01/04/2026
A few snippets from Tuesday night’s in-house grading. Well done Luke, Steven and Matea.
Great effort.
Martial Arts
01/04/2026
A few snippets from Tuesday night’s in-house grading. Well done Luke, Steven and Matea.
Great effort.
Interview with Hanshi Marc Toussaint while he presented a Eskrima seminar for us.
28/02/2026
What an amazing day of training. We had the pleasure of having Hanshi Marc Toussaint and Shihan Cam Pizzo in Canberra. With Marc imparting his wealth of knowledge in BJMA Eskrima and so much more.
Check out interview with Marc in the next post.
24/02/2026
Reminder, looking forward to this session.
05/02/2026
16/12/2025
One of our very clever students, Steven Pecotic, posted this to our group chat today after last night’s class. It was a fun class.
13/12/2025
Tenacity BJMA ACT end of year gradings, Saturday 13 December.
Great day as we welcomed two new 1st Degree Black Belts and almost all coloured belts attempted.
Everyone stepped up and preformed to a very good standard.
This grading was very family oriented with two brothers attempting yellow, two brothers attempting green (juniors who stepped up and did the adult grading, look out😉) and a father and son attempting brown.
From all the instructors we are very pleased to watch you all develop and set your own goals and reach them.
Just a few photos from the day.
Reminder:
Tenacity - Pearce, kicks off term three tomorrow.
05/06/2025
In Melbourne to celebrate the achievements of this great man, Soke Bob Jones (the Chief). 55 years of Bob Jones Martial Arts, Zen Do Kai.
The guidance and mentoring he has given many of us, will never be surpassed.
13/05/2025
https://www.facebook.com/share/16CypqZC3k/?mibextid=wwXIfr
(Approx 1 minute 50 second read)
It’s hard not to feel frustrated when reading comments about kata. So many people speak with confidence - but little understanding - about what kata is for, how it works, or why it was created in the first place.
Most of the time, their explanations are rooted in theory that wouldn’t last five seconds in a real confrontation.
But how did we get here?
Much of the confusion goes back to the rapid global spread of karate in the 1960s. During that period, many well-known Japanese instructors travelled the world to promote karate. Some were representing large associations, backed by prestige and formality.
Westerners - many seeing karate for the first time - were in awe. These instructors demonstrated powerful kihon and crisp kata. They were seen as masters from a far-off land, and what they taught was accepted without question.
But here's the thing: much of what they shared was stylized and watered down. It was suitable for demonstrations and for teaching large numbers of students. It looked good, was easy to memorize, and gave beginners a sense of structure and tradition. But it lacked combative realism.
As these methods became codified, they shaped how kata was understood. Bunkai became a kind of choreography - tidy, aesthetically pleasing, and far removed from the unpredictable nature of violence.
Over time, this version of karate became the global standard. And because those early instructors became legends, their methods became untouchable.
But legend doesn't always mean truth.
Many of these men were products of their era - focused on spreading karate, building organizations, and creating structure. Don’t get me wrong, many of these instructors were incredible karateka, hugely talented, and amazing teachers.
But they weren’t interested in preserving the older, more pragmatic approach to kata - just what karate had become. And few of their students, in those early days, had the experience or context to question what they were shown.
That’s the root of the misunderstanding. The real lessons of kata - were either left out or barely touched upon.
What remained was a shell: the movements were there, to look fantastic, but the ‘why’ was missing.
Today, and for many, that old image still holds power - the myth of the perfectly crisp snappy kata, explained with unrealistic bunkai and preserved as gospel.
And those that look on from the outside see this ritual, and for them - for those that don’t want to understand - kata, and karate as a whole, just doesn’t work.
Is it time to move past the myths? Not with disrespect, but with honesty.
Written by Adam Carter
*toryu
| Tuesday | 7pm - 8pm |
| Thursday | 6:30pm - 7:30pm |