When Amy's dad Kyoshi Andrew Roberts sadly passed she was left with 2 options: Quit or continue the family legacy. She's doing the latter.
IN THIS EPISODE, YOU WILL LEARN:
- What made Amy Gardam continue the legacy of her dad, Kyoshi Andrew Roberts
- The dad and daughter bond that was cemented by martial arts
- How Edge Martial Arts got back on track after losing 80 students
- Spotting young talented instructors early and making it known
- How you can help the Kyoshi Andrew Roberts Foundation and its mission to help families who have a loved one in palliative care
- And more
*Need help growing your martial arts school? Learn More Here.
TRANSCRIPTION
AMY: I felt like he was there, I felt close to him and I felt happy to be here, I prefer to be here than at home – this was my home.
GEORGE: Amazing, so you truly are living a legacy.
AMY: I think so, it's a good feeling.
GEORGE: Good day, this is George Fourie and welcome to another martial arts media business podcast, episode number 42. I have today with me Amy Gardam from Edge Martial arts in Mt. Evelyn, Victoria, how are you doing today Amy?
AMY: I’m good thank you, George, how are you?
GEORGE: Excellent, thank you. So we're going to have a bit of a chat about you and running your school and a whole bunch of other things that have happened and the journey that you've taken to… if it's right me saying that way, that you really continuing a legacy within your family, would that be the right way to say it?
AMY: Yes.
GEORGE: All right, so we've got lots to talk about, so I'm going to jump into the interview. Just a few things: the show notes for this interview is at martialartsmedia.com/42, so that's 4, 2 as in the numbers. And that's it, let's get started. So, Amy, first and foremost, tell us about you: who is Amy Gardam?
AMY: Ok. So, I'm a mother of two, I'm married, I've got my husband. I started martial arts when I was 4 years old with my dad. We started in just a local school hall at the time and eventually, the martial arts took off and he opened up a little part time center. And then when I was 15, just shy of being 15, I actually started teaching with him, just teaching the little kids. And from that moment on, and loved it, made it a career and now I run the business. I've got my two kids, and I'm a full-time working mum.
GEORGE: Ok, awesome. So you are running the business full time and you're a mum and so you're really just born into the martial arts, this is everything you know, right?
AMY: My whole life I've done martial arts, it's all I've known.
GEORGE: All right, cool. So now, you're also running the business and that's just you at this point in time?
AMY: Yeah, running the business with my staff, but my husband has recently, in the last three weeks quit his job as a welder to come onboard and we've brought it together, so we are running the business together and he's slowly learning martial arts basically.
GEORGE: All right, awesome. So he's coming from a completely different angle then. He hasn't trained martial arts yet, but he’s also stepped in to help?
AMY: Yeah. He did kick boxing, but that was about six years ago. He did it for six years back then, but he's never done karate or mixed martial arts, no…
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