The Sum of the Parts


Parts being the fundamental principles of martial systems. The sum being the entire whole that are the parts of the fundamental principles in order to master the martial arts. It becomes very apparent when studying the principles separately, parts, that in order to get the most of the principles one must know them all and have the ability to work them as a complete set or the sum of the parts. 

The principles are chocked full of inferences to how they all depend on one another to get maximum effectiveness in applying the principles to martial systems. You would think this would be obvious as any discipline in life requires much more than knowing one or more parts of a whole. To achieve a wholehearted practice of martial arts means taking all the parts and causing them to work symbiotically much like the concept of yin-yang. All the parts are the various stages of either yin or yang or maybe yin and yang as it traverses through its dualistic paths.

This is the teachings of the ancient classics, it is the law of the universe and it is the meaning applied to martial systems such as Isshinryu, the one heart or wholehearted system of Okinawan karate. Tatsuo-san studied and lived the ancient classics. He was a sumuchi using the ancient Chinese classics including the astrological charts, etc. He also tried his very best to transcend the obstacles created by the differences in cultures, i.e. wester vs. asian, to pass on to us the key to his beliefs and knowledge, i.e. the ken-po goku-i (chock full of symbolism, etc.). 

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