During the “off-season” a conversation transpired over the phone between myself and Mr Proctor from the Latrobe Valley club. What started as a brief comment around our recent combined grading turned into an idea on how we could encourage further interaction and role-modelling among the young girls from our respective clubs. So it was agreed that I would facilitate a training session for girls only, and invite students from both Latrobe and Melbourne. My main focus was to encourage friendships between the girls so that they could draw courage and inspiration from each other. We don’t often get together since our clubs are a couple of hours apart, so it was great to see them train together so happily.

After some “getting to know you” type activities we covered basic fundamentals, and some kicking drills. Then I introduced the girls to Team Patterns via You-Tube footage. Of course the girls all thought it was too hard and something they could never achieve at their level. So with a little encouragement I asked them to perform Saju-Jirugi (4 direction attack/punch) in time with each other. After all, it doesn’t matter whether it’s a black belt pattern or a white belt pattern, the point is a choreographed routine that reflects timing, teamwork and co-operation! They perforned in sync with each other and so I then began to suggest a couple of ways they could stagger some moves and before they knew it, the girls were performing a team pattern, getting right into the thick of “choreographing” their own routine! I was so happy to see what a little encouragement could do to take the girls from “we can’t do that” to “can we do that again?!”

It was a privilege to host the girls, who bonded so well and they have already asked for more “girls only” training. Actually they asked for it to be a permanent arrangement! But I countered that Mr Harper and Mr Proctor would not be as enthused about that idea 🙂 We certainly will look to arranging more sessions like these, to help increase the confidence of our more shy students, who sometimes can feel that they can’t “match it” with the boys in the club. The great friendships being formed between the girls is also a huge bonus!

Alexandra Proctor (aged 7) was one of the students who attended and I would like to share with you her thoughts on our session (I love her honest, matter-of-fact account 🙂 ):

 

“On the tenth of the first month of 2013 there was a girls training session. 6 girls turned up. There names were Mrs Harper, Katrina, Rose, Isabella, Alex and Jasmine. We did a quick talk so we could get to know each other.  In the talk we told each other our school and our age. We also got to know each others names.

Then we did a few laps. Every body ran ahead of Mrs Harper.

We did four directional attack. We counted in Korean. Katrina was the best at counting in Korean.

After that we did turning kicks. A few people accidentally did slapping kicks.

We then did jumping kicks. They were jumping front kicks.

Mrs Harper showed us some team patterns videos .We tried to do team patterns . After that Mrs Harper gave us books to put down Taekwon-do stuff .

After the class we went to the park for lunch. We played.”

Thankyou girls, I look forward to training with you all soon!

Michelle Harper

Il Shim Melbourne

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ITF Australia will be holding 3 instructors courses during October, run by Master Daher.

Sydney – Saturday, Oct 13th 

Sunshine Coast – Saturday Oct 27th at the PCYC Nambour and is open to Red belt and above.

More details will be added soon.

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Masterclass August 2012

What we lacked in numbers we made up for in determination and good looks . . .

Sunday August 19th held the first grading and masterclass undertaken in Stawell without the supervision of our former instructor and wise elder ( J ) Mr Steven Harper.  Had he been able to be there I’m sure he would have been chuffed.  The effort students put in in the lead up to the grading was rewarded with all 12 of us going up a notch in the kups.

The day began with a masterclass on sparring led by Mr Paul Harper.  Foot work, creating opportunities for point scoring, coping under pressure and putting pressure on the opponent were key features of the very informative, if a little exhausting, session.  Students then put all of their practice into, erm . . . practice, running through fundamentals, patterns and kicking combinations.  A special mention must be made to Tyler McHenry who scored exceptionally well and came very close to double grading.  Well done Tyler!  It was also lovely to have Miss Amber Harper back in the hood, we would love for her to be a regular visitor.

We’ve got plenty to work on before the next grading, but if all of the Stawell students do as well in December as they did on Sunday they can be very happy campers.  A very big thank you to Mr and Mrs Harper and family for a great day and for making the journey to Stawell to put us through our paces.

Corinne Raymant – Instructor, Stawell

Masterclass August 2012 Sparring drills Masterclass August 2012

We are very excited to announce the birth of the newest Il Shim Taekwon-Do club in Dandenong, Victoria!

Commencing in March, IL SHIM Dandenong will be lead by Mrs Jessica Bull, 1st Dan Black Belt. We are very pleased to have Mrs Bull on board and look forward to a successful opening night!

When: Thursday 1st March, 2012
Where: Oasis Leisure Centre, cnr Heatherton Rd and Cleeland Rd, Dandenong
Time: 7:30pm

All available are encouraged to come along and help support Mrs Bull and make the night a success.

Any enquiries for IL SHIM DANDENONG: please phone Mrs Bull on 0402 923 858 or email bullspaddock7@yahoo.com

At the grading on the 17th of December for my black belt, I was very nervous. I didn’t want to forget any of my theory or my patterns. Months and months of hard training, theory work and instructing the class throughout the 3 month period helped my confidence and power. When Master Daher arrived, I was nervous more than ever. I felt very proud when Mr Christensen asked me to say The Oath. Master Daher asked everyone if we wanted to do the grading first or the master class first, it took only seconds for everyone to decide to do the grading first – everyone was nervous and wanted to the grading out of the way.

Mr Christensen asked me to run the warm up and some of the junior grading session (naming the patterns and holding kick pads). After helping the junior class with their grading and slipping them some tips with their kicking e.g. pivot, more power etc, it was our turn. Emily Tisdell and I had put our hard training and all our effort into this next hour. After a gruelling session which included sparring against 2 opponents, Master Daher finally said the words Emily and I had been waiting for – “Brendan Love, Emily Tisdell you have successfully graded to 1st Dan”. I was so happy and proud of myself – all the hard work had paid off.

Master Daher gave us our Do Bocks and asked us to get changed for the Master Class. While I was getting changed I was so excited that I started jumping up and down and waving my arms everywhere – I was that happy.

Master Daher asked Emily and I to demonstrate the techniques throughout the Master Class which made me feel respected. Looking back at this year, I think the Instructors course in October helped me a lot because it improved my foot stance and balance techniques. I would like to thank Mr Christensen for his hard work, patience and belief in my abilities throughout the past 4 years, without his knowledge and assistance I would not have been able to achieve my 1st Dan black belt.

To all those younger students, I encourage you to continue to train hard and listen to and respect your instructors, as they will know what you are capable of even before you do and they will help you achieve your goals.

Tae Kwon

Brendan Love

1st Dan

At ITF Australia/ IL Shim International Taekwon-Do, we believe it is important to recognise those students that put the extra effort in each day to improve their techniques, skills, and understanding of the Art. Here are some comments from Joe Shaw, age 16 from Coomera on the Gold Coast, who doubled graded from Yellow Tip to Green Tip last weekend. As an instructor it is fantastic to have a student like Joe in the club and it is satisfying to see him rewarded for his effort

“Hi, I’m Joe Shaw, I’m a member of the Gold Coast clubs

“I am happy and excited that I double graded and hope my skills keep progressing with the help of my Instructors Mr Shawn Sutton and Mr John Abdallah. I know that just turning up for 2 classes a week will not be enough to achieve my goals. On average I attend 4 training sessions a week . I like to think I am dedicated and take training seriously so I can make progress quickly. When not training at the Do Jang I try to condition myself, most nights I stretch for 20 minutes and do a 10 minute AB workout, I also practise my patterns. I attend the gym and try to keep myself fit and intend to continue to work hard.”

“I am really enjoying Taekwon-Do and have met lots of great people. Although I have only been training for 5 months, I have already attended 2 tournaments, The Hunter Valley and Bundaberg Cups and would highly recommend all students go out of their way to attend as many tournaments as possible as they are a great experience and lots of fun.”

 

 

 

 

Hey,

I’m Emily Tisdell and I’m a black-tip from Aberdeen Tae kwon Do. Last weekend I went to an instructing course in Sydney run by Master Daher and I must say, “I loved it”! On the way to Sydney, I was nervous because I had never been to one of these before but I soon realised that there was nothing to worry about and going there was a terrific learning opportunity. I now understand allot more about the theory and practical sides of Taekwondo, including some terminology when refereeing. I feel I learnt not only about taekwondo, but also myself and gained confidence to strive for bigger and better things in life. I recommended that everyone who can attend an Instructing course to make sure they do.

Tae Kwon

Emily Tisdell

P.S Thanks for the B.B.Q Master Daher. I love your dog “Sampson”

HADEN 2011 Bundaberg Cup

CUP SET TO BE A BIG HIT

 

Local support in growing for the resurrected Bundaberg Cup, with HADEN Air conditioning and Mechanical Engineering announcing their support for the tournament with their sponsorship.

Local branch manager and former Black Belt with the organisation, Mr Craig Warner, confirmed their support this week. “It’s good to be able to support the local community through an event that used to be a prominent part of the Taekwon do calendar.” Mr Warner said. “I remember when the Bundy cup was held at the Bundaberg Basketball Stadium back in 2001 where it was combined with the Queensland Championships and the local organisation filled the stadium with competitors and spectators.”

The Cup made its return in November 2010 with a small contingent nominating for its return after a 9 year absence. This year nominations had nearly doubled on last year and we also welcome a club travelling from Rockhampton for the event. “We have received nominations from the Gold Coast right through to Rockhampton and includes other ITF clubs outside of our organisation such as Millennium in Rocky and Dynamic on the Sunshine Coast” commented Bundaberg’s Senior Instructor Mr Michael McGaw. “We even received email enquiries from Pakistan, but unfortunately they are not able to attend this year.

McGaw who heads a smaller club here in Bundaberg with an average of 15 training on a regular basis, has managed to have 5 students, along with another 5 students from the Miriam Vale / Agnes Water Club, gain selection into the Australian Squad for the 2013 World Championships in Spain. The HADEN 2011 Bundaberg Cup this year also has attracted the attention Mr Frans Christensen, Head Coach for the Australian ITF team. “It is exciting to hear that Mr Christensen will be making the trip to Bundaberg this year. He has spent a lot of time travelling to different countries studying their training regimes’ and developing these to ensure our standards are of equal or better standard at World Championships.” McGaw said.

Action for the HADEN 2011 Bundaberg Cup will kick off at the Bundaberg Basketball stadium in Flint Street, with Competitor Weigh in at 9am, and the tournament commencing at 9.30am with the Patterns Division followed by Sparring and the day finishing with the Men’s and Women’s Power Breaking

 

My story with IL Shim starts in August 2010. I had been in Australia for 4 or 5 weeks and I was looking for an ITF club where I could train. At that time, I had one thing in mind: being part of my country team, and hopefully, represent Canada in the individual sparring event at the next World Championship. I left Canada with a heartbreak, just had my first concussion from a sparring match on a day I should not have been on the floor, still, I kept riding my bicycle full on to go to work and had an accident and broke my teeth just before my flight for Sydney… Ouch. As my aunt says: « I was not aligned».

My Taekwon do journey so far has had ups and downs and it is normal. The head of the painting department in my home University who is in a wheelchair and makes pretty damn good art said one day: Living is going up, keeping the balance and suddenly we are being slapped in the face and we fall. And then we stand up on our feet again, get stronger, and then, again, we take another hit, fall, then stand up, and so on. Let’s say at that moment, I felt I’ve been slapped and was trying to go back on my feet. The only way I knew would work is by escaping my homeland in order to shake myself, to break patterns and start from scratch.  

And you know, whoever you are and read my story, I don’t intend here to talk about moves and medals and sparring matches and being champion and that sort of stuff… One thing I learned at IL Shim, is that your martial art, is not really the kicks, the belt color and the performances. It is much more what you do the rest of the time in your life that will crystallize while you train, while you interact with your training partners, while you talk to your teacher. Of course learning the technique and challenging yourself are noble and beautiful things. Wearing your Dobok, washing it, looking in the eyes of someone when you bow, paying your fees on time, be there when you say you will, etc, my point is that ALL these things are important and not only the power of your kick and the speed of your punches.  

When I went to my first class in Parramatta, it is this philosophy that I recognized in the teaching of Master Daher. I did not really know what it was but it had something I was looking for since I left my first Taekwon-Do school. He had the people to sit and he started talking about the Do, or «the Way» if you prefer. While most of the time in clubs you hear about Tae Kwon, «jump, kick and punch» but the Do, or all that is spiritual, the wisdom through discipline, is missing.  

Today, more than a year has passed since I started my training with IL Shim. During this year and a half, I have the feeling that everything has changed in my Taekwon-Do practice and my attitude toward it. Before, the only thing I wanted was to win. Doing a lot of competitions has a weird way of making you strong and weak at the same time. But that is another topic. The idea here is the impact that joining IL Shim had on me. Let’s say being trained by a Master for 4 months before going to the nationals in Canada last year helped me big time. A lot of people came up to me afterwards and told me how surprised they were at my quick evolution. I will not tell you if I won or not, because this is not important. Nevertheless, what is very important is that I sparred at the height of my capacity, to my full potential at that moment, in full awareness and I was feeling just right.  

To continue my story, following some sort of a timeline, I spent a winter 2010-11 in Canada preparing myself for the World Championship in New Zealand. Let me tell you one thing: that was not the same. Of course the team training was great, but I was travelling 3 hours every week to the next city to train with my former teacher when I was not in Montreal, (600 km from where I lived), at Eclipse Taekwon-Do. The rest of the time I was training by myself at the Gym. When I came back in Australia after New Zealand, I understood that I could never forget about IL Shim and that it would be hard to train somewhere else. I’m not saying that IL Shim is the only and the best. Perhaps IL Shim is not suitable for everybody, but it is sure the right place for someone who’s looking for some kind of spiritual development through the body and a martial art system. To me, it is obvious that when one is at the right place, doing the right thing, with the right people, it is the optimal experience.  

There’s some inner voice that tells you when you are into a state of optimal experience. You don’t need to research from noon to 2pm, it is the voice of wisdom that speaks and we all have it. So once I realized that I found a good environment to practice, training partners and a teacher with whom I could learn more about Taekwon-Do and myself, I just had to make sure I stick around and stay in Australia as long as possible.  

Of course life brought me some other experiences, acquaintances, challenges here in Australia, but the grounding of my life in this country, what I am now, every good thing that happened to me, are due to the strength and confidence I gained at IL Shim. Without Master Daher’s help and patience, and the support from Mr Tyson, Mr Ken Harris, Michael Jasser, all the other members of the club, and the joy from kid’s classes, nothing that I have had accomplished in Taekwon-Do, academically, socially and professionally, would have been possible. 

When we had instructor courses in Canada, we used to make fun of how dear and missing Master Tran was saying: «Taekwon-Do, is a tool, for social development!» He was so right. I’m saying this because to develop socially, you must know yourself. It is a very basic rule, taught within Buddhism, Yoga, and many other philosophies and religions. And with IL Shim, it’s like speeding up the process by going to the source to get knowledge.

Instructor’s Course – Parramatta 2011

 

The instructor’s course was fun, enjoyable and very helpful.

The course helped me learn things that I had never heard of, like a low stance. The first time Master Daher said to perform a low stance I just went blank, I had no idea what he was talking about. But after the course I have a couple of new moves to add to my knowledge of tae kwon do.

At the start of the course, I was very nervous because I didn’t know how many people would come, and I didn’t want to forget my patterns. The start of it was the scariest part, and by the second session the nerves went away and I started to have the best time ever.

The course atmosphere was just great because if I made a mistake then Master Daher would help fix it straight away. There were many black belts also who shared their knowledge with the group. I also learnt that you should never be afraid of asking a question, because if you don’t know the answer Master Daher, the senior instructors and the other black belts will help you understand the answer.

 

Tae-Kwon

Brendan Love 14 years

(1st Kup-IL Shim Aberdeen)