I Know Karate and Kung Fu
...and lots of other foreign words!
Martial arts have become incredibly popular in the US. Drive
through any little strip shopping center in nearly any city and
you're likely to see a martial arts studio. There are dozens of
styles to choose from. Karate, jujitsu, aikido, kung fu, qi
gong, taekwondo, tai chi. How did that happen?

I think its partly because Americans are so competitive. To
many, a martial art is just another sport. You move up the
ranks from one belt color to another until finally you're at
the top and you're a black belt in karate. Its also good
exercise. Many of us don't get nearly enough exercise. But if
we can engage in a little friendly martial arts tournament and
work out at the same time, we can really get into that.
In the East where all the martial arts came from, its a bit
more than just a sport or a way to exercise. Martial arts are
the physical part of an entire spiritual discipline designed to
teach us to live as better and happier people. They believe
that our bodies must be healthy temples for our spirits. Monks
in monasteries learned the martial arts. I don't know of any
comparable practice in Catholicism. Do you? There may be, but I
have never heard of it.
In karate, and all the martial arts, we bow to our opponent
before and after the match. Why is that? Any martial arts
student from any decent school can tell you that you are
honoring the other person. You honor them for their skill. You
honor them as another spiritual being on the planet. You honor
them for giving you the honor of the match.
I think practicing karate and other martial arts is really
adding something sacred to our American understanding of
people. And yes, we get to compete and get a little exercise
in, too.
About this writer
Aiko Mettarod moved from Japan with his parents as a child. His
father was his first karate teacher. You can read more articles
about martial arts at Tsunami Karate.
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