New Weekly Schedule

The new schedule is out and ready for everyone. The two main changes are the stretching class and BB program seminars have swapped places, and we have added a competition training seminar twice a week that is open to Black Belt program members.

Download the PDF of the schedule to print at home:
tkd_schedule_2013.pdf

2013_tkd_schedule

Black Belt Program Schedule Changes

Starting in September, the weekly black belt seminar will move from Saturday to Thursday nights at 6:30. The last Saturday seminar will be this weekend at 1pm: Fundamentals of Sparring. No equipment is needed for this class, which will be an excellent time to sharpen up sparring skills and gain confidence in the ring.

fundamentals_in_sparring

20th Anniversary Open House!

We have a new way to keep up on school news. Visit us on our FACEBOOK Page.

Coming up on April 20, 2013, from noon to 2pm, our school will celebrate our 20th year in the Porter Square neighborhood! We will be having an Open House, open to all, with free admission. We will have board breaking demonstrations, games and activities, refreshments, and more! Drop by and see what goes on inside our 2000 Massachusetts Avenue school and meet some friends and neighbors! If you are on Facebook, RSVP to the event or see more info at: 20th Anniversary Open House.

Olympic Excitement and working out at home

Over 70 million people in 91 countries practice taekwondo, according to a recent AP news story. That is a lot of people who will be interested in the coverage of the sparring matches in the Olympics in London, going on right now. Also according to the story, to keep the sport of sparring fresh and interesting–and fair–the matches will be scored electronically and have instant replay available. Why? What happens in a taekwondo fight, whether in competition sparring or a self-defense situation, happens so fast that sometimes the human eye cannot even see it. Even trained judges can miss what happened. The new electronic system removes the doubt and rewards the achievements of the fighters. 

 

But when you work out in your home dojang, when you take sparring class, no one is there to award you points. The achievements are measured on a different scale. Did you achieve what you set out to do? Did your technique improve? Did you learn what you need to move to the next level? Did you work hard? Did you build strength or flexibility or improve your health? Chances are you can say yes to all those things if you are taking class regularly. And those things are more important than “points” or medals.