Black Belt

Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.
— Robert Kennedy

Words can't begin to express how proud we are of Noah for achieving his black belt. When he first started we realized he had an aptitude for it but to stick with it for 3+ years was all on him. I remember when he made the jump from the little kid class to the junior class and the trepidation he showed. I really thought he may give up on it, but I remember the third time he went to the class with mostly teenagers and suddenly his confidence came through and he fit right in.

During his training as a recommended black belt the past 6 months he had to master all 9 lower belt forms but the biggest anxiety was he had to demonstrate 2 successful board breaks. At one midterm, a boy 2 years older than Noah was testing for his black belt and failed to break his second board.  I remember Jenna and I watching in horror as the boy sat on the mat with tears pouring down his face.  Our anxiety grew as we got closer and closer, but not Noah's. He was unflappable. 

When I picked Noah up from school the day of black belt testing he was fired up. At school that day he earned a show and tell the following Monday. He was excited because he'd be able to show off his black belt.  We did our best to present him with possibility he may fail the test without hurting his confidence going into it.  He just shrugged it off and had decided he was passing no matter what.

True to form, he rocked his form demonstration. He has always had excellent technique in his forms at every graduation and midterm he's ever taken.  I don't say that as his father, but as the adult standing next to him after instructor after instructor and parent after parent came to him after graduations and told him how much fun he was to watch. Then came sparring, which is probably his weakest area.  He doesn't win many matches because he doesn't counter well, but he also never loses because he is a defensive machine.  He's like trying to hit a fly with a chopstick. 

Then the moment of the board breaks came.  The students testing for black belt were given their boards and sat away from the students mid-terming. Then my most proud moment came.  I was going to be proud no matter what and I wasn't proud for the reasons you assume.  I was proud because up to this point in his 8+ years on this earth, this was probably Noah's biggest moment in the spotlight.  3 years of work was coming down to this moment and he had 10 family members, 7 of whom drove a long way, there holding their collective breath. I was proud because when the spotlight shone on him, he did what Noah always does.  He volunteered to go first.  If he has one trait now that I pray sticks with him for his entire life it's his willingness to do whatever he's asked, in front of whoever is there, whenever you ask him. 

Of course, going first was great for us because we didn't have any more time to worry.  It was go time.  He lined the boards where he wanted them held, asked permission to be a badass, and then snapped both boards like they weren't there. 

Noah breaking boards at his black belt test

Joy. Relief. Pride. It was a flood as Jenna and I looked at each other and could finally breath. The last of the story was when he was actually belted.  The passing students were asked to say a few words.  Like always he didn't hesitate and stepped forward.  

Noah receiving his black belt

Won the battle but lost the war

During the many snow days, Noah's ATA school said if the kids practiced for an hour they'd get credit for a class.  We invited Banks over so they'd both get credit.  Somehow, my male brain thought it would be a good idea to let them spar.  I wanted to document their practice so I caught a few rounds on video.  In this video, Noah finally wins the point with his left foot only to leave himself open to lose the war.  Ouch.

Blue Belt

Noah graduated to blue belt last week. This was the first junior graduation he has been able to attend. He was a rockstar.  He and his partner were asked to demonstrate their self-defense move to the group because they were so awesome. He's little karate boy at school also.  His new backpack is an ATA messenger bag that may not have left his body except to sleep.  This weekend he's taking his best little friend to buddy day and he's crazy stoked for it.  

MMA Boy

Noah was allowed to participate in a JuJitsu seminar at ATA this weekend. Initially everyone 8-9 had to get permission. Noah asked if he could come watch and he was given an awesome compliment by his instructor and was told he could participate. He was an absolute rock star. He was with adults and older kids. He was by far the youngest and smallest person there. His instructor was PJ Bonner, a professional MMA fighter from Little Rock.
After the two days he is all MMA. He wants to watch every fight coming up and is asking all kinds of questions about becoming a fighter, much to his mother's dismay.

Our Purple Belt

Noah missed graduation for the city tournament (baseball) but he was still able to move up a belt.  This was his first belt earned as a junior so he had to know the entire form.  Tigers learn half the form at a time so they have a midterm (head band) type ladder progression. This one has seriously upped his pride level.  He slept in his new belt two nights in a row.  As much trepidation as he showed in his first few junior classes, he's really stepped up to the plate. One day he was singled out for his stance and was brought up to lead the group.  His leadership drills are also much more difficult but he does them like a pro. What's crazy is we can see the light all the way to black belt now.  Hard to imagine him as a black belt but as fast as he's maturing, when the time comes I have no doubt he'll be ready. 

Our Green Belt

Noah graduated to green belt yesterday.  Even cooler, he graduated to the Junior class.  We are excited for him to move up with the big kids.  Mainly because Jenna and I are tired of participation success. Noah's ready to be in the world where everyone keeps score and he advances on merit. We are so proud of him.  This cycle was difficult because we were gone a lot and he missed a lot of classes but he was still a rockstar on his form and sparring.  Of course, Jenna's favorite is his freestyle where he really demonstrates he has a talent for martial arts.​

Here's a picture of him with the primary instructor, Mr. O'Connor.  Noah really likes Mr. O'Connor and always wants to impress him. It's nice to have your kid genuinely respect an elder and teacher.  Noah is just a good kid and we are very proud of him.​

NWA ATA Tournament

That's a lot of letters in a post title.  Noah's Taekwondo school hosted a tournament with it's "sister" club in Fayetteville this weekend.  This was Noah's last tournament (probably) before he moves up to Juniors and out of the Tiny Tiger class.  He and we are ready.  He did fantastic but he's a little over the whole participation medal thing.  He's ready to win or lose.  We are ready for him to be humbled so he can be a better loser.  He can be a pretty sore loser, like most Sullivan's to be honest, but the kid has never really lost at anything because they never keep score!  

With that said he was the same rockstar he always is.  We feel he was the star of creative weapons.  He was the only kid in his division that brought music and had a planned routine like they were supposed to. Of course I'm far from partial :)

Here's his creative weapons routine he made up, set to "Walk the Dinosaur!"

Yellow Belt-Level 2

Noah graduated last weekend to his 2nd level of Yellow Belt. This time he was graded on form and was allowed to do his weapons freestyle and spar.  His motor memory makes the therapist in me proud.  If he can just overcome the short hamstrings he inherited from me, he'll ​be an awesome black belt.

I also updated Noah's ATA page with all his graduation pics.​

ATA Demonstration

Yesterday Noah's Taekwondo instructor spoke at his school.  The topic was responsibility.  I'm always amazed at Mr. O'Connor's ability to keep kid's engaged and correct behaviors without raising his voice.  Yesterday though, it wasn't 20 kids it was over 300.​ It didn't seem to be any different. After he spoke, Noah and 3 other boy's in leadership from his school were asked to put on a demonstration for the school.  

Noah did great.  He demonstrated a self-defense move that got the crowd excited.  He was a little rockstar. Afterwards a bigger kid stopped us in the hallway to say "You  were awesome!"  ​

When Noah is proud he loses his big smile and gets a little grin on his face with his lips together.  Yesterday his lips were so tight I thought he'd burst from pride.  The kid was right. ​He was awesome.

Leader in Yellow

Noah graduated to his yellow belt Saturday morning. Even more exciting was being invited into the leadership class. Ever since he began Taekwondo he has cast an envious eye towards the kids in the leadership class. Each graduation 1 or 2 students are recognized and are issued an invitation to a separate more advanced class.

During the orange belt level 1 cycle one of the monthly lessons was Goals. Noah told us he was setting a goal to work hard and be invited into leadership. The leadership class has different lessons beyond form and technique. Most importantly (to Noah) is weapons training and contact sparring.

That graduation he was very disappointed when he wasn't invited into leadership. Jenna and I were disappointed too because he wanted it so much. Honestly though it was a good lesson to be learned. I always tell him you learn more from failure than success and it held true here. Yesterday when they called his name Jenna let out a squeal. He was comically stoic as he walked up to accept the invitation. Afterwards he beamed for the rest of the day.