by John R. Corbett
People don't understand that whenever they
come into contact with a child, they are potential teachers because whatever
they say or do is going to have a lasting effect on that child for the
rest of his life. A child's world is as real and more dangerous than the
adult world because anything that is said or done is automatically implanted
in the child. It stays, and we forget that."
The person quoted above is neither teacher
nor psycholo- gist. He is kenpo instructor Larry Tatum. Protege of Ed Parker
and a teacher in his own right
at
Parker's West Los Angeles school, Tatum boasts a roster of students that
includes a mini Who's Who of Hollywood celebrities. But celebrity name-
dropping is not the kenpo instructor's forte-he would rather discuss the
state of kenpo and the role he believes it holds for teaching children.
Especially children, for Tatum explained at length to B LACK B E L T recently
what he sees are the dangers of modern American society and the ameliorative
effect kenpo may have on impressionable youngsters.
A student of kenpo for more than a decade
and a half and now a teacher for the past five years, Tatum has developed
his children's teaching methods and philosophy to the point where he has
said he is now ready to publish a book on the subject called Confidence.
A Child's First Weapon. Tatum said the book will be put out by Rand McNally,
a national publish- ing house specializing in school texts.
Tatum said that one third of the students
who pass through the doors of his' West L.A. school are children-some of
whom are as young as three and a half years of age. He said that parents
do not really question whether three and a half years is too young-but
some do wonder if their children can really perform martial arts techniques
at all-
"The trouble is that we begin teaching our
children too late in the use of their bodies," the thirty-one-year-old
instructor complained. "Balancing we start way too late. We finallystart
at a point where their bodies have developed to the point where they've
developed certain habits. Even as young as three and a half or four years
of age, they already have their own ways of running, their own ways of
throwing a ball, their own ways of kicking that are not necessarily right."
Tatum explained that cl1ildren are consciously
and continu- ously taught reading and writing skills throughout their ele-
mentary school years but that sports and physical skills train- ing were
literally catch-as-catch-can affairs out on the school- yard playing fields
during recess periods. The kenpoist said that only a few-and he said he
had been lucky to be in this minority group-children really had natural
sports talent. In the end, he added, it was this sports "elite" that gained
the extra edge in high school and college where sports programs favored
them at the expense of their less talented but still just as eager classmates.
"Only the elite are trained in sports, although
all of us are trained to be somewhat proficient at reading and writing,"
Tatum said. And he insisted that education is equally neces- sary in sports
and physical activities as it is in mental pursuits. The instructor said
his task was to bring this about through teaching the very young-not to
be martial artists, necessarily, but to become better acquainted with their
latent physical skills.
"My little baby, Brittany, she's 17 months
old:' the kenpo teacher explained. "While we're teaching her to talk, we're
also teaching her how to do kenpo karate. My wife, Jill, is also a purple
belt in kenpo."
Tatum said that with such small children-in
reality, almost infants-his style of teaching must be radically different.
"It's a game, I teach them a game," he said.
"Obviously, there are rules that I make them go by so that I can accom-
plish my teaching, but there's no pressuring them. I teach them only as
much as I know they can absorb, and th&n I don't push them any further
.
"When I'm teaching children under six years
old, the thing I'm teaching them is coordination-and concentration. I'm
just using the art as a vehicle, that's all. That's all I really use kenpo
for with small children."
In addition to teaching his youngsters better
coordination and concentration, Tatum reiterated the bottom-line goal for
all his children was to improve their confidence. The instructor pointed
out that confidence would be a child's-and then the adult's defense against
many of the forces he said had crossed American culture during the previous
three decades.
"The complexes and the neuroses that we build
up through- out the years are phenomenall" he exclaimed. "Look how many
psychologists and psychiatrists are working trying to correct adults. Dammitl
If only they would have had the proper training."
Tatum said he could recall many of the fads-crazes-that
stirrred the American scene, and his friends, over the years, fads and
events that he said gave him his purpose in teaching kenpo.
"If we look back to the fifties, we find that
the type of person in our country who took karate classes was the thrill-
seeker, policeman, FBI agent and street fighter each looking for a greater
edge in his ability. In the sixties, the martial arts were known to be
an activity that seemed to enhance one's mental capacity. It was also instrumental
in giving rise to other Eastern cults in our country involving the mind
and body. In the early seventies, it became a craze that turned into a
storm only to find the substantial schools weathering the onslaught of
unqualified instructors.
"Today, we have the art by itself," Tatum
continued. "It's benefits are numerous, but when coupled with academic
structures as it is today, it becomes a tool of immeasurable importance."
Tatum added that he and other martial arts
instructors were seeing "Mr. and Mrs. America" finally come to study the
various arts-and bringing their children. And Tatum said he loves teaching
children.
"When I was in elementary school, I used to
take kids on little tours of the neighborhood and explain certain trees
and houses and so forth like this because I enjoy teaching," Tatum said.
"But I think that if I can get across to pe()ple to look be- yond the veil
of their man-made environment, then they'll begin to find their own potential."
Regarding teaching youngsters, Tatum said
the key was ". ..Patience. That's the hardest thing. I get down on my knees,
and I get face to face with them. I don't-and this is very important and
will go into my book-1 never talk to the child like an adult. They don't
talk to each other like that. Why in the world do we adults talk to them
like that?
"I talk to them exactly like they talk to
each other. It's very simple and to the point. Sometimes I use slang terms,
anything they may use on the schoolyard or whatever. You must get their
attention, so you've got to speak their language before you get through
to them. I get on my knees, and I let them hit me. I let them block my
punches. They get to hit me and kick me-it's worth it.
"If I stood up and taught them from a standing
position, all they'd learn would be to follow the leader, follow what the
instructor says, and that would not be teaching them," Tatum a~ed. "I want
them to be able to improvise because-and I'll be redundant-their world
is a very dangerous world because it's their forming years."
Tatum said he is happy to have parents watch
the lessons, but he added that he was quick to keep them of; the mats should
they offer advice or register concern.
"Once in a while, they try to become involved:'
Tatum said. "I'm very firm. I don't ask the parents, I tell them to please
go over and sit down. When the child is on the mats, that's his time. If
he gets bruised or gets the wind knocked out of him, he cries. When he'~
done with it-and there's nothing wrong with crying because that's nature's
kiai-they get back up. Crying is the only thing that protects them and
keeps them going. You've got to release that energy. Some parents tell
their child to quit crying and to get up and be a man. That's baloney!
He's going to get up and be scared to death. Let him cry. He'll wipe his
eyes and get up."
Tatum said he believes that this early training-all
designed to improve a child's feelings of confidence and physical abili-
ties in general-paves the way for their progress through an especially
difficult time in their lives. He said many of his friends had a particularly
rough transition through this period and often fell prey to drugs.
"During stress, logic becomes overshadowed
by emotion:' he said. "Drug abuse is only one precipice one can falloff
but one that vividly shows why the martial arts can play an impor- tant
part in the rechanneling of one's life.
"Adolescence is that awkward time of life.
The transition from childhood to adulthood is never easy. Childish pleasures
no longer satisfy. One's social standing becomes dependent on the approval
of others. Comparison becomes rampant, and some find they lose their own
identities. Peer pressure mounts seemingly beyond endurance, escape is
sought, but the avenues are limited. For many, escape is through drugs.
"If a child is to become an adult," Tatum
went on to say, "then he or she must be trained to meet and solve the prob-
lems of growing up. Kenpo karate and other martial arts do not offer answers
to each individual problem. But through acquiring respect in a healthful
and intelligent environment of planned progression, a child or young adult
begins to build confidence. The confidence shows them they need no longer
be subject to the whims of others."
Some of the children Tatum said he teaches
are, in fact, the children of parents who themselves studied kenpo at the
same school more than two decades ago. Tatum said he had such a full schedule
of classes that callers had to make appointments to see him, a statement
BLACK BEL T can verify. Some of Tatum's students include Hollywood notables
including Sidney Poitier, Elke Sommer, Scott Jacoby and Edd Byrnes. And
many of Ed Parker's original students are returning for more instruction
from protege Tatum.
As with Parker, T atum said he places great
store by the use of analogies drawn from daily experiences in order to
point up the key elements in what he teaches. Most techniques have colorful
names kenpoist Parker devised to aid students in re- membering and performing
the moves accurately and without hesitation (see BLACK BEL T issues of
July, September and August 1979 for the feature on Ed Parker and his techniques).
The younger kenpo teacher said the use of analogy was especi- ally valuable
in teaching children.
"When dealing with children, I have found
that key words play an important part in bringing about a desired response,"
he said. "Obviously, the arts require certain amounts of aggres- sion,
whether defensive or offensive. Too often, aggressiveness is mistaken for
violence, and a child will purposely refrain from emotion. Such words as
faster, harder, stronger lose their effectiveness because of overuse. These
are words that a child expects to hear, so the instructors may never break
through."
But Tatum said that there were ways to, in
fact, break through. "For one child, it was the phrase, 'first gear ,"'
he said. "I told him to get out of first gear and into second. His mother
came in the next day, and my student said he would ask her what gear she
was in while she was driving. She ex- plained that the different gears
made the car move faster. At the next lesson, he not only moved faster
but at different rates of speed.'
Though Tatum directs much of his effort at
teaching young children, he nevertheless maintains that he wants kenpo
to be an art for the well-educated.
"In the orient, martial artists are very literate
men," he ex- plained. "They were very learned men, well-educated before
they became noted as martial artists. That's the way it was, and that's
what is now happening here.
"I have Addison Randall and Rick Hughes working
for me as assistants, but it took me a long time to find them," Tatum noted.
"I hired and fired quite a number of teachers to locate these guys because
I couldn't have an illiterate man teaching literate people. You can't do
that."
Tatum said he needed intelligent instructors
so that they could pursue more than mere punches and kicks in classes.
"I've got to teach him (his students) not only physically and teach him
how to concentrate, but I have to adapt the teach- ing to his attitude,"
Tatum said. "I don't know if he is the type of guy who could kick somebody
in the groin or a guy that in a dire situation would be able to poke somebody
in the eye. I have to find out if he is, and if he is not, then I've got
to teach him in a way that I want. I don't want him to think that he's
learning a violent thing. There's nothing violent about what we're doing,
but if there's malice behind it during prac-tice, yes, it's violent.
"But when I teach I have to know the person's
bc ground," he said. "I've got to know if he's ever been in a fi! How do
you get him to pull it off if he hasn't been in an vironment where he has
kicked somebody?
"You draw analogies. You can't take Mr. and
Mrs. Amel and put them into a karate school and teach them all ti" moves
and expect them to pull it off in a street situatiol they don't associate
it with their environment. They havE associate it with things they have
learned."
Tatum commented on the claims some have made
tha takes too long for average students to master kenpo mc and thus obtain
rankings and proficiency. He explained v these claims 'f"ere made.
"Kenpo is not just a style, it is a system:'
he maintair "Kenpo incorporates kicking, punching, off-balancing, ti ping
the hands, flipping, throwing, wrestling, pressure poin everything. It
takes longer to earn a belt in kenpo, and w' noted for that, but the thing
is, you become a well-roun, student. If you were to go from style to style-people
01 prefer cetain styles-that would be fine. These people r like a portion
and keep that for what they do. But Ed (Parker) set up Kenpo as a
system." .
Although Tatum insisted that kenpo techniques
forme total system of martial arts, he said that no student need E master
the totality. "He doesn't, he only takes the criter the instructor explained.
"There's a certain criteria he ha! learn-the sum of the basic kenpo techniques
and strategies- but he only takes certain portions of that and adapts it
to his body build, his style and again, his attitude so that the sys- tem
works for him. He doesn't have to go from school to school till he finally
finds one style that works for him. If he comes to a kenpo school, anything
will work for him, but he'll use only those elements that are really effective
for him. That's the difference between a style and a system."
By example, Taturn noted another comment often
aimed at kenpoists that they rarely employ high kicks. He insisted that
tournament kenpoists do employ the flashy high kicks-as taught in his school-but
that for many, the choice is for the low variety which is more effective
in street confrontations.
"They both have their place," he said. "In
a tournament you need high kicks, but in a street situation, low kicks
are harder for your opponent to see and to block. If you used high kicks
here, you wouldn't be able to use your arms simul- taneously, but when
you kick low, you can kick him in the knee and punch him in the face at
the same time."
No matter how effective a person's use of
kenpo techniques may be, Taturn placed a high premium on one more quality,
albeit one that for many is quite intangible-almost mysteri- ous: ki. The
kenpoist said that he believed everyone possessed ki but that only a few
people ever called on the ultimate re- source. And even then, those individuals
only found ki for an instant-at the height of a physical or emotional crisis
when a surge of strength was required that otherwise would not have been
available.
"Yes, they found out that their well was deeper
than they thought, and it was unexpected," Tatum said. "But that doesn't
mean they can use it all the time. Only the mastery of ki allows somebody
to tap that energy at will without getting emotional or all stressed up."
T aturn explained how his instructor, Ed Parker,
developed ki strength at the outset of his teaching career. "He didn't
in- vite challengers in, they came in. What happened to him hap- pened
to me, because when Ed personally quit teaching and put the teaching on
my shoulders, I was under challenge again. And for the first year of my
teaching, I had people coming through that door right and left. Under that
stressful situation, I had to pull energy from my spirit, it boiled right
down to that.
"You are working with your spirit, your etheric
self. It's almost transcendent, but the energy is here. Most of us live
out our lives, and though we have the energy, it's latent. It's there,
but we don't use it because our environment doesn't demand it of us. If
I hadn't become a martial artist and was on a desk job, then I would never
have used that energy. I would have never had to force it out. But because
I became a martial artist, it began to move. Well, with all these people
coming through the door to challenge my teaching Ed's kenpo, I had to go
up and beyond. I had to bring it back up and force my body to do it again.
"There are talents within all of us, but unfortunate.ly,
our environment is like a veil, and most of us never reach our potential."
Taturn said there were certain kenpo techniques
designed to enhance latent ki energy, but he insisted that the energy to
come from within. And this, among the various techniques, is what he said
he tries to impart to "Mr. and Mrs. America"- and children.
"That's kenpo!" he exclaimed. "That's what
Ed, the other kenpo practitioners and I have been trying to tell people.
It's not so much a different style of martial art, but it's a system that
adapts to the American way of life."