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Posted
I'm so very glad that there's no intervention clinic to address my addiction to the MA!! If there was, I'd never attend!

:)

Wait.... Isn't that kind of what KF is..? :P 'cept with the positive notion of keeping it going?

:)

Yyyeeeesssssssssssss!!

:spitlaugh:

**Proof is on the floor!!!

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Posted

I'm at the dojang 25 hours a week, mostly teaching. My instructor jokingly told one of our parents last night "she loves martial arts so much, when we get a bigger school, I'll build her a house on top so she can live at the school".

When I'm at my day job, I'm thinking about taekwondo. When I'm trying to sleep at night, I'm thinking about taekwondo. 16 years now, still going strong.

Your present circumstances don't determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start. - Nido Qubein

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Totally addicted and I just started. My husband will point out if I mention anything regarding karate that I am addicted. He doesn't get it. With each class, with each new technique learned, you want more. I have karate 3 days a week and weapons once a week.

Part of my addiction comes from the fact that I walk out of there each time feeling like I have learned something new, have improved on at least one thing, have more self-confidence(and typically I have zero). It has does wonders for the way I see myself. I use to to think I couldn't do much of anything, and you quickly learn you can do a lot more than your mind or body ever thought.

I train at East Coast Karate in Rhode Island with Sensei David Ahrens http://www.eastcoastkarate.net/about-us/kyoshi-david-ahrens/

I train at home daily. Some days I can get about two hours in which would be warm up, stretching, blocking, punching, kicking, working on kata and practicing bo. Waiting for my husband to hang my punching bag so I can use that when at home.

Posted

Totally addicted and I just started. My husband will point out if I mention anything regarding karate that I am addicted. He doesn't get it. With each class, with each new technique learned, you want more. I have karate 3 days a week and weapons once a week.

Part of my addiction comes from the fact that I walk out of there each time feeling like I have learned something new, have improved on at least one thing, have more self-confidence(and typically I have zero). It has does wonders for the way I see myself. I use to to think I couldn't do much of anything, and you quickly learn you can do a lot more than your mind or body ever thought.

I train at East Coast Karate in Rhode Island with Sensei David Ahrens http://www.eastcoastkarate.net/about-us/kyoshi-david-ahrens/

I train at home daily. Some days I can get about two hours in which would be warm up, stretching, blocking, punching, kicking, working on kata and practicing bo. Waiting for my husband to hang my punching bag so I can use that when at home.

Posted

Refer to my signature. :)

Kobayashi Shorin-Ryu 9th Kyu

Kempo & Goju 3rd Kyu

IFPA Certified Personal Trainer

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