Fighting Like an Old Man
Three weeks ago, I started fencing again. I fenced throughout high school, and won a good deal more than I lost. My form was poor, and relied too much on explosive action and not enough on technique. I fenced with leaps, with snake-speed, with techniques borrowed from my Wado-Ryu Karate training. In short, I fenced like a young man.
I didn’t set foot on a strip for nine years after high school, but recently, thanks to a coupon and a need to have a reason to keep myself in shape, I began taking classes at a local studio. Holding a sword for the first time after an eight year absence feels like settling into your own bed – you know this place, you know this feeling. In bouts with the other students, I began fencing like a young man, jumping up and down the strip, relying on speed and power.
Now, I’m not as fast as when I was seventeen. Nor am I nearly so resilient. After two weeks of leaping and lunging, I woke to find that I couldn’t walk without a limp. I’d pulled or strained one of the tiny muscles in my hip that helps one recover from a lunge, and even a normal pace caused pain. I worried that I might have to skip fencing this last week. I cursed myself for forgetting that I’m not a teenager any more. Grow up, I thought.
I went to fencing. I hobbled through warmups. I stretched, I conserved my energy. And when time came to fence, I fought down my instincts to press the attack, and fenced like an old man.
I lunged rarely, and only when certain of victory. I parried and I riposted. I gave ground in a slow and calculated fashion. I struck exposed wrists, upthrust arms. I sidestepped attacks and hit undefended flanks. I controlled my opponents’ blades, and guided them off-line to create openings for myself.
I won five bouts in a row, and lost none that evening.
My form remains horrible, and half the tricks I tried I got away with only because I was more experienced, even though I hadn’t fenced in years. My point, I have a point, is more that just because a certain way of fencing, or moving, or writing, or thinking, works well when you’re a teenager, doesn’t mean it still works even in your twenties – people grow, change, develop. That’s okay. If we don’t respect these transformations, we invite pain; if we do, we can earn victory and joy.
I hope I can keep this in mind as my hip heals. Otherwise I’ll be jumping up and down the strip like a crazed kangaroo again, and nobody wants that.