Ten Good Reasons For Seniors
To Learn WingTsun
Have
you ever thought of bringing your grandparents to WT training?
Perhaps you only need a few hints on how to get them on board.
Perhaps they might read this article themselves? The following
is a 10-point schedule of what WT can offer them, and it can be
read in 10 minutes:
1. Contact with younger people
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WingTsun
is simply fun! |
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Young and old training
together – no problem for WT students |
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Older people are well capable
of keeping up with the younger ones in WT training. |
Except at family
get-togethers or for professional reasons (e.g. nursing and the
health services)
there are only very few day-to-day occasions when old and young
people have anything to do with each other. I know of no “major“
sporting activity where people over sixty train together with
fourteen year-olds and are “equal” partners. WT offers this
possibility. During training, “grandpa“ and “grandma“ become
George and Mildred who are taking their first student grade just
like everybody else.
2. Respect
This takes us to the second point: who still respects age
nowadays? The divide between old and young is too wide for more
cultural proximity. But there are also exceptions, for respect
is not given, it must be earned. For example by Lemmy in the
band Motorhead, who still appears in “the world’s loudest band“
at the age of more than 60, or Sean Connery, whom we are very
unlikely to meet on a pensioner’s bus outing. Don’t most of us
dance to the music of Tom Jones, Cher, Tina Turner or The Stones?
This means that older people starting to learn WT are respected
for this by younger ones right from the start. The feeling of
being respected is also transferred positively to daily life.
3. Fun
WT lives on the fact that self-defence does not need to be
hard-nosed and drill-oriented.
Our motto is “Have fun and meet people“. Where else is there so
much laughter while learning to hit others than in a WT school?
Laughter is healthy, which brings me to the next point.
4. Health improvement
An older student once said to me jokingly: “When I feel the
usual aches and pains in the morning, I know that I’m still
alive.“ Health is a central topic in the 40++ course, but it is
applied with humour.
In WT the old are
allowed to be young and the young old: except for a healthy
basic constitution which is developed over all age groups, no
peak sporting performance is demanded. The forms are conducive
to calm, concentration and meditation, while the movements are
aimed at relaxation and suppleness. How physically demanding or
movement intensive the classes are depends on the individual
instructor. Everybody is able to obtain what he/she wants. I
think it would be overambitious to assert that WT itself can
heal the sick, but movement is healthy and healthy movements are
even healthier. Accordingly a WT school does its bit to improve
general health.
5. Healthier ”grey matter”
It always sounds slightly absurd when I tell outsiders that I
ponder for weeks about a small movement of the arm. During
classes we ”communicate“ with our arms. We learn to stand, walk,
see and “speak” in a new way. The exercises make us think, as
does confronting our own ”ego”. Those who are aged over 60 and
think that they have experienced a great deal in their lives are
able to take a look at the dark side of the moon during WT.
Which brings me to the next point.
6. A lifelong learning challenge
Usually I have to explain to potential students that I do
not offer “courses“, but rather a lifelong “learning challenge“,
though naturally I express it differently. Otherwise it sounds
like ”imprisonment for life”. A course has a defined end, and at
the end you know everything. In WT classes you know a great deal
after a short time, but you also learn more and more that
knowledge is not the same as skill. After all, starting to learn
WT is a test or experiment. Some leave it at that while others
find it impossible to stop. Particularly the older generations
discover new perspectives and accept new learning challenges
”despite“ their growing age.
7. Self-assurance
There are T-shirts bearing the imprint “I’m 30, please help me
across the road“. Funnily enough these are also worn by 30
year-olds, not just by 70 year-olds. People like to make fun of
older people, while hardly noticing that the old also like to
laugh at themselves. Ageing is a taboo subject, as is death.
There are old south-east Asian customs where people happily
celebrate the death of e.g. an 80 year-old, because they are
glad that he/she has reached this advanced age. In our own
culture, self- assurance declines with increasing age. Older
people have the feeling that they are no longer needed, and are
”put out to grass“. WT counteracts this. It is perfectly
possible for a 70 year-old to cope well during classes.
8. Security
Am I locking others out or locking myself in? Can others be a
threat to me, or am I a threat to them? Should I be afraid, or
should others perhaps be afraid of me? Why should I constantly
be concerned about my security?!
Security becomes very important with age. Security is the
opposite of fear. Most people are unable to deal with their
fears constructively. You learn to handle your fears by playing
with them. This means getting to know your limits and assessing
yourself in dangerous situations.
If you are more confident in yourself, you move differently and
more freely in everyday life.
9. Freedom of action
A Franciscan monk who had lived in Brazil for many years was
once asked to make a cultural comparison between Germany and
Europe in a newspaper interview. He answered: “When people in
Brazil leave the house, they like to take a walk around the
streets. When people in Germany leave the house, they always
have a clear purpose in mind.“ Perhaps people are just more
fearful here, or maybe they are just afraid of wasting time.
Just walking around is something one does on holiday, and
usually in southern European countries. But still with an
unstated intention (e.g. to find the best and cheapest
restaurant in the resort).
What does this have to do with WT and older people? In theory
many more older people could be out and about in public, but
they usually consider carefully when they will go where, and
which situations might be a threat. I am convinced that more
self-assurance and points of contact with younger generations
would enliven the scene in our towns and cities at all times of
the day.
10. Better quality of life
All in all, contact with younger people, respect for age, more
fun, the health aspect, the mental challenge, learning in itself,
more self-assurance and more security in day-to-day life,
together with the enhanced mobility these provide, produce a
better quality of life for older people.
Oliver C. Pfannenstiel, 3rd TG
Source: WingTsun World
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