we do. They think that karate is either fighting, an activity for kids, or a sport. It is all of this but what they don’t know about is the most important part. We are a personal development program, a character and leadership development program where we use the platform of Shotokan Karate to develop our students into the best person they can be. This has a lifetime effect on the person who takes it seriously and gives it their all. This magazine is just one of the many ways we use to help you understand what this means and why it is so important to your child, yourself and your family. Please take advantage and read, watch and listen to the many other ways we provide through our website, Facebook page, Youtube channel, author site (Marty-Callahan.com), Kicksite, Tiger’s Great Journey, Shoka Leader Handbook as well as a library of articles we have available in the school.
Our family and your family
As of this writing we managed to survive the rains and floods but other members of our school did not fair as well. Our power was out for 5 days and when it came back on the surge blew out our home printer. A very minor inconvenience compared to what others experienced. Sensei Logan Flaherty knew the family of the toddler who was killed by a tree that fell on their house up on Joy Road in Occidental. He has been helping them throughout this tragedy. If there is anything we can do for you please let us know.
Yours truly,
Marty Callahan, 8th Degree Black Belt,
Founder, Chief Instructor, Author
Shotokan Karate Leadership School® 3082 Marlow Road B1, Santa Rosa, CA 95403 707-575-1681
Family Fitness and Karate at Shotokan Karate Leadership School
By Shotokan Karate Leadership School in Santa Rosa, CA
It’s NO SECRET that most American families are lacking the proper amount of physical activity. According to the latest figures from the National Center for Health Statistics, one in five adolescents ages 12 to 19 were overweight in the United States in 2018-2019, a rise of almost 24% since 1999-2000. Family support has been a key factor identified to encourage physical fitness among children, according to the Surgeon General.
The key to getting your kids out of the house and moving about is creating a routine that is both fun and challenging. Most children drop out of sports because it ceases to be fun, there is too much emphasis on winning, or there is lack of parental involvement. Choosing an activity such as karate is perfect for families looking for a challenging way to stay in shape and learn new skills together without putting too much emphasis on competition.
The best way for parents to become positive role models for their children and encourage them to become involved in physical activities, is to become involved themselves. Moms, dads and kids who exercise together, plan better eating choices, and adopt a healthier family lifestyle are more likely to have greater bonding, better relationships and overall improved health.
Karate is a perfect opportunity for parents and kids to learn a skill together and experience an activity that is strong in learning, recreation, and family bonding, all at the same time. There’s nothing like mutual encouragement when it comes to an activity that requires discipline. Karate can provide continuous challenges for families to pursue together for years to come. A family that kicks together sticks together as the life skills and levels of respect are so admirable in the martial arts.
“You may be on the right track, but if you just sit there, you’ll be run over.”— Unknown
Some students come to karate at Shotokan Karate Leadership School in shape, while others have come 100 pounds overweight. Most come with limited flexibility. Adults start at any age, as Shotokan Karate Leadership School has had some adults who started as late as age 65 and have still earned their black belts. As a student, you are looked upon as an individual, never compared to anyone else. Shotokan Karate Leadership School instructors will be there every step of the way. All that is expected is a willingness to try.
Here are some benefits you can expect from training in karate at Shotokan Karate Leadership School:
- Fitness – The principles of karate techniques are Reality Based Training on the design of your body. For power you develop the larger, powerful muscles of the torso. The speed of the techniques comes from the fast, agile muscles of the arms and legs. As you progress in karate, you will learn to coordinate this speed and power, and develop a concentration to focus all your body’s strength into a small, hard striking surface like the edge of the hand or the heel of a foot.
- Self-Defense – When the speed and power developed through karate is used in a self-defense situation against the vulnerable parts of an attacker’s body, the results can be incredible. Karate allows a woman to emphasize many of her natural physical strengths, such as power in the legs, while learning a method of self-defense efficiently against a much larger opponent. Knowing you can defend yourself; your confidence will grow. And confidence alone is usually enough to deter potential attackers.
- Self-Confidence – This does not come naturally for many people, but self-confidence can be developed over a period. Through karate, as you accomplish new goals, your confidence level increases. Karate instills a sense of discipline and self-confidence that can carry over to all aspects of your life.
Instructors at Shotokan Karate Leadership School are not only there to teach classes but to positively motivate, inspire and teach the necessary self-discipline traits and life skills needed in this ever-changing world.
Please visit https://askaboutkarate.com for information about our Karate school in Santa Rosa, CA!