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Archive for July, 2008

Freelancer

***Note: Thank you so much for your Congratulations and encouragement! It is most heartwarming to know all of you are “celebrating” with me. You inspire me to keep trying, to keep striving to be the very best God intends for me to be.

Me ke Aloha pumehana… - ‘Ailina


I believe I’ve begun a new chapter in the saga of Writing, and it is entitled “Freelance Authorship.” The parenting article was accepted for publication. It will appear in the September issue of the local parenting magazine. First publishing rights pay right up the middle of what the publication usually offers for accepted works. Not bad for a first-timer’s first time.

Somehow, this makes it all “official.” Makes lots of things “official” for me. It’s amazing how a single event can so completely alter my perspective. I’m astonished I’ve come to view my nonfiction writing as a more serious undertaking, and I’m looking at a whole new set of possibilities.

One acceptance gave me a huge boost of confidence, so when I came across yet another local parenting publication, I immediately began sniffing out submission guidelines. The new magazine is indeed new; the issue I picked up happened to be the first, so there were no submission guidelines.

Not one to be discouraged by a lack of information, I wrote to the editor and asked if she would be interested in seeing my work, to which she answered “Yes.” Within the hour, I drafted an outline for another article destined for the editor’s desk.

It’s 11:00 PM, and I have three articles ready for consideration. They’ll go out tomorrow morning.

Beach Weekend 2008

Of course I wouldn’t be able to recapture the magic of the 2002 photo of Bunny with her gulls. It was simply a moment in time that inhaled and exhaled and was gone. But for the sake of the beauty of continuity…Bunny (age 4) in 2002, and Bunny (age 9) in 2008.

Bunny & The Gulls 2002

Bunny & the Gulls 2008

To Picasa Album: Beach Trip 2008

We are all burnt bright coral red and can barely stand to have fabric atop our chafed skins, but it was worth every bit of pain we’ll endure until we heal.

No sand dollars to speak of. Hardly any seashells left intact after the roiling and churning of Dolly in the Gulf last week, but buckets overflowing with new memories.

The only thing lacking the entire trip was Rocky. Miss that kid.

Beach Bound

  • Three birthday parties today.
  • Squeak is 6.
  • Little Brother is (ACK!) 30.  Told Mom I don’t mind my age, being thirty-something and all.  I don’t mind being the eldest.  But as soon as my siblings start turning thirty-something…that’s not cool.
  • Every muscle in my body is absolutely depleted.  Trained hard all week long.  Finally feel I’m ready for the belt test in two weeks.  Will still work hard toward perfection.  Accept I’ll never get there, but I’ll do my best to come as close to perfect as I can.

Getting up at the crack of dawn and heading to the beach for three days.  Hurricane Dolly missed our destination, but I’m sure her whistling tresses grazed the shore in some form.  Expecting lots of debris, which is perfect for us, being the scavengers we are.  Hope to come back with some cool pieces of driftwood, lots of seashells, and hopefully, a load of sand dollars.  Will definitely have some cool photos to share.

Squeak has never been to the beach before.  This will be her first time.  Birthday wish.

Returning to the same beach we went to in ‘02, when Squeak was still in-utero.  Same beach where I got the iconic family photos of Moe laying on the beach trying to put a stick back together, and Bunny and her gulls.  They were 2 and 4, respectively.  Now, they’re 8 and almost 10.  Wow….  Time flies.

I’ve been initiated into the world of free sparring.

A lot of people think that karate and free sparring go hand-in-hand. I tend to disagree. One practices karate to ultimately avoid “sparring” in the classical sense, to avoid hand-to-hand combat. I was taught, the essence of karate-dō is to be able to defend oneself with the aim of inflicting minimal injury, only the force that’s needed to halt an attack. In training, I’m learning techniques that are designed to ideally stop an attack with one or two offensive executions.

A lot of people study karate so that they may free spar. In all my experience in martial arts, free sparring has been THE aspect of training that I have loathed with every atom of my being. I hated it when I was younger, I’ve hated it in memory, and I hated it until about 12:20 PM on Saturday afternoon.

With ten minutes left in class, Senpai KÅ«nane paired us up and announced, “Okay. Free sparring. Medium speed.”

I felt the horror flush through my face. I’m sure my eyes grew to the size of dinner plates. “Sparring,” to me, has always meant “pain and humiliation.” Almost every single time I was ever forced to fight, I got the wind knocked out of me. EVERY…SINGLE…TIME. And every single bout ended with me crying and getting yelled at.

Getting the wind knocked out of me, crying, and getting yelled at was one thing to endure as a child. But as an adult, the pain and humiliation would be nicely rounded out with a generous dose of sheer embarrassment. How many times have I envisioned my thirty-something self, doubled over in a corner, gasping for breath like a fish out of water and tears flying from my eyes.

The biggest difference would be, I’m sure no one would dare yell at me, but the silence would actually be worse. Certainly, one or two instructors would jump to the task of holding my arms out at my sides, crouching down beside me, telling me in that low, controlled voice, “Breathe…breathe…deep breaths…slow…inhale, exhale….”

I think very much I’d really rather die.

So Senpai KÅ«nane gave the direction to free spar. I looked at my partner–”Dr. Sensei”–and said, “I have NO idea what I’m doing here.”

“It’s okay, it’s okay,” she said. “We’ll take it slow. All you need to do is look for a target. Use the techniques we’ve been practicing in class. Don’t worry, you’ll be all right. Just take it slow.”

I took a deep breath, got into fighting stance, and hoped for the best.

We started out in a slow circle. Dr. Sensei allowed me a few seconds to get used to moving around, and then she put out a leisurely, much-anticipated punch. It was the most basic offensive technique, and I blocked it with the most natural defensive technique I know–a simple parry.

That was painless. She threw another punch, and I reacted in the same way, parry and move.

A minute or so passed. I realized I hadn’t been waylaid yet, hadn’t been knocked to the floor, hadn’t had her fist lodged between my lungs. I gained a little confidence and added in some counter-attacks.

Dr. Sensei picked up the pace, began to beef up her offense just enough to offer me a bit of a challenge to counter with a more varied defense.

Strangely enough, I began to enjoy the exercise. It wasn’t the simulated combat that I enjoyed (like so many other martial arts enthusiasts); it was the challenge to the reflexes. Kind of like playing a video game. Once it was clear there was no chance of injury, I felt safe enough to engage in the exercise and focus on what I was supposed to be doing.

I’m not so naive to think free sparring will always be so controlled and “safe.” Dr. Sensei–and Professor Sensei, after her–were both purposefully controlled, knowing this was my first trip around the block. And they’ve seen me train for several months, so they know what I’ve been exposed to and what I haven’t. They met me according to what they know to be my skill level.

But not everyone approaches sparring a beginner the same way. There are many, many people who are not very aware of what is appropriate in such a situation, and many who don’t care what’s appropriate in such a situation. It’s been my experience that sparring often brings out an ugly side of people; there is something to prove, an opportunity to yet again establish themselves as stronger, faster, fiercer.

I can remember quite a few people who I truly enjoyed before I either faced them in the ring, or watched them face someone else in the ring. It’s what I saw in their eyes, the expressions on their faces. Almost like hate. Blood-lust. Violence. A raw desire to hurt someone.

The perverse thing about it is, a lot of those eyes and faces belonged to kids.

I remember one tournament…I must’ve been ten or so. Through most of the first half of the tournament, I sat beside this kid I’ll call “Billy.” He was my age, same rank. We competed against each other quite a bit, so we were familiar.

Billy was the prodigy of his dōjō. I think his parents were senseis, too. Whenever he competed, dozens of people from his school gathered around the ring to cheer him on. “Get ‘em, Billy!” “That’s the way ta do it, Billy!”

He was good, and he always left with a handful of trophies.

That day, Billy and I ended up sitting beside each other through the first two competitions. Though we were competing against each other, the main challenge was to impress the judges. There was no one-on-one competition. Each person had a turn to go before the panel and exhibit his best.

The line was long, so Billy and I had a lot of time to chat. We talked about our dōjōs, our parents, school, what we did for fun, what our friends were like. It was kind of fun, getting the chance to get to know a kid I’d seen over and over again but never really spoke to. It felt good to make a friend who I shared so much in common with, who understood the pressures of being a young competitor.

That good feeling lasted all day. Even when we were herded together for the final competition–sparring–I was happy. Of course, I was plagued by the usual nervousness that went along with gearing up and drawing numbers so the judges could pair us up with our opponents, but the fear was diluted a little with the contentment I had at finding a new friend.

Unfortunately, my number matched Billy’s. The two of us would face each other in the ring.

Being the optimistic little girl I was, I thought Billy and I would hang out until it was our turn, just like we had all day. But instead, Billy’s dad pulled him away to a far corner and began coaching him and warming him up.

I thought, “Well, maybe today won’t be so bad. Billy knows I hate fighting. He won’t go out of his way to hurt me, and everything will be okay.” My nervousness all but disappeared. Even when they called my name to take my place in the ring, I wasn’t scared.

Imagine my shock when I stepped to the line and saw Billy was not the Billy I’d been talking to all day. He was stiff; he glared at me through two narrowed eyes that bunched up into a mean scowl. He gnawed on his mouth-guard and breathed like a crazed bulldog at the end of a chain.

I was so taken aback by the change in Billy that I didn’t even notice the referee give the command to begin. Before I could even blink, Billy was across the ring and on me, flailing away at my head, my stomach, my ribs.

So began the same old dance: my opponent beating me with every limb, and me bruised, crying, and trying desperately to suck some air back into my jolted lungs. And who was the hurt-ER? Billy. Billy My Friend. Billy with whom I had so much in common. Billy who understood me. Billy who would show compassion and control.

Billy took first place in sparring that day. After it was all over, he dragged his trophy over to his father, went back to his fold, a champion. As most kids did after the work was done, he changed into his street clothes and went to run with the other kids.

I was far too hurt and confused. I bought some nachos and a Coke from the concession stand and spent the rest of the time sticking close to Mom, trying to figure out what happened, who Billy really was, what I’d done wrong, why I felt such an injustice, and if I were justified in what I felt.

I don’t think I ever trusted another kid I hung out with before the sparring competition. From that day on, it was always in the back of my mind that this person might be an animal under all that human-kid.

And you know, that suspicion and expectation has followed me even to today. Granted, I do have the reassurance that I will never let anyone force me to spar, so I’ll never find myself in that exact situation again. But I’ve also made up my mind that I will not give up. Sparring goes with the territory of training; it’s natural in the progression.

I don’t loathe sparring on the whole the way I did when I was a kid. I enjoy watching matches and seeing the application of all I’m learning. I find it intensely interesting to see that expected metamorphosis that happens when one faces an actual opponent. It’s exhilarating, intriguing, quite a study of personality.

But it’s also frightening. I’m most afraid of looking upon the countenance of my dear instructors and seeing that same terrible animalism I saw in Billy so many years ago. From that moment, I know I couldn’t help but view them in a different light.

Solarium

What ease, to snuff the light from the woman’s eyes, to tarnish the gleam on her lowered lash, to dull the glow on her shoulder and pull the shine from each of a million burnt-bark strands.

To break the bow of her lips, white-wash the heat from her cheeks and leave her flesh as cold as old wax.

To bind her ribs, her hips, her calves, to fell the arch of her foot and level the curve of every ivory finger.

How ardently you love the girl, how lovely she is all rooted and reaching to you as you alone are the sustaining sun.

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