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Old 04-30-2006, 07:41 PM   #23
MaugleeRobins

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
500
Senior Member
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Would you buy a inium/house/townhouse or rent an apartment in a "kendo community" ?
No.

You know, some suburb developed zone that was a group of homes or apartments or condos or whatever in a little area with a shared Dojo, and financial support for kendo built into the cost of living in the community?
No.

Ok, it's an idea that would NEVER fly. But wouldn't it be great - to live in a complex/neighborhood/whatever where there was an early morning keiko before work 5-7 days a week, evening keiko 5-7 days a week, and visiting sensei and events on weekends and such?
No. It's too much kendo. Then, I would have to look for something to get away from kendo.

A shared dojo space so you could go work on suburi without worrying about your feet on concrete or carpet, or tearing up your ceilings?
There's something called 'outside'.

Living around a lot of people who weren't necessarily totally obsessed with kendo, but where everyone saw enough value to move to a place where it was a selling point in the community?
No.

Like the golf communities ?
No.

A place where you didn't *have* to practice every day if you didn't want to, but where any day you wanted, if you felt like it, you could?
No.

Yea, I think Kendo isn't popular enough in a dense enough area to make it economically viable, but even if it was, some form of the ugly head of politics would kill it anyways. But what a fantasy !
A secret ninja clan community is something I would buy into. Secret sliding doors, hidden tunnels and a little bridge to cross over the obligatory koi pond.
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