Shujin [主人] Karate-ka [空手家]
Tatsujin [達人] Karate-ka [空手家]
To attain this level/grade, you must complete years of training in and out of the dojo, rising from apprentice (kyu) to journeyman (dansha) to master (shujin) [master, expert, adept, etc.]
The other commonly used titles in karate are honorary awards having nothing to do with being a true master of karate, or any martial discipline for that matter.
Apprenticeship to journeyman to master karate-ka:
- 60,000 hours minimum to reach master level (7,500 “8hr days; 20 years of continuous daily 8 hours a day)
- Experience: teaching, practicing and applying (real time hands-on experiences) skills, methodologies and methods, etc.
- Hands-on actual experiences and hands-on reality-based training, practices and experiences of reality-based practical (street cred) experiences from a master.
In short, we Americans tend to base our titles or entitlements on an emotionally based (ego) criteria, such as the time-in-grade model derived from military influences of karate’s early development and years.
In this light, can you imagine what the reality of achieving shodan would be and how karate would not survive in that kind of requirement?
I’ve been involved in martial disciplines, in particular karate of Isshinryu descent, since 1976 and I often feel I would just be achieving black belt but using the current criteria the karate community puts me at a much higher level and I know this information will have absolutely no influence on how the community would view it in reality saying, “I’m full of shit.”
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