"The Author, it must be remembered, writes from his own standpoint!"
My personal "Interpretive" Lens!

"One thing has always been true: That book ... or ... that person who can give me an idea or a new slant on an old idea is my friend." - Louis L'Amour


"Providing a first step on a path to self-reflection." - C. E. James

"Read not to contradict and confute; nor to believe and take for granted; nor to find talk and discourse; but to weigh and consider..." - Francis Bacon

"What is true today may be reevaluated as false not long after. Judgements are frequently based upon a set of "temporary" circumstances surrounding them. Conflicting ideologies can exist simultaneously. Antagonistic dualities are complementary aspects of a unified whole: are seen as mutually dependent mirror images of each other." - Nahum Stiskin

Warning, Caveat and Note: The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.

Kenpo Gokui

The lines of the ken-po goku-i are set from an atomistic aspect simply because it is the manner in which the brain learns. Its nature is completely holistic and like the I Ching must be in a form that promotes learning and understanding so a person can see, hear and grasp the nature of a holistic system. The gokui is a method to teach us how to be holistic. Its terseness is the best that can be done to convey its holistic meaning.

A person's heart is the same as Heaven and Earth while the blood circulating is similar to the Sun and Moon yet the manner of drinking and spitting is either soft or hard while a person's unbalance is the same as a weight and the body should be able to change direction at any time as the time to strike is when the opportunity presents itself and both the eyes must see all sides as the ears must listen in all directions while the mind must grasp all the tactile, olfactory and gustation data not seen on all sides and not heard in any direction


Master Zeng said, "Am I preaching what I have not practiced myself?"

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Bunbu Ryo(u) Do(u) [文武両道]


The characters/ideograms mean "(accomplished in) both the literary and military arts." The first character means, "sentence; literature; style; art; decoration; figures; plan," the second character means, "warrior; military; chivalry; arms," the third character means, "both; old Japanese coin; counter for carriages (e.g., in a train); two," the fourth character means, "road-way; street; district; journey; course; moral; teachings."

Ancient Chinese texts believe that all things begin with one but for nature and life to exist it must exist with opposites in the concept yin-yang. Those two sides to the one that result in the constant changes and coinciding of life. Yin cannot exist on its own and yang also cannot exist on its own. The natural way of things will not allow that to occur in our Universe.

The yin-yang exist or coincide by complementary existence where fluctuation occurs naturally as does the circular path of the sun and moon as they move naturally with the Earth toward the duality of day and night with all its gradations between making it one whole. 

The martial arts only exists as a whole when there is the complementary of the physical and academic whole, i.e. yang = physical, yin = academia. This too will have gradations according to the particular practice and training involved. True classical martial arts cannot exist without bunbu-ryo-do, the yin-yang concept and essence that is martial arts. The sun and moon of martial practice and training. 

The Meaning of Kenpo Gokui


This is so hard to set down in a manner that is believable. There are some explanations that simply do not make any sense to me. When someone says that it means something and yet the characters/ideograms don't necessarily support that something then you wonder what is used to back that meaning. Simply saying that someone said that Tatsuo-san told them it means that and to have others used as validation when the overall meaning is still foggy and lacking with emphasis that one must believe simply because the person said it was so seems implausible, to say the least. 

My efforts to bring meaning to the characters/ideograms of the ken-po goku-i are based on personal training and practice along with studies of those ancient classics from China. I give a bit of credence to those studies from the sparse information that Tatsuo-san was a fortune teller who used the ancient Chinese classics for that endeavor. It connects but is not provable by more concrete means other than hearsay, etc.

When I read some explanations I find the explanations incomplete and a bit incoherent, like an ranting of belief that may be true for the individual but not connected solidly with Tatsuo-san. I am not saying that those persons are wrong. I am saying from a perspective that is different the explanations seem flaccid. 

I also will admit that the characters/ideograms and their direct and indirect meaning are open to interpretations even if you give credence to what is stated as from Tatsuo-san. The parts as stand alone do connect to belief and meaning from the classics but as a whole tend to be loosely connected. The mere fact that my post is iffy at best adds to the credence of the ambiguity of the gokui - at best. 

My rendition of what I attach to the gokui is mine alone. It may or may not reflect the intent of Tatsuo-san for his absence makes that impossible. He changed constantly and who knows what he may or may not have deduced from his studies of the gokui if he were alive today. Then again he may or may not have given any more to the gokui then most of what is given today as the meaning. 

It is also possible that I give it more meaning than it is actually intended. I may attach more to it than Tatsuo-san would attach. It may be very simple indeed but then again it may not. 

When you speak of Heaven, Earth and Man as part of the meaning then you find connections as to the culture and beliefs of early China when the I Ching and other classics were written, for those times and places along with the culture and belief of those who believed, lived and wrote the classics. 

In the end it is a journey of the individual. Karate is a journey of the individual. Martial systems are a journey of the individual and the individual must arrive at a meaning the is true of that individual. Who is to say that it is either right or wrong and maybe in the end all Tatsuo-san wanted was each individual to think, study and contemplate all the possibilities only restricted by the culture, belief and practice of that individual. 

Even the disjoined and sometimes vague interpretations I encounter today may be similar in context as the gokui itself. The meanings all have some connection to the ancient Chinese classics simply as "Heaven, Earth and Man" as related to the hexagrams/trigrams of the I Ching. Where we go with it is up to us and maybe that individual journey is all that is needed. 

Iken [意見]


The characters/ideograms mean "opinion; view; comment." The first character means, "idea; mind; heart; taste; thought; desire; care; liking," the second character means, "see; hopes; chances; idea; opinion; look at; visible."

The word iken kokan [意見交換] of which the characters/ideograms mean "exchange of ideas; exchange of opinions." The third character means, "mingle; mixing; association; coming & going," the fourth character means, "interchange; period; change; convert; replace; renew."

What I am attempting with all the writings I provide is to give my opinion an various subjects with the hopes that others reading will reciprocate by giving their opinions so that we exchange our opinions and ideas coming to a greater understanding of the subject - martial arts and self-defense, etc.

Honshin [本心]


The characters/ideograms mean "true feelings; root spirit; true heart; heart-mind; original mind." The first character means, "book; present; main; origin; true; real," the second character means, "heart; mind; spirit."

"The concept of honshin is that of one's true essence or heart of hearts; an internal moral compass, or something akin to a conscience. By heeding the honshin, one can find the way back to one's true moral and essential nature (by virtue of michi). The idea of connecting to one's true, inner self - the original mind, aligned with nature, unclouded by sensory misperceptions, calculations, or cognitive deliberations - is an old one in Japanese and Chinese thought. It is the concept that involves overcoming the clutter of false perception or dualistic interaction with the world, and discovering one's inborn essential character of harmony with the nature universe." - Linda Yiannakis, Classical Fighting Arts

Bibliography:
Yiannakis, Linda "Judo as Moral Education" Classical Fighting Arts. June 2013 (Vol. 2 No. 24 Issue #47): 60 to 65. Print.

Knowledge


"To store up knowledge when young, and to bring it into practical application when old, is the order of things which holds true through all ages. For storing knowledge, we must be guided by great men, otherwise we shall not be able to develop our talents, and adjust ourselves to the infinite varieties of external circumstances. Again, the spirit of studies does not lie in mere reading and writing. The true spirit is to cultivate our minds by the method indicated and to advance to their applications." 

"The phrase 'advantageous to see great men' teaches not to devote oneself to mere reading and writing, but to attend the true school of mixing with great personages, of being aware of the worldly phenomena, and of piercing through the stat of the nation, and gradually to advance. I must open myself to intercourses and I must freely mix with the world."

- My Resolution at the Beginning of Meiji, The Takashima Ekidan. 

This speaks to the need of obtaining knowledge first before teaching. It is knowledge that is both academic and through experience. It is best served for both the future teacher and future students that the teacher acquire such knowledge and experience before taking up the full mantle of teaching alone. Even then it is the experienced and knowledgable teacher who continually, diligently and consistently tests their knowledge and experience under the guidance of one who is greater to maintain a constant change toward new knowledge and experience. 

All to often those who attain the coveted black belt, sho-dan, assume that this is enough to teach. All to often they branch out quickly to be on their own, to own their own dojo and to teach others before they are fully and truly capable. This lessens the lessons. This diminishes the content and context of the system only because no one at such a young age and level can obtain and retain all that is necessary to transmit the fullness of any one system.

Then we can speak toward those who assume the role of teacher early too often attempt to accumulate many other systems to bolster their resume' not considering that the foundation on which they are attempting to build knowledge and experience into a solid foundation of teachings is inadequate to the full task at hand. 

The ancient and wise of old China managed to convey this through such as the I Ching translated into the Japanese Takashima Ekidan, the I Ching equivalent. The entire society of two great and old nations was built upon this great knowledge and experience so it seems ludicrous to try and circumvent the natural process for expedience sake and monetary gain not to leave out ego and pride. 

It is therefore prudent and wise for seekers on knowledge to first assure that their teacher meets these requirements of nature. To be older, wiser and more attuned to both knowledge and experience of the system to be passed down to others who follow. 

I made this mistake and only now through long years of practice, long years of attaining knowledge, and long years of attaining experiences that I have come to accept and understand those early failings and to achieve what I have achieved in my winter years. 

The Way (Dao) and Wu-Wei


The way is wu-wei is the way or the Dao. An enigmatic way of thinking that came from ancient Chinese way of thinking. My recent studies has emboldened my thoughts on wu-wei and the way as we may speak of it in the practice of martial systems. In my attempts to further my understanding of the cultural belief systems that caused such martial disciplined practices it has come to my mind that our perceptions of the "Way" may be misaligned much like many factions of ancient Chinese thought conflicted in their beliefs and understandings to the Way and wu-wei. 

I quote, "A model of skill-mastery in any form provides one access to a type of realism that differs significantly from - and lacks some of the weaknesses of - the sort of realism found in Cartesian representational theories of knowledge. The realism that governs the skill of martial systems, for instanced, is thus reflected in the fact that techniques (tactics and strategies) can be applied well or poorly, and the difference between these two types of techniques is observable in the material realm. When a technique cannot fulfill its intended use because its fundamentals do not apply properly or because it fails to fulfill its purpose when used can be said to have been applied by a bad martial artist. One's embodied mind becoming adequate in martial fundamentals to apply technique with fundamental principles is thought to be evinced by an apparent ease of action (wu-wei) and the possession of a sort of spiritual power with observable effects."

This quote as a stand alone does not adequately convey the connections of wu-wei with the way/dao and with martial systems, i.e. a physical discipline used to provide access to a type of realism that connects through patterns, rhythms, and realism with nature and its patterns, rhythms and realism that is called Heaven (another term that is perceived to mean nature itself).

In martial systems we strive to reach an ideal level of mastery and by this we can achieve wu-wei but the Way and wu-wei encompass more than mere physical master for it requires a spiritual master as well that speaks to nature's human virtue. If the proper cultural belief system is not understood and applied then the martial system in question is often practiced by one who may not be of moral spirit. This context is taught by the Way and wu-wei so that the entire martial system or any discipline can be a representation of the perfection that already resides in nature, or heaven, thus through perfection of skill you become a fully realized human being who embodies the way in all the actions and deeds done in living as a human connected to nature or Heaven. 

Nature (Heaven), the Way, Wu-wei, and virtue are intimately linked with one another to form the way of wu-wei or the wu-wei of the way. This is a complex context that warrants further study so that one can achieve the full spectrum of wu-wei, the way and master of a physical discipline. The order of which is irrelevant since it is the holistic wholehearted one that teaches us wu-wei-the-way-the-dao. 

I continue my studies to further my understanding. 

Choju [長寿]


The characters/ideograms mean "longevity." The first character means, "long; leader," the second character means, "longevity; congratulations; one's natural life." 

In martial philosophy choju or longevity is attained by acquiring the traits as follows: one should sit like a turtle, walk like a pigeon, and sleep like a dog. It is a means achieved by development of an inner quiet. Quieting the mind with the goal of remaining still in each moment with no thoughts of distraction and allow any fleeting thoughts to simply enter and leave in the moment with no conscious effort to remain with the thoughts. 

"To regard the fundamental as the essence, to regard things as course, to regard accumulation as deficiency, and to swell quietly alone with the spiritual and the intelligent." - Herein lies the techniques of the ancients. 

Wu Wei [無為]


The characters/ideograms mean "idleness; inactivity." The first character means, "nothingness, none; ain't; nothing; nil; not," the second character means, "do; change; make; benefit; welfare; be of use; reach to; try; practice; cost; serve as; good; advantage; as a result of." 

The mind of wu wei provides a means by which martial systems train the mind. The training results in a mind, wu wei, that "flows like water," "reflects like a mirror," and "responds like an echo." The Japanese term for these characters/ideograms is "mui," meaning idleness; inactivity. 

Wu wei means "without action," "without effort," or "without control." The full phrase in martial systems is wei wu wei or action without action or effortless doing. We would be best served in martial systems by observing ourselves and our behaviors with full acceptance  of ourselves for who we are and therefore release any conscious control over our lives. In martial systems this means, to me, practicing and training to where one's instincts control actions in all beliefs taking the process of thinking and removing it from the actions taken in martial arts, etc. It is making the training and applications as natural to human action as can be achieved. It is the ability achieved to take appropriate actions in any situation with natural action. This makes it even more important that martial systems training be such that it either matches or relates closely to natural action or movement. 

Yin (In) [陰] Yang (Yo) [陽]


Yin is a force of nature - receptive. Yang is a force of nature - creative. Fundamentally the book of changes is about balance through opposites and acceptance of change. 

The tai-chi is preceded by the wuji (mukyoku in jp.) [無極]. Wuji separates into tai-chi or yin and yang. These two symbols become four, the four become bagua and bagua describe all things of creation. 

The limitless (wu-chi/wuji/mukyoku) produces the delimited, and htis is the absolute (tai chi). The Tai-chi produces two forms, named yin and yang. The two forms produce the four phenomena, named lesser yang, great yang, lesser yin, great yin. The four phenomena act on the eight trigrams (bagua), eight eights are sixty-four hexagrams. 

The two spheres refer to heaven and earth, or yin and yang. The four elements are metal, wood, water and fire, which are omnipresent. The eight diagrams symbolize the eight natural phenomena: sky, earth, thunder, wind, water, fire, mountain and lake. The picture represented the ancient Chinese early knowledge of the Universe. 

The basic idea of the yin-n-yang consists of two natural, complementary and contradictory forces of any phenomena in the universe, the principle of opposite polarity and duality. 

Summer is old-yang; autumn is young-yang; winter is old-yin; sprint is young yin. Full moon is old yang; moon's decline first quarter is yong-yang; when the moon is full, it is old-yin; moon in last quarter is young-yin. 

In divination as pertains to the I Ching, the inner aspect (a person) is combined with the outer aspect (a situation). Each hexagram represents a process, a change happening at the present moment. 

Man


Hito [] The character/ideogram means "man; person; human being; mankind; people; human; humans as a species; character; personality; man of talent; true man; another person; other people; others; adult." 

What is a Man? First, we can all accept that a male is easily spotted by the physical attributes of the male species. Being a male in our culture does not necessarily mean being a man. How do you or any person determine what makes a man a man? 

Lets begin by saying a variety of factors determine what a man is that make a man a man. A man is determined first by the time, culture and ethnic groups of which he is a member. Then as a male grows and ages the various power relationships they encounter in life along with that persons perceptions, the sensory input mode that dominates, and the perceptions of perceptions as to truth and accurate facts get involved. 

Then you have to consider both the internal and external environments this person experiences every single moment of life. Then take into consideration the influences and constraints self-imposed by their own knowledge, experience, imagination, and attitudes which also are derived by the connections they encounter throughout the moments in life. 

Each culture and tribe will have an accepted societal survival model that dictates to those males within that tribe as to what makes a man a man. We have to then create living patterns that are based on culture and the influence of environments and other factors and then cover both spiritual and physical aspects of life. It is this culturally defined values and rules that determine the attitudes and actions, most which are learned, applied and transmitted unconsciously and consciously by members of the individuals tribe or society. 

Determining what makes a man a man is then convoluted and prone to misinterpretations that also lead to conflicts and so on. It then comes down to the individual taking the time to self-perceive, self-analyze and the self-transmutate to achieve the model of a man. 

Various methods are derived within a tribe to achieve the goal of making a man a man and in one of the greatest cultures is it most apparent, the Asian cultures with concepts such as warrior, defender or simply the hunter-gatherer. 

Bushido, the Japanese Code of the Warrior, speaks to the eight virtues of the samurai. Rectitude or justice; courage; benevolence or mercy; politeness; honesty and sincerity; honor; loyalty; character and self-control. All of these can be attributed toward manliness or being a man. Certainly they are all traits a good person would want to develop but often this is not what a person will go to the mat for when it comes down to dissing a man.

Some believe a man, a real man, can defend themselves. This speaks to the instincts derived from when man was the hunter-warrior. Defending the tribe from beasts of the plains and other human's they may encounter. Defending when hunting along with the hunter instinct. 

A man is supposed to be strong. This is not just physical strength but strength of spirit, conviction and heart to bear the burdens of life. He is also meant to be focused having the ability to separate the chaff from the wheat of life. Then the most important aspect of being a man is to accept that family is most important then the tribe is next. 

A man understands that his word is his bond. It is better than a legal contract and in our history carried heavy weight when given to others. A man is a role model for his family and the tribe. How he acts and the way he lives his life shall be of the highest standards and morals possible and acceptable to the tribe and beneficial to his family. 

A man is of character and not just the personality that impresses but carries no weight as mentioned in the above traits. His character goes hand in hand with is word, his strength, etc. A man knows the difference between humility vs. arrogance and pride. 

Then you add in the virtues of bushido adjusted for current times and current cultural influences then you begin to understand what it means to be a man. Manliness also means acceptance, acceptance of all the flaws, failures and behaviors that may fall short of being a man's man but understanding that this is the means by which a man grows to become a true man's man or as the Okinawan's use the term, true bushi. 

A man can be relied on for anything. A man is educated. Not just academic but in life. A man embraces life completely and wholeheartedly. Being a man takes discipline, diligence and heart. 

What a man is not is one who lacks a level of esteem that any perceived slight as to his manliness results in conflict. A true man cannot be influenced by the words or deeds of others causing perceptions that one has lessened that man in some way. A true man cannot be influenced to such a negative. To allow such influences demeans and deludes what a man is allowing for conflict. 

Many fights are the result of some perceived slight toward that persons perception of his man-hood. It actually displays the weakness of that man as a true man will simply ignore such false things and remain calm and with moral steadfastness a sense of humility and confidence that can actually result in avoidance and deescalation. 

A true man has the confidence of his convictions that are impervious to any outside influences. Manliness or man-hood is the armor created that makes conflict of any nature impossible to the man. Real men understand this and when two men meet they acknowledge one another with a slight nod of the head and then they continue on with life. 

Silence


The power of silence. When silence prevails we tend to turn our thoughts inward and gain mind recharge time, i.e. a means to quit the mind so that one can truly see, hear and feel the world. 

In arguments or conflict using the tactic of silence can rein in your ego and hold tight to pride driven reactions. Silence allows the mind to switch over to active listening. It also allows for reflection that often results in inspiration and relaxation. Silence is also noise pollution abatement. 

Silence allows us to remain in the present moment. It provides quality to our talking and it allows us to digest what is being said and to discover appropriate responses. Silence fills in the spaces between words giving an underlying meaning along with body language, tone of voice, inflections and word meaning. 

Silence allows the other person to self-reflect on what they are saying or what was said and often answer their own discussion. Silence is also inaction, i.e. being silent and still allows others to perceive a calm that can affect the person presented with silence. 

Silence is also a means of respect toward a social environment. It can be a means of talking among family members and linked to credibility. It is a way to avoid conflict and embarrassment. Silence results in self-realization, truth, wisdom, peace, and bliss as achieved in a state of meditation and introspection as a person communicates with his or her self in silence. 

Silence conveys interest and consideration. It is considered a sign of a remarkable person. It shows that the person has respect, proper etiquette, maturity, good manners, and good character toward others. 

Silence is a component to understanding context of verbal communications. What is not said through silence is as important as what is said. In some cases it implies "no" in a conversation. 

Silence can avoid open conflict in a conversation. It promote harmony and graciousness.  

...

"silence is a part of the spiritual discipline of a votary of truth." - Gandhi
"All this talking can hardly be said to be of any benefit to the world." - Gandhi

...

Seeing, Truly Seeing


Seeing, Truly Seeing

One of the lines in the ken-po goku-i as presented to the folks who practice Isshinryu Okinawan karate. I speak or write of the self defense aspects, the combative stuff, the fight itself and not the sport or way aspects. The stuff that gets down and dirty to get the job done so you won't pay the price of violence or violent encounters. 

Complexity seems to me a major obstacle to understanding true real life self defense. Do we see a technique or combination of techniques as simple, fast and effective? Do we analyze the SD component as reality effective? Not many do and go for the complex set of techniques to give ourselves comfort that we know something. That something seems to be a part of our culture and belief system. We seem to think that a lack of complexity means value. In the fight value is simplicity itself along side its opposite effective. 

What is the nature of violent acts? If an assault is the complex system able to get the job done? Do you know, understand and accept that violent assaults regardless of the reasons is hard, fast and a total surprise? Do you realize that the attacker had a plan long before he attacked and that every single moment and every single moment of delay allows him to do something - different? Do you realize how this wrecks havoc on your orient to the attack that slows down your progress toward the act part of the OODA loop? 

Do you realize the ten step combination or technique you do could be streamlined into a one, two or three step process with effectiveness and speed? Do your realize that the ten step system leaves a lot of room for error and that the adversary with his pre-plan in progress will be changing the dynamics of the fight constantly keeping you in the orient phase of the loop? Do you ask yourself these questions in training and practice?

Seeing all sides of anything means you look at it in a multi-dimensional view that takes the physical, non-physical, and mental views of all things from all sides. It means taking what you do, say and hear outside that box that society, your environment and your lessons in life to beyond the comfort zone that blinds you to what works and what does not work. 

Does your training remove reality from the matrix? Do you consciously seek reality in your training and practice? Does tori-n-uke stray from the model, the regimen, the training syllabus? How often do you ask questions? How often do you seek real answers and not just accept the first answer that makes you feel comfortable and safe? 

Bibliography:
Miller, Rory. "Training Blindness." Tuesday, April 16, 2013. <http://chirontraining.blogspot.com/2013/04/training-blindness.html>

“don’t let the ‘perfect’ be the enemy of the ‘good.’”

Seeing

Today, I was once again surprised by the length and breadth of what I have not seen simply from not seeing. I thought I had a pretty good handle on the gokui's inference to seeing all sides, etc. but I was introduced to another.

Rory Miller introduced me to another way of seeing things. Read his current blog post on training blindness. See it to believe it ;-)

The Sage


One of the more favorite of the stories told is the one about the martial artist who reaches a level that makes them wise, i.e. wise as in the ancient wise men who have flowing robes, long grey hair and beard and who sit atop huge mountains the the every day person climbs to talk with for wise advice for their lives and living. It is the proverbial sage like Asian wise man derived from the bodhidharma figure or the Buddha. 

This creates an atmosphere of philosophical discussions as to what makes a person wise. Is it merely age? Is it knowledge? Is it a combination of both? What makes one wise. It can be perceived as one who lived a long life with a wide variety of experiences and thus knowledge, both academic and reality based. The sage or wise man or woman then relies on that experience to provide advice. 

It has come to my mind that this type of sage must have this one quality that allows them to reach sage-hood. The ability to recognize and correct mistakes. It is this model of experience that has the greatest value in life and the wise man can achieve this in time simply by the breadth of experiences and the innate ability to see all mistakes and correct them. 

Han Fei-tzu said, "The wise are not wise because they make no mistakes. They are wise because they correct their mistakes as soon as they recognize them."

The Eyes Must See


The eyes must see all sides reveals the issues one has with the mindset. Mindset is an aspect to both life and martial arts that drives us toward success. It is ours and our responsibility that has no tolerance toward projecting blame on others and other things, it is our responsibility. The eyes must have the ability to see the mindset issues and problems so as to reveal the errors humans make due to perceived expertise or mastery.

Mastery, if not seen within the mindset of the master blinds the person to seeing things beyond what they perceive as mastery. It hinders our perception of the cues and options, to ignore potentially useful strategies, and to fail at noticing opportunities that arise in each moment. 

Allowing a mastery or expertise to exist means we assume that there is nothing more to learn, to study or to practice. It stunts the growth of our intuitive-analytical ability especially in stressful and dangerous situations. To block or hinder our intuitive mindset process is to set it to a dogmatic immobile perception of the world so that one can not see it any other way. 

When you think of those systems that remain dogmatically glued to a practice and training that is born of some master long ago without the crucial requirement to extend that practice and training beyond the mere fundamentals taught as the origins of the system then you fail to see the true potential and growth of that system. It is honorable to desire that one's practice of a system similar or exact to what they were taught by the master and originator but to remain steadfast and doggedly attached to it stifling the growth of it are just wrong. The ken-po goku-i teaches us that this is not conducive to the growth of any system, i.e. the shu-ha-ri of martial systems. 

The eyes must see all sides goes way beyond the sense if sight. Seeing goes way beyond merely seeing. It is an intuitive analytical means of truly and without bias seeing the world and all it contains so that perceptions are true to the individual and thus to the whole of humanity.

Jing


Jing, a Chinese term, comes from traditional Chinese medicine. It is translated from Chinese to English for Essence. There are three kinds of jing: prenatal, postnatal and Kidney. Prenatal is passed from the parents to the child in the womb. Postnatal is when the child develops post-Heaven Essence when they begin eating, drinking, and breathing independently. 

The lungs, spleen and stomach extract and refine Chi or Ki from food and drink along with air we breath. To guard jing is to make sure the body, mind and spirit are fed properly both the physical and the psychological. 

Prenatal jing is hereditary. You can replenish jing through the postnatal processes of eating and breathing and thinking right thoughts. Jing has a fluid nature so it circulates all over the body. It forms the basis for growth, development, maturation, and reproduction. It moves in long, slow cycles, and presided over the major stages of life as they develop each moment. 

Jing is considered the basis for Chi. It is in a fluid context yin. The essence (jing) and Chi are the material foundation for Shen (mind). Our longevity is determined by a combination of hereditary jing (yang) and postnatal accumulations of jing (yin). The shen is the yang context. 

It is believed we all are born with a fixed amount of jing and can also accumulate jing from food and various forms of stimulation (exercise, study, meditation.) Jing is continuously consumed in life. It is effected as to quantity and quality by everyday life experiences, i.e. stress, illness, anger, fear or exercise, nutrition and mental health, etc. 

Martial System such as Chi Gong were developed by the Chinese to replenish jing. Internal aspects of martial arts may be responsible for preservation of our jing if performed correctly. 

It should be apparent how this jing, or sei, is associated with the practice, training and application of martial systems whether it be in combat or in the health and fitness derived from the way. 

Age Old Dilemma


Getting youth to gain from the wisdom of elders. A question that has caused concern and consternation  since man became first aware or self-aware of the self. I find this question in my winter years of life and practice of a martial system. It concerns me now because I give due consideration to what I could have been if I has only taken the time and the effort to learn then as a youth what I am learning and know now as an elder.

Elder in the sense of a martial system who has practiced and trained for approximately thirty-six years. Three plus decades and I tended, except for the last decade, to spend an exorbitant amount of time on the more physical aspects. 

I found ten years ago the secret to life. The secret to all that entails living a good life. The secret is not really a secret but obvious if you look, see and then truly see it - balance. Yin-Yang or In-Yo. That which is symbolized by the great Tai Chi symbol of the Yin-n-Yang. 

It can be expressed by the term "hindsight." It is often late in life we understand a situation or event of our lives that it could have gone far better only if ..... hindsight would be better served if youth could gain from it as told by elders. Sensei are elders too in many cases - not all and not alot, just a few. When I say Sensei I mean one that has gained such insight so that his or her hindsight can benefit those under their guidance. Say around the winter years with a modicum of experience, knowledge and understanding (thirty years or more) of what it is they are trying to improve both for themselves and those who look to them as one who has come before. 

Youth all to often, I am guilty of this as well, tend to discard things of importance for that something that often is fleeting. Speed and gratification are necessary in the balance yet are not the end-all of all things. It is a shame that sometimes the perceived boring and not cool things are necessary to give more balance or depth and breadth to those things that do, in time, give gratification, knowledge and meaning. 

Simply waxing philosophical today :-)

Eight Circles Kenpo Gokui ??????

Recently in my continuous research on this esoteric aspect of martial systems with specificity toward Okinawan Karate I came across a symbol that has not come up in the past ten years. I have asked as to its origins and until I receive a response I thought I would ask readers if they have encountered this symbol at any time during their training, practice and research.


Sorry for the lack of size, if you click it the size will not be clearer.
Ever seen this and if you have can you provide me the source as to when, where, how, why and whom it was conceived of, by and for?

Heaviness


This principle as explained in the Book of Martial Power by Steven J. Pearlman can be connected to the ken-po goku-i tenants, i.e. with specificity to, "A person's unbalance is the same as a weight."

Our inability to properly make use of our bodies anatomical structure in nature means we misuse our weight and cannot apply our weight to our techniques. It means that we are ineffective in martial applications, which can be a loss of heaviness properly applied resulting in our unbalanced body and weight. To achieve balance in our body regarding the bodies mass and weight we cannot apply momentum to techniques and we lose things like proper structure and posture where the triangles become skewed resulting in an imbalance of weight or heaviness and this results in our attacker, if his line is longer, having the ability to apply his heaviness to unbalance ours and we lose the battle.

Our bodies must maintain the principles so that our angles, i.e. alignments, structures, axis's both major and minor, vertical and horizontal axis control, centerline, triangle guard, posture, proper breathing, etc. all reduce our bodies heaviness for applying technique which results in our being defeated.

If our heaviness is reduced in this manner the reactions of our applications are turned inward so that those same applications against our attacker are lessened allowing the attackers heaviness to overcome the technique and turn it back inward resulting in heaviness unbalancing our bodies and so forth.

I quote, "Heaviness typically refers to sudden manifestations of weight that manifest our heaviness faster than the opponent can compensate.' It must be remembered that our weight never changes but how heaviness is applied does change accordingly to how it is maintained regarding heaviness balance.

As indicated in the ken-po goku-i inference to yin-n-yang or changing opposites to balance and back all the martial principles work in either a yin or yang form with mixtures that result in efficient and effective martial power.

Another form of this heaviness is our mental state. If fear or anger gain momentum then that becomes a heavy psychological weight that can unbalance and make fall our physical selves.

The overwhelming burden, weight, of those negative emotions releases a form of chemical and electrical energies that are detrimental to our ability to implement physical actions. Therefore, our weight can be heavy mentally causing an imbalance within the mind that results in a fall as if a heavy weight succumbs to gravity. 

PDF Books Available


Greetings and Salutations All: I have worked toward compiling two small pdf books as an exercises and learning effort on terminologies for martial arts as well as my interpretation of the karate koan most call the ken-po goku-i. I didn't do this to publish for money and I don't plan on trying to charge for these two pdf books in the future.

I am making them available free to whomever wishes to obtain them for study and reflection. If you would be interested in reading them simply send me an email address that I can send them to as attachments. Please note that I am still editing them both so you will find errors and omissions within as to grammar, spelling, punctuation, etc. I have a friend who is an editor who has graciously consented to edit the ken-po goku-i effort. When it is done I plan of notifying those who ask for a copy so they can have an updated and hopefully fully edited final edition.

The terminology pdf book is not what you might normally find as it does not give technical/technique oriented terms but rather terms of a teaching/martial philosophical nature. I had this one as a blog for a while but decided it might better serve those who are interested to have a pdf version available to either read and use via electronic means, i.e. either a computer like the iPad or a kindle reader type thing. 

So, send your email to isshin.do.karate@gmail.com and I will gladly send you one or the other or both for your reading pleasure. I would ask that if you do that you give me your review of them, if you wouldn't mind, when you have read them. - Thanks!