Jizo Sama on Mount Koya Photo copyright Peter
Boylan 2014
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I’ve
heard proponents of various martial arts talk about how “natural”
their art is. They proclaim that whatever they are doing is based on
natural movements. Some are said to be based on the movements of
animals. Others claim to be based on the natural movement of the
human body.
I
was working with one of my students this morning on some kata from
Shinto Hatakage Ryu. His movement is getting good and solid. It
struck me that his strong, smooth movement was efficient, effective
and elegant, but not at all natural. When I began to think about it,
I realized I could not think of any martial art where the movements
are natural to human beings. By “natural” I mean that the
movements are ones that people make without having to be trained for
endless hours.
Along
with Shinto Hatakage Ryu Iai Heiho I teach Shinto Muso Ryu Jo and
Kodokan Judo. Among the movements and principles taught in those
three arts, I cannot think of a movement or technique that I would
call natural. In truth, the hallmark of good, effective budo
seems to be how unnatural it is. Developing proficiency in any budo
movement requires years of practice with a good teacher. It never
just happens. Even with students who have a natural affinity for an
art, it takes years, perhaps half as many as a natural klutz like me,
but years.
I’ve
written before that all
I teach is how to walk and how to breath.
I was exaggerating a little there, and Ellis Amdur was generous
enough to call me out on that point and several others. However,
walking and breathing are examples of unnatural budo movement. There
isn’t much that is more natural than walking, and breathing might
be the most natural thing we do. Nonetheless, as budoka, we spend
years learning to breathe properly from our guts and to stay balanced
and stable when we walk.
Why
does it take so much effort to learn to do something that we were
born doing? Breathing is the first thing we do for ourselves when we
are born. We take a breath and let the world know how unhappy we are
to have been kicked out of the wonderful home where we’ve spent the
last nine months. Once we do that, we never stop breathing. What else
about breathing could there possibly be to learn. A great deal when
you dig into it. Our natural instincts aren’t very good when it
comes to breathing. Even before we get to all the inefficient
ways people have of breathing, for all that it is a natural,
automatic act, put people under just a little bit of stress and they
will actually forget to breathe! I spend too much of my teaching time
reminding students to breathe for the first couple of years they are
training.
When
they do remember to breathe, they usually are doing it poorly;
breathing with their shoulders or taking shallow breaths or finding
some other way to do the most natural act in the world wrongly.
Proper breathing must be taught and practiced until it is an
unconscious act. When sparring, you don’t have sufficient mental
capacity to think about breathing correctly. If your breathing skills
aren’t honed so that proper breathing happens even when you’re
not thinking about it, you won’t breathe well under stress.
Walking
feels nearly as natural as breathing. No one had to teach you how to
walk. You figured it out for yourself, and you’ve been doing it for
longer than you can remember. What could there be to learn about
walking? From the condition of the students who come to the dojo, or
just doing some casual people watching, we can see that most people
haven’t learned very much about how to walk properly. They
roll their hips. They slouch their shoulders. They slap their feet on
the ground. They lean forward past the point of balance. They stand
on their heels. New students spend hours hearing me correct their way
of walking. Because of all the bad habits people pick up over the
course of their lives, learning to walk in a solid, stable, balanced
manner takes a long time to learn to do consciously. Learning to do
it unconsciously when under stress takes even longer. Good walking
isn’t natural at all.
When
you consider the discrete movements and actions that make up any budo
art, things become even more unnatural. Just about the first thing we
teach in judo, and the technique that prevents more people from
getting hurt outside the dojo than any other, is how to fall safely.
Two year-olds fall pretty well. They are relaxed and comfortable with
falling down, perhaps because they do so much of it. By the time we
start school though, falling is met with stiffness and fear. There is
no technique in judo that we practice as much as falling. Falling
well requires coordination of the entire body and I’ve never met
anyone besides trained gymnasts who took to it without hours of
accumulated practice. It’s an entirely unnatural act: we don’t
like to fall.
This
doesn’t even begin to approach the mental aspects of what we are
teaching in the dojo. Mushin.
Fudoshin. Heijoshin. Everything
about the mental aspects of budo is unnatural. We strive to
override all of our natural reactions under stress: to not stiffen
up, to keep our breathing and heart rate calm and steady, to ignore
the monkey brain’s insistence on fighting or fleeing, to retain
mental control instead of panicking, to adapt to the situation
fluidly instead of trying to impose a solution. None of these
things happen naturally. All of them take training and practice.
Everything
we do in the dojo leads to being able to respond to stressful
situations with these unnatural skills. All that physical practice
has effects on our mental states. Breathing properly comes in handy
when things get stressful and the monkey brain wants to start
hyperventilating. Having practiced good breathing statically and in
all sorts of kata and free practice that gradually increase the
mental and physical pressure, over time it becomes ever easier to
maintain the calm breathing and heart rate which anchor calm mental
patterns.
Once
you can maintain mushin
while
people are trying to hit you with a big stick, or choke you
unconscious, it becomes less of a stretch to maintain that mental
state under the stress you encounter outside the dojo. Fudoshin
is
even better. This is the unmovable mind that isn’t disturbed by
anything, no matter how stressful. People with fudoshin
don’t
seem quite human. They are no more natural than a Rolex is. Both take
tremendous work to create. Both demonstrate the pinnacle of human
development in their own areas. For all its combined beauty,
engineering and functionality, no one would call a Rolex “natural.”
Like
a Rolex, the mind developed through budo is elegant, refined and
resilient. This is a mind that can make the choice to step inside an
attack to evade and counter in the same movement or to slip out of
the attack and then disarm the attacker.
Relaxed
when the natural reaction is to be tense, calm when nature urges
panic, unflinching when nature urges you to dive behind cover, and
unmoved when distractions abound, the mind and body of someone well
versed in budo is not natural at all. It surpasses what nature gives
us by refining the natural core of our beings into something new,
with all the naturalness of high grade steel. Budo isn’t natural.
It’s better.
3 comments:
Good post, Peter.
A counter argument might be that we are conditioned since birth to carry ourselves in an unnatural way and that budo helps us to peel off the layers of baggage to return to a state of naturalness.
All I know for sure is that when I practice regularly, life works better.
On the other hand budo is not "supernatural." Nor, in my view, is there any behavior that can be said NOT to be natural. I suspect there are simply optimal and suboptimal ways to "do" moving, all of which humans can, in fact, do. Differently-abled folks. Amputees. Artificial joints. We learn both to walk and to "do" budo by trial and error, but we do that without ever leaving the realm, the prior unity of "the natural," of nature. Nowhere is there a place outside nature. Even driving a car is, therefore, natural. Finally, I robustly argue that this essay points to a real truth: no budo is more or less natural than any other, and "natural" is, in the first place, PR hogwash.
I disagree. Many things we do "naturally" in life are not carried over into martial arts and so we have to be taught again how to be natural. That is, we train martial arts with an attitude which makes our movements odd.
As an example, imagine sitting in a cafe waiting for a friend. You scan the people coming in for your friend, when they arrive you rise and navigate the tables towards them, at the "right" distance you extend your arm and grip their hand just hard enough to say "welcome". All of these are martial arts concepts but perfectly natural.
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