9/1/2012
Considering I've been training for over
a year it feels odd to be wondering what the stripes on my belt
actually mean. But after thinking about it, it was never really
explained to me. It just seemed like, hey you've been training for
a while have a stripe! Yay! A
round of applause, a handshake from the instructors, bow, and you
get to stand further up the line. It feels nice, gives a sense of
accomplishment, but really...what's it mean?
It is a measure of
skill? A mark of experience? A symbol of dedication? Or a mark of
praise given out when your instructor deems it's warranted? I've
heard so many different meanings for stripes it's become confusing.
So here's how I figure it.
I don't think it's
a measure of skill simply because there's people with less stripes
that are clearly more skilled than people with more (admittedly, I'm
often one of those with more stripes that struggle against some with
less). Belt color is more a measure of skill than the amount of
stripes on it. I don't think a stripe should be given as a form of
praise. That just seems a little base and it allows for bias. Feels
like praise should be a result, not a reason. I side with a stripe
being a sign of experience. The last person who gave a reasonable
explanation of what a stripe is explained it as a sign of one's
position, they've been there longer, they're more senior and have
more experience.
So why not
dedication? Well, just because somebody's dedicated doesn't mean
they've been training. For example, at the beginning of the year I
was completely dedicated to Gracie Barra but I wasn't training. Feels
like a stripe should be awarded for time and effort on the mat not
from some sense of attachment. Not that there's anything wrong with
dedication, just feels like that shouldn't be a main reason for
awarding a higher rank.
That's how I figure
it. What do you think? Really, if your understanding of what a stripe
is is different please let me know. I'm just guessing here.