Jeri's Tae Kwon Do Book;Tae Kwon Do Memoirs Chapter Nine
Chapter 9
I settled in to a long, quiet study of fitness. I had always
been average in my athletic abilities. Tall people actually fall outside of the
curve of efficiency. We are not "well knit," and the longer levers of our arms
and legs do compromise maximum strength and speed. As a man grows taller than
about five foot seven or five foot eight, he leaves maximum efficiency behind
him. Similarly, as a woman gets beyond five foot four or five foot five, she
also is moving away from the optimum height for athletic efficiency.
The
Koreans that we saw on tape or in person were the most startling example of
efficient builds and precise accuracy. Korean instructors who visited did admit
to us that they viewed Americans as big and ungainly. To them, Americans, even
men, have large backsides and tend to be heavy set.
Big, bluff Bull
Beringer, a bull of a man with rank equal to Warren Elseman, was barrel chested
and had a voice like a bull horn. He was one of those men that make others shake
their heads and say, "Why did he ever need to take a martial art?"
Huge,
naturally muscular, and confident, Beringer overcame the size barrier by forcing
himself to learn to be aerial. While still in the lower ranks, he practiced
jumping again and again until he could fly through the air on jump kicks. I
watched him once, doing jump back kicks against a full sized heavy bag. He'd
rush forward, leap into the air and spin, and that massive foot would crash into
the bag near the top seam. Each crashing kick sent the bag shooting and shaking
the other way until the chain caught it. More than once in his career, Beringer
had to re-drill the beam to reinstall the anchor chain because his kicks had
jarred the anchor bolt back and forth so much that the hole had widened. He'd
kick the bag, and it would suddenly fly free.
When he would spar with
me, he would grin at me and roar, "Come on, Jeri! Right here! Right here!" and
slap his own chest in the middle. "Come on! Kick hard!"
He did this when
I was a white belt, and he does it now that I'm a third degree black belt and
he's a fifth degree black belt. The sequence never varies. "Yes sir!" I yell,
and I fling my foot at his chest. I hit him in the chest and then slide off the
barrel surface. Unaffected by a side kick that can break three boards, he'll
turn to face me, arms wide, to let me do it again and bellow, "Good! Good! Good
spirit Miss Massi! That was a good kick! Come on! Come on!"
One night in
the dressing room, four of us girls started imitating him and giggling. We
paraded back and forth, arms wide. "Come on! Come on! Good spirit!" we called to
each other, trying to make our voices deep and resonant like his. We didn't know
that he could hear us in the next room. He pounded on the wall. "Girls, are you
making fun of me?" the deep voice called.
"Imitation is the highest form
of praise, sir!" I called back.
"Okay then! Keep at it!"
When he
would come to the main school, all the black belts loved to fight him. For one
thing, he was the only real challenge to some of the bigger men, and the smaller
men could test themselves against him.
There were times, even when Mr.
Hong was alive, when everybody would be called to a halt, and we would watch Mr.
Beringer and Dr. Roberts spar, or Mr. Beringer and Linwood Cisco. The floor
shook as two such heavyweights of speed and skill crashed about. I think that
one reason the rest of the class was told to watch these matches was to make
sure that nobody got run over by accident.
Nobody in his right mind
would challenge the bull-like Beringer. But one night, at his own school, he had
a man and his teen age son sign up for classes. Beringer always kept an eye on
teenage boys. They can be the most unpredictable of students and sometimes hit
too hard on smaller or weaker people.
But this young man seemed to be
earnest and careful in his training. He obeyed quickly, got along well with
Bull's wide variety of students, and was enthusiastic.
But Bull started
to hear complaints, and some of his students started showing injuries. To his
surprise, it was not the teenager who was bullying young men smaller or weaker
than himself, but the boy's father. More than once, Beringer had to tell the man
to go easier with the boys. Bull himself is such an example of gentleness
wrapped around devastating power, that usually his word is enough.
This
new student, a father himself, had seen Bull spar and had seen him on the heavy
bag. He had also seen Bull exercise that great gentleness of his with the
school's one or two elderly students and with the adolescent boys and girls who
studied from him.
And yet, this adult student brushed aside Bull's
orders to calm down, to be careful, to avoid deliberately injuring or
humiliating another student. Finally, things came to a head when the adult hurt
a younger man---a mere boy---of higher rank. Beringer ended class and sent
everybody else to go get dressed.
They hurriedly cleared the room,
knowing that Beringer was going to give the man a talking to. Even the man's son
left.
"Now look," Beringer said to him. "I've told you before. You can't
hit kids hard. They don't have the strength to fight you."
"Yeah, you've
said it," the man said, his eyes and face deadpan.
"You know," Bull told
him. "I don't like your attitude."
"Well, I don't like your attitude,"
the man said right back, glaring up at him.
Beringer flicked a glance at
the full length mirror on the wall. Yes, this man who was berating him really
was a foot shorter than he and weighed about 150 pounds less.
"In fact,"
the man said. "If you got anything to show me, you better show me now! Let's get
this settled."
Bull couldn't resist another quick glance at the mirror.
And then he looked the smaller man full in the face. "Are you challenging me?"
he asked. His voice was surprised, rather than angry.
"Yes I am! I think
you got nothing to back up your words!"
The scene had taken on a dream
like quality, now. But Beringer said, "Then hit me if you want a fight."
The man threw a punch, and before it landed Beringer turned and kicked a
light back kick into the man's chest, right on the sternum. The man flew back
and hit the floor. Gasping, he rolled back and forth and tried to sit up. He at
last managed to do so. He held his hands to his chest and tried to catch his
breath.
"You all right?" Beringer asked.
The man nodded and then
said, "I think so."
Beringer just stood and stared down at him, still
not comprehending all that had happened. At last he said, "Well, I'm going to
get dressed now. You take as long as you need." And he walked back to the
dressing room. He heard the front door open and close, and when he came out, the
man was gone. The fellow never returned.
Challenging and showing
dominance occur more with men than with women. But it does occur with women. It
seldom happens to me, because I'm simply too tall.
But when I was up at
the first degree brown belt level, preparing for black belt, we had two girls of
equal rank. One of them, Susan, had gone to college with me. She was pretty,
slender, and very well coordinated. Susan was a "bouncer," an enthusiastic
student who bounces through class. She loved kicking; she loved jumping, and she
had endless energy. All of the single men liked to talk with her. Susan's
vivaciousness and inborn happiness infected everybody. She did practice with
intensity, but I do remember that once when the teacher asked her why she took
tae kwon do, she drew a complete blank. She had no idea why she took it. Typical
of the "bouncer," Susan threw herself into every new endeavor that held her
fascination, and she did it whole heartedly. When women like Susan are asked
that question, they usually default to the sensible answer of "Self Defense,"
but for them that's a pretty minor reason. They're too optimistic to seriously
consider being attacked.
The other girl, Nancy, was loud and confident,
like me. Also like me, she was more of a plodder through tae kwon do. She did
better at strength than at speed, though with training her speed had improved.
She had a lot of innate ability, and she was tremendously strong. She always
treated me with respect, and I enjoyed working with her because she was ready to
work hard and follow directions. When I sparred with her, I noticed that she was
strong, but I have so much strength for a woman that it didn't ever alarm or
challenge me.
Nancy and Susan were a year behind me, fourth degree brown
belts preparing to test for third degree brown. One night, with her more
deliberate, strength oriented way of sparring, Nancy blocked a kick from a man
straight on. The result was that the kick shot past the arm into her ribs, and
cracked them.
I'd had my own ribs cracked six months earlier, trying to
block a jump kick, and I sympathized with her. When ribs are cracked but not
cleanly broken, they do not present a serious danger, but they are painful. You
can't comfortably sneeze, cough, or clear your throat. And you can't train for
at least six weeks. Jumping jacks alone would have you rolling around in agony.
"I'm sorry," I told her in the dressing room. "I think you're going to
miss the test."
"I know." She let out a moan. "Darn! And I was so
ready!"
"Yeah, you really were." I helped her by stuffing her clothes
into her gym bag, "But lay out for a few weeks and then come back. You'll get it
next time."
"But you know, I was really looking forward to fighting
Susan. I knew I could beat the shit out of her!"
I stopped and stared.
"What?" I asked.
She turned innocent eyes to me. "Don't you think I
could?" she asked.
"I don't think anybody should beat that out of
anybody," I told her honestly. "We're all friends here."
"I'm not
friends with anybody I fight," she said earnestly.
I dropped the gym
bag. "Okay. Well, I'll see you in six weeks."
I found Susan and told her
what Nancy had said. Susan's blue eyes lit up in amazement. For a moment she
looked frightened, but then she was simply puzzled.
"What do you want to
do?" I asked her.
"I don't know," she said.
"Do you want me to
go to Mr. Elseman?"
"No!" And suddenly the blue eyes were angry. "I'll
handle it myself."
"Okay,"
We never mentioned it to each other
again. Susan stayed in training and worked with her same enthusiastic intensity.
When we sparred she would get more on edge, more brittle with me than she had
been before. That was the only difference.
The weeks went by. Nancy came
back. She was polite to Susan and polite to me. I wondered if she had changed
her mind about beating up Susan. She outweighed Susan and seemed more savvy
about how to fight. If she really chose to hit Susan hard, I didn't think that
lightweight, bouncy Susan could handle her.
More time passed, and the
next test came up. Warren Elseman, oblivious to what was going on, matched the
two of them together. Working as a pair, they demonstrated the basic kicks for
him and the assembled onlookers. They did forms well, and they went through one
step sparring.
I could see it in Nancy's eyes as he sent them off to get
their mouthpieces. She was going to beat up Susan.
Watching the test
from the rows of folding chairs, I moved to the front row, my hands knotted in
anxiety. Susan suddenly seemed little and vulnerable. I love happy people, and I
always do feel protective of them.
Nancy came out. The two women bowed
to each other, and Nancy positively charged her, fists out.
Susan
sidestepped and smacked a kick into Nancy's shoulder. It was not an effective
kick, but it sure was quick. Startled, Nancy turned and came after her again,
kicking with determination. Susan avoided the kick and turned. She threw a fast,
explosive kick that glanced off Nancy's side, and then she pummeled Nancy with
her fists and drove her off.
Startled but still confident, Nancy
attacked again, and Susan, eyes set like blue ice, kicked her as she came in.
Susan dodged when Nancy charged from too close, avoiding the weight that was
greater than her own. But every time she got Nancy backed off to just the right
distance, she kicked. And then she closed with the bigger girl and punched,
driving Nancy off again and again.
It was too much. A test is not a
tournament and is supposed to be conducted in a classroom atmosphere, but I
suddenly yelled, "Go, Susan! Go Susan!"
Mr. Elseman was also deeply
impressed. Susan had always shown skill and promise, but she had never been such
a tiger before. She remained defensive in the fight but her defense cost Nancy
something every time Nancy came in. He let the match go on for longer than
usual. At last, he clapped, and they bowed out. Sweating and puffing, their
faces red, they turned from each other and faced him. Susan could see me,
sitting right behind him in the front row, and she suddenly beamed at me, back
to her bouncy and happy self. I grinned back. Later, I apologized to her for not
realizing that she was so tough under all that bouncy and happy exterior.
Typical of Susan, she laughed a bright, happy laugh and said, "Did I teach her a
lesson?"
"Yeah," I said. She'd taught me a lesson, too. Happy people can
be cool as ice and hard as nails. But they would rather just be happy.
Chapter Ten
For me, the journey to black belt was very much a
journey of physical fitness. I took an aerobics class for two semesters in a
row. After the first four weeks, it made a difference. At first I had to stagger
tae kwon do classes to give me a chance to recover from the aerobics, but as the
weeks passed I resumed a three-times a week tae kwon do schedule, interspersed
with two classes of high impact aerobics that lasted an hour each.
I was
still losing weight, and I did notice that being lighter also made the difficult
kicks and the jumps less difficult.
Professionally, I had achieved a
lifetime goal when I published my first book, a fairly forgettable children's
adventure called Derwood Incorporated. By the time the draft got through the
editing at the religious publisher that produced it, most of the jokes and humor
had been fairly well eradicated from it, but it was still billed as a comedy
adventure. And though I wasn't impressed with it, the publisher wanted another
one, and so I began the next in the series. Over the next six years I would sell
13 novels to this publisher.
If life has any "golden years," I suppose
that mine began then. One drawback was that, just when I had my head together
and had shaken off my past, and was now ready to really play and have a good
time, all my friends were settling down and getting married. I knew I wasn't
ready for marriage and had no interest in it whatsoever. Men, to me, were pals
and were useful as highly efficient insect killers and furniture movers. In
fact, my apparent inability to commit the sin of lust used to worry me. But for
all that the opposite sex appealed to me, I might as well have been 11 years
old. Writing adventure stories gave me great pleasure, and I loved working out
in tae kwon do. And it was compensation that even as old friends got married off
and moved away, I was meeting new friends. I was having a great time.
But it all came down to Hong's. I began to free spar in earnest, and I
entered competitions. Tournaments were held in high school gyms, and the "rings"
were regulation-sized squares marked by tape on the floor. These were the last
days of the old style tournaments, when the fights were called light contact but
were full contact, and the only protection was mouthpieces and shin guards. In
the last year before the WTF mandated comprehensive protective equipment, the
tae kwon do tournaments adopted the rubberized, lightweight gloves and foot
shields made popular by the PKA competitions.
As far as the men were
concerned, they may as well have just wrapped their hands in plastic wrap. And
women tended not to go for knockouts, anyway. I certainly didn't. I hated the
thought of knocking somebody senseless. I really did want to work on technique
and kicks.
I did enter one tournament in which one of the girls, who was
an inch taller than I and heavier, wrapped her gloves with duct tape. When I
asked her why, she said the gloves were ripped. One of the other girls clued me
in as I sat down on the sidelines.
"Duct tape sticks," she told me. "If
that girl hits you in the face, it'll stick. The glove won't slide off."
I immediately complained to the referee about this and insisted that the
gloves be thrown out. He got angry with me and told me to sit down and be quiet.
And then she and I were called up first to fight.
The very first time
she punched me, I thought a locomotive had run between my eyes. It threw me
around and dropped me to the floor. The referee helped me up and asked if I was
okay. I think he was humiliated, but he still didn't throw the gloves out. I
said yes, I was fine, and I went back to it.
I learned a lot about
fighting in the next twenty seconds. Again and again she almost had me knocked
out by those sledge hammer punches. I think that the only thing that kept me up
was that I was so mad at her for cheating that I refused to go down.
And
then, suddenly, I realized that every time she hit me, she only hit once. She
had no combinations. As I staggered towards her, I used an old trick from
basketball and waved my gloved hand right in her face. Next thing I knew, I was
inside. She couldn't touch me. Jab, jab, backfist, all right on her nose.
She staggered back. I was right on top of her. I knew if I backed up,
she'd slam me again. Jab jab backfist. I followed her around the ring, crowding
her. Somehow she got distance, and I saw that duct tape glove coming at me.
WHAM!
My vision got red, but I didn't go back. I rushed her again and
kept up the light fast patter on her face. This time when I saw the glove I
ducked and for the first time in my life, I threw a left cross. Full force, it
hit her high on the cheek bone, and she fell back. The ref got between us.
"Now, now girls, this is just for a trophy," he said. I could have
killed him. The time for that speech was before the match, when he should have
been throwing those blasted gloves away. He stepped back, and she slammed me in
the face again. And then I was on her with the rain of right jabs and backfist
strikes.
At the end of three grueling minutes, the match was declared a
tie, and we were given a minute to rest. Most of the girls were on my side, and
as I sank to the floor, one of them said, "If you can just kick her, you'll win.
They want you to kick more."
She was right. The problem was that by now
my head and feet felt like lead.
But as we were called back in, I
shakily threw a kick that actually did tap the side of her jaw. And then we were
back to our slugfest. But in the final few seconds, I did control the match. I
was declared the winner.
And then I saw her pass the gloves to her
sister, who was also very tall and very powerfully built.
I fell back
onto the floor, exhausted. The haze of red over my vision gradually cleared
away. Oh good, I thought. I would live. Brain still intact and both retinas
still attached.
There was another match between two of the lighter
weight girls, and then I was called in against Little Sister. And Little Sister
had the duct tape gloves. We bowed in.
She rushed right at me, leaning
too far forward, and threw a tremendous roundhouse punch at me that would have
finished me. I ducked down as I slid back and then slammed a roundhouse kick
right into her head as she was off balance. I used my instep rather than the
ball of my foot as the striking surface, but she got the message. It threw her
over sideways.
"Not so hard!" she exclaimed.
"You punch me in
the face again, and I swear, I'll knock you out!" I exclaimed. "Do you
understand me?"
She glanced at her sister, and then she meekly said,
"Yes." Wisely, the ref said nothing.
It was a more moderate fight after
that, and I won by a point.
There were more matches, and then I went up
against a much lighter girl who was a lot smaller than I. She was very honest as
we bowed in.
"Please, don't hurt me," she said.
"I don't want to
hurt anybody," I told her. "Let's go light."
And we did. I still won by
virtue of my superior reach. She was too small to get in on me and land much.
At the break, one of the women I had not fought came up and introduced
herself as Arlene. "I really admire you for holding back on that little girl,"
she said. "That's how I like to fight. It ought to be skill, not brute strength.
But I am glad you beat those two."
I introduced myself, and then I said,
"Well, if you and I fight, let's agree to keep it light and fast and show some
good technique."
She agreed. As it turned out, she and I were the
finalists, and we fought for first place. After my bad experience with the first
two girls, it was a reaffirmation to fight Arlene. We both stayed true to our
agreement and spent our whole match trading kick combinations. We went fast and
light, and the girls encouraged us both. We would even encourage each other and
say things like "good shot!" when something landed. We went into three sudden
death overtimes with each other but kept tying because when either of us landed
anything, she would get successfully countered by the other. Finally, Arlene
tagged me with a round kick, and that ended it. She took first place, and I took
second, and one of the lighter weight girls took third.
I never saw
Arlene again, but I'm always glad that I met her. As we received the trophies,
one of the judges came up and shook hands with us. "You girls are examples of
what tae kwon do should be," he said. "That was a great fight."
Almost
everybody who had competed from Hong's had won trophies. But there was little
time spent on congratulations. Come Monday, we were back in the training hall.
It was one thing to excel against overweight girls who cheated by putting duct
tape on their gloves. It was something else entirely to train with lean, fit
people who had a passion for excellence and not for glory.
Chapter Eleven
In my last year before black belt, the school suffered a
tremendous upheaval. I can only write what I was told, and I'm sure that there
are two sides to the story. As I was told, Warren Elseman had wanted the school
to follow the new Olympic fashion of tae kwon do. He was ready to modernize the
old military style. Mrs. Hong opposed him, as did other senior black belts. It
was a brewing controversy that occasionally bubbled over into arguments and then
subsided again. But it never quite died out.
A meeting of the black
belts was called one night, and Elseman announced that he was thinking of
leaving Hong's to form his own school. And he told the black belts that since he
was the only person of high enough rank to test them, they would have no choice
but to come with him. Elseman was now fourth degree. One by one, as the
discussion progressed, many of the black belts expressed their unhappiness with
this plan, but they felt forced to agree. Until it came to Danny Kidd, a second
degree black belt, a young and unmarried man, who was about the same height as
the late Mr. Hong.
"No," Danny said. "No, I'll stay with Mrs. Hong.
We'll work out something."
"You can't be a head instructor. You can't
even test people for black belt," Elseman told him. (An instructor must have a
third degree black belt to pass students to first degree.)
"I know,"
Danny said.
"And nobody will test you."
"I know. Something will
work out," he said.
He didn't accuse Elseman or berate him. He simply
refused to go along with the plan. At his refusal, others in the group changed
their minds, and they decided not to pull away no matter what Elseman decided.
But there were others who agreed with Elseman. With tae kwon do about to become
an Olympic sport, they argued that Billy Hong would have adapted to the change.
He would have modernized with the WTF.
The controversy became bitter.
When Mrs. Hong found out about her senior instructor's unhappiness and the tone
of some of his recent conversations, she attempted to fire Elseman. She only
failed because he was already storming out. But he had taken the item of
greatest value from our school: Billy Hong's black belt.
Mrs. Hong
demanded it back. Our school would keep the name Hong's, and we were the school
that honored his memory. But Elseman insisted that Mrs. Hong had given him the
belt as a gift when he had assumed leadership of the school, and it was his. I'm
sure that he was telling the truth in this, but others have leveled the charge
that he obtained it by false pretenses in claiming loyalty to Mr. Hong.
I try to forgive and forget the past, but the loss of Mr. Hong's belt
has always rankled with me. But Elseman does have his own side of the story. He
called me personally to apologize for the unpleasant scene in the school when he
had stormed out, and he did tell me that he knew he had not handled things the
right way. And he asked me to forgive him. But he never returned the belt to
Mrs. Hong or the school. He hung it on the wall in his own school.
The
school had definitely split. Even some of the sister schools had gone with
Elseman, taking with them other senior black belts. Though Bull Beringer's
school in Simpsonville remained with Hong's, many other instructors had left
when Warren Elseman did and stayed allied with him. Elseman was determined to
follow the WTF and USTU and pursue a more Olympics oriented style of tae kwon
do. The original school was just as determined to follow the military style. It
was time for me to make a decision. Go with Elseman or stay with the old school.
We were certainly in a shambles. Fortunately, the current second degree
black belts were scheduled to test for third within a few months. But bringing
in a high ranking teacher to test them was an added financial burden, and until
a teacher was found who would agree to come, there was a certain amount of
uncertainty about the matter.
And it was dismaying to come to the school
at night and find out who else had gone with Elseman, who else we had lost, who
else was not speaking to whom. Danny Kidd became acting head instructor. He said
nothing at all about all that had passed, and I learned about the secret
conversations---from somebody else---only after I was a black belt. Mr. Kidd
remained calm, kind, and professional through the entire transition.
When he first took over, I felt many doubts in him because he was so
young, but I thought I should be true and loyal to the memory of Mr. Hong. As
the months and then the years unfolded, and I learned more about Danny Kidd's
integrity, his generosity, and his kindness, I came to respect and admire him
tremendously. I still train under him, and I believe that he is a truly great
man, both as a technician of the martial arts, and as a human being. In
hindsight, I can say that staying at Hong's was the best decision.
Dr.
Roberts had also stayed. He had never even known about the meeting where Danny
had declared his intentions to stay with Hong's. If there ever was a great
tribute paid to a man's character, it was that Warren Elseman never even
bothered to invite Roberts to a meeting where forming a new school would be a
topic. It was a foregone conclusion that Roberts would have voted against it.
Roberts' wife Caroline was also with us, a first degree black belt preparing to
test for second. We worked on rebuilding.
Months later, after I had
earned my black belt ands things had settled down for the school, we had a black
belt meeting at Ryan's Steakhouse. Black belt meetings serve two purposes: to
eat food and tell stories. As six or seven of us sat at the table and talked,
the topic of "The Split," as we called it, came up. One of the men said, "Yeah,
Elseman just earned his fifth degree. The traitor!"
"And thief," I
muttered.
"Jeri," Mr. Kidd said clearly. "Warren Elseman is my friend."
I looked at him, astonished. I said what everybody was thinking. "He
stole Mr. Hong's belt."
"He really does believe that Mrs. Hong gave it
to him," Mr. Kidd said. "Warren and I have talked on the phone, and he's
apologized. His feelings were hurt because Mrs. Hong wouldn't listen to him.
That hurt him. But he asked me to forgive him." He looked around at all of us.
"I did forgive him. He is my friend. I want you to treat him as my friend."
"Yes sir," I said softly. "I apologize."
Months after that, I
saw Elseman at a tournament. He was pleased that I spoke to him with my old
respect and friendliness. But when I invited him to come back up to the school
and train with us sometime, his face clouded over.
"I don't care to be
trained by a man whose rank is lower than mine," he said stiffly. And he walked
away. This, I thought, about a young man who had forgiven him and defended him
to his enemies. But I dropped it. Danny Kidd wouldn't have cared, even if he had
heard Elseman speak that way. But it was another affirmation to me that I had
chosen well in my decision.
Chapter Twelve
When I was a teenager and studied Shotokan karate, a
fellow student once told me that everybody wonders deep down inside what it
would be like to be a black belt.
If you want to know what it's like to
be a black belt, just take a big bull's eye target, thread some string through
the top corners of it, and hang it around your neck. Then walk into a gun and
ammo store.
That was what it was like for me when I first walked into
Hong's wearing my new black belt. The days of peace were over. I was now,
officially, a target.
My first degree black belt test was uneventful. I
showed adequate development of the basic kicks and the forms, and I did spar
well. Already, in my private practice sessions, I had broken single boards with
a straight punch and had broken two boards at a time with a forearm strike. Six
months prior to testing for black belt, I had overcome the aerial kick barrier
by breaking two boards with a flying side kick. So it was a bit of a
disappointment on the test to be asked to break only a single board with a knife
hand strike, which I did. The master who came down to test us, Master Kim from
Orange, New York, told me that I was a tough woman. And then he burst out with a
laugh. I'm still not sure why.
But after Master Kim told me I had
passed, one of the black belts from the school, a man easily old enough to be my
father, took me by the hands and said, "Jeri, the black belt must serve. You
must help the other students and be an example."
And right away, I said,
"I will sir." Then came congratulations, warm wishes, and dinner at Ryan's.
My one claim to true martial greatness happened the first week after I
had earned my black belt. We had a student named Jeff who had been a brown belt
when I started my study of tae kwon do. Our school has four degrees of brown
belt, so students stay in that brown belt zone for a year and a half before
advancing to black belt. But even as I had advanced through the white, green,
and blue belts and progressed to the brown belt zone, Jeff only tested once. He
told me he was in no hurry. According to him he wanted to develop slowly and
precisely into a black belt. So he remained a brown belt for six years.
But I finally figured the truth: As a brown belt, Jeff liked to spar the
new black belts and beat them. He had more experience than most people who
outranked him. And there was a certain, self-congratulatory way that he sparred
new black belts. He would get them off balance and throw them to the floor, and
then he would cuff them sharply right on top of the head. It was not a fighting
blow, but rather a smack, a "trophy shot" to declare himself the winner. Of
course it was humiliating for somebody who outranked Jeff to be soundly
dispatched by him and to be hit that way.
I finally tested for black
belt and passed. Jeff was second degree brown (second gup or second kyue). On my
first night in class after getting the coveted belt, he pointed right at me and
said, in front of the other students, "I'm going to spar YOU, tonight."
Right away I kept up the black belt front and said, "So?"
But I
prayed through the whole class. I'd seen him really thump on black belts before.
Jeff wasn't a big guy but rather wiry and agile. I'm strong for a woman, but not
a very agile fighter.
I complained to God through the entire class, and
at last it was time to spar. Jeff was smirking at me. I kept a look of bored
patience on my face while inwardly I was eating my heart out. But then something
happened inside me. I suddenly knew that if he intimidated me I would lose right
from the start. It didn't even occur to me in words. I just knew it. I suddenly
froze into complete stillness, but my nerves were on a razor's edge. Yet
everything inside me was absolutely still, as though all of me were listening
for something.
I think that poor Jeff was over confident. He moved but
he didn't move much. Before I even knew what was happening, I saw my own foot
way far away from me. I didn't see it move; I didn't feel it move until after
I'd struck. The kick was just suddenly there, and it caught Jeff on the hip as
he rose up on the balls of the feet to come in.
Men are top heavy. With
broad shoulders and narrow hips, and the tendency to go up on the balls of their
feet when they come in, they are often off balance as they attack. A hard
straight kick against the hip of a slender and wiry man can knock him off his
feet, and this one sure did. In fact, Jeff rolled between two other sets of
fighters. That part seemed to be in slow motion as I watched. My mouth was
hanging open. He crashed between a set of fighters and then stared up at me,
amazed. I was amazed, too. But I closed my mouth.
"Now he's really going
to kill me," I thought. But he was still lying there. And then I realized I had
completely deflated his ego. The authority of a black belt suddenly fell across
my shoulders like a mantle, and I heard myself order him, "Why are you lying
there? Get up and fight!"
He got up, and the rest was a piece of cake
for me. I sidestepped his clumsy attacks. I chased him around with my kicks. I
had no illusions. I was sure eventually he would recover and get even with me.
But not that night. And as it turned out, his job moved him to Ohio two weeks
later. So it remains my one glorious fight.
But even at the time of my
black belt test, I was on a downward spiral, physically. I had been training
four or five times a week in formal classes and had a case of bronchitis that I
could not shake. The doctor kept giving me different antibiotics to take. They
would clear me up for a week, and then the symptoms would come back. Over the
next several months, I developed vertigo, ringing in the ears, weakness,
confusion, and almost constant fatigue. I became allergic to dust and to cats. I
put on weight again.
I finally dropped out of training. My family
physician diagnosed me with a heart murmur, and a second physician verified the
find. I made an appointment to see a cardiologist.
In the interim, I
read a book about the ill effects of antibiotic overuse, a condition called
candidiasis. I visited a doctor who had submitted several papers on the topic to
medical journals. He did a blood test and an allergy test and confirmed that I
did have candidiasis.
I had to eat a special diet in which there was no
sugar, not even fruit sugars, and no processed carbohydrates. But my confusion
cleared up, and I lost the vertigo and ringing in my ears. By the time I got in
to the cardiologist, the heart murmur was gone. He did a thorough ultra-sound
scan of my heart and found it to be quite healthy. This was such a relief to me
that I nearly cried. I felt freed from the burden of worrying about my health.
I stayed on this diet with incredible faithfulness for two years, but
the climb back to good health took me the entire first year, and the ability to
train hard was the last thing I regained. After my long absence, I attempted
class for several weeks in a row, but would become too dizzy, nauseated, and
weak to go on. My black belt peers encouraged me to keep trying, but eventually
I had to give up. It was too shameful to wear a black belt and have to bow out
of class even before the first drills were complete.
My weakness drove
me to prayer. As a conservative Christian woman, I was constantly niggled by
some of my brethren about being in the martial arts. Some people say the martial
arts are Satanic, and some people say it is not appropriate for a woman to study
them. And yet, I had rather liked it that God made me different from other
women. I think that this is one of the things that has mattered most to me about
tae kwon do. Somehow, it makes being so tall and so strong sensible. Perhaps it
sounds silly, but in a life where I have never been special to anybody, I have
always thought that God made me the way I am to remind me that I am special to
Him. Tae kwon do helped me to rejoice in the height and the temperament God had
given me.
And so, on my knees and with many tears, I pleaded with Him,
for the sake of the hope that I had in Him, and the joy He had given me in the
martial arts, to heal me.
The next week, Mr. Kidd announced that morning
classes would be started, and they would be taught by our new young second
degree black belt, Barry.
Barry, a young black man who was astonishingly
talented, had started at fifteen, and had skipped several belts in his meteoric
rise. During my year and a half out of training, he had passed me in rank. Six
foot three, rail slim, with a quickness of reflex that I have never seen
equaled, he easily won tournaments. From the time he was a brown belt he could
defeat most of our black belts except for Mr. Roberts and the tall, lightning
fast Linwood Cisco. From the very beginning of Barry's career, Linwood had taken
Barry under his wing. He had trained Barry, invited him over to his house for
meals, and took pride in Barry's skills and ability. When they fought in class,
it was beautiful to watch. And yes, the walls shook and the doors rattled, for
both of them were quite tall and powerful.
And yet, in spite of his
ability, Barry was remarkable for being quiet, gentle, and shy. The kids in the
children's class loved him, and the minute he walked in the door, they would run
to him and wrestle with him or hug him. I'd heard all kinds of people brag at
Hong's, but never Barry.
I went to him and explained the nature of my
illness, and he quickly encouraged me to come to his smaller, less formal class
and gradually build up my strength.
Usually, there were only four of us
in Barry's class. At first I did have to stop from nausea and stomach cramps,
but I took to timing my sessions and measuring how much I could endure, and as
the times lengthened out, the other people in the class encouraged me and
congratulated me. At first I could work out for only 12 minutes, and then week
later I shakily attempted 20 minutes. It took another several weeks to
accommodate to 20 minutes, but finally I advanced to 30 minutes. Once I was over
the 30 minute mark, I was able to work out through the entire class. We had
another woman named Betty with us, a blue belt, and a young black man named
Willy who was second brown, and Bruce, a very shy, very tall white man who had
played soccer in college and had the most powerful legs I think I have ever
seen. I considered it purely my own good fortune that Bruce had no confidence
whatsoever, because if he ever figured out what to do with those strong legs, we
would all be in trouble. He was third brown.
We all encouraged each
other, and God did answer my prayers. I regained my health and strength. Within
about two months I was avidly training at full speed. Soon enough, I was wanting
Barry to push us faster and harder, and he did. This was another golden time for
me. Everybody in the morning classes, which met on Tuesdays and Thursdays, was
supportive of each other and also committed to be challenged to the last degree
of endurance. I eventually named us "Barry's Buddies," and we took pride in the
skills that Barry so carefully taught us. At the end of each class we would all
be wringing wet and exhausted. After washing up and changing, we would bid each
other goodbye and rush back to work, to class, to housework, etc.
One
morning, a blond haired young man showed up, somewhat nervous, and told us that
he went to Warren Elseman's school, but he had been moved to second shift at
work and so could not take evening classes for the next three months. He didn't
say anything about the Split, but he obviously knew that the relationship
between the two schools was strained. Barry politely invited him to train with
us that morning. All that Barry said was, "Let's see how you do."
The
young man, named Thomas, was a red belt, an equivalent to our first degree
brown. He was friendly, kind hearted, and trained very hard. By the end of the
class we were all glad he was there, and he joined our little group. All of us
became good friends, and we visited each other at testing time to offer support
and encouragement.
Thomas had the fastest full leg extension I'd ever
seen. He could do a split right up into the air. He lacked Barry's strength,
though as he trained with us he picked up more of the hard hitting style that we
use. He and Barry had many good matches. But he never would eliminate the ax
kicks and moon kicks, though even I could block them and get away from them, and
I'm not a fast fighter.
Sometimes my friends in WTF Olympic style tae
kwon do ask me why I hate the ax kick so much. My best answer is one of
experience. I've been hit by side kicks, front kicks, round kicks, back kicks,
spin back kicks, and flying side kicks. I've never been hit by an ax kick. An ax
kick comes straight up and then comes down like an ax falling, and so its
instant disadvantage is that if you're defending, you see it coming.
Furthermore, a simple rising block will deflect it down the arm, and if you push
at the right moment as you deflect, you'll knock the attacker right over.
In a tournament, an ax kick's advantage is that the judges do see it
easily, and it gets a point if it lands with any force on a target area. But in
real life, it's a dangerous kick to throw, because a skilled street fighter or
anybody of decent timing will deflect it and throw the person over backwards.
Thomas, even with the handicap of what I consider inferior kicks, was so
fast that he had to slow down to fight me. As for me, I was actually in the best
possible circumstances. I was training with people who were incredibly fast and
skillful, but who were possessed of such good control that they would never hurt
me---not even by accident. I could fight them with complete abandon and really
work on my skills.
Barry taught me one of the best skills that anybody
cam learn in any martial art. Prior to training under him, I had been tense and
straining all through class. I would huff and puff to rev myself up and then
muscle through the techniques. Barry showed me how to stand relaxed, even
letting my fists unclasp, and then to throw the kick---still loose and
relaxed---and tighten up right at the moment of impact. This relaxed, fluid
motion increased speed, and it also improved the impact strength of my kicks. It
spared me from weariness in class, and it allowed me to work on my aim and focus
as well.
The other skill that I worked on was to align my shoulder,
elbow, and hand with my kicking hip to develop a straighter line kick. I learned
to align everything and site down from my shoulder to elbow to the target. I now
did mirror work on my own as often as I could.
One of our old die hards,
a second degree black belt fellow named Will Thorson, made the conscious
decision to quit. He felt that he was getting too old, that it was wearing on
him. I begged his key from him, and he gave it to me. With a key of my own, I
now went up to the school and trained alone. This also was a turning point for
me. Over the years, I would learn to train alone with intensity, and it became
my favorite method of training. At that time, though I was a regular attender at
morning classes, I tried to get into the main, evening classes at least once a
week, and now I could keep up well. The black belts welcomed me back, and I
could see that they were happy that I had come back from illness. I timed my
evening classes for Friday nights, because that was the night we would all go to
Ryan's.
It had now been two years since I had earned my first degree
black belt, and I asked permission from Mr. Kidd to train in preparation for my
second degree. He consented. My health was recovered, and I had a secure niche
in the school. Under Barry's instruction, my kicking skills had improved even as
my health had also improved, and so I began the ardent journey to the second
degree.
Chapter Thirteen
Teaching English is probably my first love, though it
takes a lot out of me. I taught at our local tech school for five years, and for
four of those years the administration of the school awarded me presidential
commendations for outstanding service as a teacher.
One semester I was
assigned to teach a pre-101 course to the Machine Tool Technology students. This
course was the hot potato of the English Department, as none of us could figure
out why in the world Machinists needed to take an English course. The Machine
Tool Technology students couldn't figure it out, either. So the poor English
teacher who was picked to teach it got stuck with 30 students, mostly male, who
had no interest or motivation to learn the material. And the poor students were
thrust into a class with little explanation or justification as to how this was
going to help them.
My number came up, and I was assigned to teach the
class. My first goal was to make it pertinent to them, so I made writing a
resume and a cover letter two major goals, and then I decided that--in addition
to some basic rules of grammar--I would teach them to use the library (if they
did not know how) and I would show them all the trade periodicals available to
them. Weekly assignments would consist of a couple worksheets of grammar, and an
index-card sized report of any article that they read in a trade journal. By
this method, they would be doing some writing every week, getting in some basic
grammar practice, and also learning something that might help them in their
careers: how to stay current on their trades and how to track new developments
and changes.
On the first day I passed out the syllabus and started to
preview the assignments with them. From the back of the room, one of the young
men started a running series of comments under his breath as I talked, and I
asked him to stop. When he did not but rather deliberately turned to his friend,
jerked his head towards me, and said something that made his friend laugh out
loud, I walked to the back of the room.
I looked him in the eye, and the
rest of the class fell silent. "I asked you to stop," I told him.
His
response was a sort of open leer and his friend laughed again.
I was
unimpressed. This was college, not high school, and it was not going to turn
into high school. "Get out," I told him.
He was a little surprised at
this, but I stepped closer. "Out," I said again. He got up and left. I glanced
at his friend. "You too."
To my surprise, his friend folded his arms,
settled himself in the seat, and looked me in the eye. It was a definite
statement that he was bigger than me, stronger then me, and I could not make him
leave. For a moment I was stunned to realize I had a student physically
intimidating me, but the moment was so brief he never even saw my surprise.
I stepped closer, and I remember thinking, "Buddy, if you and I end up
on the ground wrestling with each other, one of us is getting out of here." I
simply could not back down in my own classroom. I taught in a dress and heels
back then, but it didn't matter. I knew if this kid got an inch of surrender, I
would lose the entire class to him.
But I felt no hesitation, only the
assertive decisiveness that I would push this issue to its conclusion, whatever
that would be. We had a battle of wills for a moment. After a moment of hard
staring between us, he got up and left.
I continued the class, and
afterwards I went to my mentor in the school's writing center and talked with
her about it. She very nearly panicked. One of the boys, she was fairly sure,
had been charged with assault as a juvenile and had been sent here to school by
a judge as an alternative to time served in a juvenile detention center.
I went on to the dean of students. He was a tough, stocky man who had
graduated from Sterling High years and years ago. Sterling High was the
segregated high school for local black residents back in the old days. I've had
older students from Sterling High who could still recount the Periodic table
from memory after 20 years of being out of school. It was a hallmark school, a
pearl somehow produced in the tragedy of segregation, a school where the
teachers held up an incredibly high standard of learning. This man had fought
his way through segregation in college and had little patience with people who
waste time in school or who disrupt classrooms.
I told him what
happened, and after discussing the matter with me thoroughly, he approved of my
promptness in dismissing disrespectful students out of my class. I insisted that
they could not come back in without apologizing to me, and he agreed. He
commended me for not putting up with nonsense. I mentioned the rumor that I'd
heard, and he was concerned. He knew of the one student, and he told me frankly
that the one boy was all bluff and probably would not come back even to
apologize. The other boy, the one who had been convicted of assault, he did not
know. But he also added that the first boy followed the second one. He took it
on himself to meet with the boys separately.
I thought about it a lot.
I'd heard of another teacher at another tech school being assaulted by a student
over a grade dispute. Both boys that I had dismissed were bigger than I am (and
I'm six feet tall), and they were very muscular and tough looking. The rumors
about the one boy's alleged assault were all over the department, but I had no
idea how to get to the truth of the matter. There was no doubt that he had tried
to intimidate me with his size and strength, sitting their with his arms folded,
muscles flexed, staring at me and daring me to take him on. I'd backed him off
once in public, but I wasn't sure he would back off if he found me in private.
I went to Barry to talk to him about it. Barry had just fought and won
two successive "Tough Man" contests in our town. Soft spoken and pleasant to
talk to, Barry had not come across as tough to his older opponents (in spite of
nineteen inch biceps and a nineteen inch neck). But in the first Tough Man
contest, he knocked out one man in 32 seconds with a left back kick, setting a
record. In the second Tough Man, every other fighter refused to kick against
him, including Ray "The Kick Man" Rice, but Barry still won, just using fists.
I'm a Christian and I am supposed to believe in turning the other cheek.
If either or both of these guys came after me and I were unsuccessful in
defending myself, it would be wrong to get revenge on them. At the same time,
the sheer crime of a man assaulting a woman occurs again and again in our
society, and not much is ever done about it. I told Barry what had happened in
the classroom. I asked him--if anything happened to me--to find the boys and
avenge me. He told me that he would go see them right then and warn them off,
but I said no. I'm a black belt, and that requires a high standard of conduct,
and I didn't want to get into vigilantism. Besides, guys warning each other off
is like throwing gasoline on a fire to put it out, especially when it's a black
guy warning two white guys to leave a white woman alone. It would only make
things worse. When I told him this, he laughed and agreed.
"It's my
problem," I told him. "And I want to handle it through professional channels.
But if professional channels fail, I don't want them to get away with anything.
Assaulting women is a terrible crime."
He nodded.
"They're
white," I told him. "So be careful if anything happens."
We both knew
that the sight of a black guy confronting two white guys could cause trouble on
entirely new fronts, unrelated to this issue. But Barry's clever, and his
wide-eyed, gentle expression makes him look like an easy target. I knew
perfectly well that he could be clever enough--if he had to--to get an
aggressive, hostile white guy to attack him first and thus make any counter
attack a clear case of self defense.
I wrestled with this issue for a
long time, even after it became apparent that I had scared both bullies off by
sheer strength of will and determination of spirit. On the one hand, I did learn
that most of fighting is psychological. Simply refusing to be bullied gave me
the upper hand, and I chased both boys out by possessing and using indomitable
spirit.
On the other hand, I was as subject to the psychological effects
of battle as they were. Suggestions of revenge really unnerved me.
And
then there's the question of vigilantism. On the one hand I am an English
teacher who prides herself on professionalism and the amount of positive student
feedback that I get. Students would highly recommend my classes to each other,
and those presidential commendations I received were always based on student
input, and not on peer observations. Yet my peer observations were also good,
and I introduced some new teaching methods in the ENG 101 classes that are still
used at Tech. In fact, my outlines and methods of having the Machine Tool
students do periodical summaries were picked up and used by other teachers for
that class. The idea of having to physically fight students bothers me, and the
idea of having to go to another black belt as back up really bothers me.
But I am also a woman who is determined that nobody will ever
successfully assault me. I hate the danger that women are in continually, and I
hate it that our legal system does not protect us from assault. Most assaults
against women are carried out by repeat offenders. I vowed a long time ago
(after the beatings my father gave me) that the buck stops here. I am my own
deterrent to assault, and if a man assaults me, I will be his last victim. He
won't do it again to another woman, no matter what happens to me as I stop him.
The boys both quit school. Neither one approached me again--not to
apologize and not to harass me. The Dean of Students paid me a great honor when
he told my department head that they needed more teachers like me. After it was
safe to laugh about the matter, he often did, finding it very funny that a woman
threw two big strapping men out of her classroom.
Until today, nobody
has even known about the private discussion I had with Barry. It all turned out
okay, but I still wonder about the ethics of what I did.
My example was
one of a person refusing to lose in the long run. Essentially, I knew from the
first moment of the confrontation that--no matter what it took--I would not let
these guys subjugate me. Even if they put me in the hospital, they would be the
ultimate losers in the conflict.
The question it raises in me is this:
To have indomitable spirit (and thus end the confrontation by sheer strength of
will, ending it without violence) was it necessary to have that end in mind from
the beginning? I've been censured by other martial artists for my promptness in
deciding that no matter what, no assailant will ever be ultimately successful in
assaulting me, yet I wonder if that is not a necessary ingredient in attaining
indomitable spirit.
Before you can act on a commitment to never be
beaten (and by definition, "indomitable spirit" means the refusal to be
subjugated) you have to make the commitment to never be beaten. Yet if you make
the commitment to never be beaten, you have to then act on it and ensure that
you never actually will be beaten, no matter what physically happens to you.
This is essentially what I did.
I did not carry the violence to them. I
wanted to avoid it. I was firmly resolved that they would have to carry the
attack to me, and I decided to stand alone to defend myself, no matter what that
was going to cost me. But I did ensure that if they carried assault to me, they
would ultimately lose.
Somebody else told me I was paranoid. I tend to
not think so. I mean, there was physical intimidation going on at first, and one
of the boys had some type of conviction for assault. I don't think it was
paranoid to think that crossing them might get me into trouble.
Yet
first and foremost I want to point out that violence did not happen. The kid
tried physical intimidation, and he failed against a smaller, weaker woman. So
it gets into this causal relationship. In order to win, do you have to be
willing to die--or to kill? If that is true, the paradox is that it seems that
psychologically, the person least likely to need to defend himself/herself is
the person most willing to fight the last degree. In other words, the person
least likely to die in a fight is the person most willing to die in a fight.
I've never resolved this question entirely to my satisfaction. What I
have learned over time is to be calm and clear when I teach, and if I have to
throw students out for being disruptive, to behave as though dismissing them is
a grief to me, an unhappy event that they have driven me to do. This has worked
pretty well. Now I say, "I'm sorry, but these other students really need to hear
this. And so for their sakes, I must ask you to leave. Time is short, and I
cannot keep stopping. But I'd rather have you stay." So far, it has always
worked.
Chapter Fourteen
Every black belt takes a turn at instructing a brand
new student, and I usually get the new women. I give them two or three lessons
off to the side of the main room as the main class is going on. Though I am not
technically gifted in performing tae kwon do, I have surprised my male
colleagues with my ability to teach it. I set students at ease very quickly and
facilitate their natural skills.
But usually new women students are
startled when they meet me. I'm six feet tall, and I lift weights. I look like a
very strong woman, and that makes me something of an unknown. There are women
bullies just like there are men bullies, and I'm afraid that I can easily look
like a bully. I have a loud voice and am gregarious and confident. I stride when
I walk, and I swing my arms. More than once in my early days as a black belt, I
saw new women students show alarm in their eyes when the instructor would call
me over to give private instruction. So I work very hard to keep my voice low
and quiet when I deal with new women at the school. I encourage them frequently.
I try to "read" them so that I can let them set the pace of their own
instruction for the first couple lessons.
I can read women pretty well.
They have different reasons than men for taking martial arts. Some women are
perpetual girls, and tae kwon do is one more great adventure, one more fun thing
to do. I call these women "bouncers," not because they are like the professional
bouncers who work in bars, but because they bounce when they free spar. They're
happy and confident and have no idea what pain is. They are sure that because I
am a black belt I must be undefeatable. So they fling themselves at me in free
sparring. Bouncers are fun to spar with because I love their enthusiasm. But
they are dangerous because they tend to assume that I'm impervious to anything
they throw.
I, of course, will not hit a new student and will not even
kick or punch in a student's first free sparring match. Usually, all I do is
block and get out of the way.
Bouncers are few and far between, though
they are delightful when they come. They are the sort of student who has seen
all the right movies, and they are not intimidated by me, because they instantly
trust and respect me. They like me; they smile a lot; they laugh at my jokes,
and they work hard. That makes up for the banged shins and bruised fore arms
they give me.
There are also women who are bullies, who carry a chip on
the shoulder. Not many; in fact, they are very rare. But I've gotten new
students who just start out angry with me. I don't fully understand the psyche
of an angry woman, but it seems that while demanding that she be treated as an
equal by men, she also despises other women. However, in a tae kwon do class, it
is very difficult to despise me. For one thing, there's a lot of me, and for
another thing, I am gregarious and happy, and angry women don't change that. My
ability to not care, and to do so with complete transparency, infuriates them.
There's not much that I can do with an angry woman. If she can stay calm
and work with me, everything is all right. But I have had new women try to hurt
me, and I've had new women sucker punch me. I had a new student purposefully
bang shins with me. The blow to my shin was excruciating, but I stayed calm and
quickly sent my other foot right into her hip, a kick that would not hurt her,
but it sent her sailing across the floor, and she fell. My prompt, careless
counter stunned her.
"You're not hurt," I said. "Get up."
She
charged me like a bull, and I sidestepped. I put my foot on her hip and sent her
on her way again. This bull fight of being charged by her continued until she
was exhausted. But I never even put up my hands. She left when class ended, and
she never came back. Nobody ever reproached me. I do feel pity for her. That
much anger is a burden, a self-defeating affliction that forces her to make
other women either despise or fear her. I'm happy to say that though angry women
do sometimes sign up, they are very rare, and they usually do not stay long.
Hard training strips anger away. It strips every false pretense away. And for
some people, anger is their only covering. Rather than be stripped of it, they
quit.
But my most typical new woman student is a little bit afraid of
me. She knows that sooner or later I am going to spar with her, and she's
concerned that I will hit her.
So I smile a lot; I keep my voice low and
quiet; I encourage her. And when it's time to spar, I direct her to kick and
punch at me, and I only block. It can be insulting to any student of the martial
arts to say "I'm not going to hurt you." So I usually say, "Okay, this isn't
really free sparring because first I have to teach you some basic combinations.
So please go light because I won't be hitting. I'm just going to block." And
then I suggest specific combinations to them. That usually works, and after a
few lessons, I've built up her confidence in me.
Most women get over
initial nervousness quickly, but a few do not. Hitting, for some women, is
traumatic because they have a lot of emotional associations with hitting others
or with being hit. A woman can be confident in every other way but still dread
hitting, even light hitting, on a deep level. It's a vulnerability, a fear of
humiliation rather than of pain, and I can usually see it in a woman's eyes. So
if I see it, I work around it and train her more carefully.
There was an
English teacher in Greenville who was a local celebrity. She did some acting in
local theater, and she was known for doing Shakespeare recitations and promoting
the teaching of Shakespeare. She was just about five foot four and had reddish
hair and very big, dark eyes. I'd been on the periphery of social and academic
functions where she had been a central figure, and she had deeply impressed me
with her genuine love of Shakespeare and her sincere willingness to talk with
new teachers like me about the best ways to teach 16th century literature. For
being such a small woman, she radiated a definite self possession and focus. In
fact, there was a rumor that one of the men chosen to play opposite to her on
stage had protested that he could not do well playing opposite such a tall
woman. It seemed that her reputation and stage presence had made her bigger than
she actually was.
When I'd met her backstage at Merchant of Venice, I'd
been amazed at how she warmly took me by the hand, asked where I taught, and
thanked me for attending. When I told her that I taught English at a tech
school, I thought she would be unimpressed, but immediately she said, "How do
your students do with Shakespeare?" And she actually listened as I quickly told
her how I got my students involved in Othello and how they responded. We talked
for several minutes about the challenge of teaching Literature to technical
degree students and about the best ways to make literature meaningful to them.
I was very surprised to come to class one night and find her, dressed in
a bulky white uniform, standing with our head instructor at his office door. He
called me over. He introduced her simply as Liz. In the training hall, of
course, everybody below black belt is called by their first name. This woman of
grace and knowledge would call me Miss Massi, and I would call her Liz. I was
suddenly embarrassed.
She didn't recognize me from the one or two social
functions years before when we had spoken briefly. I just told her to warm up
while I changed into my uniform, and then I would teach her.
When I came
back out from the dressing room, she was alone by the mirrors, doing toe touches
the wrong way. She looked up at me, and I saw the familiar expression of both
readiness and faint worry cross her eyes. I honestly wondered why she had signed
up for classes. She was in her late forties by then, a small, petite woman, who
showed no inclination whatsoever to engage in martial arts training.
I
quieted my voice as I approached her. "Well, do you feel warmed up? You look
like you're in pretty good shape."
Eyes big, she nodded and then said
"Yes," out loud. She was nervous. I showed her how to stand in the ready stance.
How to bow. Then I showed her the horse stance and taught her the basic punch.
As I kept my voice quiet, and as I praised her efforts, she gradually lost her
nervousness. I'd done this dozens of times before. But there was a pleasure in
teaching her. As I had already noted, she was intense and focused, and she
learned more quickly than most new students do. As she felt more at ease with
me, she even asked a few questions, her voice also quiet and gentle. I showed
her how to down block, and I showed her the two most basic kicks: the front kick
and the side kick. We did the drill work on them together.
She did well.
She had a lot of coordination and paid attention to what she was doing. Once
again I could see that I was teaching somebody of greater natural ability than I
possessed, but I could also see that she had no mindset whatsoever for tae kwon
do. After thirty minutes, the head instructor pulled her into the regular class
to work with a partner so that I could work with a higher rank student.
After the brief water break, I was told to teach her the basics of free
sparring. That look of fear lit up her eyes when she realized she would have to
fight on her very first night. I instantly became much more soothing in my voice
and deliberate in my gestures. We spent several minutes on the fighting stance
and the proper way to hold one's hands in the guard position. I positioned her
in front of the mirrors so that she could watch herself execute the basic
combinations of front kick, punch, punch. I taught her the all-foot combination
of front kick, side kick. Again, as she realized that this was purely
instructional, she calmed down.
At last, I turned her away from the
mirrors, instructed her to bow to me as I bowed to her, and set her up in the
guard position again. Her eyes were very large now. She was frightened but
determined to do her best.
"Just go easy," I said. "Practice your
combinations."
She was frozen, uncertain. I had to make my voice more
stern. "Kick, Liz. Do as I say. You'll do very well."
And she flicked
out a front kick. It was probably the worst front kick she had thrown all night,
but I said, "That's right. Come on. Take your shots at me. Just stop short of
actually hitting, okay?"
She nodded, eyes still big, and followed me
around, kicking too low. "Higher, higher," I told her as I backed up. I wasn't
overly concerned. I've had women students who need a few lessons before they can
really focus on free sparring.
She was dropping her hands. I nimbly
zipped my hand forward and pulled her near fist higher.
"Oh, sorry," she
gasped.
"Oh, you're doing fine. You know, you can hit harder, just focus
your kicks-" I leaned forward to adjust her other fist and never saw her foot as
it went up in a straight line, right between my legs, from the floor to my
groin.
"Ulp!" was all I said when it hit. My lower insides erupted into
electrical voltage and flames. I fell over, frozen with pain.
She was
terrified. She stared down at me and backed up, concerned but afraid.
Weakness traveled out in a web down my legs and up my abdomen. I nearly
dry heaved. She'd hit me full force with her shin. A groin kick on a man
probably hurts more than a groin kick on a woman, but it still hurts when a
woman is kicked there, especially if the kick comes straight up from below.
Danny Kidd quickly trotted over. "Did you get hit in the leg, Miss
Massi?" In our conservative school, some of the men cannot use the word "groin"
to a woman.
I nodded, unable to speak, and he got me under the shoulders
and pulled me up. Believe it or not, the best way to handle a groin kick is to
stand up and bounce on your feet. If you fall over and stay down, the pain and
cramping get worse.
Poor Liz backed up further as I stood and bounced.
"It's okay," I told her. "My fault. When a black belt gets hit, it's his or her
own fault. I should have been more careful." I bent forward and tried not to
retch, then looked up and smiled at her to show her I was fine. Just fine. Oh
sure.
Mr. Kidd suddenly smiled. "Not the first time, is it?" he asked.
"No." Of course, it was only the second time, and the first had been 12
years ago. But I tried to behave as though it were no significant event.
I straightened up, got my breath back, smiled at her, and said, "Now,
what was I saying?"
But Mr. Kidd clapped his hands, and class ended.
In the dressing room, I had to sit down on the bench before I could take
my uniform off. Liz came in and stared at me for one appraising second. Suddenly
her large dark eyes became contrite and concerned.
Hey! I thought, she's
acting!
"I am so sorry," she said, her voice perfect. She rested her
manicured hand on my shoulder. "Do you think you might be hurt?"
I shook
my head. "Just sore. I'll be fine. I'll be more careful. Don't let it get you
down."
She offered a shy laugh of apology. Still acting, I thought. I
was stunned. She was saying what she thought should be said, what I would expect
her to say. But whatever she really thought was hidden away.
She
rummaged through her things, and I realized that she was embarrassed at what had
happened and was going to get out without changing. In fact, as she gathered up
her bag and clothing, I realized that I was nothing more than an inconvenience
to her. I don't think she was glad that she hurt me, but she wasn't sorry,
either.
This realization didn't anger me, because Liz had been very
gracious and kind to me when we had briefly discussed teaching English, and she
had listened to some of my ideas with great interest and animation. But here, in
the training hall, not realizing that I was somebody she had already met in a
different environment, she did not really view me as a peer. I was a black belt
to her. A big thing who could give and take hits. She'd been afraid of me the
whole time, I thought. And that realization, suddenly, shot humiliation all the
way through me.
"I met you backstage when you did the readings from
Merchant of Venice," I said suddenly, speaking to her back. She turned and
stared at me. "You really helped me understand some of the themes in the play. I
always wanted to thank you for that."
"Well isn't that sweet!" she said.
Still acting. But the statement had caught her off guard. She took a second look
at me, trying to place me, and then she said good night and left. But as she
went out the door, I saw that she was still nervous or afraid. Of course. She
would have to come back and fight me again.
Gingerly, I slipped off my
trousers and checked for blood in my underwear, but there was none. I pulled on
my heavy sweat pants, donned a dry shirt, and packed up my stuff. I replayed
that kick in my mind. Could it have been deliberate? I wasn't angry. I didn't
think that Liz had enjoyed hurting me. I didn't think she was especially grieved
about it, either. But she was a woman of good character. There was a chance that
she had deliberately hit me so hard for a mistaken reason and was now
embarrassed.
The next night was a Wednesday, and the school was closed.
On Thursday, I returned, and Liz was there. Mr. Kidd put us together again. At
sight of me, her eyes again flickered with uncertainty, but it was not as
prominent as it had been.
She did well on basics, and I taught her the
back kick and the round kick. We worked on the blocking techniques. She was then
put with the main class, and I rejoined the black belt line. We were not paired
together, but I could still see her. She did very well, and so Mr. Kidd kept her
in the main class as free sparring started. But he put me across from her. We
bowed in with the other student pairs.
"Okay, nice and easy Liz," I told
her, but I had one eye on her feet. She was still looking at me uncertainly, but
I was more judicious this time. I wanted to know if her fear of me was an act,
too. But it didn't seem to be.
I let her chase me around with kicks, but
they were too low. "Come on," I told. "I'm not counter attacking. Make your
kicks go higher. She nodded and continued exactly as before. Her hands were
dropping.
"Liz--your hands," I said. This time, to be safe, I came to a
complete stop, held up my hand to tell her to stop, and leaned forward to lift
her fist to the proper guard position. Her other hand, open, raked my ear and
the side of my face in a swift, defensive swipe.
"Son of a---" I caught
myself in time and ducked my head to avoid the swipe, but one of her nails still
scratched me. Without thinking, I threw my arm over her swiping arm, pinned the
hand to me, and came down to the floor on my knees. I brought her down with me,
helpless, her arm locked against the elbow and her chest pinned to the floor.
"If you ever do that to me again!" I shouted. "So help me, I'll---" And
then I quickly let her go and jumped away from her. I backed away. I had never
in my life gotten so angry in the training hall. It's a violation of the school
to be angry or to brawl. And it had violated me.
Gasping with surprise
and fear, she stared up at me from the floor but did not dare to move. I wiped
my hand across the side of my face, but there was no blood on my cheek. She had
not scratched me deeply enough.
"Get up!" I exclaimed.
Shaken,
she straightened up on her knees.
"Stand!" I shouted. "Stand up when a
black belt addresses you in this school! Or get out!"
The rest of the
class was still sparring in pairs, and I'm sure that some of them heard me, but
nobody came over or paid attention. It's not polite to stop sparring because of
distractions.
Shakily, she stood up, clearly afraid of me. But I was
furious. She didn't even have a right to be that afraid of me. I had given her
no reason.
I took several deep breaths and calmed down. "Go into the
dressing room," I said. "We have to talk."
She did as I asked. I took
another moment to calm myself., and then I followed.
When I came in, she
was on the bench, and she was bent forward. She was not crying, but she looked
ready to start. I couldn't tell if she was acting or not.
I stayed
standing and looked down at her. "Somebody attack you?" I asked.
She
nodded.
"Your husband?"
"No," she said. "My husband's a good
man."
Panic attacks, I thought. I lost my anger. If there was any place
where this woman did not belong, it was here.
I slowed my breath. After
a long pause, I said gently, "Listen to me When I was a kid, my dad used to beat
me." She looked up at me, startled. I ignored the look. "It was difficult. He
used to call me stupid, too. I grew up believing I was stupid, ugly, and
useless. And I chose to be violent. I was filled with rage. Martial arts
training helped me to calm down. It wasn't a perfect answer. But martial arts
helped me learn to be disciplined. It showed me that people are to be respected
and treated with courtesy." I set my teeth and said the rest. "Including me. I
deserve respect and courtesy."
She looked up at me, and then she looked
down. "I'm sorry."
"This person who attacked you---did he hurt you?"
"Not much. I got away," she said. "It was a near thing."
"Did
you know him?"
"I'd seen him a few times, waiting around backstage. The
police said he was stalking me."
"Why did you come here?"
She
was startled by the question and became defensive, almost hostile. She glared at
me. "People told me to. The police said so."
"Well, you don't take tae
kwon do to hit the people who are teaching you," I told her. "Not when they have
their guard down and are helping you. You don't have to be that afraid of any of
us."
She shot me a look of pure resentment. "You can say that," she told
me, and she looked me up and down from foot to head.
"That's right," I
told her. "My dad beat me because I was big, dumb, and homely. I made it my
advantage. I am big. So I made myself big and strong. I learned the art of war.
You know what?" I was angry now. "It won't work for you. You can cheat as much
as you like, and you can scratch me and kick me in the crotch every day you're
here. And you will still never be big and strong like me."
She was
startled. She stared at me, mouth open. Black belts are supposed to tell you
that martial arts will make you unbeatable. This was a first for her. But I was
telling her the truth. Women who are five foot five and weigh one hundred and
ten pounds and have almost no muscle mass are going to have a struggle to become
formidable fighters. And when they don't even enjoy training, the goal is
impossible. You have to love martial arts training to excel at it. With that
love, you can do anything. Without it, any amount of talent is useless.
"You don't like this," I said.
Her voice rapped out like steel.
"I have to defend myself. Nobody is ever going to do that to me again."
She wasn't acting now. I had said those same words myself about my
abusive father.
"Okay," I said. But I didn't leave. I heard Mr. Kidd
clapping to end the class.
I thought back to the old days, to the
furious rages of my teen age years. I was as surprised as Liz when I heard
myself say it. "You're punishing yourself. Making yourself do something you hate
and that scares you."
She glanced up at me.
"Look, take it from
somebody who's been beat up. Every time you do something because of him, he wins
again. If you punish yourself for not being able to beat him off, he keeps
winning. You need to give this up and go do something you like."
She
stared at me, and I think it was the first time she ever looked at me as a human
being. She was genuinely surprised
Finally she said, "What about self
defense?"
"Find a way," I told her. "Live smarter. Get a dog. Be more
cautious. But this isn't working for you. You're afraid of it, and you're
punishing yourself."
"I really do hate it," she said. "There's nothing
wrong with it. But I don't like it. I feel so out of place."
"Even at
your best, it's going to take a year for you to get any proficiency at self
defense." I heard the men outside dispersing to the water cooler and the men's
dressing room. We'd missed bowing out. "Tae kwon do is devastating. But it's a
big mistake for a woman to think that a few lessons will give her an edge. And
the smaller a woman is, the more training she has to undertake to compensate for
being small and light."
"Nothing really protects us," she said at last,
her voice small and hopeless.
"Nobody gets any guarantees. Not even men.
Anything can happen in a fight."
She looked up at me, silent, and I
looked down at her. I was about to tell her it was still her decision, and I
would help her is she wanted to stick with tae kwon do a little longer. But
suddenly she said, "I really am very sorry I scratched you. I'm sorry."
We didn't say anything else about it. I went out to practice one of my
new black belt forms with Linwood Cisco. But Liz came out of the dressing room
just as I finished. I noticed that she waited at the door, watching for her
husband to come before she ventured outside. So she was already taking steps to
live more cautiously.
We never said anything else about the incident.
But I privately spoke to Mr. Kidd, and I told him that I thought Liz had been
assaulted. Instead of free sparring, I taught her self defense. It was my first
chance to take somebody entirely on my own. I emphasized that old standby of
Shotokan karate: the punch. I wanted Liz to be able to throw a short, powerful
punch. What I wanted most was to teach her to keep hitting until the attacker
went down. I think it's a mistake for a woman to drive a man off and then run.
If he can follow, he will, and he won't be stupid enough on a second attempt to
let her get away again. I taught Liz the palm heel strike, and we worked on that
powerful blow often. It's a terrific, straight line blow that hits with the heel
of the palm. Delivered to the chin or to the nose, it can blind an attacker. And
it's the easiest strike to learn.
I studied books on grappling and
locks, practiced with the other black belts, and then showed her techniques for
escaping holds. She did come to trust me in a professional sense, though we were
still reserved with each other outside of class. But as long as I called the
training self defense, she never showed the fear she had shown when I tried to
teach her to free spar.
The most typical attack on a small woman is to
grab her by the hair, and we practiced getting away from grabs on the hair and
striking back. The next most typical attack (prior to rape) is for the assailant
to rip a woman's shirt off, an instance in which the woman is defeated
psychologically by such a degrading act. Of course I never ripped Liz's shirt
off, but I explained to her the need for psychological coolness, for that virtue
that the Chinese call "detachment." It was then that I realized that a woman
will probably fight better if she views assault as an offense against God even
more than it is an offense against a woman. I came to believe that men who rape
hate God, and rape is their means to deface His divine order in which men are
responsible to guard the dignity of women.
I don't know how much Liz
agreed with my theological spin on things. But I think that talking with her
about the psychology of self defense helped her overcome some of her inner
fears. She had to learn not to take being attacked personally, and I think I
helped her work towards a better mindset.
I think that she came to
respect me. At first, I'd been just a big, strong, loud woman to her. But as I
worked with her, she listened to me, and I could see it in her eyes
that---though she might not choose to pal around with me socially---in class she
was ready to learn from me. In the compartment of her life where she had to deal
with having been assaulted, I was very welcome.
Students pay by the
month, and as her first month came to an end, I knew she would not come back.
Really, I had been training her to leave, not to stay, tacitly showing her how
vast martial arts training really is while trying to provide her with thorough
short term training. It was the best I could do.
We'd only ever made
small talk in the three and a half weeks that had passed since our
confrontation. But that night, as we pulled on our street clothes in the
dressing room and took turns at the mirror to wash up and brush hair, she
suddenly said, "I am very sorry for that time I kicked you."
"I moved
too close?" I asked.
"It's like you said." She had her eyes down on the
wet tunic that she was folding. "I was striking out. I'm sorry. I had no right
to do it." She looked up at me. "I really was frightened. And I was trying to
fight you. Really fight. But I knew you weren't ready for the kick."
I
just nodded and shrugged it off. But she said clearly, "Please, will you forgive
me?"
"Yes," I told her. And then I said, "You know, I've been thinking."
I pulled a slip of paper from my own bag. Before class, I had neatly printed my
name and phone number on it.
I stuffed the paper into her gym bag. "Just
in case you have to go someplace alone. Or if you have to stay by yourself. Call
me in an emergency."
I didn't wait for her to say anything and just
walked out. I was bitterly disappointed that we never would be friends, because
I honestly admired her. I had wanted her to like me. But I also wanted her to be
able to leave Hong's behind. It would always be associated in her mind with
being attacked and her struggle to overcome the first waves of traumatic shock,
fear, and grief that follow an assault.
I went to the office to make a
call. But when I came out, she was by the front door. Waiting.
She
looked at me without any fear or reserve in her eyes, only a sort of
satisfaction, as though she realized that she had found something here that she
had not expected. And she held out her hand to me.
I walked over to her.
"Is your husband coming?"
"Yes." She had talked about her husband
before, and I knew he was a good man who would look after her. She nodded
through the window. "That's him down there."
She turned to me. She set
down her gym bag, lifted her slim hands, and rested them on my shoulders. Her
beautiful eyes lit up, an expression just for me. She looked me full in the
face, and I suddenly realized that she genuinely respected me for what I was,
even though she still didn't really understand it. "Your father was wrong," she
said.
She let me go and then picked up the bag. Mr. Kidd strode from the
office. "You have a good night, Liz!" he called as she walked out. She smiled at
him. Neither of us said anything else, but I knew she would never be back. And I
was glad for her.
Chapter Fifteen
Barry strongly recommended heavy bag training to
me. Now that I had my own key to the school, I decided that I could not advance
until I had learned to kick that heavy bag and make it move.
Ever since
blue belt, I had broken boards on tests. I could break two with a punch, two
with a forearm blow, and two with a flying side kick or even a standing side
kick.
And yet, my kicks lacked consistent focus. And though I could
competently get through aerial kick training in class, I was not good at aerial
kicks. A flying side kick is a kick that advances you forward. You take a
running start at the target, jump off one leg, and kick with the other as you
sail at the target. A jump side kick is a kick that lifts you straight up but
doesn't move you very far forward. You jump with both feet, straight up, tuck
them in, and shoot one out in a classic side kick while you're in the air.
That sounds easy, and it is easy if you have narrow hips and strong
legs. The wider your hips, the less easy that kick is. I was a black belt and
had never really done the kick correctly. I knew that to advance to second
degree I had to show a much better proficiency at the complex, advanced kicks.
People mistakenly think that a first degree black belt is some sort of
master. The first degree, or Shodan, is a mark of proficiency in the basics,
with a show of promise for future development. In Japanese, the term for this
rank literally means "first step." The truth is, genuine, intense instruction in
tae kwon do begins at first degree black belt. Up until then, the student has
merely been learning his letters, so to speak.
Barry helped me when I
started on the bag. I jammed everything on my first kicks. I started with the
side kick, the most basic kick and my best kick. Immediately, because I was not
turning my hip over far enough when I pivoted over to shoot out the kick, I
jammed my ankle and instep when I hit the bag. After ten kicks, I had to sit
down and vigorously rub the ankle and push against it to make it able to bear my
weight.
It was like beginning all over again, and yet I was not
dismayed. Many, many times in tae kwon do I have started all over again. There's
a type of satisfaction in it, because each time I go back to the beginning, I
think, "Now I'm really learning."
I broke down each kick into its
composite stages: lift, tuck, pivot, align heel to the target, shoot. It was
painstaking, but I learned in every session. To develop my ability to lift and
tuck the kicking leg, I would hold onto one of the supporting pillars in the
school, lift the leg to the correct position and hold it for a five count. Then
I would slowly shoot it out and hold it in place, fully extended, for a five
count. I did this until I could hold the kick out, unassisted, in slow motion.
It took weeks to do this.
I read books on training, and I consulted
Barry frequently. Though possessed of excellent fighting skills, Barry never
neglected basic, thorough training. Many young men of great talent get lazy with
it, relying on it, floating by with it. I'm sure that if I had been talented, I
never would have developed very far. But Barry was as keenly interested in
improving as I was, though he was much better.
I would get so
intimidated by the bag that I forgot to relax before striking. I was killing
myself by degrees, from the ankles up. He coached me again, all the way from the
beginning, on staying relaxed until the moment of impact.
And then I
began to make rapid improvement. I kicked the bag in its mid-point, and it swung
back instead of just trembling. I began setting my sights higher and higher up
the bag. I used a square of duct tape as my target. But I practiced only
straight line kicks on the bag: side kick, back kick, jump side, flying side,
jump back kick. Barry recommended that I add hook kicks. He was going through
what I call his hook kick stage, when he used it every time he sparred with
anybody. I told him he was watching too many movies, but I obeyed him.
I
further revised my opinions on self defense for women. First of all, self
defense is nothing but fighting. If anything, it is more genuinely imitating a
real fight than free sparring is. On the street, a woman is not going to go toe
to toe with a man and slug it out like she does in class. In class, we do a lot
of preliminary feinting, faking, bobbing, moving, etc. None of that will apply
on the street. Her life hangs on one explosive kick or hand strike. If that
first blow doesn't work, then her chances of getting a second blow off are
miniscule. Her attacker will have her on the ground and do what he wants with
her. End of story.
Feminism, the more unrealistic branches of it, has
clouded self defense issues. Now it's popular to say that a woman can be as
strong as a man. Oh sure. That's why we now have so many women piano movers. The
truth is, though a woman can be as strong as a man, she'll have to train a lot
harder to be that strong, and there are some men who will always be stronger
than she. Men do have more muscle mass than women. They also put muscle on at a
faster rate than women in identical training situations. That's a fact of life.
When a woman is attacked on the street, unless she's unusually tall like I am
and has spent years in the gym as I have done, it's a sure thing that her
attacker will be stronger than she. And even for me, the chances are still
excellent that he will be stronger.
Proclaiming that women are as strong
as men and that they have the same emotional outlook on violence is dangerous,
and it victimizes women. Maybe, in the long term, violence has the same
emotionally devastating impact on both men and women. But women tend to be
emotionally devastated by it from the moment it occurs. The biggest danger to a
woman when she is being made prey is that she'll keep denying it to herself,
that she'll hold off on making a decisive first strike because she's telling
herself this isn't really happening to her. The next greatest danger is that she
won't hit hard enough when she does hit, or that she won't keep pounding an
assailant until he's truly incapacitated.
I began to develop my own view
of self defense for women. Assaults always end up on the ground. They start
upright, but they end with her prone. A woman has to react before she goes down,
and that means a fast, hard initial blow. Once she's down, it's a matter of
being able to grapple with her opponent. And that's a different martial art. We
do incorporate a very small amount of grappling in our classes now, but tae kwon
do is mostly about kicks and punches. And a brave spirit.
This
realization actually freed me up. I had started to dislike sparring in class. It
really doesn't matter to me if I can beat somebody or not. My quest as I
approached the second degree was personal excellence. But now with understanding
of what really happens in a fight, I felt freed, able to be comfortable with my
own preferences. I still respected sparring as a teaching tool and as part of
the necessary instruction of tae kwon do. Nothing can replace it for its ability
to develop certain skills. For one thing, the psychological skills it gives a
woman are incredible. The only way she'll learn coolness and decisiveness on the
street is through sparring. It also teaches quick reactions, the most vital
physical component of self defense. But, especially for women, sparring is bone
jarring, emotionally intense, and gets her a lot more bruises than her male
counterparts.
And in many ways, sparring is a fantasy world. It only
shows how good you are at sparring. In fact, Billy Hong was a great example of
this. When he really fought for what counted, he ended the fight with his first
strike. He did not keep things going.
I turned my focus to single,
explosive kicks and hand strikes. De-emphasizing combinations in order to
emphasize an explosive single blow would forever hamper me in free sparring, but
I believed that it made me more competent to handle real situations. I still
sparred, of course, but it surprised Mr. Kidd and even Barry to find me a lot
less concerned about it, even when I stopped improving in toe-to-toe fighting
skills. We sparred in every class, but to save myself for the intensive training
that I liked, I would fight hard only once a week. The rest of the classes, when
we sparred, I spent avoiding blows, dodging, going light. Not only was I tired
of being hit, I did not want to hit people any more, not even to make them
improve.
The one skill that I did want to develop was the ability to
move to the side rather than to retreat straight back in sparring. This is a
weakness of mine. But there were so many other things to work on that I had to
put that skill on hold.
But as the months passed, my single kicks
improved, especially the straight line kicks. Now when I hit the heavy bag, it
jumped, and the chains jingled, a sign that the kicks were focused and not just
strong. Barry's lessons on staying relaxed to the moment of impact were paying
off. My back kick, which had always been difficult for me, became my most
powerful kick. I'd hit the forty-five pound bag with it and make it fly all
over, dancing crazily on its chains. I felt powerful, competent, and sure of
myself. I was ready to test for second.
Chapter Sixteen
I have a great deal of respect for the men who have
trained me. But I do get annoyed with them, and I often sense that they are
blind to certain differences between the two genders. One thing that men
miss---especially well meaning, kind hearted men---is a woman's ability to
endure long term stress well, and the needs she will have for emotional rest and
recovery.
A woman who is committed to doing what she believes in can
take one hard pounding from her adversaries. Throughout history, women have
sacrificed themselves for others. If you don't know the names of Mother Theresa,
Amy Carmichel, Edith Cavell, Gladys Ayleward, and Florence Nightengale, then
your training in courage is not complete. Their courage is on a par with the
likes of Miyamoto Musashi and Robert E. Lee. But rather than turn to war and
destruction, they turned to the saving of life and the preserving of human
dignity. And Edith Cavell was executed for her heroism, and she faced death with
calm integrity.
I settled down to studying the psychology of attack and
defense and how women react to threat and danger. In the psychology of battle,
we are completely different than men, far more complex. And men who mistreat
women will mistreat them to generate a breakdown in the woman's emotions. It's
this simple: if a man really wanted only to kill or subdue a woman, he would
poison her and get away with it. But a cruel man has to see a woman suffer.
Seeing her anguish and emotional reaction is the fulfillment for him. So he's at
the scene of the crime, with the weapon in his hand.
This realization,
of course, opened all sorts of new avenues of thought for me about self defense
situations. It also showed me that fighting is far more emotional for women than
it is for men. Granted, we don't have the same burden of ego riding on it. But
it's still a stress situation.
I believe that women who train hard in
martial arts that are explosive need to cultivate their recovery times. Young
women, especially, often try to go from "fight to fight" as they seek to build
themselves up to competition level. This is like thinking that by going from
"stress to stress" you will make yourself endure stress better, and that is not
true. To attain the calm mind needed for really good explosive fighting, a woman
needs to practice calmness and give her mind emotional rest and recovery.
I rescued my cat Rubin (a female, by the way) when she was just a
kitten, I found her dead mother and a litter mate in the woods, each shot
through the head. The bullet intended for Rubin had probably missed her, and she
had escaped. She never meowed once in all her life, and from the first day that
I brought her home, wrapped up in my sweater, she devoted herself to me.
For the first week, she followed me from room to room, and when I would
sit down to read or attend to my work, she would sit down and watch me. When I
noticed that she was in the room, I would speak to her and call her over. Only
then would she come, gentle and shy. With a nervous little trill in her throat,
she would leap onto the other end of the sofa and come closer. And as I would
speak to her and stroke her back, she would climb onto my lap, suddenly purring,
and then all at once stretch out and fall asleep on me, deeply content. She was
a gentle black and white cat, who never would wrestle with my hand or "play
rough" with me. If she was indoors at night, she slept in the niche between my
arm and my body, and she was the only cat I ever owned who came to me every
single time I called her.
About a year after she joined me, a pack of
dogs took to running through the neighborhood at night. They pulled a cat to
pieces practically on my doorstep, and I was very worried for Rubin. But she was
incensed against these invading dogs. And she set out on a vigilant mission to
destroy them. This was a side of Rubin I had never seen. But every martial
artist knows that the gentle and loyal heart, if it finds a just cause for war,
is more terrible in battle than a band of hardened thieves. Be wary of those who
believe all the way down to the core that they *must* fight.
Her
technique was good. While the dog hesitated at sight of her, she ran up his
muzzle onto his back as far as the whithers and dug her teeth and claws into
him, right where the nerves were most exposed. She could cling like a leech. And
the fight always ended the same way: the dog tearing down the street, howling in
pain, with Rubin grimly clinging with all her strength to his back. This
five-pound cat, who would not so much as bat at my hand, maintained a rule of
terror over a huge great dane that lived down the street. He would start howling
as soon as he saw her. And the French poodle next door stayed inside day and
night. If Rubin ventured outside, he would watch her through the front window
and never take his eyes off of her.
Morning after morning, Rubin came
home with great tufts of fur pulled from her shoulders and nicks in her ears. I
tried to keep her in at night, but I lived with other people, and she got wise
to me. She would slip out in the afternoons when somebody opened the door and
would not come in again until next day.
But she won. After about four
weeks, the pack either broke up or chose to stay out of her territory. I never
saw them again.
And I learned something during the weeks that Rubin was
at war. She had a definite method of recovery from a fierce battle.
First, she would enter the house, adorned with her gashes, and would
inspect the place to make sure it was secure. No dogs hiding anywhere. Under the
vet's advice I didn't touch the wounds but watched for signs of infection, but
they never did become infected. Rubin would eat and drink, and then wash. Her
morning groomings after war were extensive and meticulous, even for a cat. I
knew that it was her instinctive way of checking for injury and verifying that
all was well throughout herself. Also, for a cat, a good washing is in itself
reassuring and comfortable, a nice bath and a massage as well. And finally,
grooming from top to tail was a quiet stretching exercise for her, as well as a
subtle display of her beauty. And Rubin, gentle and loving and devoted, was also
tremendously pleased with her own beauty.
She next found a quiet,
sheltered place to sleep. In days of peace, she would sleep anywhere, but after
a night of battle, she would go to a "safe" and silent place, usually under a
chair in the front room, away from the television---which was in the back room.
For her first couple hours of sleep, she would sleep curled up. This never
varied, and I have never seen it vary in any cat who has encountered stress.
During the first stage of "recovery" sleep, the cat assures itself that it has
survived the battle. The curled up posture helps it "feel its body" and know
that it is physically safe and intact.
After two to four hours, Rubin
would move elsewhere. Sometimes she would just come out from under the chair and
stretch out on her side. At other times she would come silently into a room
where I might be working, if I was being quiet, and she would stretch out on the
floor near me. In lying full length, she was coming in contact with her
environment, assuring herself of its safety and that it was also still intact.
And so she would sleep that same deep sleep of the first stage, but this time
stretched out.
After one to four hours, she was ready for the more
indolent type of dozing, reflection, and affection that cats engage in as
recreation. She would seek me out to get some lap time or attention. At this
point, she was out of "recovery" and was being a peace-time cat again. She would
tuck her paws under her chest and snooze on my lap for a while, eyes closed,
lifting her black, spade-shaped head as I tickled her white chin and throat.
Though she never meowed, she purred well, and my attentions were always rewarded
with the rich, honest sound of her contentment. Like all cats, she enjoyed and
cultivated my understanding that she was the most beautiful creature in the
world. Every now and then she would open her eyes and gaze up at me,
communicating her happiness with me. The next battle did not worry her at all;
she was gifted in enjoying the moment. She did not look ahead.
One
mistake against a pack of dogs would have been her last. And yet Rubin recovered
fully between battles and was always ready for the next (though she did choose
the nights that she would fight). Cats adhere strictly to the principles of
staying relaxed. And yet they are unrivaled in their ability to spring into
sudden, vigorous action.
What I noticed for my own benefit was that
Rubin instinctively gave herself time to pass through stages and levels of rest.
I'm not sure what the human equivalent is to a cat's rest cycle after battle,
but I'm sure that there is one. The components that I noted were these:
meticulous care of herself, for she herself was her only weapon against the
dogs; an appreciation of her own abilities and limitations and how to best
accommodate them; an understanding of where she was safe; a capacity to
tremendously enjoy certain simple and quiet pleasures that relaxed her and made
her feel secure and refreshed; an ability to discard all thoughts of war after
she was rested and partake in the more meaningful interactions of life (being
petted and admired, and chasing ping pong balls that I threw for her).
Chapter Seventeen
Women were a minority at Hong's. But we did have
several women black belts. As I ascended up to second degree, Melissa Edwards
returned to training. She was already second degree black, newly married, and
her husband Calvin had signed up to start classes.
Calvin Edwards was a
man after my own heart. Nearsighted and lightweight, he lacked the superior
coordination of truly gifted people. But he threw himself into training. He was
a man who demonstrated to me the concept of a genuinely Christian love for his
wife and for others. Melissa had suffered a hard life, and she was a tough
looking little woman. Under Calvin's care, she had bloomed and softened. I think
her greatest tribute to him was her studied imitation of his kindness and
hospitality.
They became pillars of the school: ready to encourage,
ready to help new students, examples of intense training, and ready to go to
Ryan's and eat. Without ever becoming a formal thing, Calvin and Melissa started
meeting with other Christians from the school at Ryan's after Tuesday night
classes. The discussion focused on Christ, and we would have short prayer before
the meal.
Lynn Forrester also returned to class. She was third degree
black preparing for fourth. Lynn was a great example to me of why my reasoning
about free sparring was correct. She had trained under Billy Hong and gotten her
black belt from him. Never willing to give an inch or admit that a man might be
stronger than she, she had suffered broken ribs, broken teeth, broken wrists and
neck injuries from fighting so hard. Her neck was so damaged that more than one
surgery had to be performed on her to give her more mobility. Even so, she could
no longer do back spin kicks at all. She was still tremendously strong. The
years had mellowed her, and she was a patient person now, past 40. But I looked
at her record of injury and her current physical limitations, and I knew I had
to pace myself better. I simply wanted to last longer.
Mrs. Roberts, or
Caroline, had reached her second degree black belt and was holding at that fixed
point. She had always been wise about pacing herself. Carrie Roberts was a
tremendous waiter in a fight. Her favorite trick against me was to pull up the
foot and cock it. Unfailingly, I would react too soon and block through empty
air, and then she would kick me. But I learned from her that a sparring match
does not have to be a slugfest. Brains play a role. Waiting to pick the best
shots is a tremendous skill.
We all shared our experiences with each
other. Any woman in the martial arts has encountered men who are too rough with
her or who get pleasure out of humiliating her. They don't last long at Hong's,
but sometimes they slip through the initial screening.
We got one young
fellow named Mark who had gotten into college on an athletic scholarship.
Muscular, compact, and skilled, he joined with another young man named Michael.
Mark behaved well with me. I was five inches taller and could move well
enough to keep tapping him with light kicks as we sparred. But after he'd been
in class for a few weeks, he slammed one of the lower ranked women with a hard
kick that threw her into the wall. I didn't see it, but the young woman told me
afterward. I suggested that she complain to Mr. Kidd, but she didn't want to.
The next time we all trained together, Mark was not assigned to spar
with a woman, though he sparred with five or six different men. That was
unusual, and I was actually naive enough to think it was a coincidence. But I
had my eye on him, and during self defense practice, I saw him practice a take
down on a woman and fling her to the floor, almost full force. Even throwing a
man is risky, and it's important to throw people with restraint, making sure
that they land safely.
The next night, after the partners' session, Mr.
Kidd brought out the punching pads. These were hard, rubberized pads of great
density that had little spring to them. Years ago, Mr. Hong had purchased them
from a speedboat manufacturer. They were part of the shock system on boats.
They were cut into one foot by one foot pads. Each man holds a pad flat
against his own stomach, and his partner punches the pad full strength. This
exercise teaches the ability to take a punch as well as strengthening the
stomach muscles. It also teaches a man that there's more to taking a punch than
good muscles. He has to learn to expel his breath as he's hit, and to meet the
punch with spirit.
Women at Hong's were discouraged from using the pad
training because the old teachers in Korea believed it would ruin female
fertility. But I had done "hit" training in Shotokan, with no pad. So I
understood the concept.
The hard rubber pad afforded some protection to
the man being hit, but not much. Barry could drop just about any man in the
school with a single punch through the pad. The exceptions were Mr. Kidd, Mr.
Roberts, and our brown belt student from the morning class, Willy. Willy was the
skinniest man I had ever seen, and he was deeply embarrassed about his inability
to put on weight. But he could take thirty punches through the pad from Barry.
He would disparage himself for being so skinny and weak, and I would say, "I
wish I could be that weak!" Thomas, our visiting red belt, was determined to be
able to last thirty punches like Willy could, and there were some sessions when
he did, and some when he did not.
On that particular night, Mr. Kidd
brought out the punching pads and gave them to Mark and Michael. Then he called
over Melissa Edwards and me. He set the two young men with their backs against
the wall and the pads across their stomachs.
"This teaches you how to
take a punch," he said. He explained to them how they should tense to meet each
blow. They nodded. "Melissa, Jeri," he said. "Twenty hits each and then switch
with each other and give them twenty more." I had Michael first, and Melissa had
Mark. We both knew what Mark had done.
I told Michael to warn me if I
hit too hard, but Melissa just started hitting Mark through the pad.
Michael, a high school senior with a good build and a history of
wrestling behind him, had at first smiled with open and cheerful condescension
when I warned him, but after the first eight hits on the pad, he was gray around
the eyes and asked me to ease up a little. I did, and I slowed the cadence so
that he could re-set his breath and muscles between each punch.
When I
had finished, he nodded and thanked me. He was embarrassed and a little
confused, which is normal. Many men are unused to the idea that a woman could
drop them to the floor with a punch.
Mark had not done nearly as well as
Michael. But there was no way Mark was going to tell Melissa that she was
hitting too hard. He was pasty-faced and sullen when Melissa and I switched. I
did tell Mark that I would go easy if he needed me to, but he mutely shook his
head. One of the black belt men came up to me and said, "Your punching is really
good. But twist more from the hip. Really sink it!"
"Yes sir!"
I
sank it all right. Mark took four from me through the pad and his knees gave
out. I stepped back.
"I ate something that disagreed with me," he said.
He ran to the men's room.
"Mark, where are you going?" Mr. Kidd called.
"He ate something at dinner that upset his stomach, sir," I called back
as Mark disappeared into the men's room.
"Okay, if you ladies are
finished, go get you some water and then line up for forms," Mr. Kidd told us.
Not another word was said about the pad training. Until the next night.
Again, after the partners' drill session, the pads came out, and Melissa and I
were called over. This time, Mr. Kidd put me against Mark first, and Melissa
against Michael.
"Now, you tell me if I hurt you," I said, my voice
sincere. And I was sincere. All he had to do was ask me to ease up. I would.
He gave a jerk of his head to tell me to go ahead, and I slammed him
through the pad. "One!" I yelled.
I jerked the hip the other way and
slammed him with the left. "Two!"
He was already caving in. I could see
it in his eyes. I hit him again through the pad. "Three!" And then again with
the left. "Four!" I shouted. I even went slow with him. I knew I had incredibly
strong punches, and I knew he couldn't take twenty from me.
He'd figured
out how to cheat. He eased the pad out from his stomach. I pushed it back.
"Don't do that or you'll never learn," I said. And then I slammed him again.
He gave out somewhere between six and eight. He was gray around the
eyes. He staggered to the men's room. When he came out, he told Mr. Kidd that he
had to be somewhere, and he left with his clothes. I knew he would never be
back.
As everybody got water, Mr. Roberts asked Mr. Kidd why Mark had
left early.
"Oh he had some place to go," Mr. Kidd said. I was standing
behind them, and Mr. Kidd didn't know I was there. "Yes Phil," he said to Mr.
Roberts. "We got to teach these young men to be tough." He paused and then said,
with just the faintest hint of humor in his voice, "You know, so our women'll
stop beating them up." And then they both chuckled with quiet, sneaky chuckles.
The punching pads were put away. I was never called upon again to teach
anybody to take a punch. And neither was Melissa. Mr. Kidd never said a word
about the incident. And I never mentioned it to him. But my respect for his
wisdom had just gone up yet another notch.
When Melissa, her husband
Calvin, and I met at Ryan's that night, Melissa and I talked about it. Calvin,
like most gentle and secure men, was amazed to think that a young man would have
been using smaller and lighter girls for target practice. He had been oblivious
to the whole problem until we told him. Calvin was too generous to criticize
Mark for being unable to ask a woman to hit more lightly. All he said was,
"Well, I had a lot of growing up to do when I was only 18!"
But Calvin's
complete lack of perception of a problem was pretty typical. It's a cliche to
complain about men being insensitive. In looking at how kind hearted and good
men at Hong's have so often missed behavior problems, I would have to say that I
think that it's not insensitivity, but lack of perception. I think that when a
man is beyond being a bully or a tyrant, he's slow to see it in others. Men seem
to find a comfortable niche of thinking that everything is all right, and subtle
clues that things are going wrong have about as much effect on them as a
butterfly's wings on a buffalo. They need a pretty clear message to wake up and
start correcting matters.
Because of this lack of perception, I've
learned that I need to solve my own problems. Not long after Mark, we got a
student from Switzerland. We called him "The Goose" because he cut his hair so
that it radiated out from his head like the quills on a gosling. He had studied
soft style kung fu and was pretty good at it, but not good enough to use it on
men of his strength. So he practiced it on the smaller girls. Against their
will. He would force them backwards to the ground in sparring or throw them
down. He hurt one small girl by bending her too far backwards before she
collapsed under him.
Before Mr. Kidd found out about what was going on,
I was put against the Goose in sparring. He had been getting better in his
skills against the smaller girls, and I knew from his face that he was going to
try his kung fu stuff on me. I was anxious about this. I figured that he
probably would get me down to the floor, but I'd promised myself that I would
use a scissors kick from the floor or a leg sweep to take him down as well.
We both bowed in and played a waiting game. I was too smart to rush into
his hold. Finally, he leaped straight up and came right down onto me, his hands
on my shoulders. I'd never yet correctly thrown a jump back kick, not even on
the heavy bag.
But that was when I threw my first one. And it was really
solid. It hit him just above the rim of his protective cup, in his extreme lower
abdomen. Technically, that's still considered a groin shot, and I was mortified
with myself. Hitting somebody in the groin is the domain of white belts, not
black belts. Of course, he had been jumping, and he had been forcing me down, so
that hampered the kick.
It threw him right to the floor. He rolled back
and forth in agony. I actually was sorry. I'd been ready to hit him hard if he
tried to take me down, but I had not intended to hit him in an illegal target.
Because the Goose was always talking about kung fu and showing it off
before class, he was always rolling around, so when the instructor that night
saw him rolling around, he yelled at him to get up. I called back up to the
teacher that I had hit the student below the belt. Every woman in the class
smiled. I thought they were laughing at me.
After class, in the dressing
room, they congratulated me for having put him down so solidly.
"Come
on," I said. "That's an illegal kick!"
"So what!" Caroline Roberts
exclaimed. "He picks on the new girls and the little girls. He got just what he
deserved!" Melissa was there, and she agreed.
The others agreed, and so
I shut my mouth. The next night, the Goose tried his kung fu on one of our best
black belts, a man of tremendous size and speed, and when he closed too quickly,
he got a black eye. That finished the lesson I had started, and the Goose
learned not to crowd his opponent in a fight. Grappling an opponent who does not
want to grapple takes some skill. A few weeks later, the Goose went back to
Switzerland, and we bid him a fond farewell, but everybody was relieved. The men
thought he was accident prone, and the women thought he was a nuisance.
Chapter Eighteen
I earned my second degree black belt when I was 32. A
friend video taped the test. For the first year after I earned the belt, I was
always glad to watch the tape of myself. I demonstrated the kicks, did the
required forms, performed two lower rank forms to show that I was still current
on everything, sparred several times, and sparred two on one. And, of course, I
broke some boards. I was proud of my accomplishment.
But there came a
point where I was not so satisfied. The kicks began to look shoddy to me, and
the sparring seemed slow, and I looked like I had no real sense of timing.
So after about another year, I put the tape away. I realized that I had
a lot more work to do.
But in the first glow of my accomplishment, I was
still faithfully attending classes, especially the morning, "Barry's Buddies,"
classes. Betty had dropped out, but Willy still attended. Our young, former
soccer player Bruce was preparing for his first degree brown belt test, and
Thomas was preparing to test for his black belt from Warren Elseman' school.
Thomas had invited Barry to come to Elseman' school on Saturdays. The
young men who were the best fighters would train together and then spar with
each other for an hour or more. Elseman had allowed Barry to attend, but as the
fights got hotter and hotter, he actually encouraged the visits. Certainly,
Barry gave the black belts there excellent contest, and sharpened their skills.
And Elseman' top fighter, Bobby, was just good enough to really challenge Barry.
The rivalry could have gotten out of hand, but even as the two men got more and
more competitive with each other, they liked and respected each other more and
more.
Barry would sometimes come to a Tuesday morning class, look at me
with chagrin in his wide, dark eyes and say, "That Bobby, he really tagged me
one on Saturday. That boy's pretty good!" And I could just see him thinking and
plotting for the next match.
We all critiqued Thomas in class, to help
him, and Barry tailored the classes for what Thomas would need to do for his
test.
Thomas invited the whole Buddies gang to come to Elseman's school
for the test. He didn't know the time, even up to the last week before the test
itself, but he promised to call as soon as he knew.
The Thursday before
the test, Barry called me up, and he said, "Thomas' test is scheduled for two."
"Okay, Buddy, I'll be there," I told him.
Well, at two o'clock
on Saturday, I was amazed to see that there were no cars parked in front of
Elseman' school. I pulled up and parked, went up to the double doors of the
school, and opened one of them. It was unlocked. I stepped inside.
I had
never been inside Elseman' school, and for a moment I just glanced around, like
anybody does in a new place. I checked my watch. It was ten until two. Surely
they should be here by now. The people testing would need a good half hour to
stretch and warm up.
There were folding chairs by the door, and I sat
down and waited. It didn't make sense. The door was open. So why was nobody
inside?
I sat there for fifteen minutes, but nobody came. Surely it had
been canceled or postponed. I had no idea why the door had been unlocked.
I stood up and threw my glance to the wall to my left, and then I saw
it. Mr. Hong's black belt.
For a moment, I just stared at it. I
recognized it at once, the black faded to gray from years of his sweat and toil.
I looked outside. The parking lot was empty, and the building was set so
far off the road that nobody had seen my car. Nobody knew I was there. Barry, of
course, might know because he had told me to come here at two. But I was pretty
sure that if I stole that belt and returned it to Mrs. Hong, Barry would ask me
no questions and would keep his mouth shut.
I stared so hard at that
belt that my eyes watered. This was the chance of a lifetime. I could take the
belt, anonymously leave it at Mrs. Hong's house, and restore everything to its
rightful order.
I really almost did it. Even the remote possibility of
consequences didn't concern me. Just to give it back to her satisfied me. And I
knew that many people from Hong's would be glad that it had been done. We all
thought that she should have her late husband's belt.
But the command,
"Thou shalt not steal," is something that really admits no exceptions or
mitigating factors. I wrestled with this for a moment. But what really settled
it for me, was remembering Mr. Kidd telling us that Elseman was his friend, and
he expected us to treat Elseman as his friend. I knew that stealing the belt
back would displease Danny Kidd. In fact, it would distress him because it would
open up a new rift between the schools.
I made myself turn away, and I
wouldn't let myself think with any