“When are you coming in?” he asked.
His question caught Cheryl off guard. All she ever saw at the dojo were the youth classes, and she had a hard time imagining herself in her son’s class. “I didn’t really think about adults doing karate,” she says. And by that point, she had all but forgotten about a karate class she had taken in college, at the University of South Alabama.
“I decided to take that class as an elective, and I ended up loving everything about it,” she says. “Then I got into physical therapy school, and I didn’t have time for anything extracurricular. Then it was graduating, getting a job, having kids… And I didn’t think about it again until my son showed interest.”
Not too long before Master Santillo’s question, Cheryl had been at her job – at a geriatric rehabilitation center in Alexandria, working with a physical therapy patient. They were working with the parallel bars, and Cheryl was on the floor. She went to stand up, and she had to pull herself off the floor, using the bar. “I felt so weak,” she says. “I was looking for something to help change that.”
Now in her seventh year of Kempo, Cheryl, 50, is a second degree black belt. She looks forward to training and finds that the practice has benefited her in countless ways. She has never struggled with weight issues, but she knows that her balance, flexibility, overall muscle tone and posture have all improved. “I think I carry myself better,” she says. “I definitely feel more confident.”
She has even become more comfortable speaking in front of a group, thanks to all the practice speaking to students. “I was always terrified of that, and it has really improved,” she says. I feel myself not getting red from the face up now.”
Cheryl’s son – now 21 – made it to the black belt level as a teenager. In their house, the entertainment room turned into the family dojo – with swords, katanas, a punching bag and a makiwara board. On family vacations, they often practiced on the beach in the sand. When they went to Ireland last summer, Cheryl practiced her moves underwater in the pool and found that the water resistance offered a new challenge. “The Irish people didn’t know what to make of me,” she says, laughing. “But Sensei tells us that whatever you need to do can be done in whatever space is available. There is enough space in a hotel room to do a Kempo, no problem.”
Cheryl goes to group classes three days a week, with instructor training and her private lesson on Tuesday and on Saturdays she teaches. Most challenging are the physical demands. “And that’s a good thing,” she says. “You want to try to take yourself to another level. But you have to be smart about it. I’m not 20 anymore… Everyone has to set their own goals.”
“It doesn’t matter what your shape is,” she says. “And no matter what your goal – confidence, weight loss or even speaking ability – it’s a terrific sport. I’m just a normal average mom, and I can’t believe where it has taken me.”
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