Hey Readers!
Wow! Has it been a busy couple of weeks! Getting a novel ready to launch is a lot of work, especially when you are doing it for the first time. Finalizing edits, cover design, learning the ins and outs of publishing platforms, preparing social media . . . I’ve certainly had a full plate. It’s all good thought because I’m so excited to share my time travel murder mystery, All These Threads of Time, with you! If you haven’t already, please follow me on my Author Facebook Page and/or my Instagram Sarah Crowne Instagram. Fair warning - I’m still learning Instagram, so please be patient with me there!
This week, I’m going to share with you a short, mini essay that was published last year in Issue 3 of Clinch: A Literary Art’s Magazine. You can find the published version here or read the essay below - whichever you prefer! Note: the original essay is not published under my pen name.
In the meantime, here are some other updates:
I am planning to reveal my book cover this week! Join the countdown on social media starting Wednesday. The cover will be revealed this upcoming Saturday . . . but because you have all stuck with me at this Substack and are my faithful readers, I’ll be sharing the cover reveal with you first - five hours before it goes live on Social Media.
Next week, I plan to post my latest “The Write Life” column. Which writer will be next? I’ll give you a clue - he was born on the 4th of July!
Till Next Time,
Sarah
AKA A Busy Lady
Dōjō kun
By: Sarah Crowne
Picture this. It’s 1995 and I’m sixteen. I’m the only girl in the Dojo. My white belt is tied around my Gi. My legs burn because I’ve been in this squat position for fifteen minutes while the Sensei discusses the history of Japanese martial arts. He paces back and forth as he talks. He punches each of our stomachs when he senses we’ve let our guard down. I try not to let mine loose. I worry I might be getting my period and that my boobs will fall out of my sports bra.
I’m here because my brother brought me. I’m also here because I want to be. The reasons are twofold. It’s not because I like physical activity. Despite my short stint on cross country, I’m not much of a sports girl. I’d rather be home listing to Nirvana on my Walkman while writing dark, moody poetry. But it’s the 90s and not only does Jeffrey Dahmer eat people, but my Teen Magazine is full of date rape stories. I figure I should probably know how to defend myself. Besides, my boyfriend is a student here too. That’s part of the motivation. Okay, maybe that was most of it.
At the end of each class, we recite the Dojo Kun. Hitotsu! Be Humble and Polite! Hitotsu! Train considering physical strength! We yell it in unison. Practice earnestly with creativity. Be calm and swift. Take care of your health. Live a plain life. Do not be too proud or modest. Continue your training with patience. These are the gifts from Miyagi Chojun. I chant the rules whole heartedly, even if I don’t know yet what it fully means to live them. It makes me feel like the girl version of Karate Kid. Wax on, Wax off. I’m all about the life lesson. I’m just too young to understand how many lessons I’ve yet to learn.
But those words – Hitosu! Be humble and polite! Hitosu! Train considering physical strength! - have echoed in my mind in the decades since. When I was broke and struggling to feed myself at nineteen, I’d recite them. Be calm and swift. When I almost died in the hospital I remembered, Take care of your health. Each time I faced a challenged that felt too big to achieve I’d think, Train considering your physical strength. Sensei always said it was important to remember to start where you are.
I never made it past my white belt, but I held my own when I was tossed in the middle of five guys throwing punches during a class drill. I loved the forms the best. It felt like dancing. I probably should have stayed training, but as they say, life happened. Still, I’ve never forgotten.
I may not have been the Karate Kid, but the “Dōjō kun” gave me the playbook for life. That’s worth more than any stripe or colored belt.
© 2024 WHAT’S GOIN’ ON?! SLN Publishing, LLC ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Great story! My friend, Sifu Rob Moses was David Carradine's Kung Fu trainer. Both studied under Sifu Kam Yuen. Rob told me that in traditional Kung Fu the belt system did not really exist ad they have it here. It was invented to make money. A grandmaster like Kam Yuen would only give out ONE black belt his entire life to his single best student.
Very excited for you glad to see you on this journey. Best of luck. God bless