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TheMartialArtsReporter.com

"Martial Arts News, Updates, Insights, Training Tips & Chat"

Olympic Games

TKD Gold Medalist Dana Hee And Change “I Can’t” To “I Can”

I am pretty sure that most of you will agree that the Korean martial art of Taekwondo is one of the most popoular and well-known styles.

Interesting to me is the fact that it was not really developed and introduced until after WWII ended in 1945. That’s not that long ago.

While Japan was occupying their country for decades, Koreans were not allowed to practice martial arts. Except only when in service for the Japanese military.

After the war, that all changed for countless individuals striving to improve themselves through Korean martial arts and Taekwondo in specific.

Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee as well as many other Korean instructors and former U.S. military service members returning from the Far East paved the way for Taekwondo to widespread acceptance, especially in the United States.

Another boost for Taekwondo in the U.S. certainly took place in the realm of the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea.

And our featured martial artist today, Dana Hee, played a pivotal role.

Some of you reading this post might not be old enough or you simply did not follow the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul to the degree to remember her name.

Let me share some very intriguing insights about Dana Hee and what an inspiration she was then and still is today.

Dana was born in 1961 in Louisiana and based on what I found out about Dana, she had to endure a rather crappy childhood, to say the least.

Growing up with divorced and alcoholic parents, Dana had to go through what no child should experience, namely despair, abuse and being abandoned.

Over years, Dana was passed between orphanage, suicidal family members, halfway houses, and finally a foster home.

As you can probably imagine that took its toll on her self-esteem and led to a major fear of failure.

At the age of 25 and way too many years of having been programmed with the “I Can’t” mindset and running from her fears, Dana was finally able to make a decision to commit to change her life forever.

Through her agonizing, against-all-odds process of this struggle, Dana Hee transformed from the young woman with low or no self-esteem in a such profound way that changed “I Can’t” to “I Can”.

Dana trained vigorously and competed for several years, pushing past her self-doubts and fear of failure to finally win the Olympic Gold Medal on the U.S Olympic Taekwondo Team that consisted of 8 men and 8 women. Team USA Taekwondo won another 3 gold medals in Seoul.

I will add that Takewondo was a demonstration sport in Seoul and became an official Olympic discipline in 2000 in Sydney.

After her Olympic success, Dana has moved on to become a leading Hollywood stuntwoman and double for leading actresses including Nicole Kidman, Uma Thurman, Gwynneth Paltrow, Renee Russo, and Jennifer Garner in big budget movies such as Independence Day, Terminator III, Charlie’s Angels, Batman Forever, Batman & Robin, Demolition Man, Lethal Weapon 4, Swordfish, The Long Kiss Goodnight, plus an ongoing list of television shows like Star Trek Voyager, The Pretender, VIP, and the X-Files.

With her life experience and unwavering persistence to succeed Dana Hee is high in demand as a motivational speaker for dozens of clients including Hewlett Packard, IBM, United Way, and United Airlines.

I would like to leave you with a quote by Henry Ford:

If you think you can do a thing or think you can’t do a thing, you’re right.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4OtAPYAL3A[/youtube]

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Is Yildiz Aras The World’s Best Female Karate Kumite Competitor?

You all know by now that my life-long martial arts experience started with Shotokan karate and even though I haven’t taken official classes in a very long time, I don’t consider having stopped, I simply look at the hiatus as having taken a break.

But be assured or as Arnold “The Terminator” Schwarzenegger would say, “I’ll be baaack!”

All of that being said, you will appreciate my never-ending interest in Shotokan karate and who can blame me, right?

I have been thinking about Girl Power on the karate circuit and a female competitor who immediately got my attention is from Istanbul, Turkey.

Her name is Yıldız Aras and she is considered to be the world’s best in karate kumite open division.

She just recently celebrated her 32nd birthday (are we even allowed to mention a woman’s age here?).

Born in Istanbul, Turkey, Yildiz began studying karate at the tender age of 10 under Yüksel Baltay, a former national karateka.

Yildiz was admitted to the national team in 1994. So let me think. At the age of seventeen!

Foreign sportspeople gave her the nickname the “Strong Girl”. She holds three world champion titles, seven European champion titles, and three Mediterranean Games champion titles.

Now get this:
Yildiz is the most successful Turkish athlete ever, but without any Olympic medal, because karate is not an official discipline at the Olympic Games.

I was researching her achievements in competition since 1997 and believe me when I tell you I almost fell off my chair.

So instead of listing all of them, because that would have made this post the longest in Internet history, I will just show you an excerpt of what Yildiz Aras has accomplished. I repeat: This is only an excerpt.

Are you ready to be amazed? Hajime!

World Championships
Gold 2006 Tampere Kumite open
Gold 2004 Monterrey Kumite team
Gold 2002 Madrid Kumite team
Gold 2000 Munich Kumite open
Bronze 1998 Rio de Janeiro Kumite open
Gold 1998 Rio de Janeiro Kumite team

World Games
Gold 2005 Duisburg Kumite open

World Cup
Bronze 1997 Manila Kumite open

European Championships
Gold 2009 Zagreb Kumite +68kg
Bronze 2008 Tallinn Kumite +60kg
Bronze 2008 Tallinn Kumite open
Gold 2007 Bratislava Kumite +60kg
Bronze 2007 Bratislava Kumite open
Silver 2006 Stavanger Kumite +60kg
Silver 2006 Stavanger Kumite open
Gold 2005 Tenerife Kumite +60kg
Bronze 2005 Tenerife Kumite open
Gold 2004 Moscow Kumite open
Gold 2004 Moscow Kumite team
Gold 2003 Bremen Kumite +60kg
Bronze 2003 Bremen Kumite open
Gold 2002 Tallinn Kumite open
Gold 2001 Sofia Kumite team
Gold 2000 Istanbul Kumite open
Bronze 2000 Istanbul Kumite team
Gold 1999 Euboea Kumite team
Bronze 1998 Belgrade Kumite team
Bronze 1997 Santa Cruz de Tenerife Kumite team
Bronze 1996 Paris Kumite open

Mediterranean Games
Silver 2005 Almeria Kumite +65kg
Gold 2005 Almeria Kumite open
Gold 2001 Tunis Kumite open
Gold 1997 Bari Kumite open

World University Karate Championships
Silver 2000 Kyoto Kumite +60kg
Bronze 2000 Kyoto Kumite team

European Cadet & Junior Championships
Gold 1997 Greece Kumite +60kg

Are you still there?

Is Yildiz Aras amazing or what?

Check out this short, but action-packed video with Yildiz Aras, aka The Strong Girl, aka The Turkish Rose, aka The Golden Girl:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGpNhd7dolg[/youtube]

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2016 Olympics Awarded to Rio de Janeiro – Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Anybody?

“Tonight I have the honour to announce that the Games of the 31st Olympiad
are awarded to the city of Rio de Janeiro,” IOC President Jacques Rogge said.

My heartfelt congratulations go out to the people of Brazil in general and the
citizens of Rio de Janeiro in specific.

When I think of Brazil and Rio de Janeiro, what immediately comes to my mind:

Pele and artistic Brazilian soccer football, Copacabana, super-model Gisele Buendchen,
the famous song “The girl from Ipanema”, churrasco, Carnival in Rio, and …

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, of course.

The Gracie familiy members have done herculean work in laying the foundation
and together with their Machado cousins spreading the now immensely successful
and, just ask any of their opponents, very effective martial art.

BJJ founder Helio Gracie must have a really big smile on his face right now!

So, the Olympic Games 2016 have been awarded to the mesmerizing metropolis
of Rio de Janeiro and that leads me to the following question:

Can Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu become an Olympic discipline ?

And why not?

Just look back at the Olympics 1964 in Tokyo when Judo became an official
discipline and has stayed one ever since!

Or how about the Korean martial art of Taekwondo that first was a demo sport
during the 1988 Olympic Games of Seoul, Korea and then just 12 years later
officially became an Olympic discipline in 2000 during the Sydney, Australia games.

By the way, this recognition came less than 50 years after Taekwondo was first
officially introduced to the world.

Can Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu do the same?

Tell me what you think!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T82QDpy2DEo[/youtube]

Check out some great books on BJJ, too:

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