This teenage karate teacher thinks that his YouTube channel will be more contagious than the current virus that is sweeping the country.
Jeffrey Wall founded Golden Age Karate, an outreach program, in October of last year to train seniors at the Friendship Village nursing home in Dayton, Ohio.
Jeffrey Wall, the organization’s founder, recently turned 15 years old.
Then, two days before the final session, the Ohio governor issued a shelter-in-place order, thereby ending his personal fitness crusade for the elderly—or did he?
At the age of six, Wall started studying karate, and four years later, the USA Martial Arts Hall of Fame inducted him.
He was just 13 when he achieved his black belt, and his dedication to his students remains as strong as it was during his own personal journey.
In response to the new quarantine, Wall stated, “I anticipated that they would be really disappointed.”
As a result, he launched a YouTube channel to help pupils stay up with their coursework. Now that younger kids are attending lessons, his admiration for his seniors is spreading around the room.
In reality, a large number of people who follow Wall on Instagram are currently working on decorations and other crafts in preparation for a visit to a nursing facility.

Prior to the epidemic, each one-hour lesson would gather five to ten elderly citizens, who would not attend just to observe.
Wall started by helping his elders understand with demonstrations.
In his first demonstration, he demonstrated how he performs push-ups on his knuckles, which is an effective way to relieve wrist tension.
He looked up to find pupils, at least 90 years old, doing pushups alongside him on the floor.
He told the Good News Network, “My mom and I tried to help them up, but they wanted to keep going.”
“One of our 95-year-old pupils successfully performed 10 pushups while wearing a gorgeous sweater and pearls! Every class gets a hilarious chuckle over it.”
The same age as his grandmother, Wall’s nineties customer reminds him of her.
Her calm appearance and soothing words conceal the excitement that lies beneath. She never held back when punching the target pad before the quarantine, especially when Wall pushed her to let go and fling her weight about.
At the end of each lesson, she would always ask, “That wasn’t too difficult, was it?”
Wall said to GNN, “It has never been too hard, but I always told her, ‘Just a bit,’ and she would laugh.” “It has never been too hard.”
When the classes ended, she had a perfect attendance record for the previous six months. Wall intended to progress her to the yellow belt level.
Videos on YouTube reflect the intensity that Wall students bring to every lesson.
Wall asks each student to throw punches while seated in a chair, holding the target pad in front of them.
In the video below, an elderly woman with white hair does a series of seated kicks so forceful that the teacher hilariously advises her not to shatter the target.
Wall’s growing interest has prompted requests from care institutions outside of Dayton.
At the moment, all he wants is to stay in his current area. However, once the order to remain in place and take cover is lifted, he is open to extending his business.
Wall expressed his desire to aid a number of communities and, eventually, nations, saying, “I hope that I can help.”
Watch the video.