A
Baldwin Shotokan dojo closed two weekends ago.
They finished Saturday morning classes, closed the doors, packed up, and
left. They had no scheduled classes on
Sunday or Monday, by which time an email went out to all students and Facebook
announced that the dojo was permanently closed effective immediately. Their dojo website and 800 phone number were
already disabled.
Arrangements were made for their students to continue training at a Shotokan dojo
almost four miles away, with their tuition covered from mid-May to the end of
June. They also made a point of saying
that this dojo was the only one recommended for their students to attend. A few students said they would not attend
this new dojo, and reached out to us, ¾ mile away from their former school, to
continue training here. They know of our
Sensei Abrams, who was the kobudo instructor at their now-defunct school. Mr. Abrams sat on promotion tests there, and
supported many of their students at tournaments. Some of their students reached out to other
former members and they also contacted our dojo.
The
weekend after their dojo closed, we hosted an open house. Around 15 people showed up and took class
with us. At that time I reminded them
that the dojo almost four miles away was recommended, and their fees were
covered for six weeks. Several said
that, for varying reasons, they had no intention of going there. I said they were welcome to train here as my
guest to the end of May. They would pay
tuition as of June. This gave them a
chance to see if we are a good fit for them, and if not, go four miles where
their fees are covered for another month.
Our tuition is significantly lower than what they were paying, so a few
months with us will save more than their pre-paid June fees at the recommended
dojo. From open house to today, ten of
their members trained with us on a regular basis.
Someone
asked why all this didn’t upset me. When
the former sensei recommended that particular dojo AND NO OTHER, it was a slap
in our face - especially since the former sensei studied/trained at our dojo,
we were both members of Miyazaki OB-Kai, and we dined together several
times. He knows that we do not take
little children and the other dojo does, and likely took this into
consideration for his little tykes. He
probably made a deal with the new dojo for his students. These were sound business decisions. As it happens, the female Black Belt who
taught their little children’s classes came to our open house. She is interested in joining us and working
little children’s classes for us.
If I should be upset about
anything, it would be that the school opened in Baldwin in 2012. Baldwin was our town from 1986 to 2006, only
moving ¾ mile away to Freeport when our landlord, American Legion, sold the
building. I wasn’t upset because we rent
a small room in a Temple, no street traffic or signage, too small to mount any
major ad campaign. The sensei could say
he was unaware that he opened so close to us, same style, same Miyazaki
lineage. I remain positive. I know what we have to offer. His students will hopefully recognize it and
decide to join with us. If not, I wish
them well at the new dojo. My one hope
is that all the students continue training, improving, and bettering
themselves.
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