06/15/2026
It’s hard to believe it’s been a year since I represented the U.S. Masters Taekwondo Team at the World Masters Games in Taiwan.
But this story doesn’t begin with pride—it begins with doubt.
There was a time I truly thought my journey might be over. I had already gone through two ACL surgeries and a hip surgery, and coming back from that wasn’t just painful on the body, it tested my spirit. Every step back into training felt heavier. Every round felt like I was chasing something that had already left me behind. At my age, I started believing a quiet lie—that maybe my time in Taekwondo had passed, and I simply had to accept it.
Then I lost a match against an amazing Taekwondo athlete from Spain.
That loss didn’t just stay on the scoreboard—it stayed inside me. It made every doubt louder. It made me question not just my performance, but my identity as a martial artist. There was a moment where I honestly felt like I didn’t belong in the ring anymore.
In that moment, Coach Jeff Pinaroc pulled me aside. He didn’t talk about mistakes. He didn’t talk about losing. He looked at me and reminded me of who I was before the doubt, before the injury, before the fear. He spoke about my years of work, my discipline, and the fighter he still saw standing in front of him—even when I couldn’t see that version of myself anymore.
I remember thinking, if this Olympic-level coach believes in me, maybe he sees something that I can’t see right now. His words gave me confidence when I needed it most and helped me believe in myself again. That conversation didn’t erase the struggle—but it gave me something to hold onto when everything in me wanted to quit.
The USA Masters Team became part of that turning point. It wasn’t just an opportunity—it was a reminder that I still belonged somewhere I thought I had lost. Being surrounded by teammates who carried the same passion, respect, and discipline made me realize I wasn’t alone in the fight. I don’t know if I can fully put into words what it meant to wear that uniform again after everything.
Through it all, my wife, Angel Patterson Arana, was my anchor. When I was ready to let go, she refused to let me believe my story was finished. When I saw age and limitations, she saw experience and strength. When I saw failure, she saw someone still capable of rising again. When I had nothing left in me, she carried belief for both of us until I could breathe again.
I am still competing today, but I don’t share this story as success—I share it as truth.
There are moments in life when you will feel like you are done. When your body feels older than your dreams. When your losses feel heavier than your purpose. When quitting feels easier than continuing and in those moments, the difference is not talent—it is who stands next to you, and whether you are willing to listen when someone tells you that your story is not finished.
I share this with my students because I want them to understand something simple but real: you don’t achieve goals because you never fail—you achieve them because you don’t stay down.
Somewhere along this journey, I had the honor of representing the United States and earning a gold medal, but even that fades compared to what it took to get there.
What I carry most is not the victory, but the moments I almost gave up—and the people who refused to let me.
I’m grateful… not for the outcome, but for the fight, and for the ones who believed in me when I couldn’t.
04/17/2026
04/14/2026