"… and last night when he came home he looked worse than ever! It looked like he'd been beaten up!" Honoka exclaimed.
Apparently, my being seated next to her for about three weeks meant that I was the perfect person to vent her problems to during the lunch break.
I took my eyes away from my cutting-edge Gameboy Advance* at that, having mostly ignored her rant about how her brother didn't spend enough time with her (and seriously, what kind of 14-year-old wants to spend
more time with their older siblings?), until it morphed into her complaining about him coming back dirty and weary from "some sketchy dojo." Which could only mean once place, of course.
"Hey, are you spacing out on me, Ensei?" Honoka asked. "Come on, this is serious!"
"If it's so serious, then why don't you just go to the address on the map you translated for him and see what's happening, instead of complaining to
me?" I asked.
"You can't expect a defenseless young woman like me to just waltz up to some place I don't even know in a place of town I've never been to!" Honoka exclaimed. "Haven't you seen the news? There's been all kinds of gang activity happening recently!"
"That's… a good point," I admitted. I'd never really thought of it while reading the manga, but there
were a whole lot of teenage delinquents and flat-out gangsters in this city, weren't there? Like, a
whole lot of them, given the kind of numbers Ragnarok eventually had.
"But then, I don't
think I've heard anything super-sketchy about that part of town, so it might not be
too unsafe," Honoka continued, sounding thoughtful. "Hey, you're really good at martial arts, right? Like, practical self-defense and junk?"
"I
did mention that in my class introduction, yes," I said, already knowing where this was going.
"Perfect! You can be my bodyguard, then! And if someone
is trying to get the better of my too-pure-for-his-own good brother, I might need your help in rescuing him!" Honoka exclaimed.
"I notice I apparently don't get a say in this," I pointed out. I fully intended on going, of course, but I couldn't just cave to the demands of a 14-year-old girl without putting up some token resistance.
---X---
And token it was, since once school was done the two of us, being fine and upstanding members of the Go-Home Club**, immediately set out for our destination, which we reached without incident.
"Whoa, what
is this place?" Honoka asked as we stood in front of the huge double doors.
"This is Ryōzanpaku, home to some of the strongest martial artists in the world," I explained. "You know, if you'd told me where the address was, I could have saved us both the walk over here."
Not that I wasn't glad to have the excuse.
"Wait, you know about this place?" Honoka asked.
"Yeah, the first thing we did when we moved here and opened up our dojo was to challenge these guys as a way to drum up some business," I explained.
Which hadn't really panned out so far, unfortunately. Somehow, even a lot of people interested in the martial arts in this town didn't know Ryōzanpaku or their reputation, so claiming that we'd won a single match out of three didn't strike prospective students as super impressive. Add to that, after Mom started worrying about our finances, Dad had decided to put his all into trying to attract new students, and his "enthusiasm" scared away all the potential students who were just casually interested in picking up some martial arts for self-defense or health reasons.
I'd thought of just giving them the ¥1,000,000 I'd been handed through the Jumpchain, but I couldn't really think of a way to explain how I'd gotten it. Tell them the truth?
No. Tell them I'd found it? They'd turn it in to the cops and it'd be
months before we'd be allowed to keep it when no one showed up to claim it. Assuming that stuff even applies when it's that much money.
What I
really needed to do was get us some students to secure a steady income.
"Rrrr, come on!" Honoka exclaimed, snapping me out of my thoughts. She was trying to open up the doors.
"You're gonna pull something if you keep doing that," I told her. "Those doors are too heavy for most grown men to budge. Besides, you should really knock first."
Before Honoka could reply, the doors were suddenly thrown open, and a bronze-skinned giant of a man with arms thicker than Honoka's waist stared down at us in silence.
Then he grinned at me, his face lighting up like a small child. "Hi, Ensei! You've done well to come this far, but now you must face me!" he said cheerfully.
I tilted my head at his greeting. "Did you… hear someone in a movie say that when he opened a door?" I asked. I seem to recall him answering the phone with some variant of "Your child's life is in my hands," and Japanese
is a second language to him. Wait, he's from
Thailand, so…
"You know Japanese better, or Chinese?" I asked in Hokkien. When Apachai frowned, trying to parse what I was saying, I repeated the question in Teochew.***
"Oh! Been a long time since I used it; really rusty," Apachai explained. "Trying to practice Japanese, anyway. More useful in Japan."
"That's fair," I said with a shrug. "My Chinese is worse than your Japanese, anyway."
"… Wait, where's Honoka?" I asked, noticing that she wasn't in sight anymore.
"The girl who was with you? She ran in while we were talking," Apachai said. "Is she your friend?"
"She's a classmate," I explained. "She came here because her brother's been coming here and come back beat up and exhausted, so she wants to find out what's going on."
"Oh, you mean Ken'ichi!" Apachai exclaimed. "They have the same hair!"
"Oh, you mean the way it starts off straight but kind of flips outwards at the ends?" I asked as we walked into the dojo grounds.
Before Apachai could respond, a girl's shriek cut the air. Hurrying to the source of the sound, we saw Honoka lying on the ground unconscious, a look of horror on her face. The reason for that…
Well, seeing your older brother like that would freak anyone out. Shirahama Ken'ichi was "training," if you're generous enough with that word to involve torture devices.
Ken'ichi had been forced to assume the Horse Stance****, and he wasn't able to get out of it thanks to his feet being tied to the wooden board he was standing on and ropes tied to his legs so he couldn't straighten them out. To keep him from collapsing or sitting down, there was a small pot of hot sand with a burning incense stick stuck into it that would burn him if he sat; the pot had "Mind" written on it. Attached to both hands were
nigiri game – heavy ceramic jars filled with sand and gripped around the lip – which were meant to strengthen the arms, back, shoulders and fingers. Beneath each jar was a boiling kettle on a small burner to keep Ken'ichi from letting the jars go or relaxing his arms, since they would quickly heat up the jars and burn his fingers. One jar had "Spirit" written on it, the other "Effort." To further keep him from lowering his arms, leather straps had been attached to his upper arms with small spikes attached that would prick his sides. On top of all that, three small bowls of rice had been placed on him for him to balance – one on each leg, and another on top of his head, with "Endurance" written on it.
Despite all that, his attention was on his passed-out little sister, looking on with a worried expression as Akisame checked her to make sure she hadn't hurt herself with her faint.
"Uh… far be it for me to question the wisdom of the Masters, but is this really a training regimen for a guy who's been training for, like, a month tops?" I asked.
"I assure you, I'm keeping a very close eye on the state of his body, and adjusting the time he spends in this position to make sure no harm comes to him that can't quickly be repaired," Akisame said reassuringly from where he was checking Honoka's pulse.
"No damage?" Ma Kensei asked, tapping his foot against Honoka's shoe as soon as Akisame nodded at him. Somehow, this jolted Honoka awake, as she bolted upright with a shocked look.
"Ken'ichi! Hold on bro, I'll get you out of here!" she said, jumping to her feet and running over to her brother to try to untie him from the makeshift contraption.
"Honoka, I told you not to follow me here," Ken'ichi said, with a sigh that he quickly regretted, as he relaxed his arms and caused the spikes on his arms to jab at his sides. "Ah!"
"It seems we'll need to cut this portion of his training short today to have this conversation," Kensei noted.
---X---
We all sat around the table with some tea and snacks as Ken'ichi and Akisame explained the hows and whys of his deciding to take the lessons at Ryōzanpaku of his own will. I think Honoka only heard every third word, what with how much time she spent glaring at Miu as she bustled around playing host. For her part, Miu was too busy gushing over how "cute" Honoka was to notice.
"Oh, so you got your ass kicked by this 'Tsukuba' guy, not in training," I noted. I'd actually forgotten about the guy, so I had the impression his issues with Ragnarok started immediately after he kicked that Daimonji guy's ass.
"Yeah, I completely fell apart," Ken'ichi admitted with a sigh. "And if it weren't for the training I've already had, he probably would have broken something."
"Well, on the plus side, Sakaki is willing to give you some valuable advice on fighting karateka," Akisame noted. "… Assuming he hasn't forgotten completely and is just wasting his time playing pachinko again."
"My turn!" Apachai exclaimed, running into the room with the enthusiasm of a little kid on his way to Disneyland. "My turn to train Ken'ichi!"
"Oh, so it is," Akisame said with a frown and a glance at the clock. "Hmm, I'll have to readjust the schedule a little bit to make up for lost time…"
"O-oh, great, muay thai training, yay…" Ken'ichi said with a weak smile, shaking in dread.
'I see Ken'ichi's already witnessed Apachai's inability to manage his strength,' I thought to myself, thinking back to his fight with Dad. In this life and my previous, that was by far the most brutal-looking fight I'd ever witnessed. Even the other Masters had been exasperated about it, which had given me an idea.
"Apachai, your muay thai training is really heavy on sparring, isn't it?" I asked.
"That's right! Only right way to teach muay thai, is what my master said!" Apachai affirmed, giving a thumbs up. His smile faded a little as he continued. "Hard to hold back, though. But I can do it this time!"
"Maybe it'll help if Ken'ichi has a sparring partner who isn't, uh, quite so far above his level?" I suggested.
"We tried, but Ken'ichi not want to hit Miu, and Miu's fighting style too different to give him experience with muay thai," Apachai recounted, now frowning.
"Well, yaw-yan isn't
quite like muay thai, but it's probably close enough that I could help him with that if I just stuck to that," I pointed out.
"Oh! That is a good idea, Ensei," Akisame said with a nod. "A sparring partner who isn't quite so… far above Ken'ichi will probably make his training sessions with Apachai much more productive.
'And less likely to kill him' was the unspoken addendum.
---X---
"So, Ensei, right?" Ken'ichi asked as we stood across from each other, with Apachai adjusting Ken'ichi's stance and explaining the reasoning behind it.
"Yeah. Nice to meet you," I said, taking a stance fairly close to the traditional muay thai stance: head-on with Ken'ichi, rather than slanted to one side, arms held high with the elbows flared slightly out, standing mostly straight with hips squared, using small movements to constantly shift my weight between each foot.****
"Nice to meet you, too," he said as Apachai stepped away. "Do you mind if I ask you a question?"
"What, right now?"
"How do you know Honoka?" he asked, his expression serious.
I stared at him for a second as he stared me down. I tried to keep it in, but I couldn't help it and smirked a little. "Are… are you trying to play the intimidating big brother with me?" I asked, trying hard to keep from chuckling.
"No. I'm just asking what you are to my sister," he said calmly, but his eyes were hard.
"Kick butt, big bro!" Honoka called out. Ken'ichi had given some speech or something I hadn't paid attention to, and now she was willing to accept him training here. Something about courage, or something.
"Uh… we're starting, now," Apachai said, sounding a little confused as we stared each other down.
"Okay, please stop trying to be intimidating, it's gonna make me crack up right here," I said with a cocky smirk. I knew I was being an asshole here, but even
before I got dropped into this setting I'm pretty sure I could have kicked his ass, even at the age I was now. The manga had not done justice to how scrawny he looked.
"You have to actually start hitting each other for this to be training," Apachai said.
"Ken'ichi, Ensei, come on!" Honoka exclaimed.
"Look, I'm not anything to your sister, okay?" I finally said. "We're just classmates, and she dragged me here because she needed someone to keep an eye on her. Streets are kinda dangerous lately."
"Oh, well tha-" Ken'ichi started, before being cut off as I charged up and threw a roundhouse kick, stopping just an inch away from his face before he'd even noticed. After a delay of about a second as he processed what had just happened, he suddenly jumped away in shock.
"H-hey! That's not fair!" Ken'ichi called out.
"Right, 'cause the ironclad rule of street fights is that the fight doesn't resume until the banter's over," I said with a roll of my eyes. "Try that one on this Tsukuba guy and see how it works out for you."
Ken'ichi glared at me, then tried to throw a jab at my face. I used one hand to swat his fist to the side, sending his punch off to the side, then stepped forward, put both hands on the crown of his head from the back to pull it down, and started tapping his ribs lightly with my knees to simulate what would be some very painful body blows.
"Ah, ah, ah!" he yelled out, struggling futilely to break free.
"Muay thai's famous for the use of elbows and knees, which makes it deadly in a clinch," I explained calmly, now letting go of his head with one hand to start elbowing the side of his head. "If you don't know how to clinch, you're dead the second you get grabbed like this, see?"
I let go and pushed him back to make some space between us, which nearly knocked him on his ass.
"Yaw-yan doesn't focus as much on the clinch, but it's always important to know if you're ever going to get into a street fight or MMA or something," I explained, taking my stance again.
"Ken'ichi, did you see what Ensei did there to take control of the clinch and keep you from escaping?" Apachai asked, actually sounding like a serious teacher.
"Uh… he grabbed my head?" Ken'ichi asked, not sure how to answer.
"Right! Everyone always tries grabbing neck, doesn't give you leverage!" Apachai said, sounding proud. "Need to grab crown of head, lets you control head better. That's how you do one of muay thai's best moves: Kao Loi!"
To demonstrate, he suddenly grabbed me and did a live demonstration, not even giving me the time to cry out in fear as his knee rushed up to meet my forehead.
Luckily, since I was the same age as Honoka, Apachai mentally categorized me as somewhere along with the various kids and animals he played with all the time without losing control of his strength, so I got away with a mild concussion instead of my head exploding into gory confetti.
---X---
About 10 days later, Ken'ichi came home to proudly announced he'd had a rematch with Tsukuba (apparently he'd been beating up on some random judoka and then threatened Miu, so Ken'ichi stepped in). He was feeling pretty good about himself… until the Masters pointed out that both tough guys interested in a guy who'd beaten up Tsukuba, who had something of a reputation, would start coming out of the woodwork to challenge him, and if the guy really was part of a gang like the rumors about him said, they'd probably want revenge.
I didn't really intend to get involved in Ken'ichi's fights until the Ragnarok's "Eight Fists" started getting into the mix, so I didn't really think much of it at the time.
But that was yesterday, and this was today. And today, I'd noticed a commotion in an alley on my way back home after school and came face-to-face with about half a dozen thugs beating the crap out of a guy, led by a spiky-haired kid.
"If you wanna blame anyone for this, blame yourself for being such a pansy!" the spiky-haired guy said with a laugh, kicking the guy in the ribs while he was down.
"Hey, you guys, lift him up. And one of you hold his arm out," he said, turning to the other goons before looking the downed guy in the eye with a sadistic smirk. "You karate guys are all about breaking boards, right? We don't really have any lying around, so I think I'll try practicing on bone instead."
"'Boards don't hit back'," I quoted, stepping calmly into the alley. "If you really want a workout, you should try sparring instead of ganging up on some guy six to one like a bunch of pansies."
"What the-!? Who the fuck are you!" one of the thugs yelled. "Get out of here, kid!"
"Yeah, this is Ragnarok business, half-pint! Go home to mommy!" threatened another one.
"Ragnarok? That gang of punks who took a naming scheme they were too dumb to even stick to properly?" I asked with a smirk. "Yeah, I guess I'll buy that. You guys don't exactly look like the sharpest tools in the shed."
"Why you-!" one of them yelled, trying to grab me by the shoulder and winding up for a punch.
Much like I had with Ken'ichi, I swatted his arm to the side, stepped forward, grabbed him by the crown of the head from behind, and laid a
real knee hard into his ribs. He landed on the ground, gasping for air with tears welling up in his eyes. I didn't feel them break, though, so at worst they were bruised or fractured.
"So, what's this 'Ragnarok business' that's so important, exactly?" I asked, stepping over the fallen thug.
"I'll kill-!" One of them tried to charge me. This time I just grabbed the back of his head and turned him to the side, so he knocked himself headfirst into a brick wall.
"Ooh, we've got a tough guy," the lead thug said mockingly, a cocky grin on his face. "Well, if you must know before I kick your ass, this loser here is Tsukuba. He used to walk around thinking he was hot stuff, then he got his ass kicked by some lame-o freshman. And Ragnarok doesn't tolerate guys making us look bad.
"Which is why you're joining him on the floor!" he said, pointing at me in a manner I'm sure
he thought was really threatening.
"Oh, so this is the guy Ken'ichi beat the crap out of," I said, looking down at Tsukuba. Yeah, he was definitely the "sportsman bully" type; pretty tall, good natural build, muscles obviously born out of competitive sports. From what Ken'ichi had described of him, he'd almost certainly started with boxing before learning karate, and despite joining Ragnarok he was more used to fights in the ring than the streets. The classic "was stronger than the other kids, took some classes, won some fights and got a swelled head" story.
"You… you know Shirahama?" he asked. Apparently, he was still conscious, though he was forcing the words out as he clutched his side.
"I've been helping him train. So, I guess you could say I'm indirectly responsible for you being where you are right now," I admitted.
"… No, it
is my fault," Tsukuba said, eyes downcast. "Beat up a few punks, thought I was some badass. Didn't even take him seriously until I'd already lost."
"Yeah yeah, no one wants to hear some beaten dog howling," the punk said, landing another kick at his ribs, eliciting another grunt of pain from Tsukuba. I made a mental note to pay him back for that.
"So, you know Shirahama?" he asked, turning back to me. "That's just perfect, we've got orders to take him to our boss. Maybe you can…
introduce us to him?"
Despite the fact that two of their buddies were still lying on the ground, the other punks started trying to look intimidating, giving dark chuckles, cracking their knuckles, the whole deal. I couldn't help but roll my eyes.
"Sure, whatever," I said dismissively. "Hey, Tsukuba, you still awake? Got something to ask you."
"W… what?" Tsukuba asked weakly.
"Do you want to get strong? For real, this time? Strong the way Ken'ichi is becoming?" I asked, stepping forward to stand over Tsukuba.
"Hey, what gives-!" the lead punk started to say. I held out a finger to silence him.
"Shut it, I'll get to you in a minute," I said. "So, how about it? Are you ready to learn under some real Masters, and learn what the martial arts are
really about?"
Tsukuba looked up at me in disbelief, before giving a small smile. "You know what? You beat this guy, and I'll agree to whatever the hell you want out of me."
"Sweet! Be proud, Tsukuba, you're about to become the first (paying) student of the Southern Martial Forest dojo!" I said, giving him a thumbs-up.
The thug's disbelief finally wore off. "Alright, that's enough out of you! Once I'm done kicking your ass, I'm burning your Southern Whatever dojo to the ground!" he said.
I turned away from Tsukuba, looked the leader square in the eye, and then backhanded the nearest still-standing thug full in the face, sending him spinning to the ground, my eyes still on him as his eyes widened. "You'd die trying."
Gritting his teeth in anger, he took a small hop back to make some space, then launched a roundhouse kick as I took the stance I always used when training Ken'ichi in muay thai.
Thinking my ribs were an easy target, the thug's eyes widened in shock as I checked his kick by raising up my knee and then pushing it away, sending him stumbling back against the wall of the alley.
"Really? You're using taekwondo in a narrow alley?" I asked, shaking my head with a smile. "Man, thugs these days. No awareness of their environment, I swear."
"Shut up, you little shit! No one talks like that to Koga the Kicker!" he yelled, kicking off from the wall to add force and speed to a tornado kick, spinning his body to build up momentum in midair.
To the average punk on the street, his kicks would be blindingly fast and terrifyingly strong. But he was practically in slow motion to me as I used the back of my hand to knock his kick aside, then gave him a swift kick in the ass while he was off-balance after landing, sending him face-first into the pavement.
"Ah!" he yelled in pain, hands on his surely-stinging face. "You son of a bitch!"
"Word of advice, 'Koga the Kicker'," I said derisively. "Being famous for a particular move is fine, but relying on it isn't. Specialization is for insects and sportsmen. If you wanna walk around the streets like a tough guy, learn to throw some punches instead of just kicking your legs around like a ballerina."
He would've replied, likely with indignant shouts or empty threats, but I was getting a bit bored, so I just rushed into his face where he couldn't get room to kick and put him in a clinch. I used my knees to foil any attempts to knee or kick me, and I didn't even bother dealing with his sad attempts to use his fists.
"See this? This is what happens when you think all you need to know is how to throw kicks," I said calmly, easily containing the struggling thug. "
Real taekwondo has plenty of hand techniques, too, so you don't even have the excuses a boxer would have there.
"Shut up!" he yelled.
"Fine, if you don't wanna learn, I won't bother trying to teach," I said. With that, I brought my knee up into his gut and let go. I shook my head in disappointment as he started puking.
"For someone who loves to dish it out, you sure can't take it for shit, huh?" I asked the vomiting street punk. "You're just as soft as your goons. I think even Tsukuba here would have taken more punishment to be out of the fight.
"Speaking of which, come on big guy, we've gotta get you signed up for your first classes!" I said cheerily as I hoisted the huge teenager over my shoulder. "Man, Mom's gonna be so happy about this!"
'Got us our first student and I got to beat the crap out of some punks,' I thought to myself with a smile.
'Man, this day's definitely going my way!'
---X---
"I can't believe you!" the prospective 8th Fist yelled, kicking her defeated subordinate so hard he went flying, only to be caught by the other two members of the "Three-Man Army."
"You didn't find Shirahama, and you couldn't even punish that loser Tsukuba without getting the crap beaten out of you by some
kid!? 'Koga the Kicker' my ass!" she exclaimed.
"He… he wasn't just some kid, Kisara!" Koga cried out plaintively. "He… he was so fast… so strong… like I was nothing… he's a monster!"
"A monster, you say? Well now, doesn't that sound interesting?" came a young man's voice. There was an amused, cocky tone that matched his smirk as he stepped out into the open.
"Loki? What are you doing here?" Kisara asked, visibly on guard.
"Well, I
was going to speak to you about your upcoming nomination as the Eighth Fist, but now I'm wondering if we should be evaluating this new mystery fighter instead," the Fourth Fist said with a chuckle. "After all, anyone who can take out 'Koga the Kicker' without breaking a sweat is someone of interest to Ragnarok."
"You-! Don't bother with this punk, because when I get my hands on him, he's dead!" Kisara yelled, indignant.
"Oh, I think not, Kisara," Loki said, pulling out a wire puzzle and casually starting to play with it. "Odin has been insistent on getting a full complement of
nine fighters for some reason, and that means we don't make enemies out of our prospects unless they do so first."
"But… but he attacked me!" Koga yelled.
"And if you weren't more than one of the top thugs for a simple executive, that might be a deal-breaker," Loki said dismissively, quickly solving his wire puzzle. "Damn, too easy again.
"But you aren't, and it isn't. Don't bother with this… Oh, what's his name again?" Loki asked, turning to Koga.
"He… uh, I don't, um, know," Koga admitted, voice small. At Loki's frown, he quickly backpedaled. "But I know he goes to a dojo! It's called the Southern Martial Forest, he recruited Tsukuba for it!"
"Oh good, that's even better than a name," Loki said, his smile returning. "I see you're not totally useless. Good, Siegfried and I will be approaching him ourselves, so go about your business as usual, Kisara. Go see about that… what was his name, Shirahama?"
"Tch. Fine, whatever," Kisara said, sinking back into her chair and glaring down at the Three-Man Army. "Until you three idiots bring Shirahama here to me, I don't want to see your faces around here. Got it?"
"Loud and clear, boss!" affirmed "Takeda the Puncher," the unofficial leader of the three. "We'll be back at his school bright and early tomorrow!"
-x--X--x-
*The manga debuted in 2002 and is thus assumed to be the time that the story takes place. The Gameboy Advance was released in Japan at the tail-end of 2001.
**The norm in Japanese schools is for students to join some kind of after-school club, and they're heavily encouraged and sometimes even required to do so. "Member of the Go-Home Club" is a joking term for students who don't join a club and just go home when school's over. You probably know this if you read manga, but I try not to assume.
***Thailand has the largest overseas Chinese population in the world at over 9,000,000 (about 15% of the country's population), as well as one of the oldest and most established. About half of them descend from people from eastern Guangdong Province, and thus the Minnan ("Southern Min") branch of the Chinese language is very well-represented among them. Hokkien, also called "Minnan Proper," is the historical
lingua franca of overseas Chinese communities all throughout Southeast Asia, including the Indochinese Peninsula, and it has (limited) mutual intelligibility with Teochew, the dialect of Southern Min most prominent in Thailand, so the odds aren't terrible that Apachai is at least passingly familiar with one or the other.
***People who criticize the horse stance as useless in combat, or who
categorically deny that that's true, are both missing the point. The horse stance, where the legs are spread wide and solidly rooted to the ground in a manner similar to what it looks like when you ride a horse, is quite useful for endurance training, to strengthen the back and leg muscles and tendons, and for helping a student to understand what "being grounded" feels like. And those fighting systems that do/did argue for its use in practical combat did so because of unique circumstances that made it a good idea at that time and in that place; namely, a lot of southern Chinese styles like Hung Ga were made to be used while fighting on unsteady barges and boats. In very unsteady or shaky ground, a stable stance that lets you keep your footing can be more valuable than one that lets you strike and move quickly but isn't strongly rooted to the ground.
****Here's a short explanation of the reasoning behind the typical muay thai stance, and even some exercises for it.