AGE, THE
PREREQUISITE ?
By Soke Daniel Verkerke
Some
people think age is a prerequisite needed in order to gain
experience, knowledge, and wisdom. It is not a matter of how
many years you live that makes the difference, it's a matter
of what you do with each year you live. I have met quite a
few retired people who have spent 30 to 40 years of their
lives working the same job day in and day out, never
changing or developing. On the other hand there are
individuals that have accomplished a lifetime of
achievements while still in their twenties. Everyone
automatically thinks of Bruce Lee when one mentions a young
master. If you would investigate many of the founding
Masters you would find that Bruce Lee is only one of many
masters that formed their own martial art at a young age.
What would you think if I said, "I know of a guy who started
training in Jujitsu when he was 17 years old. His instructor
thought he was too young for serious training and only gave
him a few formal exercises to practice. At age 18 this guy
found a new instructor named Fukuda, but Fukuda died when
this guy was 19 years old. This guy continued practicing
what he had learned and by age 21 he was a master in
Jujitsu. When he was 22 years old, he took nine students and
set up his own dojo. Two years later at 24 years of age the
first by-laws were drawn and he opened the Kodokan? His name
was Jigoro Kano.
It is much easier to judge someone by age, rather then
spending the time to get to know them, who they are, their
experiences and accomplishments. It is ridiculous that in
order for a young Master to be accepted by his peers he has
to either appear in movies, become famous or die.
If someone starts training at age 55 and earns their black
belt by age 58. Then continues training until age 65. Should
they be accepted as a Master? If so, then a person who
starts training at age 20 and earns a black belt by age 23
should be accepted as a Master at age 30. Both these
examples are wrong as age has nothing to do with becoming a
Master. It would be easy if all mankind grew, experienced
and developed at the same age in life, then age would be a
major factor. Unfortunately this is not the case. Everyone
does not grow, experience and develop at the same age in
life. Some people grow up quickly while others may never
grow up and how we grow from what we experience makes a big
difference. It may take one person 20 years of living to
develop an understanding of wisdom, while another person may
take 50 years, and some may never attain it.
Unless you have a closed mind, "Please"; before Prejudging
and discriminating against people, find out their
accomplishments and who they really are. You have nothing to
lose.
By Soke Daniel Verkerke
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