Category Archives: Upcoming Events

2012 Goshukan Gasshuku Report

2012 Goshukan Gasshuku

 This past weekend was a fantastic success; thank you to all that attended and participated in our IOGKA 13th Annual Goshukan Gasshuku in Columbus, GA.   Our attendance is growing every year, as is the variety of martial arts instruction offered. This year was another first for us as we enjoyed the Live Eisa Taiko Drum Performance of the Mirai Kanai Taiko Group during our lunch break on Saturday! This is a very important part of Okinawa martial history, and was the first taiko experience for many in attendance. We were honored when the Taiko Group Director asked those Paul Sabota Sensei, Izumi Shimabukuro-Parker Sensei, my son Kenji, and myself to participate in the final song.
  I am so very proud of all of the students/teachers that came with an open heart and mind. Not one single complaint by anyone. The Okinawan Spirit of Ichariba Chode was present throughout the Gasshuku, and was experienced by all. The Instructors did a wonderful job, and kept everyone involved and exicted about learning something new.
 FRIDAY: The Gasshuku began with a ‘warm-up’ of Ngo Cho Kun Iron Body drills. (Which Kevin Bonner Sensei participated in quite vigorously). For many this was the first time, and they caught on very quickly! Following, was Troy Price Sensei teaching Shuri-Te Jujutsu series of unbalancing, takedowns, and ankle/leg locking techniques. For the attendees that train primarily in Okinawan Karate, this was a brand new and eye-opening experience!
  We finished the evening with promotions:
Izumi Shimabukuro-Parker was promoted to 3-Dan, and received her IOGKA Shidoin/Instructor License.
Keith Klaif was promoted to 2-Dan, and received his IOGKA Assistant Instructor Certification.
 Following the end of training, we all walked down the block to enjoy a live band while eating dinner and enjoying good conversation.
SATURDAY:  Saturday morning training began with Qigong Training by Troy J Price Sensei, and was a wonderful way to energize and warm-up on a brisk Saturday morning.  Following that, I taught the next segment on Ngo Cho Kun (Five Ancestor Fist) Peho/White Crane Evasion, Entry, and control. Next, Paul Sabota Sensei taught Okinawa Kobudo-Bo Kihon and fundamentals. We broke for lunch to enjoy  the Taiko performance and then back to training. After lunch, we were taught Mugai-Ryu Iaido- Sword etiquette and kata by Ron Davis  Sensei. …

The final segment of the day was Naihanchi destructions taught by me. We finished at approximately 4:30pm and some of us met later that evening for sushi and drinks at a cozy little Japanese Restaurant.
Special thanks to all of our visiting Gasshuku Instructors and performers:
Troy Price Sensei:  Shuri Te Karate/Jujutsu, Qigong
Ron Davis Sensei: Motobu-Ha Shito Ryu, Mugai Ryu Iaido
Paul Sabota Sensei: Matsumura Seito Shorin-Ryu, Okinawa Kobudo
Mirai Kanai Taiko: Eisa Taiko Group from the Atlanta Okinawa Kenjin-Kai.
We had a great cross section of Traditional Martial Arts, both External and Internal, from Okinawa, China, and Japan; there was truly something for everyone, and I personally learned lots of new waza, methods, and principles.
I would like to recognize all of the visiting Sensei/Dojo Owners that traveled and brought students with them to train at this year’s Gasshuku:
Kevin Bonner: Gulf Coast Karate Dojo. Biloxi, MS
Paul Sabota: Imperial Crane Dojo. Crofton, MD
Ron Davis: Yushikan Bushi Shin Dojo. Griffin, GA
Thank you to all of my students who worked tirelessly behind the scenes to help this event go so smoothly, especially Izumi and Robyn, Lisa, and Kaori!
Until next year,
Garry Parker

For Love or Money

By Garry Parker

This article is one that I have written and deleted several times without actually publishing-until now.

This article will expose some ‘industry secrets’ and will likely offend those guilty of implementing these practices. So…with the disclaimer out of the way, here we go!

When I began training in Judo in 1984, I did so out of necessity and desire to learn to defend myself.  Several years later, as I was stationed in Okinawa, Japan- I began training in Karate, and again, i did so with the desire to improve myself and my skill.   My teachers (Schmitt Sensei-Judo) and (Takamiyagi Sensei-Karate) both had one thing in common; they absolutely loved teaching their respective martial arts. they were passionate about helping us (the students) achieve our goals.  This was accomplished through leadership, inspiration, and and discipline.  Every student was rewarded according to his/her efforts.  Those that trained harder, practiced more, and proved themselves dedicated were shown the more intricate details of the arts. The amount of TIME and DEDICATION is how we payed our dues..not the amount of DOLLARS/YEN.   Yes, we paid our monthly dues to support the dojo and sensei, but no amount of money could buy extra instruction, special treatment, faster promotions, or elite status.

Enter the western world of martial arts.

Does this sound like your dojo so far? Yes?  Good!   No?  uh-oh, read on.

The trend in many martial arts schools/dojo over the past couple of decades has been to concentrate on the ‘business’ of martial arts first, and the education of martial artists second.  It has become a maze of quantity over quality,  sales pitches, long contracts, upgrade programs, and guarantees of frequent promotion.  The new student is often brought into a basic or beginners program and a few months later pressured to ‘upgrade’ to a special program in which the members receive very little extra instruction and are allowed to wear a different color uniform or special patch to set them apart from the other students (read: make them feel really special).  Of course, this comes at a price!  These upgrade “clubs” often cost $30-$60 more per month, and, in my opinion only serve to create division among the students.  The special club students look down upon the others students who can’t afford the ‘elite status’ of the upgrade program.

Why are these practices so successful?  In my opinion, two reasons:

#1.  People want to feel special; they want to be different than everyone else..maybe even have a sense of entitlement that they deserve more if they pay for it.

#2. People are impatient;  we live in an instant gratification driven society, and people have become accustomed to getting what they want .  Join the black belt club or masters club and learn more faster…for a price.

And the teachers and/or dojo owners are taking advantage of this from every direction.  What drives them to change their standards from the work hard-get results mentality they were taught when they were students?  Plain and Simple:  Money.  Black Belt Clubs, Masters Clubs,  belt ‘graduations’ EVERY MONTH  are simply income generators.  Children and parents alike love to get recognition; fewer want to earn recognition.  Rewarding mediocrity has replaced high standards of working hard to get results.

Is this now what we should expect as the standard? NO!  Do your research; look around, and find a dojo that best fits your goals.  I understand that these programs are here to stay, as long as people buy into the hype and support them.  The old ways are not attractive to everyone; I understand that too.  I am not saying that we as Instructors, should teach for free or dirt cheap, or that you as a student should expect free lessons.  The money that is paid for dues is used to pay for the dojo rent, upkeep, and for the ongoing training of your instructors.  I am saying that it is neither right, nor should it be accepted that the parents/students are progressively squeezed for more money at every turn!

Ask ONE question when approached with an ‘upgrade’:  What is the value to me?  Is the extra money being spent worth the results, or is the Dojo Owner just padding his/her pockets?  If the upgrade includes extra training time and additional curriculum above and beyond the scope of the normal training, it may be valuable to you.  If nothing additional is included,  beware.

I began teaching in 1995, and opened the Columbus Dojo in 1999.  I did so not for money, but for the love of martial arts, and the desire to share with others the benefits of traditional martial arts as I have been taught.  In Okinawa, my Sensei had one price for children, and a slightly higher price for adults-regardless of rank.  The black belt students paid the same as the new beginner.  My dojo is the same way. Students can gain skill and earn respect and promotions only through hard work and dedication.  No dollar value should ever change the principles of honor and integrity.

Train Hard, Get Results; you can’t buy skill.

G. Parker

Out of Time

 In a few weeks, summer break will end for this year, and it will be back to school for our children.  Back to school means homework, projects, sports, more homework, and of course we never seems to have quite enough time to finish it all.  Time- we all get the same amount of hours in each day; you may spend your 24 hours differently than I spend my 24 hours.

We can use it efficiently, wisely, and productively; we can waste it.  We cannot, however, kill time nor can we buy more. However you choose to spend your allotted time is entirely your choice. The average reader has already spent 45 seconds of your time, and now it’s gone.

As parents and children alike get back into the swing of the full schedule of the new school year, the challenge of attending classes at the dojo regularly will be met with excuses such as “I just can’t find the time”, or “There isn’t enough time in the day”.  May I present to you the solution?  Friends, time isn’t lost, nor can you save it.  We have exactly 24 hours in every day.. no more, no less. We must choose to budget our time as we do our money; for time is the currency of life.

Our lives are so hectic in this hustle & bustle society in which we live and it’s very easy to get lost in the shuffle; it’s easy to procrastinate and forget what’s important.  Friend’s, don’t put off until tomorrow that which needs to be done today. One day it will be too late, and you’ll be out of time.

G. Parker

What is the Dojo?

What is the Dojo?  We hear the term, and usually associate it with the tradtional martial arts ‘training hall”.  That isn’t entirely accurate..read on.

Here we see the kanji for Dojo; the first kanji is ‘way’ or ‘path’. the second is ‘place’. So we read the kanji as ‘the place to practice the way, or the place to follow the path. This way/path is the philosophy that is the backbone of all traditional budo (martial arts). That is, the constant search for self discovery, self improvement, and enlightenment. The dojo is the place where we go to learn our chosen martial art…and learn about ourself.
We learn to discipline ourselve, to push harder, go further, make goals, meet them, exceed them, make new ones..on the path to self discovery.
This is our dojo. This is your dojo. Enjoy the journey.

G. Parker

Join our Karate Kids Club

imageThe Columbus Dojo Karate Kids Club is a great way to introduce children to traditional Karate; classes are fun, structured, and challenging.  Your children will learn character building, teamwork, goalsetting, fitness, self-defense, and so much more! Contact us at columbusdojo@aol.com for enrollment information.

Watch “30 second bag drill.” on YouTube

Bully-Proof Workshop

 SATURDAY  JUNE 02, 2012.  12:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.

This workshop is a FREE community service event sponsored by the Columbus Dojo, and taught by Hall of Fame Regional Instructor of the year- Garry Parker.

Group #1: K-5th grade.  12:00-1:00 p.m.

 Group #2: 6th-8th grade. 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m.

SPACE IS LIMITED; PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.  To register, email columbusdojo@aol.com with Bully-Proof in the subject line.  Include both the parent(s) and the child’s name, along with the child’s grade and age.

FUNDRAISER:  Donations will be accepted to benefit Hope Harbour: The valley area’s non-profit organization for victims of domestic abuse.  The money raised and donated will help Hope Harbour provide emergency shelter, services, and resources for these precious women and children.

Promotion Testing: Kyu grades

The next promotion testing for kyu grades (color belts) is scheduled for Friday, May 25th, 2012. All eligible candidates are being evaluated for fulfilled requirements to include attendance, and will be notified upon instructor reccomendation not later than May 10th, 2012.