Writing for the Public

My niche: how I discovered it and what it represents (rough draft)

At my current age of nineteen, I don’t know much about living or how to be happy and successful at life. But what I know is what promotes the reason for anyone to live is to find their niche(s). After suffering from frequent antagonism at school, I obliviously lost sight of who I was, how to enjoy life and what I could do about it. This slowly began to change once I walked through that gym door, stepped onto the mat, stood tall with my feet together and arms crossed and said the one word that would begin anew. It symbolizes the niche that changed my life: Osu!

Genesis of Osu (Origins and what does it mean):
The origin and meaning of the Japanese word osu (pronounced oss) is complicated to grasp due to many theories and opinions. Therefore, it is misunderstood by most people. Even most Japanese people misuse it. How it originated is disputed. One of the popular possibilities of the terms origins is it was first used in the Japanese imperial navy. Another possibility is the term originated from the martial art known as kyokushin. In kyokushin, two popular kanjis (Japanese system of writing) are used. One is the word ‘osu’ which translates to push. The other kanji is ‘shinobu’ which translates to suffer. When joined together it translates to ‘osu no seinshin’, meaning to endure while being pushed, an important fundamental in kyokushin or any combat sport one practices.

Who is allowed to say this word and who isn’t?:
In modern times, the word osu is greatly misused. Osu is generally a word describing masculinity and hard work ethnic within Japanese custom. Japanese culture is considered strict. Therefore, one should not say it to someone of Japanese descent, one who is younger than you, or in a lower tier. Because it is, as stated, a masculine word to use, women should not use it.

In reality this is almost never the case. Osu is considered a way to greet each other today. In Japan, people may use osu as a way to say good morning. In American gyms, this is applied as a common form of respect. It’s how trainers and practitioners say “hello”, “goodbye”, “how do you do this technique?”, “understood”, “let’s go hard”, “thanks” and et cetera by both genders and people of all ranks and ages.

How my discourse community (my gym) and I use it:
Most American gyms use osu as a way to greet each other, asking questions and answering them. My gym is no different. Those who have been going to my gym for a long period of time grow an attachment to the word. Because we know and train with each other, saying ‘osu’ to one another feels like a ‘family members only’ ticket. We say it with pride knowing we will make each other stronger. When I’m with a friend that I train with or has combat sports knowledge, whether on the gym or on the street, I sometimes substitute a ‘hey’ or a ‘wassup’ for osu. It is the pride and respect of friends that enjoy or train in combat sports that makes me use it as a ‘hello’ or a ‘goodbye’.

What this word means to me:
Just by reading the introduction, you can already correctly guess I was the victim of bullying. If you know me or read some of my previous articles from English 1101, you know I have discussed this before. Now I shall elaborate in more detail of how I confronted this problem. Middle school was absolute torture. I was the easiest to attack because I lacked the ability to fight back as well as the temerity to stand up for myself. I started watching combat sports and I wanted to learn how to fight like a professional. My father put in a gym get real training. Once I uttered the word ‘osu’, my fate was sealed. No longer would I be a easy target. No longer would I feel defenseless. No longer would I be a loser. When you get on the matt, put your feet together, cross your arms and say osu, not only would it signal the start of training, but the start of a new passion. A passion that grew stronger. For me, osu symbolizes strength, resilience, and redemption. A low moment transformed into a permanent lifestyle. When I think of osu, it will always be evidence that pain and misery can be replaced by achievement.

Which audience should be introduced to ‘osu’?:
The nature of osu contains philosophical meaning and importance that can be adapted to benefit anyone’s regular lifestyle, not just fighters. The specific audience that should know about osu are people who feel weak and helpless. ‘Osu’ means to push and endure, which is the natural structure of how life is. As someone who has felt weak and helpless for a long period of time, I can concur that being introduced to an osu-like environment will replace weakness with strengths such as endurance and pushing forward. In fact, you don’t have to be introduced to this philosophy through combat sports but other means. For example, film. One of the best movies that represents the meaning of osu is Rocky Balboa. In the film Rocky gives some of the best life advice ever: “You, me, or nobody is gonna bit as hard as life. But it ain’t about how hard you hit. It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That’s how winning is done!” The philosophy of osu will empower anyone. Your toughness, courageousness and self respect will rise along others respecting you. People attempting to attack you will also plummet.

Take with a grain of salt:
Power feels amazing. It is addictive emotionally liberating. But it has its consequences when used incorrectly. The audience I would like to show this to must also manage the philosophy of osu with responsibility. It is possible to take that philosophy and use it as way to hurt others and eventually yourself. People who have been hurt are prone to turning that pain into hatred thus it leads to retribution. I experienced this two years ago. In 12th grade, I started targeting a boy in my gym class. Previously in 10th grade, he attacked me and made me a laughing stock. This made me train harder so I could prevent this from happening ever again. Fasting forward, I see opportunity to settle the score without realizing I was unintentionally hurting this person in the locker room with no witnesses, giving him visible injuries. The injuries I gave him lead to me getting into trouble but I felt more bad about my actions because I don’t condone unprovoked violence. For the audience this is directed to, my advice is to use the philosophy of osu for personal strength and self-defense while also practicing forgiveness. Vengeance is an expensive luxury. Do not pay the price for it.

1 Comment

  1. Carrie Hall

    I think this is a great beginning. What I’d probably try to work on now is flow– it reads a bit like you’ve answered bullet points! (you have). Can you make it read more like an article, or a personal essay? It might be easy to do– start with the bullying aspect (I’m so sorry about this by the way) and lead into the Osu– this might give it a more “story” feel.

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