Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Karate For Kids - Phoenix/Scottsdale Arizona



The moment has finally come! The legendary Jackie Chan has stepped up to fill the shoes of everyone’s favorite mentor Mr. Miyagi in the Columbia Pictures remake of “The Karate Kid.” Chan will team up with up and coming actor Jaden Smith in the remake of the wax on wax off phenomenon.

Keeping the overall plot the same, Director Harold Zwart has added a modern twist to the timeless classic about a boy who has to find the inner strength to stand up for himself and do what’s right. This time around it is the student who is in the foreign land taking the fight to the Do-Jo’s of China. “The Karate Kid” hits theaters on June 11, 2010.




Read more: http://gossiponthis.com/2009/12/28/the-karate-kid-movie-trailer/#ixzz0bCP3zDZg


Roger


Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://GoshinKarate.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Create a Life Direction not a New Year’s Resolution



Making Goals or Resolutions? Change Your Life With a Life Direction Instead


In order to change your life you need to make decisions about what you want and then take action. But do you find that you constantly make goals only to give up fairly soon after?

I used to make resolutions ever January 1st..... but I haven’t made a New Year’s Resolution in a long, long time now. I haven’t because it seemed to just cause me great frustration that within weeks

I would abandon whatever grand plans I had. It would make me feel like I was a failure and I thought, “who needs that?”.

Looking back, I think part of the problem was that I usually made goals for something I thought I should improve about myself: lose a few pounds, stop biting my nails, etc. Things I should do but didn’t have a huge amount of desire to fulfill.

Also, to me a goal is something you want to achieve but once you’ve accomplished it, you’re done and then move on to another goal. For things like wanting to exercise more, to me it didn’t make sense to have a goal of going to more exercise classes because once I’d done them, then I figured I’d achieved my goal. So, basically, New Year’s Resolutions weren’t working for me and I stopped making them.

This year, I have decided that I am going to try something a little bit different. Instead of making a goal, I’ve decided to make myself some “Life Directions”. The difference is this won’t be things I should “improve” about myself but instead this will be the direction I want my life to head. It’s also much more about taking the time to think about:

• what’s working in my life


• what’s not working


• what direction I want to go in


• what things do I want to have happen in my life


• what new things or ideas I want to explore

By thinking about these points first, I can then come up with changes that I want in my life. It opens far more possibilities to me and I’m enriching my entire life not just one facet of it. This is different than having a goal. A goal would be having a final destination in mind.

Having a direction is more about how to change your life so that you are growing and learning the way you want to. There’s far less emphasis on “failing” because it’s a direction. I think it’s important to have a good idea of what type of life you want and what you want to be doing in your life because if you don’t stop to think about it then you’ll just end up reacting to whatever life brings. Part of gaining confidence is being proactive to change your life in a positive way rather than just reacting all the time.


If you want to change your life with a Life Direction then here’s 7 tips to consider:


1. What do you want to do?
It’s important to be clear as to what you desire. Do you want to travel more? Do you want a new job, do you want to buy a house? Do you want to be in excellent physical condition? How would you change your life? Think big here too. If you could do absolutely anything, what would you do?

Once you have your list, then think about whether your desire could be the result of something bigger. For example, if you say you want to lose 5 pounds, is what you really want is to be in the best physical shape you can be. You want to be in good shape so you can get the following results: lose 5 pounds, be less tired, fit in your favorite clothes again, etc. Losing the 5 pounds will be a result of your new life direction, not your actual direction. After you lose that weight, you will continue to have a life of being in excellent physical shape because that’s the type of life you want to have.

2. Be Specific
I used to make goals like: eat better, exercise more, get more organized. In order to know if what you're doing is working, you need to be more specific. What does eating better really mean, how much would be more exercise, etc? What will my life be like once I incorporate the new direction? You get the idea. If the concept is vague then you will be far less likely to achieve it.

3. Why do you want it?
A lot of goals we make for ourselves are because we feel they’re things we “should” do. We should eat better, we should exercise more. We hear it all the time. But, if it’s not something you really, really want to do or believe in, it’s not going to happen. Also, if you’re doing it for someone else or because you think you’ll get something in return for it (he’ll love me more if I lose weight), you’re probably also not going to stick to your new life direction. If you're going to change your life, it needs to be something that you really want to do for yourself.

4. Make a list of benefits
Make a list of why you want your life to go in this direction. If it’s to be more organized then why do you want to be more organized? For example: to not waste time looking for things, to be able to clean your home faster, to have more time to do the things you want, etc. If you have a list then on those days when you’re not feeling very motivated, the list will remind you why you started in the first place. It may even remind you of how far you’ve come from when you first started.

5. What is distracting you from accomplishing your path?
Joseph Garcia’s theory from the book, “The Motivated Mind” is that we don’t follow through with our goals because there is something more attractive in the not doing than there is in the doing.

For example. Eating better. Easy to say, not so easy to do. If I decide I want to eat better I am distracted from my goal by comfort food. Yes, the thought of eating better means I have to give up comfort food. Hard to do in the cold of winter. But, again following his ideas, I had to think more about why I want to eat better. Look better, have more energy, just feel better, be able to get out and enjoy things like mountain biking, fit my clothes better etc. You start giving yourself more reasons to want to change your life than to want the negative attraction. It makes it far easier to not give in to temptations when you keep reminding yourself of what you're going to gain in the long run by continuing to move forwards with your life direction.

6. Start small
Sometimes we lose track of what direction we want to go in because we’ve made it too big for ourselves. Break it down into steps and make sure you start with something simple. For example: remove junk food from house, stop buying lattes on the way to work or check out a pilates course at a local recreational centre. Something that’s easy to achieve and gets you started in the right direction. Keep yourself moving in the direction you want to go. Small steps on the way to change your life will soon lead to your ultimate goal.

7. It’s a direction not a destination
If you make your goals to be a direction you want to head in, then it will be easier to keep going after you have a “bad” day. For example, if one day you binge on a whole box of chocolate chip cookies, you won’t feel like you failed because you know it’s this is just a temporary thing. This isn’t the life you want to lead and you can start again tomorrow. Just be careful of saying that too many times. In order to change your life you need to keep going on the right path. A few slips back to your old habits is fine as long as you keep your motivation strong as to where you eventually want to end up. You now have a direction of where you want to go. Enjoy the journey.

Making a Life Direction is a way to really change your life for the better. You’ll have a much better idea of what you want in your life as well as how to go about achieving it. You can do it. You can change your life. It's as simple as making a Life Direction.

Tools To Help You Plan Your Life Direction



Roger

Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://GoshinKarate.blogspot.com/



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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Some Presist and Some Quit -- WHY?







WHY DO SOME PERSIST AND SOME QUIT? BECAUSE...

Is there a secret to follow-up? No.
Is there a best way to follow-up? No.
Why do people quit too soon? Big question.
Why do you quit too soon? Bigger question.
Have you ever read Think and Grow Rich? Biggest question.

Reason? Think and Grow Rich (written by Napoleon Hill 70 years ago) has an entire chapter on persistence that provides real insight as to the characteristics of what makes some stick at it until they win, while others stop either just after they start, or stop just before they are about to taste victory.

Rather than be so presumptuous as to paraphrase the great Napoleon Hill, I am going to give you the EXACT words of the master.

Here are some excerpts (and insights) on persistence quoted exactly as they were written seven decades ago that are still applicable to your sales process today.

Persistence is a state of mind, therefore it can be cultivated. Like all states of mind, persistence is based upon definite causes, among them these:

a. Definiteness of purpose. Knowing what one wants is the first and, perhaps, the most important step toward the development of persistence. A strong motive forces one to surmount many difficulties.

b. Desire. It is comparatively easy to acquire and to maintain persistence in pursuing the object of intense desire.

c. Self-reliance. Belief in one's ability to carry out a plan encourages one to follow the plan through with persistence. (Self-reliance can be developed through the principle described in the chapter on autosuggestion).

d. Definiteness of plans. Organized plans, even though they may be weak and entirely impractical, encourage persistence.

e. Accurate knowledge. Knowing that one's plans are sound, based upon experience or observation, encourages persistence; "guessing" instead of "knowing" destroys persistence.

f. Cooperation. Sympathy, understanding, and harmonious cooperation with others tend to develop persistence.

g. Will-power. The habit of concentrating one's thoughts upon the building of plans for the attainment of a definiteness of purpose leads to persistence.

h. Habit. Persistence is the direct result of habit. The mind absorbs and becomes a part of the daily experience upon which it feeds. Fear, the worst of all enemies, can be effectively cured by forced repetition of acts of courage. Everyone who has seen active service in war knows this.

How to Develop Persistence.

There are four simple steps which lead to the habit of persistence. They call for no great amount of intelligence, no particular amount of education, and but little time or effort. The necessary steps are:

1. A definite purpose backed by burning desire for its fulfillment.
2. A definite plan, expressed in continuous action.
3. A mind closed tightly against all negative and discouraging influences, including negative suggestions of relatives, friends and acquaintances.
4. A friendly alliance with one or more persons who will encourage one to follow through with both plan and purpose.

These four steps are essential for success in all walks of life. The entire purpose of the principles of the (Think and Grow Rich) philosophy is to enable one to take these four steps as a matter of habit.

Now I will grant you that some people will have read this and spit the word "Hokey" at the end. Reason? It's too simple and does not have an immediate "how to" answer attached to it.

The secret of persistence is not an "answer," it's a "realization." And if you read the above and didn't "get it." You will get beat by someone who did.

The Napoleon Hill philosophy of persistence is strong, yet soft. The only omission from the strategy is that it leaves out "what" to persist with. Let me give you that answer in a word -- value. Something more than you calling to imply, "I'm calling about the money, is it ready yet? Can I come over and pick it up now?"

Want a few value ideas?

Here are four. You may not like them. They require work.

Get your prospect a sales lead. Give your prospect an idea how to serve his customers better. Give your prospect ten things he can do to improve his morale, productivity, absenteeism, or profit. Get your prospect some free publicity or media exposure.

Get the idea?

See the work?

Now look past the work to the victory. If you can see clear to victory, then the secret of persistence is at last yours. And add to that the final wisdom of Hill: What you need to develop persistence is will-power and desire. In other words, how bad do you want it? And how far are you willing to go to get it? Unless the answer is all the way, you will not persist, you will give up.

by Jeffrey Gitomer

Roger


Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://GoshinKarate.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Christmas cheer for needy boys





I must commend the Goshin Karate & Judo Academy family here in Phoenix Arizona for helping us collect money to help some teens in need!


The Goshin crew (with Mr. Boggs support) raised $500!!!!!!! in a week!!!!!!

Some of the money will purchse some Christmas cheer for the boys, the rest will be place onto grocery store cards and distributed 'as needed' to whom...ever is housing the boys!

Update: the boys dad is out of the hospital but not physically or emotionally ready to manage the lives of 3 teens that are in need of stable emotional, physical and educational supports! The extended families are doing what they can- your generous donations will ease the finacial burden over this next few months!

Bless you all!

Peace and happiness!

Chelsey and Madeline Graham!

Friday, December 18, 2009

Shaolin Temple's kung fu monks prepare IPO



The 1,500-year-old Shaolin Temple, the birthplace of kung fu, is preparing for a 1bn yuan (£85m) initial public offering (IPO), government sources have confirmed.


A joint venture between Dengfeng, the city where the ancient Buddhist temple is located, and the state-run China Travel Service (CTS) will be listed in either Hong Kong or Shanghai in 2011.

CTS (Dengfeng) Songshan Shaolin Cultural Tourist Company Ltd will have the temple's annual ticket sales of 150m yuan as part of its revenues. However, a government source said that the temple's buildings would not be included in the new company.

More than 1.6 million tourists visited the site in Henan province last year in order to visit its prayer halls and see the temple's monks perform their kungfu show. The Shaolin Temple also performs a stage show that has toured London and New York.

According to legend, the destruction of the temple by its enemies in the 17th century helped to spread martial arts across China as five fugitive monks carried their kung fu with them.

"The joint venture will promote tourism in the region," said the government source. "But the assets of the temple itself, and its cultural heritage, will not be part of the group," he added.

CTS is expected to take a

The IPO will do little to help the public image of Shi Yongxin, the 44-year-old abbot who has presided over the monastery for a decade, transforming it into a global brand.

Mr Shi's critics claim that he has allowed one of the cradles of Zen Buddhism to become crassly commercial.

Last year, Mr Shi began to franchise out his operation, 51pc stake in the venture after contributing a cash investment. A spokesman for the travel agency said he could not comment on the deal. According to the Oriental Morning Post newspaper in Shanghai, the two sides signed a draft agreement on October 21 and Dengfeng city has agreed to inject 6m yuan into the venture. taking over the management of a number of temples in Yunnan. Rumours suggest that Shaolin also has its eyes on a site in Taiwan.

The front of the Shaolin temple has also been used in recent years as the backdrop to an open-entry kungfu competition and a swimsuit-clad beauty pageant.

Defenders of Mr Shi, who has become known as the "CEO monk" in China, say that the temple was run-down and derelict before he took over, after the suppressions of the Cultural Revolution.

Mr Shi himself has said he is "not a businessman" and that he doesn't "hold shares" in the temple.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/china-business/6831187/Shaolin-Temples-kung-fu-monks-prepare-IPO.html

Roger

Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://goshinkarate.blogspot.com/

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Honesty, Integrity and Truthfulness


 These honesty and integrity quotes are useful to help motivation and inspiration. These quotes about honesty and integrity will help you create success in business, success in management and success in life.


Quotations About Honesty, Integrity and Truthfulness

“To give real service you must add something which cannot be bought or measured with money, and that is sincerity and integrity.” --Douglas Adams

”Integrity has no need of rules.” --Albert Camus

”Honesty is the cornerstone of all success, without which confidence and ability to perform shall cease to exist.” --Mary Kay Ash

”Real integrity is doing the right thing, knowing that nobody's going to know whether you did it or not.” --Oprah Winfrey

”The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson

”A life lived with integrity - even if it lacks the trappings of fame and fortune is a shining star in whose light others may follow in the years to come.” --Denis Waitley

”The highest compact we can make with our fellow is, - 'Let there be truth between us two forever more.'" --Ralph Waldo Emerson

”Honesty is the first chapter in the book of wisdom.” --Thomas Jefferson

” In failing circumstances no one can be relied on to keep their integrity.” --Ralph Waldo Emerson

”The glue that holds all relationships together -- including the relationship between the leader and the led is trust, and trust is based on integrity.” --Brian Tracy

”Integrity is the first step to true greatness. Men love to praise, but are slow to practice it. To maintain it in high places costs self-denial; in all places it is liable to opposition, but its end is glorious, and the universe will yet do it homage.” --Charles Simmons

”Our lives improve only when we take chances - and the first and most difficult risk we can take is to be honest with ourselves.” —Walter Anderson

”Integrity is not a conditional word. It doesn't blow in the wind or change with the weather. It is your inner image of yourself, and if you look in there and see a man who won't cheat, then you know he never will.” --John D. MacDonald

”Achievement of your happiness is the only moral purpose of your life, and that happiness, not pain or mindless self-indulgence, is the proof of your moral integrity, since it is the proof and the result of your loyalty to the achievement of your values.” --Ayn Rand

Roger


Mr. Boggs - Rensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://goshinkarate.blogspot.com/

PROVIDING INSTRUCTION: Karate for Kids Scottsdale Karate Lessons Phoenix Karate School for Kids Child Karate Phoenix Martial Arts for Children Arizona Karate Scottsdale Kid Karate Arizona Karate for Child Self Defense for Women Martial Arts North Phoenix Martial Arts Arizona Cardio Kick Boxing Class Kick Boxing Cave Creek Kick Boxing Arizona Tae Kwon Do Scottsdale Karate Cave Creek kids children families Arizona Self Defense

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Donate your change



Help Make a Change.....

There are 3 boys I know from my school... Ages 14, 13 and 12. Their dad is in the hospital in critical condition and they are staying with their uncle during the week and he has 4 kids of his own. I am asking everyone I know to ask everyone they know to donate their loose change and dollar bills and I will collect them all to purchase gift cards to Frys, Cosco ext.... You can drop it off at Goshin Karate and Judo Academy


Thank you for your help. Happy holidays.
Chelsey Graham – Goshin Leadership Team




Change will not come if we wait for some other person or if we wait for some other time.... . We are the ones we've been waiting for...... We are the change that we seek...... We are the hope of these boys who have so little.... Yes, we can.
 
 
Roger
Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://goshinkarate.blogspot.com/

People don't care how much you know.... until they know how much you care....

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Can Karate or Judo help Parents deal with Adolescence?



Parenting through Adolescence....


I do believe that Martial Arts or Karate & Judo can make a differents.... A big difference to so many kids, just ask one of our Black Belts.... But, I don't have to live with your kids...  I know that it can be tough sometimes so I am making available to you the following "20 Rules for Surviving Your Kids' Adolescence," adapted from the book Running the Rapids by Dr. Kevin Leman.

Adolescence, the extremely formative period between childhood and adulthood in the life of a kid, is a period that has grown longer in our time, Dr. Leman shows. Owing to the fact that kids today are experiencing puberty earlier and staying connected to their parents later in life than any previous generation, the overly drawn-out period of adolescence can be just as great an adjustment for parents as for their kids.

As a help, we've posted Dr. Leman's "20 Rules" for parents along with brief comments on each with the hope that they provide a way through the dizzying maze of parenting advice and methods circulating today.

"20 Rules for Surviving Your Kids' Adolescence"

1. Follow Through. Disciplining must be carried out with consistency. If you create an expectation and consequences for not meeting the expectation with your kids, follow through on it! If you fail to follow through on the standards you set for your children consistently, why should they live up to them? The failure to follow through on your word is the same as saying your word doesn't matter.

2. Watch Your Expectations. It is natural for all parents to want the best for their kids. However, in "wanting the best for their kids," many parents are actually seeking to fulfill their own failed hopes or dreams through their children. Therefore, it is crucial that we help our kids set and then achieve their own goals for themselves, rather than to expect them to live up to our goals for them, a thing that will only frustrate them and us.

3. Meet and Accept Them Where They Are. Adolescence is a very turbulent time for kids—a roller coaster of moods, emotions, and hormones all intertwined. If your daughter is brokenhearted over a "crush" that hasn't worked out as hoped, don't belittle her or tease her over "puppy love." (Remember, "puppy love" is very real to "puppies.") Do your best to affirm their feelings, ones that are very real to them.

4. Take the Time to Listen. This is part of what Leman calls "The Power of Being There." Just your presence with them is a gift that makes a difference. Kids interpret your presence and listening as a sign of caring and connectedness. Listening is the language of love. So listen to your kids, and in doing so you'll be demonstrating honor, love, respect, empathy, and acceptance.

5. Respect Their Choices. This can be an extremely tough one for parents. We hate to watch kids make choices we don't want them to make. But it's our goal to help move our kids from dependence upon us to independence, and this means respecting their choices. Obviously there are certain areas where we would want to (and must) intervene, like regarding choices to consume drugs and alcohol for example. But generally, and in an age-appropriate way, we should allow our kids to make choices and then live with the consequences. Remember, one of the best ways to learn is by experiencing failure.

6. Ask for Forgiveness. When was the last time you asked for your child's forgiveness? The parent who tries to come across as perfect is making a big mistake and alienating her or his kids. In fact, you'll probably be amazed at the credibility and trust you gain with your children just from being honest with them about your shortcomings or a mistake you've made.

7. Respect Their Privacy. If your son is in his bedroom with the door closed, and you should need to talk to him for whatever reason, respect his privacy by knocking before entering. Of course, as a parent, you have every right to just walk in, but a simple knock and asking if "now's a good time" to have the conversation gives your son the opportunity to feel as though he is actually participating in the process, rather than having it thrust upon him.

8. Communicate Clearly. Good communication takes work. Make sure you work at listening to what your kids are actually saying. You might have to ask for clarification as terms and meanings change. Understand that you've grown up in a different time also, so be sure that your kids understand you!

9. Do the Unexpected. When it comes to discipline, be creative. No, you can't beat kids over the head and force them to do everything, but you can't let them off the hook either. Dr. Leman uses the example of a child who was expected to prepare dinner. The child didn't get around to it, so mom and dad went out to dinner alone and then took the meal's expense from the child's allowance. Dr. Leman says, "Doing the unexpected creates a long-lasting shock value."

10. Talk about Potential Problems. This simply means talking issues over with your kids before they encounter them, like discussing with them when they're eleven or twelve what to expect on a date and what problems they might encounter in high school, rather than waiting until their sixteenth birthday—then it's too late.

11. Don't Act Like a Teenager. You're not one and most of all your kids know it. They are counting on you to act like a grown-up. Don't resort to petty, immature tactics or selfish responses when dealing with them.

12. Give Them Choices. Adult life is stocked full of choices. Help your kids move towards independence by making sure they have opportunities to make choices and to learn from the consequences of their choices. While practice may not make perfect, giving kids choices will help them learn how to make good decisions and to recover from the bad ones.

13. Don't Do Their Work for Them. We must allow our kids to be responsible for their own homework and school activities. Too many parents get involved in helping their kids with these and, as a result, unintentionally limit the growth process their kids need to experience. While your kids need your encouragement, make sure you are simultaneously teaching them the importance of accountability and responsibility in their assignments and commitments.

14. Don't Show Them Off or Embarrass Them. Most parents tend toward one or the other of these extremes. Either we want to show off our kids for what a great job they've done on something (it makes us feel good about ourselves), or we embarrass our kids in front of others because they've messed up or disappointed us. There are times for praise and times for rebuke and correction, but make sure these are done in the right place and the right time. We should never exploit our children (with good or bad motives) for any reason.

15. Don't Pick at Flaws. Teens without a doubt are painfully aware of their shortcomings. Therefore they don't need parents to be a constant reminder of their weaknesses, failures, and flaws. Nagging and criticizing are ultimately unhelpful and have the polar opposite effect on our kids than we intend.

16. Don't Spit in Their Soup. Dr. Leman says that this is "when you add a little tagalong that has no other purpose than to make your teen feel guilty." For example: "Sure son, you can go to the game tonight. I'm glad someone in our family gets to go out and have fun. I'll be mowing the lawn."

17. Don't Talk in Volumes. Some parents are just waiting for an opportunity to unload all of their advice and instruction. Don't make every moment in your child's life a "teaching moment." There are some lessons we can only learn on our own; don't stop your kid from learning valuable lessons just out of a desire to "save" him or her from making a mistake. That's how we learn!

18. Don't Smother Them with Praise. While appropriate praise is vital to developing self-worth, if you heap too much praise on your kids they can hear the unintended message that your love for them depends on their performing at a high level. Nothing can be so oppressive and exhausting as the expectation (real or imagined) that unless I perform at the best and highest level, my parents won't love me. Find ways to praise and encourage without tying it to a specific performance and creating unrealistic hopes and expectations in your child.

19. Don't Make Icebergs Out of Icicles. This is just a reminder to season your parenting with grace. We all make mistakes. We all have fallen short. Learn to extend the same grace and forgiveness to your kids that you would like others to extend to you.

20. Handle Hassles Healthily. That there will be conflict between parents and kids is a fact of life. These times of conflict can either lead to a breakdown of communication and unloving behavior, or can become a path to deeper communication, greater understanding, and loving behavior. Working through the conflict requires our emotional involvement and a willingness to face conflict, and is ultimately the most loving way to care for us as the parent, as well as our child.

The following is adapted from Kevin Leman, Running the Rapids (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House, 2005). Available on-line at www.HomeWord.com ; accessed February 10, 2007


Roger


Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.GoshinGear.com

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://GoshinKarate.blogspot.com/

Providing Instruction/Lessons in Martial Arts, Self Defense, Judo, Jujitsu, MMA and Karate, for Kids, Teens and Adults in the Phoenix, Scottsdale, Cave Creek and the entire north valley of Arizona since 1991

Karate Christmas - Happy Holiday - Kick-Mas



To Celebrate the Holiday Season
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
will be Closed December 24th
Re-Opening January 4th
Please feel free to make up your classes before or after the break.


Holiday greetings are a selection of greetings that are often spoken with good intentions to strangers, family, friends, or other people during the months of December and January. Holidays with greetings include Christmas, New Year's Day, Chinese New Year, Thanksgiving (United States), and Hanukkah. Some greetings are more prevalent than others, depending on the cultural and religious status of any given area.


Typically, a greeting consists of the word "Happy" followed by the holiday, such as "Happy Hanukkah" or "Happy New Year", although the phrase "Merry Christmas" is a notable exception. In the United States, the collective phrase "Happy Holidays" is often used as a simple way to refer to all of its winter holidays, Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day.

There has been some controversy lately regarding the phrase "Happy Holidays" as an attempt to diminish Christmas although its use promotes other holidays commonly celebrated in the United States.

So either way... Happy Hoildays or as I prefer ...  Have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

Better yet........  "Merry Kick-Mas"

See you in class

Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://GoshinKarate.blogspot.com/

Providing Instruction/Lessons in Martial Arts, Self Defense, Judo, Jujitsu, MMA and Karate, for Kids, Teens and Adults in Phoenix, Scottsdale, Cave Creek and the entire north valley of Arizona since 1991.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Karate teacher calls for Compassion



A call to bring my little part of the world together…


The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all spiritual, ethical and Martial Arts traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves. I like to say treat others the way they want to be treated. Compassion impels us to work tirelessly to alleviate the suffering of our neighbors, to remove ourselves from the center of our world and put another there, and to honor the inviolable sanctity of every single human being, treating everybody, without exception, with absolute justice, equity and respect.

It is also necessary in both public and private life to refrain consistently and empathically from inflicting pain. To act or speak violently out of spite, chauvinism, or self-interest, to impoverish, exploit or deny basic rights to anybody, and to incite hatred by denigrating others—even our enemies—is a denial of our common humanity. We acknowledge that we have failed to live compassionately and that some have even increased the sum of human misery in the name of religion.

We here at Goshin Karate & Judo Academy therefore call upon all men and women ~ to restore compassion ~ to return to the ancient principle that any interpretation that breeds violence, hatred or disdain is illegitimate ~ to ensure that youth are given accurate and respectful information about other traditions, and cultures ~ to encourage a positive appreciation of cultural diversity ~ to cultivate an informed empathy with the suffering of all human beings—even those regarded as enemies.

We urgently need to make compassion a clear, luminous and dynamic force in our polarized world. Rooted in a principled determination to transcend selfishness, compassion can break down all boundaries. Born of our deep interdependence, compassion is essential to human relationships and to a fulfilled humanity. It is the path to enlightenment, and indispensible to the creation of a just economy and a peaceful global community.

 
 
 
Roger

Mr. Boggs - Sensei
Goshin Karate & Judo Academy
6245 E. Bell Road #120
Scottsdale, AZ. 85254
480-951-2236

http://www.GoshinKarate.com/
http://www.GoshinCares.com/
http://www.GoshinGirls.com/
http://www.goshingear.com/

http://www.yourworthdefending.com/
http://goshinkarate.blogspot.com/

Providing Instruction/Lessons in Martial Arts, Self Defense, Judo, Jujitsu, MMA and Karate, for Kids, Teens and Adults in the Cave Creek, Phoenix, Scottsdale and the entire north valley of Arizona since 1991.