photo by Scott Feldstein |
Ali Brandon, aka Diane
A.S. Stuckart, is the national bestselling author of the Black Cat Bookshop
Mystery series and the critically acclaimed Leonardo da Vinci historical
mystery series. Additionally, she is the author of five critically-reviewed
historical romances soon be re-released as ebooks. Learn more about Ali/Diane
at her Ali Brandon website and her Diane Stuckart website.
Paws of Death
Dante left out one circle of hell while documenting
the official nine in his classic Inferno.
Forget Limbo, Lust, Gluttony, and so on. The most terrifying one of all is
actually Circle Number Ten: Junior
High P.E. class.
I
spent a couple of years in Ten. It’s a harrowing place to be, loud and hot and
smelly, filled with mean girls and rotten boys. I was one of the doomed souls always
hiding in the corner of the gym during dodge ball. I also was last to be chosen
for the kickball team, was stuck off to the side anytime we played volleyball,
and never did manage to do a single pull up. Obviously, I had no aptitude for
athletics, and past performance predicted I’d never be one to enjoy physical
sports.
How, then, did I manage to reach red belt rank in Taekwondo
after waiting until my early forties to take up the sport?
And, given my “advanced” age, why in the heck did I
even try in the first place?
The short answer to that last question is that a
friend and her daughter signed up for a family martial arts class. They invited
me along for moral support. I was looking for a new exercise regimen (I’d recently
given up on the local gym…too many mean girls, again!) and so I figured that
would be a fun way to get in shape. After all, I’d always secretly been a major
Bruce Lee fan.
The longer answer is that, despite my early failure
as an athlete, I had decided around the time I reached thirty that I really
needed to revisit the world of physical fitness. And while no particular sport
had quite “taken” to that point, I realized I liked the idea of being able to
defend myself in a not-always-friendly world. Several years earlier when I’d temporarily
decided to be a jogger, I also happened to own both a Doberman pinscher and a
German shepherd. With those two dogs by my side as I ran, I’d felt invincible no
matter how dark or lonely my jogging path was. Nobody was going to mess with me
and my hell hounds!
But time had passed and my only remaining dog now
was the shepherd, who was getting on in years. I figured my best bet was to recreate
that feeling of power and competence on a more personal basis. And so I joined
my friend for that first lesson, and stuck with it long after she and her child
had lost interest.
I was involved in martial arts for a good three
years, starting out in American karate and moving on to Taekwondo, with a brief
foray into Aikido. While not a brilliant student (see above for Circle Number
Ten reference), I was determined. I moved up the ranks at a respectable pace,
though each belt test was an exercise in major stage fright that required a
Zen-like attitude to get through.
The best classes were sparring nights, when we put
on our protective gear and paired up to fight with our fellow students.
Unfortunately, there were rarely more than one or two other women in the class
with me, meaning my opponents usually were men. Big, young men with lots of
muscles! And while punches and kicks above the shoulders were technically
forbidden for anyone under the rank of black belt, I still got hit in the head
enough times to know that my next physical challenge was not going to be boxing!
But despite the bruises and sprained necks and
broken toes I collected, I was in the best shape of my life. My confidence in
my physical abilities was higher than it ever had been, and I was having a
great time. And when my sensei shut down his studio while I was still training
for my brown belt, I was bereft.
But what does any of this have to do with my new
Black Cat Bookshop mystery, Words with
Fiends?
In the previous installment, A Novel Way to Die, my bookstore owner protagonist, Darla
Pettistone, comes close to falling victim to a killer. The fear and
helplessness she felt in that situation—particularly when she saw her beloved
cat, Hamlet, put himself in jeopardy on her behalf—spurs her to take action.
And so, in Words with Fiends, she heads
off to martial arts class to learn a bit of self-defense. I won’t tell you what
happens then, but you can guess that Darla and Hamlet once again stumble across
another unseemly murder.
So what about me? After my sensei called it quits,
I did, too. I moved on to yoga and even earned my 200-hour teaching
certification. More recently, I took up belly dancing, but a torn Achilles
tendon and heel spur recently made it impossible to dance. So I am back to the
gym again. This time around, the girls aren’t quite as mean…or maybe I’m just a
bit tougher now.
And what’s up next for me and Darla? Don’t tell
anyone, but in the fourth Black Cat Bookshop mystery due out in fall of 2014,
Darla and Hamlet head down to Fort Lauderdale for vacation. She pretty well
sticks to the beach…but, just for fun, I may have to give surfing a try.
Words with Fiends
Lately, Hamlet hasn’t been
chasing customers or being his obnoxious self—something Darla surprisingly
misses. Concerned, she hires a cat whisperer to probe Hamlet’s feline psyche
and then decides to get out of her own funk by taking up karate to learn how to
defend herself in case the need arises again.
But when Darla finds her sensei
dead at the dojo, it seems that even a master can be felled by foul play. Darla
decides to investigate the matter herself, and the promise of a mystery snaps
Hamlet out of his bad mood. After all, Darla may be the sleuth, but Hamlet’s
got a black belt in detection…
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6 comments:
What a same you had to give up TKD - I started after I enrolled my daughter. Thought some basic self defense skills would be good in the this day in age. Now we both have 2 white strips on our black belts. She got her black belt at 9 - me - 39! And strangely enough when our school closed what did I move onto - yoga. Although not as intense as you - congrats. Great post.
Gym class scared me so much, I enrolled in band. Rather than having to shower in front of a bunch of teenagers, I learned to play a musical instrument. No regrets. But I understand the need to live health, not just for the sake of the body, but the brain, too.
Thanks, Lois, for introducing me to Janice and her mystery series!
Victoria, congrats to you and your daughter! I truly enjoyed the sport but I've decided since I'm now *mumble-ty mumble* years old that I'd better not beat up the body any more. But maybe Tai Chi would be good. :)
Kathleen, at least music is something you can carry on with no matter your age. I played violin in grade school and jr. high but didn't have anywhere near the aptitude to carry on beyond that. But if I had a choice of fantasy career, I think it would to be 1st chair violin in an orchestra (even a teeny one). :)
Gym wasn't my favorite subject in school. Give me a good book any day.
Angela, on the bright side you do the treadmill and you can read at the same time!
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