Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Kenny Florian and Social Consciousness



Today, Kenny Florian came to the Bartlett School for Community Partnership in Lowell, Massachusetts. I am finishing my practicum there and when I mentioned to Joe that Kenny would make a huge impact on the kids there, he called Kenny and Kenny graciously agreed. The kids at this school face what often appear to be insurmountable obstacles on a daily basis.

This morning, they heard from Kenny that there are no such things as obstacles, only "small hurdles." Small hurdles in this school community include saying no to drugs, to alcohol, to joining gangs, to dropping out of school. Today, even the kids who are seemingly jaded and "checked out" hooted and cheered after Kenny had finished his speech. He talked about making the right choices, of staying out of street fights-"only cowards fight in the street,"-the importance of never giving up, and of staying in school.

Today, Kenny Florian gave 200 at-risk kids a day they will never forget. And it's something we should all keep in mind when we're asked to make a difference.

Stacia

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Ninety-nine failures

Tatsugami Roshi said, "A tiger catches a mouse with his whole strength." The tiger catches the mouse with the same intensity the way he catches a bigger animal. The tiger totally focuses on whatever action he is taking. He doesn't worry about the size of his "problem." The tiger does not think that because he didn't catch something the last time,he won't catch something the next.

Sometimes we all have difficulty practicing our respective arts. Dogen Zenji once proclaimed, "Hitting the mark is the result of ninety-nine failures." Failures are only a part of the process of success. "It's the last arrow that hits the mark, but only after ninety-nine failures." Failures are acceptable, and even valuable, as long as you keep them in perspective and know that they are a means to achieving your goal. The only real failure is not to shoot the one hundredth arrow.

Each time you practice, do your best. Be tiger-like in your effort. Physically and spiritually, you will benefit.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

"You Travel in Good Company..."


Recently, I entered into a conversation with Stacia about the commercialism of martial arts versus the fundamental integrity of practicing them. Kanei Uechi once said that no one under the age of seventeen should be taught karate. Perhaps he said this for the following reasons:

1) Physically, the bodies of young children are not mature enough to properly execute and withstand the rigorous training that the martial arts demands.
2) Children do not understand the philosophical concepts that are embedded in these ancient practices.

She mused about the fact that just about every strip mall we had passed had a karate or tae-kwon-do studio inside. What would motivate the discerning patron of martial arts to enroll his or her child in a strip mall dojo? How can you tell whether or not the instruction that would be received was of quality or was based in authentic principles?

What often gets sold by these strip mall senseis is the ideal of YOUR child benfitting from confidence and mind and body awareness. What actually happens, though, could be the polar opposite. Just as you choose your doctor, your dentist, or your mechanic, you must choose your martial arts instructor with the same well-informed criteria that you would apply to other practitioners.

Beware of the snake-oil peddlers. You get what you pay for.

BTW...This photo is of Joe Graziano, Dave Cedrone, and myself at a recent demo where we performed Jifa and Sanchin Kata. You won't find these forms being taught in your average strip mall dojo. Unfortunately, less and less people are being schooled in the ancient rituals.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Put your mind in your practice

To be skillful in martial arts requires time and effort. You have to first learn the techniques properly to be able to do them efficiently. Learning body mechanics takes patience. It takes practice to perfect the movements.

To be effective in martial arts you have to create a focused, bellicose mindset with the physical practice.

Having great mechanics and practicing martial arts without having a focused combative mindset is like doing a dance. You might execute the movements flawlessly. You might have perfect form. But, you are not practicing martial arts.

Just because someone does a Kata does not mean they are practicing martial arts. When you do the movements of a Kata without the proper combative mindset, it is like a Ferrari without gasoline to make it move. The car won't move without gasoline. It might look great, but it is useless in actually getting you somewhere. Practicing your Kata like this won't take you anywhere in your development of martial arts. It is a waste of time.

What is important?

Thursday, April 3, 2008

What are you looking for?

My friend Kenny Florian won his UFC fight last night. I've been very lucky to have trained with Kenny, as well as with many good martial artists over the years. I was really excited for Kenny. He's worked incredibly hard to achieve his current status.

There's a lot of controversy when it comes to the combat arts. Questions are often asked: "Is this style is better than that style?" "Is this type of training better than that type of training?" The word "better" means nothing.

I've enclosed a link to my friend and teacher Tim Cartmell's website on an article he wrote on "Combat to Sport." Hopefully, it will help some folks understand more in terms of the context of why and what they are trying to achieve in their practice and study.

http://www.shenwu.com/Combat_To_Sport.htm

Whether you train in MMA or traditional arts, it all depends on what you're looking for in your training. The trick is not to try and fool yourself.