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Doesn´t it makes you mad?
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09-03-2006, 08:21 PM
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WaydayNef
Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
453
Senior Member
Well I look at this sort of thing as a good chance to train. If my concentration is broken by external forces, that's my fault. If my kendo is disturbed by people
mis-behaving in my vicinity that's my fault. In practice, I'm here to train others and to train myself.
Even if somone is interested in kendo they'll need to wait until practice is over.
When you say that ignoring them in general does not work, you miss the point of ignoring them. The idea is not to make them behave. They have to choose to do that. The idea is for you to get on with your training without being disturbed by this disruptive influence. If you can't do that when the disruption is external... how do you hope to be able to practice when your disruption is internal?
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