Dojo Reflection

 Patience as a Form of Strength




By Mornè Johan Slabbert

Modern life values speed. Faster results, quicker responses, immediate feedback. Martial arts stands quietly against this current, teaching that patience is not delay — it is depth.

In the dojo, techniques are refined over years, not weeks. Progress is subtle. Often it is only visible in hindsight. This can be frustrating for beginners, yet it is precisely this slow process that develops real understanding.

Patience allows space for learning to take root.

When students rush, technique becomes forced. When they slow down, structure emerges. Balance improves. Breathing settles. Timing becomes natural. These changes cannot be rushed without being weakened.

Patience is a discipline in itself. It requires trust — trust in the process, the teacher, and one’s own effort.

Outside the dojo, impatience often leads to unnecessary conflict. Words are spoken too quickly. Decisions are made without reflection. Strength without patience becomes reckless.

The martial path teaches us to pause. To breathe. To observe. This pause is not weakness. It is awareness.

Patience sharpens perception. It allows us to see clearly rather than react emotionally. Over time, this quality strengthens character more reliably than force ever could.

True martial strength is measured not by speed alone, but by control.

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