Black Belt
at 50, Respect and Responsibility
By Brian L.
Kennedy
I was pleased and
honored several months ago when the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association presented me
with the rank of Black Belt. It was a particularly meaningful to me as Mike
Brown Laoshi was my very first Chinese martial arts teacher and returning to
the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association after having started there 33 years ago gave
me a great feeling of homecoming. Being ranked by the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association
also has a special meaning for me because I had lived in Taiwan for the past 15
years and I have a special place in my heart for Taiwanese martial arts and
martial artists. Dr. Wong and the Ching
Yi Kung Fu Association have strong links to the Taiwanese martial arts world. So it was a double happiness for me to get
back with the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association; it was a return to my first martial
arts school and it has strong Taiwanese martial arts connections.
I turned 50 years old
this year and I got my Black Belt this year. That I think is somewhat unusual; I suspect
that most people who make Black Belt tend to do it in their 20s. For example in Taiwan most newly minted Black
Belts, which tend to be either Judo or Taekwondo Black Belts, are normally
university students. So a new minted Black
Belt who is 50 is a wee bit unusual.
I suspect too that “Black
Belt status” means something different for a 50 year old than it does for a
younger person. I remember when Mike
Brown and Dr. Wong first told me that I would be promoted,
the first two thoughts that crossed my mind were “responsibility” and “respect.”
By “responsibility” I
meant that I now had responsibilities to the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association, I
had to see how I could best help the organization. I had to find out what direction the senior
people wanted the organization to take, what the goals of the organization were,
and how I could apply my skills to helping achieve those goals. My first thought was what kind of
responsibilities do I now have towards the
Association.
My second thought was
“respect” and what I meant by that was that from now on, having accepted rank
in the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association, I would have to treat other people with a
full measure of respect because I was not only representing myself but also the
Association. It was not that as a Black
Belt I should be given respect; it was the opposite, now that I am a Black Belt
I have to be much more careful in giving respect to others because my behavior,
for good or ill, will be a reflection on the Ching Yi Kung Fu Association.
The character
building aspects of martial arts are often overlooked in modern times but for
me, a Black Belt at 50, responsibility and respect are still central to what it
means to be a Black Belt.