Some Views on Martial Art Training in Muncie, Indiana

I originally posted this in March of 2012. I’ve edited it just a bit and am resharing it with a (hopefully) new batch of readers.


Which is more different, our art or our philosophy?

The last time that I counted, there were something like twelve martial art schools in Muncie. That’s a lot, don’t you think? In this article, I’ll tell you exactly what I think of the other schools in town. Now, there are several ways for me to speak: as a martial artist, as a business owner, and as a man who wants the people in his town to be happy, healthy and strong. I’ll use all three voices before I’m done.

What kinds of martial art schools do we have here in Muncie?

There is traditional Okinawan Karate, American Karate, Korean Tae Kwon Do, American Tae Kwon Do, Jujitsu, and of course Kuk Sool Won™. In addition to Asian martial arts, there is boxing and the revived Western martial arts of fencing and combat sportsmanship. Of course, wrestling is in all of the high schools, not to mention gymnastics (which began as strength and agility training for Greek martial artists).

Historically, martial art school owners have not been on friendly terms with each other. You may have seen the old kung-fu movies where there are rivalries among different schools, and they end up fighting in the streets. That might be an exaggeration of our situation, but it is kind of the way things used to be in Asia. And of course, the different cultures (and countries) have old prejudices against each other. Unfortunately, these prejudices are alive and well in the martial art world.

As I have mentioned before, all of the other schools in the area teach arts that have very different content from ours. I have also mentioned that many (probably the majority) of them focus on tournament competition. We do not.

Now, it may surprise you to know that I do not consider myself to be in competition with other martial art schools in town. I choose not to compete for the same small “piece of the pie” that martial art school owners typically vie for. My marketing efforts are spent inducing people to look to us for fitness training, family activities, life-lessons, and camaraderie. I do not focus solely on those who might be looking for martial art training.

Even so, Muncie has about 70.000 people. If all Asian Martial Art Schools in Muncie had 100 active students in our schools (probably more than any of us have at the moment) then that would be only about 1.7% of the population engaged in martial art training. If that’s the best that we can do as an industry, then we should just pack it in and go work at McDonald’s.

But it’s not the best we can do. We have lessons to teach in awareness, fitness, self-defense, compassion, and confidence from which everyone can benefit. I think if we had 25% to 40% of our city’s population (28,000 people) actively training in martial arts, things would turn around drastically in our society.

Questions:

Can that many people train at my school?

No.

Would they all be happy with my martial art and teaching style?

No.

Do I want to have 24,000 personal students?

Heck no.

Am I willing to do the work necessary to train that many people if no one else steps up?

Absolutely.

The truth is that I need the other martial art school owners in town for my vision to be accomplished. Regardless of how they see the situation, they are my allies and I will continue to treat them as such and value their contributions. My conviction and belief is that if we stand together collectively to combat the ills that our society faces, we can teach people to change their lives. If we can put aside the prejudice and bickering that are endemic to martial art practice (and I suppose to humanity as a whole) we can accomplish much more than one small school by itself.

So, if you like what you read from me, and are interested in training, click on the Introductory Program link above. If not, please take a trial class at another school in the area (they should all have them). We can gain so much from martial art training that it would be a tragedy not to train at all simply because you didn’t like the atmosphere or style taught at a particular school.


More on competition and other stuff next week. Thanks for reading!


Posted

in

by

Tags:

Comments

Agree? Disagree? Want more information? Let me know.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.