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blankslate
11/30/2003 10:44pm,
Wheelchair-bound martial artist enshrined in hall of fame
11/27/2003

By MATT CHITTUM / Associated Press
COVINGTON, Va. —

Mean kids called him "one-ear" and "retarded."

Clay Johnson was born with cerebral palsy. He had no left ear, twig-like legs that were contorted to the right, and only his right arm was fully usable. He didn't like himself, and figured no one else did, either.

But people call him different names now.

Three nights a week, he sits in a wheelchair at the front of a room in a gray cinderblock building on the outskirts of Covington. Bruce Lee watches from framed portraits on the wall. Students bow courteously when they enter Johnson's martial arts school.

They call him sensei, sifu, guro — teacher.

Johnson, 42, gives and gets what 20 years of devotion to martial arts have taught him to give himself — respect.

This month, Johnson traded his second-degree karate black belt for a rented tuxedo, the first he has worn. At a ceremony in Lynchburg, Johnson was inducted into the American Freestyle Karate Association's Hall of Fame and named instructor of the year.

The crowd who saw him go up to accept his plaque learned the truth of something he knows more than anyone — martial arts changed his life.

"What are you going to do with him," people would ask Johnson's father when they saw the disfigured toddler.
"I'm going to keep him," Ernie Johnson would say.

Ernie Johnson and his wife, Smitty, did what they could with limited means. Before he was 18, Clay had 30 surgeries on his legs, feet, and jaw, including attempts to create a crudely fashioned ear.

They sent him to public schools but say they were ill-equipped physically and emotionally to deal with a disabled child. He spent most of his time inside his parent's brick ranch home in Clifton Forge, the only place he has ever lived.

Schoolmates picked on Clay unmercifully; frequently they took his lunch money, he said. Until junior high school, he had no friends.

"I was lonely a lot, but I was happy," he said.

Johnson roamed the Heights section of Clifton Forge on a three-wheeled bike he peddled jerkily with feeble legs, followed by a mutt dog named Joe. Mostly, he watched television and projected himself into what he saw.

He watched "Starsky and Hutch" and wanted to be a cop. He watched "Kung Fu" and felt connected to its lonely, drifting, and misunderstood protagonist.

When he was 10, he saw a sports program about a man with no legs and saw the man defeat five able-bodied opponents in a karate match. Johnson figured maybe he could do that, too.

But except for one Alleghany County sheriff's deputy who trained him briefly, no one wanted to teach a disabled man.

Some even laughed at the suggestion.

The first who didn't was Eddie Thomas, owner of American Free Style Karate in Salem. Thomas strengthened Johnson's upper body, sparred with him like any other student, and entered him in competitions to help Johnson overcome his shyness.

Johnson excelled in the "kato" competition, where contestants attempt to demonstrate perfect form. But he never did much as a fighter. His wheelchair made him a human punching bag, Johnson said.

He taught lessons to opponents who disrespected him, though. In his first fight as a black belt, he sensed his opponent was babying him. He grabbed the man by the back of the head and knocked him semiconscious with a blow to the face.

"I never expected to win fights," Johnson said. "As long as I get a good shot in, and they respect me, that's OK."

Maybe one in 500 of Thomas' students earn their black belt, though not all seek it. Thomas predicted it would take Johnson six years to get his. Johnson made it in five. He retired from competition in 1991.

He has run his own school since 1987, but he has never done more than break even financially on it, he said. But it gets him out of the house. It also gives him a place of respect, though that still doesn't come easily.

Johnson's credentials should be convincing enough. He's a certified instructor in American Freestyle Karate, Thai boxing, Filipino martial arts and Lee Jun Fan Gung Fu, the art that the late martial arts legend Bruce Lee developed.

Johnson has studied with Dan Inosanto, Lee's protege, who took the helm of Lee's martial arts school when Lee left to make movies. Johnson has trained nine black belts himself.
Still, new students are unsure, so he gives the first three lessons for free.

"It didn't take but a couple of classes to see (Johnson's disability) doesn't matter," said Terry Clemons, whose son Brian, 7, is in Johnson's beginners class.

"Out of all the stuff I know how to do, I can only do about 10 percent of it myself," Johnson said.

But he can still teach it. Though he can walk on crutches, Johnson mostly stays in his chair. He instructs students verbally on form, occasionally adjusting their position by hand.

He addresses everyone as "sir" or "ma'am." But Johnson tolerates no laziness.

"If you want to trade places, you take this chair and I'll take your ability and go off," he will tell a slack student.

He mentions Thomas often, telling students how Thomas taught him. It was Thomas who nominated his former student for the AFKA hall of fame, which recognizes mostly East Coast martial artists.

"It's a big deal ... because it's people recognizing him for his work and tenacity," Thomas said. "His determination is pretty inspirational to a lot of people."

But the real benefits of his life in martial arts have been for himself. Karate didn't save Johnson's life, but it saved it from loneliness and anonymity.

"It actually gave me my identity," he said. "I tried to gauge myself by what I saw on TV when I was little. Now, it's more like, 'I'm me.' "

Information from: The Roanoke Times

http://www.wvec.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D7V32QR81.html

Toby Christensen
11/30/2003 11:22pm,
Aah, disability strikes BACK!

**** YEAH!

FingerorMoon?
11/30/2003 11:27pm,
Good for him.

blankslate
11/30/2003 11:32pm,
Clay is a good guy. Eddie Thomas also.

PizDoff
12/01/2003 12:53pm,
Fooking wicket!!!!
KNOCK THAT BLACK BELT BITCH OUT!!!!

MUAHAHAHAHHAH!!!!!


"Johnson excelled in the "kato" competition, "
LMFAO! !!!! HAHAHAHHA!!!



Disclaimer: I just finished a tough exam and am in a state of delirium.

Wu De
12/01/2003 5:23pm,
Good for him, i think he deserves his place in the hall of fame. Best of luck to him for the future.

Jenfucius
12/01/2003 5:24pm,
they call him what? sensei, guro, or sifu?

and how exactly is he a certified instructor in muay thai if he can't walk?

Jenfucius
12/01/2003 5:31pm,
i mean, i'm all for the disabled living meaningful lives and doing the best they can with their differently-abled-ness, but to echo the boyd quote in osiris's sig, "nigga please".

PizDoff
12/01/2003 6:06pm,
that would be cool if he could produce some good competitive fights....then that would shut people up

*Shrugs.*

ClintEQ
12/01/2003 10:01pm,
Cant judge without seeing him fight, etc. Skeptical, but he sounds like a good guy.

Hedgehogey
12/01/2003 11:50pm,
He should learn full contact stickfighting. Then he'd be able to fight just fine.

blankslate
12/02/2003 12:04am,
This is a tough one. Clay used to compete in tournaments in Forms and Fighting.

Imagine judging a Forms competition and a man in a wheelchair shows you a Nunchaku Form. No kicks...movements that include rolling the wheelchair and turning it from side to side...demonstrating good technique but sometimes dropping the chucks...

Now, it takes a lot of courage for this man to compete...but does he beat the other kids that would probably have a better chance in a real fight? Does he beat the guy who sticks himself with his own kama?

I think it shows a lot of heart. But it begs some hard questions about people with disabilities and performance requirements.

Congratulations to Clay!!

Ice Queen
12/02/2003 9:34am,
Well it's nice to hear someone can do something without alot of bitching and moaning. Makes us that aren't disable feel really stupid. Has he entered a tourney? Anyone anyone anyone?

blankslate
12/02/2003 11:03am,
Yes, he has participated in and actually helped run many ISKA type tournaments.

The_Ghost
12/02/2003 1:20pm,
From what the article says, he's been in competitive fights...but doesn't win them. But all he cares about is getting a good punch in.

...Kick ass dude. But now I feel like ****, because I'm not good at full contact and I'm trying to get a good punch in. If HE can, I can do a hell of a lot better. Damnit, now there's pressure on me.

Ice Queen
12/02/2003 6:49pm,
Well ra ga