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Self-defense
training suggested for protection,
health
by
Season Weeter
reporter
It is dark outside,
and the campus parking lot is nearly empty when a college
student walks briskly through the parking lot fumbling
for her keys less than a 100 yards from her vehicle.
A cold chill runs down her spine as she
uneasily becomes aware someone is between her and her
car.
Several scenarios could fill in for the
ending to this story, but the attacker is more likely
not a stranger.
Suppose the potential attacker is an ex-boyfriend
of the student.
Would the situation prove to feel less
dangerous to the young woman?
Statistics show that more than 50 percent
of rape assault victims are attacked not by strangers
but by intimates or once intimate partners.
Sgt. Anthony Woolum, NE campus police department,
said the last sexual assault to occur on NE Campus was
three years ago.
“It was a case of ‘stranger’ rape assault,
but it is very rare that the attacker is a stranger
to the victim,” he said.
After reporting this rape assault incident
to the Hurst Police Department for investigation, Woolum
was told it was the first of 60 reports in Hurst where
the attacker was a stranger.
“Crimes against people occur more frequently
on NE Campus than on the other four campuses,
but crime happens on all campuses,” he said.
“Reported sexual assault cases occur more
often than people think, and that doesn’t even
count the assaults that go unreported,” he said.
The best ending to the beginning story
might report that the young woman had total control
of the situation because of the self-defense training
she received in her martial arts class.
That training could have allowed her to
defend herself and get away.
College campuses in the DFW area have not
reported an alarming number of assaults, but many campuses
are actively providing rape assault awareness programs.
A UTA police officer said he took martial
arts for exercise and recreation and believes all martial
arts are good for self-defense. His recommendation would
be tae kwon do.
Knowledge of self-defense is considered
the number one benefit of learning a martial art, but
many more benefits should be considered.
Other motivations to train include better
health and overall fitness in areas of strength, balance,
coordination and self-control.
Studies show that martial arts training
benefits people of all ages, and the discipline learned
by students carries over into other areas of life.
Confidence is dramatically increased, especially
in children, as a result of martial arts training.
Master Samuel T. Robertson IV, martial
arts instructor at American Institute of Korean Martial
Arts, said, “Good safety awareness and practical
self-defense equal desirable results under undesirable
circumstances.”
Master Robertson, who holds black belts
in eight different disciplines of martial arts, trains
children as young as 4 in tae kwon do, women’s
and girl’s self-defense, weapons defense, hapkido
and several other disciplines.
At AIOKMA, people are taught the mind is
the most powerful weapon.
Academic achievement is highly encouraged
and rewarded by martial art instructors.
Such achievement is considered very beneficial
to students of all ages because of the skills and discipline
acquired in training.
A key benefit of martial arts training
for parents to note is that children will become more
disciplined in general from the distinctive formalities
of martial arts classes.
The formality of martial arts is one benefit
that other sports and activities do not have.
Former problem kids with bad attitudes
may become better behaved and respectful to others as
a result of taking martial arts training, Robertson
believes.
Leigh Bietrich, defensive tactic instructor
for TCC district police department, suggests any defense
training method is good and everyone should “take
something.”
AIOKMA will sponsor a women’s self-defense seminar
soon. For more information or to register, contact Robertson
at 817-784-KICK.
TCC provides students with periodic rape
awareness seminars that provide tactics to stay out
of harm’s way.
For more information, call 817-515-7723.
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