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BILL BOYD
BLASTS BACK

İMarc Wickert
It was through a chance meeting that Bill Boyd's English-born mother and Australian father met in Canada. Bill's Father was working as a teacher
chasing work, and his mother was a nurse helping the indigenous Indians in remote Canadian villages. They married and later settled in Surrey England,
where Bill was born. When Bill was five his family moved to The Dandenongs in Australia.
"It was a time when governments poached for school teachers. As a result,
we lived a nomadic lifestyle, leaving Victoria in search of work in Western Australia, then returning to The
Dandenongs, before heading to Canberra," says Bill Boyd. Bill's mother had a life-long love of horses, which he inherited. And Bill
set his sights on pursuing a career as a jockey, but his large frame denied him this goal, and at an early age, Bill went bush, and worked on a number
of sheep and cattle stations in Kenambil, Tenterfield and Stanthorpe.
When Bill turned twenty, he took up Tang So Do (TSD) after trying unsuccessfully to wrestle a mate of his to the ground. The Mate was a
practitioner of the art of TSD, and was quite competent at defending
himself, so Bill thought he'd give the martial art a go.
Tang So Do is a traditional Korean martial art. Its history can be traced
back 2000 years to the days of the Hwrang Warriors. It is different to other arts systems, and yet all martial arts are similar in that they all teach
combative skills and philosophies. An over-simplification would be to say that you can see the strong linear
movements usually associated with many Japanese systems. It also contains the dynamic kicks associated with Tae Kwon Do, and fluidity similar to that
of Chinese Kung Fu. TSD also shares a number of similarities with the Korean art of
Hapkido."
Bill commenced training at Canberra's YMCA under the tuition of Kriton Glenn, who was a student of Tang Soo Tao's founder Robert Caputo. Eventually
Bill relocated to Darwin where Tang Soo Tao's headquarters were situated, and he took up residence in a caravan park next door to the dojo.
When Robert Caputo passed away, Tang Soo Tao was taken over by Mark King who invited Bill to further his studies and instruct in the art at Maroochydore
on Queensland's Sunshine Coast. "That worked out well for about eighteen months until I was involved in an
accident after my car centre-punched a telegraph pole. I sustained some cerebral nerve damage, which affected my eyesight. I was unconscious for a
couple of days, and the doctors didn't know if my sight would return. Eventually my vision came back, but my body was in a mess, so I'd drag
myself out of bed each morning, and practise my katas as a form of physiotherapy.
"I took up a twelve month course in Health, Fitness and Recreation at
Canberra TAFE, whilst staying with my parents. After dropping out of school at an early age, it was a real shock to be studying again at twenty-four
years of age." It was during this period in Bill Boyd's life that he commenced training
with an Australian Olympic judo competitor to broaden his martial arts background. Bill also believed that if he was to make a career of martial
arts it was important that he complete the full-time course at TAFE so as to have a better understanding of business administration, marketing and
human-relations skills. Because Bill was still recuperating from the car accident, he was determined to utilize this time for gaining knowledge and
making the most of the moment.

In 1989 Bill completed his TAFE course and also earned his
black belt. Over a period of eighteen months he went from being in a life-threatening car
accident to completing a twelve-month Health, Fitness and Recreation course, attaining his black belt and working as a security guard and doorman. Bill
Boyd was displaying the true warrior spirit.
"I remember saying to myself that it was silly for me to be working as a
bouncer after all I'd been through with the accident, but when you need
money you can't always pick and choose how you earn it." To add more spice to his life, Bill began studying kickboxing for a number
of years, before returning to Darwin and meeting up with Martin Osborne who was instructing in Tang Soo Do. When Osborne left Darwin, Bill Boyd took
over as head instructor and formed Boyd's Tang Soo Do Karate Academy, and incorporated judo and kickboxing into the routines.
"The classes began to go from strength to strength and I opened branch
studios around Darwin and down in Katherine. Two years later I leased
premises at Palmeston Leisure Centre and established a full-time dojo there. The academy was also expanding into many of the government and private
schools. I found the growth very satisfying, but the administrative politics were frustrating, so I walked away from it all and went back to working in
the security industry."

Today Bill runs a small club at Driver Primary School in Palmerston, a satellite
city of Darwin. "I resumed teaching martial arts on a smaller scale,
because it is a part of my life and I felt lost without it. I enjoy sharing TSD
with my children and people who are genuinely interested in improving their way
of life through the arts."
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