Benefits
1. Popularity
Young and old, male and female, and in some cases even handicapped
persons are able to practice Taekwon-Do. Physical strength, weight and
body build are of no consequence. A 60 year old, 85 pound, one armed
woman can derive as much personal satisfaction, along with marked
improvement in her mental and physical state of health, as an 18 year
old Olympic decathlon champion.
Patterns may be chosen according to a student's limitations and
since Taekwon-Do boasts a myriad of techniques, those best suited for
an individual student can be chosen or modified. A word of
encouragement for those who are physically underdeveloped; the
majority of Taekwon-Do masters today were not initially endowed with
physical strength or natural coordination. In fact, an instructor
usually prefers an underdeveloped student not only because of the
personal challenge, but because this type of student will usually work
much harder and become the most dedicated student.
In some ways, Taekwon-Do is similar to gymnastics. A student has
merely to repeat what the instructor has demonstrated with occasional
corrections on proper technique. Also a student with even limited
training can introduce another beginner to techniques the student
himself has already mastered.
2. Economy
Although a practice suit is a prerequisite in classroom training as
an aid for mental and spiritual conditioning, one can just as easily
train in shirts, track suit, or even street clothes.
To train or harden an attacking or blocking tool, straw rope wound
around a piece of wood, a bag filled with sand or a piece of cloth or
paper suspended by a string can suffice if the regular training aide
is not available.
Since Taekwon-Do can be practiced in a cleared space in your back
yard or even public park in the absence of training hall, the student
has the convenience of training by himself any time it suits him.
3. Tenacity
There are two pitfalls all students, regardless of rank, should
avoid:
A. Boredom
There is a common tendency among beginners to tire of repeating
the same techniques over and over. Boredom will usually set in
between the third and sixth month for a beginning student. This is
the period when a student is building his Taekwon-Do foundation by
learning fundamental technique and building power.
Impatience, lack of self-confidence, inability to perceive
improvement and just plain physical fatigue combine to cause a
psychological and physical ennui. After the seventh month, however,
the student develops physically and fatigue is reduced. The student
begins to learn techniques that he can use to gauge his rate of
advancement; and through breaking techniques and sparring the
student develops confidence. The best way to combat boredom is to
attend classes regularly and develop resolve to attain a specific
goal.
B. Lack of Thoroughness
Too often the students sacrifice thoroughness in the learning
process, because they tend to lose patience and insist on
progressing to a higher technique before mastering the previous one.
Students should realize that it is extremely important for them to
know thoroughly one single technique until it becomes reflexive
before advancing to the next.
The secret of becoming a black belt is a simple one; learn
thoroughly each technique, especially patterns, step by step, not only
developing a physical reflexive action, but developing mental
concentration as well.