The Importance Of Having Role Models To Progress In All Disciplines

The Importance Of Having Role Models To Progress In All Disciplines
Published12 hours ago
The Warrior’s models

There are several types of models. Patterns to meditate well, relax, get in shape, perform well in a combat sport, apply strategies or tactics, etc. When you brush your teeth, you are using a model that has been programmed into your nervous system.

In this site and in this blog of the way of the warrior, we will present you with different models that you can integrate into your life in order to reach excellence in a particular field. We will come back to this last point in the next article of this blog.

In this article, we will instead talk about another kind of role model: mentors.

The best mentors are those who can help you replicate their resources.
Having mentors (human role models) is essential to walking the path we choose. One of my first mentors was Sosai Masutatsu Oyama when I started Kyokushinkai Karate in the early 1970s. His influence was mainly through reading his books. After that, Soshu Shigeru Oyama was another of my mentors with whom I studied for over a dozen years. Later, I joined the International Federation of Kyokushin Karate (IFK) with the man who would become another of my mentors, Hanshi Steve Arneil. In this article, I tell you about my mentors in the field of Karate. I have other mentors in many other areas that help guide my life so that I can continually improve and become a better version of myself.

But what is even more essential is the ability of these mentors to transfer their teachings into practical exercises, skills, values, principles, beliefs, etc. In short, to create patterns that we can replicate in our lives and encode in our muscles.

This is one of the goals I set for myself, over 40 years ago. To follow and create specific patterns that we can somatize (go down from the head to the muscles) into specific exercises and integrate these patterns into our disciplines. I have used them in my own practice, in my career as a high-level athlete (karate knock down: full contact without protection), in my coaching, and in teaching. I have had a multitude of mentors that I will share with you in these models.

The mentor does not have to be a real person who communicates directly with you. The important thing is that he or she is a good “modeler” to give you a map that is accurate enough for you to navigate the territory and replicate the qualities and skills you covet.

My first mentor was Bruce Lee. At the age of 13, I learned English to better understand his books.

You can find the full article HERE.

History of Karate

Karate (空手) (/kəˈrɑːti/; Japanese pronunciation: [kaɾate] (About this soundlisten); Okinawan pronunciation: [kaɽati]) is a martial

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