Monday, 22 February 2016
WOW!
It's been 2 days, my face is sore from the giant smile plastered across it since Saturday evening. Congratulations to my fellow candidates, to Sifu's Regier, Vantuil, and Csillag and also to Mr. Sollinger for a well earned student of the year.
Having watching from the sidelines, and being part of and performing in several ceremonies I have to say this was the most emotional that I have experienced.
I huge thank you to everyone for all their efforts for the day not to mention all of the time spent in the days and weeks prior planning and preparing for the day.
It's been 2 days and I'm still excited, feeling more and more that this is where my training really begins.
See you on the mats!
Scott Fuhr
http://scottfuhr.blogspot.ca
http://flavors.me/scottfuhr
http://www.silentriverkungfu.ca
Aristotle said “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."
Sunday, 7 February 2016
What I've taken from this year is immense. As I reflect on all I've accomplished this year it appears that I've done more than I originally thought, I guess that's the point of keeping track.
One thing just came to me today. I was in a Lion since before I was in the I Ho Chuan, but not this year, which is disappointing. Although I'm no busier than I was before, the timing of my schedule is what has kept me from being in a lion this year. Maybe next year it will work out.
The year is over now, but I'm not going to look at it as an ending, it's a new beginning. I am not going to be on the Monkey team but I'm still going to take advantage of the tools I have received and used while I was in the I Ho Chuan. We will see what the future holds, maybe I will see some of you on the 2017 Chicken team.
Scott Fuhr
http://scottfuhr.blogspot.ca
http://flavors.me/scottfuhr
http://www.silentriverkungfu.ca
Aristotle said “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."
Tuesday, 26 January 2016
During my short stint in San Sou I got the opportunity to train at the Ging Wu in Edmonton in traditional San Sou by a San Sou judge and competitor. I believe it was Sifu Greg, and anyone that was there please correct me if I'm wrong. He came up from Calgary and put a "Training Session" together that was very well done and fun. We went thru the rules, the scoring, the ring and some basic but effective moves. It was done to hopefully generate some more interest in the sport in the west. We were there for several hours and, at the end, got to compete against some students from other schools.
Now if you've been in a SRKF tournament and have sparred you know it can get intense and that's with people you know, who hopefully, aren't there to hurt anything but your ego a little. Well that's what I expected when the competing was about to start. There were 2 things that stuck out in my mind, #1 the first 2 people up were Sifu Tymchuk and another guy roughy his size, and I believe Sifu Tymchuk was a Blue belt at that time but I can't recall as we weren't wearing belts so I'm not sure of the other guys rank either. It was supposed to be light controlled contact with emphasis on the clean take downs and getting your opponent out of the ring and scoring points for such. Well it didn't start out that way, it was like 2 bulls smashing into each other and swinging. It rocked the second floor of the Ging Wu training space and set the tone for the rest of the matches. That was # 1 number 2 was when my 1st opponent, who let me know earlier he was a "white belt", did a flying kick at my head in the first second and was nearly successful. Obviously he had loads of training, after that near miss I didn't let him breath, I just kept moving forward kicking, punching, pushing. At one point I could feel his frustration and considered backing off a little but after nearly having my head kicked off, I just couldn't. There was so much more but those 2 things keep coming to mind.
It was during this training that I came to the conclusion I don't like going to the ground. If a clean takedown put my opponent on the ground, no problem, but if might end up on the ground with him I let go and kept striking.
This blog was supposed to go in a different direction but seemed to come easy so I went with it.
To be continued...
Scott Fuhr
http://scottfuhr.blogspot.ca
http://flavors.me/scottfuhr
http://www.silentriverkungfu.ca
Aristotle said “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."
Sunday, 17 January 2016
So now I'm coaching 2 sports and at times on 2 different teams with much less qualifications than many other parents, you are not allowed to coach either of these sports without being certified, which involves a couple of weekends and or evenings of classroom training depending on the level you would like to coach. You need a record check, first aid, respect in sport(which is different for each sport) and in hockey, a specific sports injury first aid. No wonder it's hard to find coaches. So, no problem I do it all. A lot of time put in before I even hit the ice or a diamond. None of this may seem relevant to Kung Fu but it's part of "My Balancing Act".
Now after 3 months of training out of the Kwoon I returned, not as polished, but not having to relearn anything because even tho I was no longer registered I kept on practicing. Right back to working hard so I can catch back up to a few of the people I had been training with before my absence. This is the point where I joined the San Sou, and started to attend Tuesday's also. One more evening away from my family. At this point I don't think I'm missed that much because the kids go to bed shortly after I leave for class. Plus I incorporated them into some of my training. They would sit on my back for push-ups and on my feet for sit-ups. Also, as kids do, they would copy me as I did forms.
To be continued...
Scott Fuhr
http://scottfuhr.blogspot.ca
http://flavors.me/scottfuhr
http://www.silentriverkungfu.ca
Aristotle said “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."
Saturday, 9 January 2016
Rewind back to classes, at this point, I am really wishing that I would have kept better track of what I was doing and when. So I'm working thru the Orange curriculum and enjoying every second. I'm getting lots of time at home with family, life is good.
When you have kids, you want them to have fun, be active and hopefully find something that they are passionate about. Anytime you have to push them to do something they don't want to it becomes a struggle for everyone involved. They are still little at this point point so you put them in activities you think they might like, the majority started by 18:00 and were done by 19:30. Kathryn started dance and T-ball, James just T-ball. None of these activities interfered with Kung Fu because they were early or were on opposite days. Worked for me so still didn't miss many classes.
That quickly changed, the next fall hockey needed an assistant coach and that conflicted with my classes but only occasionally so still good, just more rushed. That spring tho while still running around with hockey, baseball starts and they also need help and coaches and that spring I left Kung Fu for 3 months. There was just no way to coach and make it to class in time, they were on the same days. Sifu Brinker was not really excited about that fact, probably believing I wouldn't return. Well...still here.
To be continued...
Scott Fuhr
http://scottfuhr.blogspot.ca
http://flavors.me/scottfuhr
http://www.silentriverkungfu.ca
Aristotle said “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."
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