
More Than a Belt
As a karate instructor, I get to watch students grow in ways that go far beyond punches, kicks, and belts. Every once in a while, a student reminds me exactly why we do what we do at Colorado Karate Club.
This is a story about perseverance.
Evan is the younger of two brothers who train at our school. His older brother, Ian, has always seemed to have a natural ability for karate. Both boys started around the same time, but Ian moved ahead quickly and earned his brown belt several months ago.
Evan’s journey was different.
Being younger, he struggled more. The movements did not come as easily, and while his brother advanced, Evan began to fall behind. He failed one evaluation, then another, then another.
Some days, I wondered if he might give up.
But recently, something changed. It was as if a switch flipped inside him. He started to believe in himself. His effort changed. His focus changed. His attitude changed.
In class, Evan began working harder than I had ever seen. His face would turn red from effort. Sweat would drip down his forehead. He pushed himself through every drill, every stance, every technique. I was silently proud of him.
Not because he had already reached his goal, but because he had found something much more important: work ethic. He had found the courage to keep trying even when the outcome was uncertain. That is a lesson many people never learn.
As rank testing approached, I could tell Evan was nervous. I was nervous too. I wanted him to succeed, but nothing was guaranteed. He would have to earn it.
During his evaluation, he started strong. Then, somewhere in the middle, I saw doubt begin to creep in. Sometimes doubt tries to rob us of the very things we have worked so hard to earn.
As Evan walked by me, flushed and sweating, I quietly told him, “Evan, this is your brown belt. Let’s go. Do your best.” He looked at me but said nothing. Then he went back out and nailed it.
Everything we had worked on for months came together. His movements were sharp, strong, and focused. At that moment, he was not the younger brother trying to catch up. He was a martial artist who had learned to fight through doubt.
When I announced that Evan had earned his brown belt, I kept my face calm, but inside I was filled with pride and joy. The real victory was not the belt. The real victory was that Evan had conquered himself.
He chose not to quit. He chose to work. He chose to earn it. And as his instructor, I could not be prouder.