Angelika Fritz over at Qialance did a very nice job pulling together an extensive compilation of Cheng Man Ching (Zhang Man Quing) Tai Chi Chuan videos. There are clips of CMC doing the famous 37 form, the sword form, push hands, teaching class, etc.
The post is simply too rich for me to show an excerpt. Please visit here.
Enjoy.
Here at the frontier, the leaves fall like rain. Although my neighbors are all barbarians, and you, you are a thousand miles away, there are still two cups at my table.
Ten thousand flowers in spring, the moon in autumn, a cool breeze in summer, snow in winter. If your mind isn't clouded by unnecessary things, this is the best season of your life.
~ Wu-men ~
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
Saturday, May 27, 2017
Do You Train Enough to be a Martial Artist
Jesse Conley at Stone Tiger XingYi has a thought provoking article on the time and quality that we put into our training. Do you train enough to be a man of kung fu?
When I was a young man, it was a simple matter. I was marginally employed and lived at home. I simply went to every class that Kushida Sensei taught at the old Davison dojo, 3x per day, 3x per week; plus the beginner and ongoing classes at the Wyandotte dojo 2x per week, then any other class I could find anywhere. As an aside, going to the beginners class for years was one of the best things I'd ever done for myself.
As I got older, life became more complicated. A girlfriend became a wife. A job became a career. Kids came along. My parents grew old and infirm. I had to accommodate this.
These days at nearly 60, I run every other day. On work days, it's 4 or 5 miles before leaving for the office. On weekends, I have my long run. I'm planning on two half marathons this fall, so my long runs will be about 10 miles by August.
The other days, I practice the Cheng Man Ching Taijiquan form. On the off days from running, I practice in a "square" fashion, holding postures for various reasons; then whenever I have the time, space and opportunity, I practice in the usual round, flowing fashion. It works out to be about 50/50 square and round.
I like to think that I've learned a little bit about Budo from Kushida Sensei. What I do isn't exactly Budo, but it's close enough and meets my needs. I call my way of practicing "Budo with a small 'b'."
With regards to martial arts training, what are you trying to accomplish and are you training enough to accomplish that? It's easy to fool ourselves and come up short.
Am I a real martial artist anymore? Probably not, but then I am pursuing different things these days.
"Budo should enhance your life, not replace it." - FJ Lovret.
An excerpt from the post is below. The full article may be read here.
...When we were talking about what they saw, we started on a discussion of how the next big issue in society may come from parents choosing which social class their children belong to. The parents who take their children to the park on a spring evening stand a good chance to read with their children and encourage them to study for themselves. These parents are more likely to emphasize physical health with their children and undoubtedly spend more focused, quality time with their children than the parents that only pacify their kids with entertainment.
I was relaying this to some martial arts friends and I had a realization. This problem isn't just about kids going to the park or being online, it's VERY evident in a similar manner with people who call themselves 'martial artists'.
Think about it for a second. Spending some time online or with entertainment these days is normal but how much time are you giving to mindless enjoyment and how much to training? When do you train? And please, don't give me the whole "I train all day every day". Most of the time that is just an excuse for people to get out of the hard parts of training. They think that picking the coffee pot up with proper shoulder alignment is training instead of just how they should always move. So how much do you ACTUALLY train each day? Have you ever actually written down how many circles you walk or how many lines of the elements you do? How many times do you practice Pi Chuan each day? And I mean how many times EXACTLY? Do you keep a training log where you detail your practices and keep track of your progress, the same as any other serious athlete?
That is only one aspect to this. What do you do when you aren't training? What do you do when you are watching TV or cooking or cleaning to add to your sets and reps for the day? I like the term sets and reps, I know a lot of traditional martial artists may not jive with that but before I was a Gong Fu guy, I was a wrestler and lifter and that is how I learned to measure training progress. It just stuck over time.
Some people may think that I am using those questions to set up an "I'm better than you" argument but that couldn't be father from the truth. I want to ask these questions of everyone to get them to think exactly how they spend their time. Time management experts have long said that we really don't know how much of our day that we waste with idleness and often, their best advice is to find all the times throughout the day that you aren't truly doing anything but just being idle. So my question to you all is, what are you doing with all the time you are wasting by accident? Again, this is not to castigate anyone but to get you to ask YOURSELF, are you truly as dedicated as you would like to be?
This is a question I had to ask myself a year or so ago and I realized I wasn't training nearly enough to really call myself a Gong Fu man. I was putting in the time teaching and certainly did a good hour or so of training on top of that everyday but I had allowed myself to play to the certainly true but still bitch ass excuse of my injuries acting up. I let myself slip into the delusion that since I was crippled in the past, that I couldn't push myself to my full limits or I would be too sore to teach my group properly. I know, it sounds silly when I write it out but I think everyone here has given themselves similar excuses in the past. So I made some drastic changes that I know most other people might find some use in and wanted to share them here.
When I get up in the morning, I start doing a light practice that is focused on waking me up, getting lots of oxygen going and just waking up my nervous system. It's usually stretching and some Qigong and a little Taiji. The stretching is focused on getting my body open after 8 hours of sleep, it adds a huge boost to my morning. This sounds common sense but how many of you actually do it everyday or at least five out of seven days consistently?
When I still worked a day job, I would take my 15 minute breaks and go do some light Tian Gan. Just enough to make me breath a little heavy and get my blood going but not enough to come back in soaking wet. Lunch time was taken to start some light circle walking or elements, again I was limited to not being sweaty when I came back in. I ate at my desk after lunch while I was working to free up that time. Last break was the same as the first but I pushed myself a little bit harder to really loosen up for practice right after work.
I own a school literally next door to my old job so the first thing I did was clock out and go straight next door. I got into deeper stretching to work out any stiffness from earlier training and then got down to a solid hour or so until students showed up. I taught my classes immediately after and then headed home after that to shower and eat with the family.
Again, I don't say this to brag but on an average day, I was up to around 3 hours of training and teaching whereas a lot of people wouldn't have started yet. It's not because I'm amazing, it's because I searched out every minute I could that was could be used for training.
When I was a young man, it was a simple matter. I was marginally employed and lived at home. I simply went to every class that Kushida Sensei taught at the old Davison dojo, 3x per day, 3x per week; plus the beginner and ongoing classes at the Wyandotte dojo 2x per week, then any other class I could find anywhere. As an aside, going to the beginners class for years was one of the best things I'd ever done for myself.
As I got older, life became more complicated. A girlfriend became a wife. A job became a career. Kids came along. My parents grew old and infirm. I had to accommodate this.
These days at nearly 60, I run every other day. On work days, it's 4 or 5 miles before leaving for the office. On weekends, I have my long run. I'm planning on two half marathons this fall, so my long runs will be about 10 miles by August.
The other days, I practice the Cheng Man Ching Taijiquan form. On the off days from running, I practice in a "square" fashion, holding postures for various reasons; then whenever I have the time, space and opportunity, I practice in the usual round, flowing fashion. It works out to be about 50/50 square and round.
I like to think that I've learned a little bit about Budo from Kushida Sensei. What I do isn't exactly Budo, but it's close enough and meets my needs. I call my way of practicing "Budo with a small 'b'."
With regards to martial arts training, what are you trying to accomplish and are you training enough to accomplish that? It's easy to fool ourselves and come up short.
Am I a real martial artist anymore? Probably not, but then I am pursuing different things these days.
"Budo should enhance your life, not replace it." - FJ Lovret.
An excerpt from the post is below. The full article may be read here.
...When we were talking about what they saw, we started on a discussion of how the next big issue in society may come from parents choosing which social class their children belong to. The parents who take their children to the park on a spring evening stand a good chance to read with their children and encourage them to study for themselves. These parents are more likely to emphasize physical health with their children and undoubtedly spend more focused, quality time with their children than the parents that only pacify their kids with entertainment.
I was relaying this to some martial arts friends and I had a realization. This problem isn't just about kids going to the park or being online, it's VERY evident in a similar manner with people who call themselves 'martial artists'.
Think about it for a second. Spending some time online or with entertainment these days is normal but how much time are you giving to mindless enjoyment and how much to training? When do you train? And please, don't give me the whole "I train all day every day". Most of the time that is just an excuse for people to get out of the hard parts of training. They think that picking the coffee pot up with proper shoulder alignment is training instead of just how they should always move. So how much do you ACTUALLY train each day? Have you ever actually written down how many circles you walk or how many lines of the elements you do? How many times do you practice Pi Chuan each day? And I mean how many times EXACTLY? Do you keep a training log where you detail your practices and keep track of your progress, the same as any other serious athlete?
That is only one aspect to this. What do you do when you aren't training? What do you do when you are watching TV or cooking or cleaning to add to your sets and reps for the day? I like the term sets and reps, I know a lot of traditional martial artists may not jive with that but before I was a Gong Fu guy, I was a wrestler and lifter and that is how I learned to measure training progress. It just stuck over time.
Some people may think that I am using those questions to set up an "I'm better than you" argument but that couldn't be father from the truth. I want to ask these questions of everyone to get them to think exactly how they spend their time. Time management experts have long said that we really don't know how much of our day that we waste with idleness and often, their best advice is to find all the times throughout the day that you aren't truly doing anything but just being idle. So my question to you all is, what are you doing with all the time you are wasting by accident? Again, this is not to castigate anyone but to get you to ask YOURSELF, are you truly as dedicated as you would like to be?
This is a question I had to ask myself a year or so ago and I realized I wasn't training nearly enough to really call myself a Gong Fu man. I was putting in the time teaching and certainly did a good hour or so of training on top of that everyday but I had allowed myself to play to the certainly true but still bitch ass excuse of my injuries acting up. I let myself slip into the delusion that since I was crippled in the past, that I couldn't push myself to my full limits or I would be too sore to teach my group properly. I know, it sounds silly when I write it out but I think everyone here has given themselves similar excuses in the past. So I made some drastic changes that I know most other people might find some use in and wanted to share them here.
When I get up in the morning, I start doing a light practice that is focused on waking me up, getting lots of oxygen going and just waking up my nervous system. It's usually stretching and some Qigong and a little Taiji. The stretching is focused on getting my body open after 8 hours of sleep, it adds a huge boost to my morning. This sounds common sense but how many of you actually do it everyday or at least five out of seven days consistently?
When I still worked a day job, I would take my 15 minute breaks and go do some light Tian Gan. Just enough to make me breath a little heavy and get my blood going but not enough to come back in soaking wet. Lunch time was taken to start some light circle walking or elements, again I was limited to not being sweaty when I came back in. I ate at my desk after lunch while I was working to free up that time. Last break was the same as the first but I pushed myself a little bit harder to really loosen up for practice right after work.
I own a school literally next door to my old job so the first thing I did was clock out and go straight next door. I got into deeper stretching to work out any stiffness from earlier training and then got down to a solid hour or so until students showed up. I taught my classes immediately after and then headed home after that to shower and eat with the family.
Again, I don't say this to brag but on an average day, I was up to around 3 hours of training and teaching whereas a lot of people wouldn't have started yet. It's not because I'm amazing, it's because I searched out every minute I could that was could be used for training.
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Teaching Flow in Martial Arts
Today we have a guest post by Jonathan Bluestein. Enjoy.
By Jonathan Bluestein
There is a hidden mechanism in the teaching of martial arts, which pervades everywhere regardless of school and style. This mechanism, I believe, is the key component in achieving success in the teaching of these arts. I will now tell you all about it, and how to put it to practice with ease. But first, let me have a short discussion with you, from one martial arts teacher to another, about the nature of what we do.
I
personally am not fond of referring to martial arts as a ‘business’, even if
teaching them is one’s means of making a living. But were we to equate the
martial arts to some type of business, then what type of business would they
be? I say we are in the ‘customer preservation business’. This is true
for everyone who teach the martial arts. The goal of the martial arts teacher,
whoever he or she are, is to gain a certain amount of students, and then keep
them for as long as possible or required. This is the reality even if one does
not charge a fee for his teaching, and certainly if one needs to earn money
from this dignified profession.
Here
is another interesting and related anecdote - you need to keep the students
more than you need new students. Why? Because martial arts are always a small
business venture. With 100 students, a martial arts teacher will likely earn a
very good income. With 300 students, you can even become a rich man (not that
this should be the goal of teaching martial arts!). Even the largest schools
very rarely surpass 300 students, and I dare say that any school with over
350-400 students is no longer really in the business of ‘teaching’ – it is in
the business of making money (for most schools, that’s true even when they
cross the 200 student line). But in any case, the number of ‘customers’ one
needs in this ‘business’ is rather small. Many will even suffice with as little
as 10-70 students. A martial arts teacher who can get the number of students he
aims for, and can keep them attending classes for years, does not need any new
students coming, at least not on a regular basis. Therefore, mastery of the
ability to conserve the student population will resolve almost completely the
‘business side’ of the teaching. A teacher who can keep all or most students,
essentially has nothing to worry about but the teaching and the practice – this
is what we all want.
There
are unfortunately many things we cannot control. Disease, marriage, having
children, injuries outside the school, moving far away, army service, major changes
in personality and more… all of these will take students from us over the
years, and there is little we can do about it. But there is the one thing we can
control, and that is the quality and the nature of our teaching. Here we
can do something, just one single thing, to make a tremendous improvement in
our ability to keep the students with us. That one thing is no less an art than
the other skills we practice and teach. That thing is the application of Flow
Theory to the teaching of our martial arts. Bear with me now for a single
paragraph, while I explain to you what this theory is, so you can later
understand how it may be easily applied to teaching the martial arts.
Flow is a popular concept
in modern psychology. It was ‘discovered’ by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, who was
the first to make a science out of this common human phenomenon (no, his family
name was not typed by my cat walking on the keyboard). Everyone who had ever
lived have experienced flow many times in their lives. You know it too. Flow is
the state you experience when you do something which is for you, subjectively
speaking, the most difficult you can handle with ease, and you also really want
to do it. When that thing you are doing is quite difficult but you can still
handle it with ease, and you are also motivated to do it, you experience a
blissful state of great joy and inner concentration which is detached from time
and place. It is this ultimate moment in time when you do something and
everything works exceptionally well. You feel uplifted, euphoric, and
completely engulfed in the moment.
Although people who write of Flow often use examples from the lives of the very
skilled and gifted, Flow can in fact be experienced by anyone – including each
of your students, no matter who he or she are. We all experience flow commonly
in play, whether it be football, baseball, soccer, box games, card games,
sexual activities, handling a musical instrument we have some skill with, etc; Cooking,
driving, gardening, singing, dancing, and countless more activities – even
negative things like killing and waging wars - whichever things humans can find
to be ‘fun’, they can achieve a state of flow while doing them. Flow can even be
achieved by thinking challenging thoughts in your mind, without moving. Computer
games especially are built to make flow happen. This is the reason computer
games have levels of difficulty, and often many of them. The player, based on
their skill, can choose how challenging the computer game is going to be for
him. What the player actually does is to draw the line of flow for himself. He
chooses a level of difficulty which is, for him, difficult but not too much,
and that level of challenge, together with the player’s interest in the game,
makes the experience the most enjoyable. Likewise, Flow can also be experienced
through a wide range of human endeavors, including the martial arts of course,
if the person is skilled enough. There is much more to this phenomenon with
regard to martial arts practice, and I have written of it more extensively in
my international best-seller, Research of Martial Arts.
Athletes
often refer to flow as ‘being in the zone’. When in flow, one performs best
with his set of skills. It is also the state in which we are able to absorb
the most and learn best from what we are doing. It makes sense therefore,
that as martial arts teachers we would want our students and ourselves to spend
as much time in flow as possible. It would benefit all of humanity if that were
the case. But here is the problem we face as martial arts teachers – although
our martial arts can manifest flow like any other skill, their training methods
were not designed to make flow happen immediately, but rather after a very long
time. This all relates to our ability to conserve the student population, and I
shall now explain how.
In
the martial arts we tend to most commonly have two types of approaches to
teaching people. These two approaches, put simply, are “take it hard on them”
and “take it easy on them”.
The first approach is embodied in the traditional martial arts schools, but
also in the sports-oriented schools. In such martial arts schools, students are
expected to work very hard to achieve skill. Their either suffer through
painful training, a type of training which stresses their strength and stamina
to the utmost, or both. This could be in the form of holding low stances for
prolonged periods of time, placing the body in awkward and difficult positions,
suffering a beating from others, exhausting their aerobic or anaerobic limits,
etc. This is the Yang end of the scale – too difficult. With this approach,
there is the underlying and often unspoken expectation that only the best (most
fitting) will survive, and that indeed happens – usually fewer people tend to
last and continue over the years than the teacher would have liked.
The second approach takes the opposite route, considering the martial arts as a
sort of pastime. The teacher does not believe the intended population has what
it takes for more serious martial arts training. Therefore, the teacher keeps
the training and curriculum at a low level of physical and mental challenge.
This is fantastic for recruiting students. Many people come and within their
first class already feel as if they have achieved something. Then this
experience is repeated in many classes. But the student also senses quite
quickly that the practice is not challenging enough. That is akin to a person
who is ‘too easy’ when going on romantic dates with others, and because of this
is eventually shunned by most potential partners. This person becomes that
martial arts school teacher, and just as many come at his doorstep, sooner than
later most leave. This is the Yin end of the scale – too easy.
As you may remember
from earlier, I have asserted that Flow is found in the delicate balance
between ‘too difficult' and ‘too easy’. Bringing the student into a state of
flow again and again is, in my opinion, the most reliable way to keep that
student interested and pursuing the practice for a lifetime. This is because
the nature of Flow, being experienced as a blissful and joyous state which is
self-perpetuating and addictive, all the while providing significant personal
growth.
Yet there is a reason most schools do not make the effort to keep students in
flow. The Yang schools want a serious student who is hard-working, so they do
not wish to compromise their teachings to ‘spoil’ the students (or, for that
matter, to bend over backwards to make a student happy). The Yin schools wish
to make money and fear pushing it in classes will drive the students away. What
then can be done to accommodate for these challenges?
Well,
I should start by saying that back in the old days, things were simpler. Just
50 years ago, people were overall far more physically hard-working and willing
to take on challenges, and less likely to complain. Martial Arts were very new
to the Western world and people did not have expectations of something they did
not at all understand. Nowadays we have populations in the Western world which
are, on the whole, high degenerate. In addition to that, the sophisticated
brainwashing by the modern media had led people to believe that what they watch
on the screen is not only reality, but something they can learn and apply in
reality on all walks of life. This led us to this day and age, in which a new
student attending our schools usually has two prominent qualities, regardless of
age:
1.
He knows less than he thinks he knows,
especially of the martial arts.
2.
He can physically do less than he thinks he can,
especially in the martial arts.
Because
of problem number 1, the student is often too quick to decide whether a martial
art is right or not for him, before truly experiencing it. Because of problem
number 2, the student will tend to have a disproportional response to his
successes and failures in training. Put in other words – people today lack good
body constitution and self-awareness of body and mind. This makes the challenge
for martial arts teachers greater than before.
To make Flow work
with the students we need to change our mindset. We have to decide and believe
that the student, albeit being a novice, can genuinely reach flow or near-flow
experiences, if we provide him or her the right conditions for it. Also, we
have to realize something else which is very important: While it is true that
we want only the best and most appropriate people as our students, going to
extremes will not necessarily help us get these people. Just look at what I
have written in the previous paragraphs. Most people are not ready for real
martial arts training when they come at our doorstep. Neither should we expect
them to be ready. We should make them so. By learning to accommodate our
teachings to many types of people, over time a significant number of students
will evolve their body and mind, changing their attitudes and seriousness about
training. Were we to go by ‘only winners’ or ‘only losers’ approach, then we
shall get very few winners (if at all) to remain after 5, 10 or 20 years of
teaching, or rather thousands of students who came and went without many or any
to carry on what we do at a decent level.
Coming
from a background teaching the traditional Chinese martial arts, I would like
to address the appropriate solutions for the more Yang-inclined schools – those
in which the teachers tend to expect a hard-working mentality from the get-go.
The most common problem I see today in such schools is that the curriculum is
simply not well made for modern society. Often the curriculum itself is excellent,
but it begins at too advanced a level, physically and mentally. The curriculum
of such arts often assumes a population of students which has been doing tough
physical labour, often in fields, from early age. This is not where we are at
today. This was well understood by pioneers in Okinawan Karate during the 20th
century, who were wise to accommodate for the problem by creating many kata to
be taught even before the ‘beginner’ parts of the curriculum. This pre-beginner
direction is the way to go. It allows a student to be challenged, but not too
challenged, and then when this becomes easy, he or she can begin training the
’real’ art. Actually, it is often stated in Okinawan Karate and other arts,
that true training beings with the first black belt. This is exactly because,
everything before that was simply beginner-friendly material. Sadly, for
Okinawan Karate and Japanese Karate, that experiment also failed miserably in
many schools in which the beginner mentality was preserved in the long-run, and
people could never get past that stage of training, even when they ‘earned’
their black belts.
But
the undertones of this approach are valid. The teacher needs to create a
version of the curriculum that suits the physicality and mentality of the
student, and then from it slowly increase the intensity and difficulty until
the ‘real training’ can begin. In this manner, the student can experience Flow
or near-flow states, by keeping the practice challenging and difficult, but not
too much. But where stands the limit between making it easier, and prostituting
one’s art to accommodate for a student’s needs? From my personal perspective, I
believe you can determine the limit by asking several questions:
1.
Does the student actually make progress towards
‘real training’ by doing this stuff?
2.
Will this type of training lead to the ‘real
training’ within a reasonable amount of time?
3.
Is this level of training respectful of the
student and of his honest wishes?
4.
Can this type of training yield any useful
skills for either self-defense or health?
5.
Am I taking care to add difficulty when the practice
becomes too easy?
Through
these questions, you will know whether your attempts to help the student are
alright. Remember though, that such modifications ought to be made on a
student-to-student basis. The changes need to fit the special needs of each
student, and what his or her unique challenges are. One of the reasons that the
creation of ‘beginner kata’ caused problems for Karate in the long-term in many
schools was that these kata were created for the masses, and not optimized for
each practitioner. Not that creating new forms is necessarily the way to go,
either. Sometimes single movements require changing. Other times the height of
steps and stances or their length beg your attention. Rhythm is also an issue.
Following a fixed rhythm of practice is not conductive to the individual. As in
the teaching of music and language, each person needs to follow a personal
rhythm before they can mold themselves unto the rhythm of the group and of the
art. Forcing people to blindly follow rhythm before they can execute movements
well is in my opinion, albeit a common teaching method, not a very effective
one. The alternative of course, in the manner of more personalized teaching,
requires more attention, effort and ingenuity of the teacher, which is why most
teachers opt to forgo such an undertaking.
Keeping
the student in flow has more to do than just the physical movement themselves.
It is also affected by how said movements are perceived by the student. A
beginner is strongly affected by his extreme feelings and reactions to the
practice. This has to be controlled, through the use of physical and verbal
language. A few examples:
Smile to make the student relax when it hurts. Frown and make displeased sighs
when the student fails to meet his and your expectations. But most of all –
know when to quickly transitions between negative and positive feedback with
accordance to the student’s actions. Do not forget to include both! Commonly a
teacher praises too much or too little; yells too much or too little. Strike a
balance in such things. The ‘carrot and stick’ method never fails. With
children I make it even more pronounced. A child whose mind goes wondering too
much and too often might get a gentle slap on the cheek and a moderate raising
of voice to put him in place. Then 5 minutes later when he makes a sincere
effort to concentrate, even if he does not succeed with the technique, I may
give him a hug, and then at the end of class applaud his efforts in front of
the other students. One must use both the carrot and the stick to help the
student locate the right point between ‘too easy’ and ‘too difficult’, and this
relies on the development of empathy and subtle skills for manipulating people.
Another
thing I do is to suit the classes to the level of the people who attend them. I
take advantage of the changing attendance for this purpose. When today’s class
features mostly the less skilled or the more skilled, I will change the teaching
content to ‘meet them at the flow point’. When the classes have people of
varying levels of skill, I will teach one thing, but then as people work on
their own or with partners, I will go personally to those more advanced and
issue detailed modifications in their ear so they could increase the level of
challenge to their flow point.
Then
it is important to remember that once a student reaches a certain level, he
needs to learn to ‘eat bitter’. That is, to practice by your order or through
his own initiative exercises, techniques and methods which are not in a ‘flow
state’, but rather challenging to the point of eventual physical near collapse
and failure, involving much pain and duress. Eating Bitter (Chī Kǔ 吃苦), a
Chinese term, refers to that substantial effort one needs to go through and
maintain for years, against one’s own intuition, to gain higher-level skills.
Eating bitter is torturous by nature, and therefore not suitable for beginners.
But it is the only path to true skill in the martial arts. Then, fortunately
for those who persevere, eating bitter for years on end eventually leads once
more to experiencing the entire art in flow, without any suffering. All of the
philosophy embodied in this article is meant for a teacher to be able to lead
as many students as possible to the gates of bitter training, and have them
arriving them ready and mature to accept that sort of challenge. Once there
with all of one’s being, the way to excellence is almost guaranteed.
The
Chinese understood this well for centuries, which is why their arts have the
social model of ‘entering the gate’. In the traditional Chinese martial arts,
regular students came for pastime classes in which not much was expected of
them, and the higher methods, skills and techniques were also kept from them.
Then if a student had proven himself in training and as a human being via
various means, he may have been accepted into the inner martial arts family and
‘enter the gate’ of the family compound (a metaphor based on the fact that in
the past many Chinese lived in walled compounds with gates, and family affairs
would be conducted behind closed doors). This is a good model which helps
distinguish those who still require special accommodations and
flow-encouragement, and those who are mature enough to suffer of their own
volition and accept the pain which will eventually lead them to true flow, in
the manifestation of truly advanced practice and application.
Here too however we have a challenge, in that there is a definite line between
that regular student and the inner-family student. But people, sadly, are
volatile creatures. Many can prove themselves to be worthy for a while, making
great progress, and then later through life’s circumstances deteriorate and
wither into a lower version of their former Self. Then, they may no longer
abide by the standards of a student who had entered the gate. This is why
traditionally, many Chinese teachers waited a long time, often several years,
before admitting a person into the family. This was also a request which had to
come from the student, and not the teacher.
Whichever
teaching model and paradigm one chooses, Flow is the way to go. Do not be
tempted to act upon your Ego, and expect the student to be this or that. As a
teacher I take the greater responsibility for my relationship with my students.
Although they have to meet me half-way, I can wait forever on the road if I did
not provide them with a decent enough map. Therefore, make sure the students
walk the right path, and be by your example their compass. Then you will find,
that things tend to flow smoothly on their own.
______________________________________________
Jonathan Bluestein is best-selling author, martial arts teacher, and head of Blue Jade Martial Arts International. For more articles by shifu Bluestein, his books and classes offered by his organization, visit his website at: www.bluejadesociety.com
You may also subscribe to Shifu Bluestein's youtube channel, which is regularly updated with rare and fascinating martial arts videos:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR0VUbThdexbXJb9BBSKMbw
You may also subscribe to Shifu Bluestein's youtube channel, which is regularly updated with rare and fascinating martial arts videos:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR0VUbThdexbXJb9BBSKMbw
All rights of this article are and the pictures within it are reserved to Jonathan Bluestein ©. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from Jonathan Bluestein.
Sunday, May 21, 2017
The Taijiquan and Qigong Dictionary
Take a look. I am sure that it will find a place on your shelf.
Thursday, May 18, 2017
Dao De Jing, #63: Thinking in the Beginning
The Dao De Jing is not only one of the world's great classics, it is one of the foundations of Philosophical Daoism. A free online version of the Dao De Jing may be found here. Today we have #63: Thinking in the Beginning.
Existence is sanctuary:
It is a good man's purse,
It is also a bad man's keep.
Clever performances come dear or cheap,
Goodness comes free;
And how shall a man who acts better deny a man who acts worse
This right to be.
Rather, when an emperor is crowned, let the three
Ministers whom he appoints to receive for him fine horses and gifts of jade
Receive for him also the motionless gift of integrity,
The gift prized as highest by those ancients who said,
'Only pursue an offender to show him the way.'
What men in all the world could have more wealth than
they?
Existence is sanctuary:
It is a good man's purse,
It is also a bad man's keep.
Clever performances come dear or cheap,
Goodness comes free;
And how shall a man who acts better deny a man who acts worse
This right to be.
Rather, when an emperor is crowned, let the three
Ministers whom he appoints to receive for him fine horses and gifts of jade
Receive for him also the motionless gift of integrity,
The gift prized as highest by those ancients who said,
'Only pursue an offender to show him the way.'
What men in all the world could have more wealth than
they?
Monday, May 15, 2017
Martial Arts and Taking a Life
Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini was a boxer who once killed a man in the ring. It left a mark on him.
Below is a documentary that is about 1.5 hours long. It is well worth watching.
Below is a documentary that is about 1.5 hours long. It is well worth watching.
Friday, May 12, 2017
Yoga for Martial Arts
There was a post on BJJ Notebook a while back about learning Yoga to improve one's BJJ. Learning Yoga could probably improve your practice of any martial art.
Below is an excerpt from the post, as well as a video. The full post may be read here.
Below is an excerpt from the post, as well as a video. The full post may be read here.
I give yoga a go for 7 days to see if it makes a difference to my Jiujitsu
I’ve heard it said time after time that yoga and Brazilian jiujitsu are made for each other, so, as an ‘over the hill’ BJJ practitioner (40+) I decided it was time I found out what yoga could do for me. Proper yoga classes are one option, but since all my free time is taken up with work, family life and BJJ I don’t have time to go to them, so I needed to look for something I could do from home.
It turns out that there’s a website just for people like me. No, it’s not Tinder. It’s Yoga for BJJ and it offers a yoga system that’s specifically designed for BJJ practitioners who feel stiff and uncomfortable after rolling and want to feel better. To access the site, which has over 100 yoga videos, you need to subscribe for $17 a month, but the first month is only $7, and they offer to refund you if you don’t find it useful. Admittedly that sounds like a good deal, but since I am your typical inflexible and stiff male who went to a few yoga classes about 10 years ago and hasn’t done any since, I decided I needed to look into another option first.
I discovered that Yoga for BJJ offer a free 20 minute introductory session (i) on YouTube. I decided it was probably worth my time just repeating their free class once a day for a week, and saving the website trial until I could get more out of it. You see, finding the time to do yoga in my day is also an issue – I have a job, 2 kids, BJJ and freelance writing to fit into my busy schedule, so I needed to find out if I could even make time for yoga..
I’ve heard it said time after time that yoga and Brazilian jiujitsu are made for each other, so, as an ‘over the hill’ BJJ practitioner (40+) I decided it was time I found out what yoga could do for me. Proper yoga classes are one option, but since all my free time is taken up with work, family life and BJJ I don’t have time to go to them, so I needed to look for something I could do from home.
It turns out that there’s a website just for people like me. No, it’s not Tinder. It’s Yoga for BJJ and it offers a yoga system that’s specifically designed for BJJ practitioners who feel stiff and uncomfortable after rolling and want to feel better. To access the site, which has over 100 yoga videos, you need to subscribe for $17 a month, but the first month is only $7, and they offer to refund you if you don’t find it useful. Admittedly that sounds like a good deal, but since I am your typical inflexible and stiff male who went to a few yoga classes about 10 years ago and hasn’t done any since, I decided I needed to look into another option first.
I discovered that Yoga for BJJ offer a free 20 minute introductory session (i) on YouTube. I decided it was probably worth my time just repeating their free class once a day for a week, and saving the website trial until I could get more out of it. You see, finding the time to do yoga in my day is also an issue – I have a job, 2 kids, BJJ and freelance writing to fit into my busy schedule, so I needed to find out if I could even make time for yoga..
Tuesday, May 09, 2017
Intent in Martial Arts
Below is an excerpt of an article that was posted at Internal Power Training. The full article may be read here.
There is a saying in the internal arts that one ‘follows the line of intent’, this is the process of moving in accordance with our will to act using the Intent as the link between the mind and the motion. But there is more to this concept than simply following how we would like to move.
Moving along the lines of intent is a concept that is, at its core, related to efficiency. It is the pure and unwavering action, the movement that is not diffused with other thoughts or considerations. Often I would hear one of my teachers say ‘don’t think, just go!’ when my movement would be sluggish, disjointed or inefficient.
As we have discovered in other articles, movement is formed at the level of the brain. The root of movement is not in the final action observed by others; this is merely the result. If we look at movement as if the physical action is the beginning and end of the story, it would be a bit like thinking a tree grows from its leaves first.
But the movement does happen, and how it happens, with what level of efficiency is of the utmost importance to the internal arts practitioner (and probably any movement artist). In the internal arts there is a deep introspection and focus on how the movements follow the will to act. We see the disciples of the many styles agonizing over their alignments and connections, looking to squeeze every last bit of efficiency out of their motion.
Correct alignment, connection and conditioning are all pre-requisites when looking at our ability to move in accordance with the directions of our intent. But there are ways to work on our movement capability at the level of Intent itself. These techniques use a combination of visualization, strong will to move and clear mental focus. Of course, when fighting the various systems work in harmony, but whether it be the conditioned response or the conscious decision to move, it is in training of the intent where one of the Keys reside. Correct training of the intent can increase our ‘signal strength’ and increase power dramatically in the motions.
There is a saying in the internal arts that one ‘follows the line of intent’, this is the process of moving in accordance with our will to act using the Intent as the link between the mind and the motion. But there is more to this concept than simply following how we would like to move.
Moving along the lines of intent is a concept that is, at its core, related to efficiency. It is the pure and unwavering action, the movement that is not diffused with other thoughts or considerations. Often I would hear one of my teachers say ‘don’t think, just go!’ when my movement would be sluggish, disjointed or inefficient.
As we have discovered in other articles, movement is formed at the level of the brain. The root of movement is not in the final action observed by others; this is merely the result. If we look at movement as if the physical action is the beginning and end of the story, it would be a bit like thinking a tree grows from its leaves first.
But the movement does happen, and how it happens, with what level of efficiency is of the utmost importance to the internal arts practitioner (and probably any movement artist). In the internal arts there is a deep introspection and focus on how the movements follow the will to act. We see the disciples of the many styles agonizing over their alignments and connections, looking to squeeze every last bit of efficiency out of their motion.
Correct alignment, connection and conditioning are all pre-requisites when looking at our ability to move in accordance with the directions of our intent. But there are ways to work on our movement capability at the level of Intent itself. These techniques use a combination of visualization, strong will to move and clear mental focus. Of course, when fighting the various systems work in harmony, but whether it be the conditioned response or the conscious decision to move, it is in training of the intent where one of the Keys reside. Correct training of the intent can increase our ‘signal strength’ and increase power dramatically in the motions.
Saturday, May 06, 2017
Cheng Man Ching Biography
Below is an excerpt from an article by Katy Cheng, the daughter of Taijiquan master Cheng Man Ching, giving a brief description of her father's biography. The full post may be read here.
My father was born in the last century, well imbued with the traditional Chinese culture. But he was not weighed down by the old. He was open-minded, a tireless teacher, creating new ideas with full enthusiasm and keeping doggedly his principles in those fashion-filled times. After inheriting the past, he was a forerunner for the present, without being contaminated by the new heresies.
My father once wrote a poem :
“Rooted in watery soil, the lotus floats free and pure. Although humble, she surprisingly radiates natural truth. She laughs at my efforts to paint her eternal beauty And breathes her timeless fragrance on the hundred-year-old man.”
My father loved painting lotus. Every birthday he uttered poems and brushed lotus: Sunny lotus, rainy lotus; thousand arrangements at sunrise or sunset; creating an overabundance of beauty.
After dinner he often sat with my mother in a little garden house playing chess, both looking elegant and sublime like a celestial couple.
This is a poem of mine in memory of my father:
“Still I see my father’s face, hear his voice, feel his great love. The lotus glows in the sunset’s warm blush, Like a goddess dancing, her silk gown swaying in the wind; Yet, it’s the sweetness of the flower’s fragrance that reminds me of his beautiful poet’s soul.”
In relation with others, he was filial toward his parents, a good responsible man, a faithful husband, open and candid toward his friends, full of righteousness, an untiring teacher nurturing the next generation, a model father.
He taught us Confucius and Mencious Doctrines. He was strict with himself, tolerant of others. He followed Mencious’ sayings “Not corrupted by riches, not withdrawn on account of poverty, not bent by authority, those are big heroes”.
And he followed Confucius, “I examine myself three times a day. Do I work for people but am I disloyal? Do I make friends but am I distrustful? Do I instruct but not practice?”
Father’s words and deeds were endless models for us. He lived a simple, thrifty, but fruitful life. He managed things with order. He never envied nobility; never craved for fame or profit. He taught Madame Chiang painting for 14 years with respectful quietness. In short, he maintained that one’s stature rests with one’s inner worthiness, and he always felt satisfaction from everything, together with a grateful heart.
On his education: He lost his father while young. Three fires destroyed family property. At ten he suffered a severe head injury. Nevertheless he studied hard regardless of all those tribulations. He encouraged himself with the motto, “Deep and deeper sufferings make higher and higher persons”.
He sought progress endlessly and his talents overflowed. He traveled over mountains and rivers to associate himself with poets and literates. They called him “Southern Genius!”. At 14 he was already famous in Shanghai. At 18 he became a professor at Beijing Yu Wen University and School of Arts and Literature. At 25 he was head of the Arts Department, Shanghai Fine Arts College and an instructor at the Literature Department, Kee Nan University.
My father was born in the last century, well imbued with the traditional Chinese culture. But he was not weighed down by the old. He was open-minded, a tireless teacher, creating new ideas with full enthusiasm and keeping doggedly his principles in those fashion-filled times. After inheriting the past, he was a forerunner for the present, without being contaminated by the new heresies.
My father once wrote a poem :
“Rooted in watery soil, the lotus floats free and pure. Although humble, she surprisingly radiates natural truth. She laughs at my efforts to paint her eternal beauty And breathes her timeless fragrance on the hundred-year-old man.”
My father loved painting lotus. Every birthday he uttered poems and brushed lotus: Sunny lotus, rainy lotus; thousand arrangements at sunrise or sunset; creating an overabundance of beauty.
After dinner he often sat with my mother in a little garden house playing chess, both looking elegant and sublime like a celestial couple.
This is a poem of mine in memory of my father:
“Still I see my father’s face, hear his voice, feel his great love. The lotus glows in the sunset’s warm blush, Like a goddess dancing, her silk gown swaying in the wind; Yet, it’s the sweetness of the flower’s fragrance that reminds me of his beautiful poet’s soul.”
In relation with others, he was filial toward his parents, a good responsible man, a faithful husband, open and candid toward his friends, full of righteousness, an untiring teacher nurturing the next generation, a model father.
He taught us Confucius and Mencious Doctrines. He was strict with himself, tolerant of others. He followed Mencious’ sayings “Not corrupted by riches, not withdrawn on account of poverty, not bent by authority, those are big heroes”.
And he followed Confucius, “I examine myself three times a day. Do I work for people but am I disloyal? Do I make friends but am I distrustful? Do I instruct but not practice?”
Father’s words and deeds were endless models for us. He lived a simple, thrifty, but fruitful life. He managed things with order. He never envied nobility; never craved for fame or profit. He taught Madame Chiang painting for 14 years with respectful quietness. In short, he maintained that one’s stature rests with one’s inner worthiness, and he always felt satisfaction from everything, together with a grateful heart.
On his education: He lost his father while young. Three fires destroyed family property. At ten he suffered a severe head injury. Nevertheless he studied hard regardless of all those tribulations. He encouraged himself with the motto, “Deep and deeper sufferings make higher and higher persons”.
He sought progress endlessly and his talents overflowed. He traveled over mountains and rivers to associate himself with poets and literates. They called him “Southern Genius!”. At 14 he was already famous in Shanghai. At 18 he became a professor at Beijing Yu Wen University and School of Arts and Literature. At 25 he was head of the Arts Department, Shanghai Fine Arts College and an instructor at the Literature Department, Kee Nan University.
Wednesday, May 03, 2017
Japanese Samurai Armor as Art
The Vintage News had a very nice article which was short on text, but long on photographs about Japanese armor of the 17th and 18th centuries, which while fully functional, are stunning objects of art.
The article may be found here.
The article may be found here.
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