Profile by daniel kammerer

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RIPPLES by Daniel Kammerer

O

ne blustery morning at Palo Alto High School, a Chinese student was walking to his first class of the day. It was the same route he took day by day, and there was no reason why this walk should differ from the norm. As he continued to make his way to class, he heard a clatter from several feet back. The moment he turned to see what had caused the commotion, someone came charging at him. The assailant had a crazed look, and didn’t sprint so much as lumber forward. In his hand was something black and silver that glinted in the morning rays.

There was no time to process the object’s identity, only to react. The young defender threw his forearm into a block and repelled the blade driving towards his chest. After disarming the attacker, he quickly planted his right leg behind his knee, wrapped an arm around his torso, and brought him down to the ground with the precision of a dancer. While having complete control over his attacker, he scrunched his hand into a fist and threw a punch with all his might aimed directly at the face – and froze with half an inch to spare. The Chinese student could see the fear and confusion in his assailant’s

eyes, and knew it wasn’t necessary to cause any actual harm. That was more than twenty five years ago, when ‘Kancho’ John Chang was a junior at Palo Alto High School. The entire encounter was the moment John realized that at almost any time, without warning, one’s life could be in immediate jeopardy. “A person can lunge a knife or attack someone for whatever reason. I needed to be much more alert and step up to the program. I realized that I could have died that day.” Today, Kancho (which means ‘founder’ in Japanese) teaches Sho-


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