Tae Kwon Do and Children
The following describes some ideals that every child needs to
possess to become a happy, productive adult, and how Tae Kwon Do
helps parents help their children attain them.
Physical Fitness
Children must be taught that a fit, healthy lifestyle is the
accumulation of good habits. Three components make up a healthy
lifestyle: exercise, nutrition, and hygiene and grooming. Tae Kwon
Do helps parents with the exercise component and may provide
assistance with the other two components.
Self-Control
Children must be taught to "self-manage" their own actions. If
parents do not establish boundaries, or if they establish boundaries
and are not consistent in enforcing them, they make it difficult for
their children to learn self-control. Children get the idea that
boundaries are flexible. Tae Kwon Do has rules of behavior that are
strictly enforced. If children want to continue training and
competing with their friends, they must learn to control their
behavior or pay the consequences.
Focus
Tae Kwon Do teaches children to pay attention and block out
distractions. Pattern practice demands that children block out
distractions and concentrate on making perfect motions. Sparring
requires a student’s undivided attention at all times or they lose
the match.
Respect
A disrespectful child gets no respect, so he or she turns that
attitude inward and starts to see him or herself as a person who
does not deserve respect. Tae Kwon Do teaches children to be
respectful at all times to everyone, and that they earn respect in
the same measure that they give respect.
Confidence
Tae Kwon Do helps children become experts at something, which then
gives them more self-confidence. Everybody knows that if you are
good at something, you become confident in that thing, but that
confidence also spills over into other areas of a child's life.
Honesty
Honesty is more than simply avoiding lies. It includes a belief in,
and a pursuit of, the truth. Honesty is a sign of healthy
self-esteem, because an honest person takes responsibility for his
or her actions. A child who feels good about him or herself has no
need to resort to deception. Tae Kwon Do teaches children to be
honest, even when it is not easy to do or is not the popular thing
to do.
Courage
If a child is constantly afraid, he or she feels less and less able
to deal with his or her surroundings. Instead of experiencing
growth, the child's comfort zone shrinks and he or she withdraws
from life. Courage determines how much freedom a child experiences.
Fear will hold your child back and prevent him or her from trying
new things, pursuing meaningful opportunities, and from living the
life he or she was meant to live. Tae Kwon Do helps children face
their fears and conquer them. As they gain more courage, they are
not afraid to try new things.
Contribution
Children need to be taught the joy of giving so they will become
persons who contribute to society. Life rewards you in direct
proportion to your willingness to contribute. Tae Kwon Do students
learn to give assistance to new students or those with physical or
mental challenges and they learn community service. They learn that
helping others makes you feel good about yourself.
Positive Outlook
Children need to look at their lives positively, not negatively. Tae
Kwon Do instructors do not tell students they are doing a technique
wrong; they praise them and tell them how to improve the technique.
As a result, students have a positive outlook about their futures
and feel capable of doing anything.
Responsibility
Tae Kwon Do teaches children to take responsibility for their own
actions, for assigned tasks, for younger children, and for other
students of lower rank. As they learn responsibility, they are given
more responsibilities.
Persistence
Sometimes, things in life do not come easily. Some children take
longer to earn rank in Tae Kwon Do than it does for other children.
Tae Kwon Do teaches children to not give up and that they can
succeed if they persist in their efforts.
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