Classes this week

With my impending study deadlines and the SEQ Regional seminar and grading opportunity on at the CBRC this Saturday, there will be a few changes to the regular training schedule.

I am not going to make it tomorrow night for Jujutsu, and Brady will run the class in my stead. I am planning to be there for iaido so that we can do a final grading prep for Lachlan. Likewise, as my due date for two assessment items is Friday, I am unlikely to make it in for Thursday night, and will be subbed in by Sean T and Kateena to do the final Kendo prep. Finally, there will be no Systema or Jujutsu on Saturday due to the dojo being used, though as mentioned in the other post, you would be very welcome to come and watch or even volunteer to help through the day. In particular, it would be great to have a few of you staff the reception desk to help direct our visitors in the morning, and, of course, the more photos taken of the event, the better.

Personally, I’m very much looking forward to getting back to a sense of normality next week and into the regular rhythms of training. Train well everyone, especially those presenting for gradings on Saturday!

Change of seasons, change of focus

Despite a few cold days and windy here in Toowoomba, we have been very fortunate to be basking in the lovely weather of late winter here in the Hill. The plum and cherry blossoms are out in force already, and the daylight noticeable extending as we head towards the equinox.

We are often drawn to mark the start of spring as a way to focus on new beginnings and the potential of the season ahead. In a time of COVID and continuing lockdowns south of the border, I suppose that we should also reflect on our good fortune here on the Hill, that our usual rhythms have been broadly uninterrupted, and we can very much take advantage of what the season offers.

On a personal level, I am now only a month and a half out from finishing my four-year journey into Physiotherapy as a profession, so the turning of the season underlines the uncertainty-opportunity nexus that I’m facing as I venture into a new vocational identity. Not quite panic inducing (yet), but certainly that tingle of awareness that things will soon change.

Whether it is seasonal, personal, or professional identities that are in flux, the temptation is to become stuck on the loss of what is passing or fixated on the process occurring. All of us tend to be bad at cultivating the stillness and calm necessary to express heijoshin — a cool presence of mind while the world rages outside. It is difficult to detach the desire to ascribe meaning and value to change rather than just sit inside that change. In many respects, our training in the martial arts is an active project to develop heijoshin, with the aim of being able to apply it to our daily lives.

None of this is easy, of course. And the temptation is to retreat inwards rather than reach out. However, I can say from clear personal experience that reaching out, making connection, engaging wholly in the activities that sustain us is far more likely to have us building those reservoirs of resilience as we face the inevitable challenges ahead.

I am always grateful of the community we have here as a Club, its active members, diaspora, and external friends and supporters. It is what keeps me turning up each session to teach and participate. The past 18 month have been particularly tough on everyone, and I hope that in some way the collective project that is BBRD has helped to provide some comfort as we have navigated the roller coaster we have been on.

Be well, everyone! I will, as always, very much look forward to seeing you and training alongside you over the coming weeks as we straddle this liminal time at the end of the University semester.

Gambareba dekiru to omoimasu! (I think it can be done if we do our best!)

QKR’s SEQ Regional grading: update

Organisation for the regional grading opportunity is steadily progressing, and I would like to thank everyone who has already put in their expression of interest to grade, and attended to some of their preliminary administrative obligations.

Just a reminder that if you do want to challenge for grade (Kendo, Iaido or Jodo), you need to lodge your paperwork and payment with the QKR no later than this Saturday (4 September). We have already had folk from Brisbane Kendo Club and Bayside Budokai put in their forms alongside those from BBRD members, so the event is shaping up to be a good representation across the Clubs of SEQ. Hopefully, we shall see some more come in over the next few days.

The grading will be held in our usual dojo space at the CBRC on Saturday 18 September, and will be accompanied by training opportunities in the morning prior to shinsa. Unfortunately it will mean no Jujutsu or Systema training will be possible that Saturday.

I would also like to gauge interest in going out for dinner with Kuramochi sensei on Saturday night. It is the weekend of Carnival of Flowers, so we will no doubt have to book a table relatively early due to the expected increase in visitors in Toowoomba that weekend. I would appreciate it if you could let me know on or before training on Saturday so that we can get some planning around the weekend. Dinner is not limited to QKR-art practitioners/members either. Sensei is great company, and very knowledgeable across the breadth of budo activities, so I would encourage everyone to consider coming out to dinner.

COVID, USQ graduations and changes to training schedules

It was great to hear on Sunday from the Queensland COVID presser that there were 0 new detected cases, and that the past few days all detected cases had been linked to known clusters with the individuals involved being in isolation for the entirety of their infectious period. It brings some hope that restrictions may ease further this week (even early), pending on what might have filtered in from south of the border.

Unfortunately, with the existing orders in place here in Queensland, and NSW looking like it will be months before they have their COVID situation under control, the list of cancelled events has continued to grow. The planned martial arts demonstration on behalf of the Japanese Consulate this Friday has been postponed. And Uni Sport Div 1 Games, which includes Kendo and Judo competitions, have been cancelled. While it is frustrating that months of careful preparation has been cast aside, we can all redouble our efforts towards events that are still on track, such as the September regional grading opportunity for Kendo, Iaido and Jodo, grading opportunities for Jujutsu, and the QKR December seminar.

This week, while the current Queensland restrictions are in place, you will still need to wear a mask to and from the dojo if you have been down in one of the declared SEQ local government areas. Your mask will need to still be worn while training, unless you are doing high intensity physical work, and please try to be mindful of social distancing where possible. This is most important when setting up your training gear — make sure you leave sufficient space between yourself and others, and try to make your gear as neat as possible. Where needed, training will be modified for you to accommodate any public health directives. And please continue to scan both the QHealth QR code as you enter the CBRC, and the Club based one so that we can easily take our attendance roles. Your efforts make it easer for everyone to focus on our training, rather than getting swamped in administrative matters.

It is also that time of the year where USQ is celebrating the mid-year graduating classes with ceremonies and their preparation being held over the next fortnight. The only potential night that may be affected at this stage it next Thursday (26 August). However, from this week there may be some disruption to the parking lot, as large marquees are due to be erected just near the tennis courts.

Things may change over the next few weeks. Make sure you keep up with the relevant discipline chat channels for any announcements. And always, if you have a question about anything regarding training, please ask your instructor or discipline coordinator.

Hope to see you in the dojo this week!

Virtual Dojo — the value of mitorigeiko

I wanted to again plug the value of logging in for classes if for whatever reason you cannot physically make it in to train.

Mitorigeiko, or looking practice forms a critical element of any training, where you are actively watching to reflect on your own practice and take the time to see what you might be missing or perhaps not quite understanding.

We are going back to the two-camera system to try and capture different angles for our sessions. It has been great to see members of our Gin Gin sister dojo actively joining in, and certainly if you have someone at home who you are isolating with, you can join in too (within the parameters of your own home environment to remain safe).

If you are regularly paying monthly fees, you can join these sessions for free. If you are paying casually, you can purchase a separate block of online lessons (10 sessions for $25) so that you are not eating into your usual face-to-face allocation.

If you are interested, please ask me for the relevant log ins. We currently have three: our week night classes (Tuesday and Thursday), our Saturday afternoon, and Sunday FlexiFit.

Hard lockdown lifted but still some restrictions

The announcement of 10 am Sunday 8 August by the Queensland Premier has the 11 local government areas of the Southeast region coming out of hard lockdown as of 4 pm Sunday afternoon. However, some restrictions will continue to apply. A link to current COVID restrictions can be found here: https://www.qld.gov.au/health/conditions/health-alerts/coronavirus-covid-19/current-status/public-health-directions/restrictions-impacted-areas

Unfortunately, this will mean that Club members who live and work down the hill, even as frustratingly close as Withcott or Murphy's Creek will still be subject to those orders. Specifically, while you are not prevented from coming to the dojo, as we are classified under recreational sports rather than "community sports" (which remain prohibited), you will have to be wearing a mask at all times outside of when you are in the middle of undertaking intense physical activity, and maintain social distance of 1.5 m. These restrictions will continue in place till 4 pm Sunday 22 August.

I would strongly recommend talking to your relevant instructor or discipline coordinator if you are in an affected area, as some accomodations in training might be able to be made. For instance, with kendo, we can reinstate men shields and masks. In lieu of face-to-face training, I would urge you to log onto the "Virtual Dojo" Zoom link so that you can participate as best as you can in the regular classes. While this is never going to be a full replacement for face-to-face training, you can still learn quite a bit from mitorigeiko (active watching practice) and, where your home circumstances safely allow, to practice along with regular classes.

So hang in there everyone! Take care, and we will hope to have a return to fully normal programming soon.

Grading opportunity for Kendo, Iaido and Jodo, Saturday 18 September

Given the ongoing uncertainties with the COVID situation, and the cancellation of the July QKR seminar and grading, I am very pleased to announce that the QKR executive has supported our proposal to hold a grading opportunity in Toowoomba for Saturday 18 September.

The grading will be for open to those challenging up to 1KYU across each of the three disciplines. To be eligible, you must be currently registered with the AKR as a financial member, and met your minimum time in grade requirements.

The opportunity is extended to all current QKR/AKR members who are eligible, so we are hoping to see folk come from outside Toowoomba to grade along side BBRD members.

Recent changes to the grading rules have made it possible for Kendo kyu-graded practitioners to attempt grading every three months, which is now consistent with Iaido and Jodo. This means that those grading in September will still be able to attempt another grading in December, when we hope to hold the State seminar.

If you intend to grade, you will need to make sure all of your membership obligations are in order and have me sign off on your application no later than 31 August.

We will be finalising some details this week, as we will need to ensure that all grading panels are appropriately formed. And this event, like all others at the moment, is subject to the ongoing public health orders and may be cancelled at short notice. However, we shall continue to keep our fingers crossed and keep working towards our training goals regardless!

UniSport Div 1 Kendo competition

We are now in the downward run towards the Div 1 games to be held on the Gold Coast for September 25 and 25.

Eric Jeffery sensei has put a call out to all QKR members to come and support the Kendo competition. There are a variety of roles including timers, score keepers, ribbon wranglers, and general set up that need to be filled each year. I would like to strongly encourage everyone who is available to support this event, even if you are not a Kendo practitioner. In previous years we have also had non-sword arts folk from the Club come down in support. It is usually a great weekend away and an excellent opportunity to see high-level kendo competition here in Queensland.

BBRD has over the years built its reputation on the foundation of service to our various martial arts communities. I would like to see that be reinforced again this year, especially after all of the COVID-related disruptions to our regular calendar of events.

If you are interested, please contact both myself at michael.baczynski@bbrd.org.au and Jeffery sensei at: UniSport_Div1_Kendo_Comp@qkr.asn.au

Virtual dojo links for those of you locked down/out of town

With any luck, the current SEQ restrictions will be eased or removed tomorrow afternoon. However, we continue to require vigilance for the emerging public health issues posed by the Delta variant of COVID.

If you have been to an area that has been directly impacted by a public health order, you must continue to comply with it even if you have now left that area. Given the Brisbane experience, where a cluster of COVID was centred as a suburban Karate dojo, we certainly do not want to have an encore of that up here in Toowoomba, given a number of us work in the health sector and/or with vulnerable populations.

To assist, there is now a new week-night link for the virtual dojo that out-of-towners and those in the lock-down blues can use to do a bit of mitorigeiko and participate in their own training as they are able to in the space they have at home.

The Zoom Meeting ID is: 880 3663 6776

Please direct message me for the password.

Hope to see you in class or over the video link this week!

Vale to my favourite piece of martial arts paraphernalia …

It’s an odd moment when your favourite, comfortable, history-filled piece of kit finally gives up the ghost. For me, it happened this weekend when my favourite Kendo keikogi failed to make it out of the wash in a state that could be worn again.

The signs had been happening for months. Worn patches in the lower half of the jacket stitched back to keep it going for that little bit longer. The odd loose thread trimmed back to prevent further unravelling. Himo frayed to the point that their repaired state certainly looked more jaunty that their initial design ever intended. But the central back seam finally gave way this weekend, making repair a major and somewhat futile activity.

The jacket had been one of my first purchases when I took up Kendo in 2007. I had found it on the Tozando website as a “outlet” sale. It was too big for me, but as 1/4 the price of what it would have cost for a “correct fitting” keikogi, I figured that any alterations that might need to be made would still come under the cost of a new jacket.

And I loved the fit and feel after those alterations were made. It always felt like a part of my budo, custom corrected and worn-in with my own practice of Kendo, Iaido and Jodo over those years. And it had long survived the weekly training sessions and laundry over those years to the point that it was recognisably me in any photo with an otherwise anonymised sea of practitioners suited up and practicing.

I have been reflecting on this as I contemplate now having to wear in my other uniforms to training. It’s true that I have been slowly switching in some of my other training uniforms over the past months from what Sara at times jokingly refers to as my “Imelda Marcos collection of martial arts uniforms”. But none of them have the history, or more importantly the custom fit of that old gown.

What this means for both my practice and my identity as a martial arts practitioner I will probably discover over coming weeks. We often talk about the benefit of Japanese arts as providing the opportunity to relinquish ideas of ego and false identity (though the real world success of that idiom is certainly up for debate). So what this poses for me is a return to an anonymity of sorts. A way to try to access the notion of shoshin — or “beginners mind”.

Our own personal training histories are an intrinsic part of our identity. But these only end a stale artefact unless there is continued openness to the process of renewal and exploration of how our identity shapes our experience of the present and the opportunities for future growth. Bind yourself too tightly to the comfort of the past, or the security of that custom fit, and you miss the opportunity to grow beyond where you are.

And so I will have to stride out into training this week bereft of my security blanket, the piece of clothing that made me feel and look “right”. I will remind myself that stepping out, provides an opportunity to reframe who I am and how I deport myself, building a new look and relationship with what I do rather than be welded to the railroad tracks of the past.

I say this knowing that there are a few of you out there who, like me, are experiencing a range of personal transition in their life and finding it difficult to navigate the dissonance between the comfort of those old artefacts and identities and the dysfunction that they now represent. I certainly know that drum beat well. And that the mourning of those identities we carry around with us, both the functional and dysfunctional, prevent us from connecting to the joy to be found in the present, and the new discoveries that can present themselves, if only we can break through the fear of change to accept that we are worthy and capable regardless.

It doesn’t matter if it is change of career, illness and recovery, deeply ingrained narratives of personal (in)competence, or something as trivial as a worn out piece of clothing. The fracture point between old and new is not easy. And yes, you will most likely look and feel “wrong” as part of that until it becomes the new “right” for you as new identities emerge.

For me, with the challenges big and small, it is important to remind myself of the central role that community connection and friendship provide in all of this. And as for my old jacket, I’ll look to see what I can use and transform into something new from the fabric that is certainly salvageable. Maybe a tote bag to help ferry around a new uniform and a new identity that grows with it? A reminder that while the past is not who you are now, we can always fashion something useful from it to support our future focus.

Be well everyone! I suspect that we may have more interruptions to regular planning due to the COVID situation south of the border. But until that time, forge on, and I will look forward to seeing you in the dojo — be it face to face training, “virtual”, or in the “second dojo” of our communities.