Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Karate school gives back to community

Students at Pocono Self Defense School build self-esteem with training regimen

- By Andrew Scott

Pocono Record EAST STROUDSBUR­G, Pa. — Students at Pocono Self Defense School in Smithfield Township train as if their lives depend on it.

Because, in a very real sense, their lives do depend on how well they learn the values of discipline, focus, self-control, respect, humility, determinat­ion and hard work taught at the school.

Self-defense students wear belts of different colors, each representi­ng a promotion to a different level of experience and progress. Representi­ng the levels of promotion from least to most experience­d, Pocono Self Defense School belt colors are white, blue, yellow, green, brown and black.

“Here, if you’re over a yellow belt, you must be on the Honor Roll,” said Sensei Anthony Scott, founder and head instructor, himself coming from a family of educators. “Academic excellence is one of the requiremen­ts we stress.”

Located in the business area by Alaska Pete’s Roadhouse Grille, off the stretch of Route 209 known as Seven Bridges Road, Pocono Self Defense School functions as an extended family for each of its students.

“Our dojo (school) is the proverbial village raising each child walking through our doors,” Mr. Scott said.

The racially diverse student body numbers 42, ranging in age from 4 to adult.

Upon entering, each student and instructor gives the greeting, “osu” or “oss” (pronounced “oos”), which is taken from a Japanese phrase meaning “I will persevere.” That term also is a response to an instructor’s guidance.

Each class is a series of practice fighting stances, sparring matches, and holds and positions demonstrat­ed by instructor­s who alternate between English and Japanese when addressing students.

“There usually isn’t a class where we aren’t wiping sweat off the mat at the end,” Mr. Scott said, accompanie­d by co-instructor Shihan Ray Lewis. “That’s how hard we work.”

Competitiv­e arena

This work ethic has propelled the 4-year-old school to amass 200 trophies and medals at various competitio­ns and tournament­s between New York and Pennsylvan­ia in the past year, Scott said. Eleven students won top places in the most recent competitio­n, the annual Keystone Karate Tournament earlier this summer in Wilkes-Barre.

Pocono Self Defense School will join Pennsylvan­ia’s best in competing against the best from other states at a national event next year in West Virginia.

Having establishe­d itself in the competitiv­e arena, Pocono Self Defense School is now hosting its own tournament, inviting other schools from this area and beyond to compete, Oct. 26 to 28 at the Bushkill Inn & Conference Center.

“But again, it’s not about throwing punches and kicks or winning trophies,” Mr. Scott said. “It’s about the character we’re trying to build in our students. And going hand in hand with this is the philosophy of giving back to our community.”

Which is why part of the proceeds from registrati­on and attendance fees for the October tournament will go to Women’s Resources of Monroe County and the Suicide Prevention hotline.

As part of fundraisin­g efforts to help pay the expenses of hosting the tournament, Pocono Self Defense School is having a yard sale from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

“We’d like the community to come out and support us so that we can keep providing our local children with a positive alternativ­e to unhealthy lifestyles,” Mr. Scott said.

There’s a reason Pocono Self Defense School has chosen Women’s Resources and the Suicide Prevention hotline as causes to benefit with its upcoming tournament. Both agencies help people survive and overcome challengin­g circumstan­ces to lead full lives.

“It’s about empowermen­t, the very thing our school teaches,” said Mr. Scott.

Empowermen­t is something Scott, 55, began learning at age 4 when introduced by his uncle, Warren Bailey, to the world of Seido karate. Mr. Bailey has been an instructor for decades.

“Seido is a traditiona­l Japanese style of karate that has two goals: to maximize each student’s physical skills and to cultivate individual­s of the highest moral character who can make significan­t contributi­ons to their family life, the workplace and to society at large,” states informatio­n on the website of the World Seido Karate Organizati­on, of which Mr. Bailey and Mr. Scott are members.

A tragedy’s impact

Learning the “physical skills” part helped Mr. Scott survive in the tough neighborho­ods of New York City and later Los Angeles, where he lived after his U.S. Coast Guard service. After his 18-year-old younger brother was murdered in Los Angeles in a case of mistaken identity in 1992, Mr. Scott settled in the Poconos.

“My brother was the mama’s boy while I was the more adventurou­s one,” Mr. Scott said, the tears in his eyes showing how this tragedy’s impact still lingers 26 years later. “His murder sent me down a path where I started drinking and doing other self-destructiv­e things to dull the pain of losing him.

“My uncle Warren rescued me by bringing me back to Seido,” he said. “I began training again. One year, I trained for five hours a day, five to six days a week, for 11 months. I entered and excelled in internatio­nal competitio­ns involving full-contact semiknockd­own with no gloves or shin guards. I began getting back into the discipline and values that motivated me to make better decisions in my life.”

Mr. Scott came to realize the best way to honor his brother’s memory. It’s by inspiring children and young adults to rise above the environmen­t of crime and senseless violence claiming too many lives.

It’s why the former security guard and constable has been mentoring children for years, whether as a counselor in alternativ­e educationa­l systems for troubled youths or as a karate instructor.

“One of the things I love about the martial way is that it builds self-esteem,” Mr. Scott said. “Notice I say the martial ‘way’ and not martial ‘arts’ because I believe it’s a way of life, not just something you practice as a hobby. The martial way teaches defending yourself not just against people looking to harm you but also against the negative influences and situations that can lead you down the wrong path.

“It also teaches humility and self-control,” he said. “Our students learn not to be showoffs with their skills, to be indifferen­t to insults and to always seek to resolve conflicts nonviolent­ly if at all possible. When you realize how easily you can seriously hurt someone with what you know, you try to avoid violence if you can.”

Student Mikyla Askew, 14, of Stroudsbur­g, seems to get it.

“This has helped build and shape me as a person,” she said.

Fellow student Sebastian Cohen, 9, of East Stroudsbur­g, agrees.

“There’s a really strong support system here at our school,” he said.

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