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Julie Moss, right, flips second-degree black belt instructor Matt Jacoby to the floor while Moss was testing for her black belt in Anshinkai-do at the Moore Martial Arts studio in Windsor.
Moss and Toby Hardwick, both of Evans, tested for four hours Saturday to gain their black belts. Earning a black belt with the one you love can be a real kick, so to speak. A Windsor police officer and his girlfriend became just the fourth and fifth students out of several hundred in the last 12 years to go from white belt to black belt.
Toby Hardwick, 33, and his girlfriend, Julie Moss, 32, both of whom live in Evans, were promoted to first-degree black belts in Anshinkai-do and Kosho Kempo on Saturday night after four hours of testing at Moore Martial Arts in Windsor. They spent the last three years taking instruction and the last year teaching students at the Windsor studio owned by Jon and Janine Moore.
Like Hardwick, she said she uses her training every day. Any part of your daily life or avoiding arguments, it affects it, Moss said. It helps me grow as a person, and being able to accept peoples differences and appreciate their differences. Jon Moore, 35, who is a fourth-degree black belt in Anshinkai-do and second-degree black belt in Kosho Kempo, said it is rare to have a student make it to black belt. It takes a lot of dedication, a lot of time and a lot of hard work, said Moore, who lives in Greeley.
Having a couple enter his program such as Hardwick and Moss is special for Moore. Moore said hes seen it with other black belts or students in the system where one part of the couple doesnt understand the importance of martial arts. Its rare to have both people who enjoy doing the same thing.