The I Ho Chuan is a program that focuses on a year of Mastery. In its
collection of students that sign up and commit to the challenge, are people at
various stages of their martial arts journey, and sometimes a real eclectic group
from various walks of life. Through the
weekly journaling requirement, the team is brought to an understanding of the
struggle and needs of each of their teammates, and I for one, love this about
the group. It has been in the honesty of the journaling of my teammates that my
perspective of the I Ho Chuan has changed over the four years of my
involvement. Let me explain.
First off, let me clarify I haven’t been involved in the I Ho Chuan
since it’s infancy, or prior to the programs patterning from the Ultimate Black
Belt Test. Prior to my involvement,
which was a grading requirement the year I first signed up, the I Ho Chuan to
me appeared as an elite group of people, hand selected for guaranteed success
of the program. To be completely honest, at that period of time, I don’t
believe the I Ho Chuan group sold itself very well to the rest of the school. I was proof of that. I wouldn’t say I was scared that I couldn’t
handle it, but rather most concerned that I really did not fit into this group
of exceptional people that seemed to lack life challenges and flooded with time
and talent.
Fast forward a few years to 2016.
The more you train, and learn about people, the more you realize their
struggles are so much similar; or maybe nothing similar, but equally daunting
to your own. It’s in that realization that my perspective shifted to understand
that the I Ho Chuan is a group of ordinary people, doing extraordinary
things. It’s that simple. It doesn’t require a secret handshake, team
members don’t wear capes, and they don’t have x-ray vision, thank goodness. I can finally quit wearing my lead lined
boxer shorts.
Is the I Ho Chuan for everyone?
Maybe not, but I do believe there isn’t a single student at Silent River
that wouldn’t benefit from at least one year in the program. Most exciting is seeing the skills adopted
from a year in the I Ho Chuan when people take the tools, and apply them into a
successful balance symbiotic to their own life situation. That no doubt requires discipline in the
application of the tools without the support of the team. I want to get there
some day.
I realize this blog outlines most of what team members mostly already
know. The reason I write about it
though, is because I strongly believe the perception of the I Ho Chuan is very important
to our Kwoon. Can you imagine if all the
students of Silent River adapted to the principles of mastery as outlined in
the program? But how can that happen if they have the preconceived notions I
had five years ago? I think this is an
aspect we can work on, but until then, it can start with the Chinese New Year
celebration. There isn’t a better venue
than that for displaying how ordinary people can set their mind to doing
extraordinary things, without the need of a cape.