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Tenets of Tae Kwon-Do
EXPLANATION OF TENETS Needless to say, the success or failure of Taekwon-Do training depends largely on how one observes and implements the Tenets of Taekwon-Do which should serve as a guide for all serious students of the art. COURTESY Taekwon-Do students should attempt to practice the following elements of courtesy to build up their noble character and to conduct the training in an orderly manner as well. 1) To promote the spirit of mutual concessions. INTEGRITY In Taekwon-Do, the word integrity assumes a looser definition than the one usually presented in Webster's Dictionary. One must be able to define right and wrong and have the conscience, if wrong, to feel guilt. Listed are some examples, where integrity is lacking: 1)The instructor who misrepresents himself and his art by presenting PERSEVERANCE There is an old Oriental saying, "Patience leads to virtue or merit." "One can make a peaceful home by being patient for 100 times." Certainly, happiness and prosperity are most likely brought to the patient person to achieve something, whether it is a higher degree or the perfection of a technique, one must set his goal, then constantly perserver. Robert Bruce learned his lesson of perseverance from the persistent efforts of a lowly spider. It was this perseverance of tenacity that finally enabled him to free Scotland in the fourteenth century. One of the most important secrets in becoming a leader of Taekwon-Do is to overcome every difficulty by perseverance. SELF-CONTROL This tenet is extremely important inside and outside the do-jang, whether conducting oneself in free sparring or in one's personal affairs. A loss of self control in free sparring can prove disastrous to both student and opponent. An inability to live and work within one's capability or sphere is also a lack of self-control. INDOMITABLE SPIRIT "Here lie 300, who did their duty," a simple epitaph for one of the greatest acts of courage known to mankind. |