I still remember my first class in Karate. I had worn a black
track suit and had gone to Cricket Club Of India (C.C.I) to train. Years have
gone by and all the moments have been blissful.
Between 1970 - 1980 the martial art fever had hit India with
movies of The Dragon (Bruce Lee), Jackie Chan and numerous other Chinese
martial art movies being shown at theaters. The movies had influenced me too
and I had started jumping, kicking and breaking lots of things at home at the
age of 4. One Sunday I was going for dinner with my parents and we happened to
meet Shihan Vispy Kapadia at the restaurant. He was known to my parents and in
due conversation the idea of me joining his classes came up. The coming
Wednesday I had started training in Goju - Ryu Karate. In those days the
training was very hard. If 100 students joined a class there would be barely 25
left by the time the batch reached green belt. In those days the belt system
was smaller so we had white I, white II, yellow then green. In just climbing 3
belts up most students would run away. After every class you would come home
with the body strained and exhausted. I feel the general population also was
tougher then.
It is impossible to mention all the Sensei's (instructors)
that have taught me and influenced me as a martial artist. However I value all
of them and have the deepest respect and gratitude for all of them. There are
many Sensei's with whom the only memories I have are in my head since I do not
have a picture with them.
I consider myself very blessed as have had the privilege of
training with not only wonderful teachers from India but from all over the
world and in numerous martial arts.
I may sound selfish but if I could go back in time I would love
to spend more time with all my teachers and train more.
When I had started training the 6 monthly training camps
would draw in over 400 plus students of all age groups. There were no luxuries,
no pampering just serious training at them for 5-6days. However nowadays the
students specially the younger ones are much softer than we were back then. The
first thing I get asked by most parents and students today before signing up
for a camp is - is there tv with cable, do the rooms have air conditioning, will
they get time to play and rest, can they carry their ipod, mp3 player, cell
phones and so on. In the days I had started training there was no
guarantee of even getting a mattress to sleep on we use to carry sleeping bags
with us.
Years passed I grew up but martial arts always remained at
the epicenter of my existence. Any free time has always been used by me to
train even today if I have more than an hour to spare then you will find me
training, reading, researching or watching training videos to further improve
myself.
In the beginning martial arts used to be free of politics and
the only thing that mattered to all martial artists was to train harder every
day. Over the year’s politics, back stabbing, speaking ill of other martial
artists started seeping into the martial art community. This is what I am
totally against and I have never been part of it nor hope to do so in the
future.
At a point I just could not bare all these things which were
spoiling martial arts and with a heavy heart I decided to leave and start on my
own. My vision was to keep martial arts clean, simple, authentic, practical and
keep the training very very hard like it use to be in the 80's. Initially many
students ran away but slowly I started getting students who were just as crazy
as me and only wanted to train. Martial arts have 3 basic aspects – the strikes
(punches, kicks etc) , the grappling (throws) and the joint manipulations
(locks and chokes). Keeping all these aspects in mind and to make training more
self defense oriented I formed JUKAADO - An unarmed combat training form
combining everything that makes sense and usable in a real life situation.
Today I have a nice lot of students of all age groups many
who have been on the journey of martial arts with me for more than 8years. Some
have had to move to other countries for studies or work or are unable to come
to train due to work timings or academic pressure. Most of them are still in
touch with me. I feel the bond that forms when 2 people train hard in martial
arts, beat each other up and yet meet again to train, lasts forever.
At heart I am and always will be a martial artist and hope to
train till the last day of my existence.
Happy
Training!!!
Comments
glad ur doing that, where ur heart lies..