Soke posses while teaching tekko (Okinawan Horse shoes) during Shorin-Ryu Karate and Kobudo classes at the Arizona Hombu dojo in Mesa, Arizona. |
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Soke Hausel, nominated and selected for the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award. |
Over the years, he was selected recognized for lifelong dedication to martial arts, geology and writing and was selected for the Albert Nelson Marquis Who’s Who Lifetime Achievement Award and inducted into in Who’s Who in Martial Arts Legends in Washington DC, and was honored as an outstanding alumni of Who's Who in Martial Arts Hall of Fame.
Students of all ages - from 10 to 100, learn karate and kobudo. Children train with a parent or grandparent. |
Hausel trained a few hundred black belts around the world as well as hundreds of lower ranked students. Most are now productive members of society as engineers, scientists, physicians, accountants, priests, soldiers, mechanics, university faculty and staff, university students, school teachers, lawyers, nurses, pilots, etc. And many of have noted that their training in martial arts provided an advantage in their respective careers.
According to various researchers; training in traditional martial arts helps improve physical and mental conditioning in part due to better health, memory, concentration, and social skills through training in the traditional Okinawa Shorin-Ryu martial arts.
Hausel dreams that one day he will meet a benefactor as devoted as he, so a permanent martial arts school can be constructed to offer many different aspects of the traditional Okinawan and Japanese martial arts to the public in the Phoenix valley, and train people to respect others and be ethical, something that is not practiced by politicians.
In one recent (2018) US study reported by Dr. Ashleigh Johnstone from Bangor University, children between the ages of 8 and 11 were tasked with traditional martial arts training that focused on respecting others and defending themselves as part of an anti-bullying program. The children were taught to maintain a level of self-control in heated situations.
Researchers found martial arts training reduced the level of aggressive behavior in boys, and the boys were more likely to step in and help someone who was being bullied. Significant changes were not found in the girls’ behavior, possibly because they showed lower levels of physical aggression before the training than the boys did.
Interestingly, this anti-aggression effect is not limited to young children. A different research project found reduced physical and verbal aggression, as well as hostility, in adolescents who practiced martial arts.