Yoseikan-Ryu Karate Padbury

Yoseikan-Ryu Karate Padbury

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Karate classes for ages 5 years and up at our dojo at Unit 11/6 Blackwattle Parade Padbury

17/06/2026

This is a great read….

WHY DO SO MANY STUDENTS QUIT KARATE?

Every year, thousands of students walk into a karate dojo filled with excitement, determination, and dreams of becoming strong martial artists. They imagine earning new belts, mastering powerful techniques, and gaining the confidence of a warrior. Yet many of them quit long before reaching their true potential.

The first reason is that karate is harder than it looks. Movies and social media often show spectacular kicks, dramatic victories, and black belts performing amazing techniques. What they rarely show is the repetition, discipline, and years of practice required to achieve those skills. Many students discover that progress comes slowly, and some become frustrated when success does not arrive as quickly as they expected.

Another common reason is the search for instant results. Modern life encourages quick rewards, but karate teaches patience. A strong punch, a precise kick, and a calm mind are developed through countless hours of training. Students who expect rapid improvement often lose motivation when they realize that mastery cannot be rushed.

Some students quit because they compare themselves to others. They see classmates who learn faster, move better, or earn promotions sooner. Instead of focusing on their own journey, they become discouraged. The truth is that karate is not a competition against others—it is a lifelong challenge to become a better version of yourself.

Fear of failure also causes many students to leave. Making mistakes, forgetting techniques, or struggling during training can feel embarrassing. However, every great martial artist has failed thousands of times. Failure is not the opposite of success; it is part of the path toward success.

For young students, distractions can become another obstacle. Video games, social media, school activities, and changing interests often compete for their attention. Karate requires commitment, and commitment becomes difficult when focus is divided among too many things.

Yet the students who stay discover something extraordinary. They learn that karate is about much more than punches and kicks. It teaches respect, self-control, perseverance, humility, and courage. It develops character as much as physical ability. Over time, these lessons become more valuable than any belt around the waist.

The difference between those who quit and those who continue is often simple: persistence. The students who succeed are not always the most talented. They are the ones who keep showing up. They train when they feel motivated, and they train when they do not. They understand that every class is another step forward, no matter how small.

Karate is a journey, not a destination. There will be challenges, setbacks, and moments of doubt. But those who refuse to quit eventually discover that the greatest victory is not defeating an opponent—it is overcoming the desire to give up.

Remember: A black belt is simply a white belt who never stopped training. Keep showing up, keep learning, and keep moving forward. The path of karate rewards those who stay the course.

facebook.com/Ilovekarateka 🥋🔥

16/06/2026

No classes this Saturday due to gradings!

14/06/2026

Today our competition team competed at the Karatewesternaustralia , and we couldn’t be prouder of their performances!
A huge shout-out to Abi, who stepped onto the tatami for her very first kata competition. This is just the beginning, and we can’t wait to see where your karate journey takes you—we know you have a bright future ahead.
The rest of the team also delivered some fantastic performances:
⭐ Zara progressed through her first round in Open Kata, a great milestone, and had some very close matches in Open Kumite.
⭐ Chloe also advanced through her first round of Open Kata, showing great composure and skill.
Congratulations to our medal winners:
🥇🥉 Maddison brought home Gold in Open Kumite (-35kg) and Bronze in Open Kata.
🥇 Katherine claimed Gold in Cadet Girls Open Kumite (-54kg).
Well done to all of our athletes for representing the club with such dedication, courage, and sportsmanship. We are incredibly proud of every one of you! 👏🥋

08/06/2026

A big Congratulations to Clare on achieving her black belt yesterday. Your hard work and dedication has been amazing and we are so proud to call you a black belt. Thank you for letting us be part of your journey. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

05/06/2026

For those interested in competitions we have a Wednesday 6-7pm competition kata class and a Thursday 4-5pm kumite class. Please email your expression of interest to [email protected]
comp

Karate WA League Tournament - Perth Open 04/06/2026

Tournament entires close this Sunday!

Karate WA League Tournament - Perth Open Sunday 14th June 2026 Gold Netball Centre Set Up from 8am Tournament to begin at 9am on completion of set up Open, Developing and Team Kata...

29/05/2026

Reminder it’s a long weekend and we will be having Monday night off

27/05/2026

On the weekend a few of our students entered the Goju tournament.

Congratulations to:

🥇Chloe Davies Girls 12/13 years 4th-1st
🥈Katherine Redmond Open cadets -54kg

Other competitors giving it their all were Maddison, Zara and Cameron. Special mention to Cam who had one of the highest scoring matches we’ve seen never giving up and and she for the first time scoring somehead kicks she’s been working on so well done.

Thanks to Jane who helped coach and Chloe and Katherine who warmed up the girls.

24/05/2026
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Location

Address


Unit 11/6 Blackwattle Parade Padbury
Perth, WA
6025

Opening Hours

Monday 4pm - 7pm
Tuesday 4pm - 6pm
Wednesday 4pm - 6pm
Thursday 4pm - 6pm
Friday 4pm - 5pm
Saturday 11am - 12pm