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Chief
Instructor: Brian Towndrow
My name is Brian Towndrow, I'm a 6th Dan,
and I teach tae kwon-do full time from my own academy. I first
became involved in the martial arts like a lot of people did
– just before Bruce Lee came on the scene in 1974. I
was becoming a little overweight, so I took a look at training
in the United Kingdom Tae Kwon-do Association, joined and
gradually it grew on me. I've never practiced any style other
than Tae Kwon-do.
One of the highlights of my early practice was the visit
to my academy of General Choi Hong Hi. That was history in
the making because I never thought I'd ever get to meet the
man, much less have him visit my own club.
I'm area representative for the North Midlands Area, plus
I'm a grading examiner. As an area rep, I coordinate everything
that happens there.
My area joined the T.A.G.B. roughly three months after if
had formed. The person in my position at that time was Bob
Harvey, and he was very pro-Rhee Ki Har. We held a meeting
and decided not to leave the U.K.T.A. at that time but after
a few months, it became clear that things were not working
out, so we pulled out as a unit.
Quite a few of my ideas have been taken on board by the T.A.G.B..
For example, we now do advanced two-step sparring and I was
the man who had the job of putting it together. I'm also a
member of the grading board and a few of my suggestions on
scoring have been implemented. Also, I make a fair input to
our regular committee meetings.
In my area, I have to go along with what the instructors
tell me, even if I don't agree with it. A lot of what my area
has asked for has been voted on and put through, including
a decision to start holding our own black belt gradings instead
of employing a practioner from another country.
As far as I know, the T.A.G.B. is one of the few associations
which operated democratically right from the beginning. Now
the T.A.G.B. has more professional instructors than any other
association for the simple reason that it was set up so they
could all make a good living, rather than just one man at
the top of the pyramid.
The T.A.G.B.'s now got over 20,000 members. I never ever
thought it would grow that big!
My personal ambition is to build my own full time premises.
I've bought a piece of land and am now looking into the possibility
of building a centre on it. At the moment I've got premises
in the same street where I live, but it's an old mill and
it's leased, so I can't do much with it.
I think that people should take up tae kwon-do because it
is an excellent form of self defence, though self defence
is only a byproduct. The real benefit of training is the self
discipline and character-building it brings about. Plus, tae
kwon-do is a great form of relaxation.
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