Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Upcoming Seminars


UPCOMING SEMINARS

We are fast approaching 2010! Here are a few of the upcoming seminars in January and February. There are seminars covering the Easteran, Central, and Westeran states so everyone should be covered. For more details contact the Sensei's listed or watch the website for registration forms. We hope you enjoy the seminar you may decide to attend!


January:

Fujishima Seminar
January 15th - 17th
Long Island Shotokan
Charles Macolino Sensei
Floral Park NY
Email: lishotokan@aol.com

Murakami Sensei and Fumatoshi Sensei Seminars

SKIF Miami
January 20th - 21st
Jaime Wong Sensei
Miami FL
Email: skifmiami@hotmail.com

Shotokan Karate-Do Center
January 23rd - 24th
Shadi Barazi Sensei
Houston TX
email: senseibarzai@gmail.com

February:

Nobuaki Sensei
February 5th
Paul Walker Sensei
Apple Valley CA
Email: pwalker@seishinshotokan.com



Saturday, December 26, 2009



Piecing Together the Karate Jigsaw Puzzle
by Paul Walker

As a young kid I used to enjoy doing jigsaw puzzles. Like any other person who has put together a jigsaw puzzle, I soon figured out that I had to create a system to understand the mass of jumbled and disconnected pieces.
The system first involved turning over all of the pieces so they were face up. Then I found the corners and the edges and started piecing those together to make the framework of the puzzle. Next I found like-colored pieces and put those together and gradually other pieces started finding each other with the help of my system and my frequent scanning of the whole jigsaw puzzle and resorting and regrouping.

Finally the jigsaw was solved and I could see the full picture that it revealed, despite already knowing what it looked like previously, thanks to the picture on the box!
I use the jigsaw analogy from time to time in my weekly Karate classes to try to show that the process of learning Karate also uses a systemized method of arranging techniques, organizing content, piecing together combinations and sets, building a framework of skills and gradually understanding the different shades of technical nuances of the general curriculum as you go through the ranks on the way to the Black Belt and beyond.

The main difference between a standard jigsaw puzzle and the puzzle of learning Karate is that there isn’t a clear picture of the Karate outcome when you first start the process of organizing the pieces of the overall puzzle. It is the job of the instructor to gradually introduce the pieces one by one, and to give hints as to where the pieces fit in to the overall picture. It is the job of the Karate student to capture those pieces from each Karate lesson and to place them in his or her personal puzzle.

The reason for this is that the ultimate picture of every individual’s Karate puzzle is different and will also change over time as details are modified and improved upon. This can be very confusing and frustrating and this is why it is important to focus on the journey rather than the destination. The journey of course is the process of solving the puzzle and the destination is the end picture that the puzzle reveals.

So what does the Karate puzzle look like? Well, like I have said already everybody’s puzzle is different and it would be foolish of me to try to explain what your personal Karate puzzle looks like. Instead, I should try to explain what the puzzle is made up of and what my own picture is beginning to show me. In very simple terms the framework of the Karate puzzle is made up of the three Ks, Kihon, Kata and Kumite. Kihon, of course, represents the punches, kicks, blocks, strikes and stances of our style. Kata are the forms within our style that show us how the basic techniques fit together in natural combinations, and kumite represents the partner work drills that show how our style can be applied in one-on-one situations and also in multiple opponent situations.

So let’s get to the picture part of the puzzle. I often thought that solving jigsaw puzzles was a little fruitless when you already know what the picture looks like, so sometimes I would ask my parents to give me just the pieces without the box so I could figure it out for myself. Maybe that’s one reason Karate is so satisfying for me because I still don’t know what the final picture of my puzzle that represents my Karate journey will look like! Yet, I have had many satisfying glimpses into the beauty of the images and checkpoints along the way.
This is the way it is supposed to be! But I still have to ask myself what does my current picture show and how does this help me improve. I believe that my current Karate picture shows a fully integrated matrix of information that represents the Shotokan syllabus as a whole, and that it shows vital cross links between individual techniques, the different kata and bunkai combinations, as well as a whole host of kumite techniques, options and arrangements that now come naturally during teaching and demonstration. However, despite the matrix that is shown to me in my mind of everything gradually coming together, I also see several weak intersections within the overall matrix. I see some unanswered questions and some dark areas that maybe I shouldn’t venture along yet. Certainly not as an instructor, maybe only as the innocent student in search of information! These gaps represent the many questions that I haven’t answered yet. They represent the missing pieces of my own Karate jigsaw puzzle that my sensei gives me every time I train with him. What I have also learned is that filling the gaps in my knowledge is not only dependent on my sensei but is also dependent on my students. The questions asked by my own students often force me to learn and improve just like a seminar with Master Kanazawa does. Which brings me to the next question, “Do you ever stop learning?” I think Master Kanazawa said it best in his book Karate, My Life, when he described his ascent up the mountain of Karate learning, “The more I know, the more I climb, yet the mountain just gets higher. The more I try, the more I focus, the depth is limitless. There is no end in sight. That is karate, my life.”

The Karate jigsaw is not meant to be solved so that there is a final outcome or final picture that we look at for a few seconds, grunt disconsolately as if to say “Is that all there is?”, and then move on. The Karate jigsaw puzzle is a living and a creative endeavor. The picture it depicts changes over time as we progress and mature and as we gain knowledge of our art and ultimately of ourselves.

Our Karate jigsaw puzzle and the problem-solving strategies that we gain from it can act as a template for our lives. It can show us how to find confidence when we need it, inner and outer strength, perseverance and endurance, compassion and tolerance, and self-belief based on honest values. If we ever see the true and beautiful picture of our Karate puzzle, then we will have mastered not only our art but also ourselves. For me, that’s enough to keep putting the pieces together and to keep training hard! How about you?

Paul Walker

A Message from the ITKA & Bambouyani, Sensei



Dear Friend and sensei: Happy Holiday from all of us in ITKA.
We wish you and your loved ones the very best for 2010 and beyond.

Please join us for the 2010 ITKA World Friendship Karate Tournament in Chicago
One week before the Easter. March 26-28. We will update the web site in January.
Thank you.

Bambouyani
ITKA Karate
http://www.itka-karate.com/
our new e-mail is below
http://us.mc330.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=sensei@itka-karate.com

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Happy Holidays!

Have a safe and happy holiday season and a wonderful 2010!

Oss,

ho, ho, ho!

Scott Monroe
Austin Shotokan Karate.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Shotokan Terminology




General Karate Terminology(Counting, Ceremony, Terminology)


GISHISKI CEREMONY

Rei -Bow
Seiza- kneel down
Mokuso- Meditation
Mokuso Yame -Stop meditation
Sensei, Onegaishimasu, Rei - Teacher, please train us, bow
Sensei, Arigato Gozaimashita, Rei -Teacher, thank you very much, bow
Tatte- Stand

KAZU -Counting
Ichi -One
Ni -Two
San -Three
Shi -(Yon) Four
Go -Five
Roku-- Six
Shichi-- Seven
Hachi Eight
Kyu -Nine
Jyu -Ten
Jyu Ichi -Eleven
Ni Jyu-Twenty
Ni Jyu Ichi -Twenty-one
Shodan- First degree
Nidan -Second degree
Sandan -Third degree
Yondan -Fourth Degree
Godan -Fifth Degree
Yogo -Terminology
Karate -Empty hands
Dojo -Training place
Shihan -Master
Sensei -Teacher
Sempai -Senior (Higher belt)
Dohai -Equal (Same belt)
Kohai -Junior (Lower belt)
Obi -Belt
Keiotsuke -Attention
Hajime- Begin
Yame Stop
Karate-Ka Karate student
Karate-Gi Karate uniform
Otagi Ni -Bow to each other
Rei --Bow
Oss A word showing respect
Mawatte -Turn around
Kata -Form (an arranged pattern of attack and defense techniques against multiple imaginary opponents)

Friday, December 18, 2009

2010 Karate Training Camp


2010 Karate Training Camp
January 23 and 24 (Houston, Texas)
An SKIF-USA Sanctioned Event
We are happy to invite you to join us in this great event providing the highest levels of traditional karate training, friendship, and a wonderful learning experience. This event is open to all karatekas (13 yeard old or older) from any traditional style with 9 months training experience or more, or youth karatekas (under 13) who are 5th kyu or higher. We hope to see you there.

Camp Instructors:

Sensei Manabu Murakami, Chief Instructor (SKIF)
Sensei Murakami is a world renowned instructor known for his great demonstration skills and for his abundant energy. He reigned as SKIF All Japan kumite champion for the years of 1990, 91, 92, 93, 94, 98, & 99 and as SKIF kata champion for 1989, 90, 92, 93, 94 & 99.
He is also SKIF World Kumite Champion 1994 and 2nd place in Kata in both 1988 & 94.
Sensei Fumitoshi Kanazawa, (Godan SKIF Japan) Sensei F. Kanazawa is the youngest son of Kancho Kanazawa. He is SKI World Champion 2006 and SKI Japan Champion
7 times (2003-2009)/

Training Schedule

Saturday January 23

7:30-8:20 AM. Check in & registration
8:30 AM-10:30 AM. Training

3:00-3:30 PM. Check in & registration
3:45-5:45 PM. Training

Sunday January 24

9:00-11:00 AM.

3:45-5:45 PM.


PLEASE BE AT LEAST 15 MINUTES EARLY TO EACH TRAINING SESSION TO WARM UP & IN RESPECT OF THE INSTRUCTOR

General Information:

Location: Trotter Family YMCA, 1331 Augusta Drive, Houston, Texas 77057 (713) 781-1061

Accommodation: Comfort Suites 3-STAR, 6221 Richmond Avenue, Houston, Texas 77057.
(713) 787-0004. (866) 482-8611. $79.00 per room for two queen size beds up to 4 people (Breakfast included). For 4-STAR accommodation consult the internet for any hotels near the Galleria using PRICELINE.COM. Typically you can room around $100+.

Fees: Youth (12 and under all ranks) $80.00. Students 4th kyu or lower $80.00. Brown belts and Black belts $120.00. One day fee: $70.00

Black belt Test: Will be announced on during the Saturday morning session (tentatively set for Sunday 2:00 PM). Please make sure all paper work is completed before test time and that you have 3 pictures.
Contact Mr. Shadi Barazi 832-766-6564

Sunday, December 13, 2009


Hidetaka Nishiyama - Karate Do - Shotokan - Click here for funny video clips

Lester Ingber's Shotokan Website

Lester Ingber's (8th Dan JKA) Shotokan Website

Lester Ingber's website (click here) is a goldmine of shotokan information. Many of the drill and exercizes that we have been practicing over the past 2 weeks are here...and much more.
From: Paul Walker's Newsletter

Masters Magazine Photo Shoot

During the past couple of months my nephew Andrew and I have taken a couple of trips down to Sun Valley, which is just outside North Hollywood and not far from Universal Studios, to visit Masters Magazine.

As many of you know, I write a lot about karate and, in addition to my book, I have had articles published in several magazines and websites. Well, in the next
year you will be seeing two fa-miliar faces in the pages of Masters Magazine as Andrew and I have put together a series of photo shoots on some part-ner work sets from our style of Shotokan.



I have also written a couple of articles and submitted an inter-view with a good friend of mine, Richard Berger, who still lives in Japan and trains at Master Kanazawa’s dojo in Tokyo. These will also be published in Mas-ters Magazine throughout next year’s quarterly issues.
May I say, that it has been a pleasure to work with Jose Fraguas, the editor of such a top-quality martial arts magazine. Masters Magazine is available from Barnes and Noble and many of the back issues can be found in our dojo.
Master's Magazine Winter Edition Available Now with Interview with Kancho:
MASTERS MAGAZINE!
IN BOOKSTORES NOW!
DAN INOSANTO – THE LEGEND SPEAKS!CLAY MORTON – KARATENIKKEI GAMES 2009PENCAK SILAT – HERMAN SUWANDAKANCHO KANAZAWA - KARATERALEK GRACIE – GRACIE JIU JITSUYONG CHIN PAK – TAE KWON DOPATRICK McCARTHY – BUBISHI: THE BIBLE OF KARATESHANE LACEY – CHOY LEE FUTALFRED HSING - WUSHUFACE OFF WITH JONG SOO PARKCOMPARING KICKS – SPINNING HOOK KICKColumns by: Teruyuki Okazaki. Luke St. Onge, Tony Annesi, Jiang Bangjun. David Petersen, etc…INCLUDING AN EXCLUSIVE 2 HOURS & 35 MTS. DVD WITH TRAINING SECTIONS, INTERVIEWS, TIPS FROM THE MASTERS AND MUCH MORE…!The magazine can be found in leading BOOKSTORES (Barnes & Noble, Borders, B.Dalton, Books-A-Million, etc.) throughout US and Canada.Please visit: www.mastersmag.com to see this issue's content.

2010 OzaWa Cup Tournament and Master's Seminar

2010 OZAWA CUP
International Karate Tournament
APRIL 1 thru 4, 2010
Hosted by: Las Vegas Shotokan Karate
In exactly four months the 2010 Ozawa Cup International Karate Tournament will be upon us. I want to inform you that we are in the process of getting all our tournament materials and information ready for mailing out. If you want to receive a Tournament Packet and you don’t think that you are on our mailing list, please send us your mailing address and we will send you a tournament packet as soon as they are ready. I want to sincerely thank you in advance for your continued support of our Tournament.

Happy Holidays to you and your family.

Please continue below to see more information on the 2010 Ozawa Cup.

Sincerely,
James Tawatao
President: Ozawa Cup