If
you want to get "a head" get a hate, that is not a piece of homespan
philosophy recently coined in the heat of war for the annual tournament,
inter-schools but a phase that kept floating over a decade ago while watching
our Hero's in action. I
can't quite remember who coined it, but it wasn't all that cleaver. Karate is a
sport that resembles Chase game or any other mind game. for you to get a win you
need to win your mind over. the phrase isn't just a play on advertising slogan
prominent in the sixties and nineties "if you want to get a head, get a
hate", but one that always made a lasting impression.
If
you find the reason in the sport-page wag and Karate Managers picked them up as
a handy encapsulation of the sort of commitment Karateka's need in order to
perform at their maximum. since the competition began, it has been regarded as
a healthy to consider any one blocking the way to your win as an 'enemy' and
you are unable to raise to this level then your best technique is weak as a
result you can end up losing. Into
what categories are our plutocrat karateka's are we! in instances where you
cannot blame the coaches when they demand their players to get their fangs out
for the judges not their fans. if hate is a valuable motivating weapon then
hating sports managers is fine to.
We have to prepare for May 6th Kenya open and Great - rift Championship in June this year. a test of character measures on ability to prevail in the face of all consuming challenges and to deal with the often far reaching consequence of difficult circumstances.
We have to prepare for May 6th Kenya open and Great - rift Championship in June this year. a test of character measures on ability to prevail in the face of all consuming challenges and to deal with the often far reaching consequence of difficult circumstances.