気
を付ける、残心、中心する、意識, 無心、ki wo tsukeru, zanshin, chushin suru, ishiki,
mushin, paying attention, staying alert, being focused、awareness.
These
are terms that everyone has come across in budo training. Some, like
ki wo tsukeru and zanshin are heard regularly, others aren’t heard as
often but are just as important. Budo is all about physical technique
though, so why should we spend our time on mental areas like these?
Physical technique is great, but it is the mind that is the true weapon
and how we train that is even more important than how we train the
body.
Many
of the things that change average technique to great technique are not
technical. They are mental. Doing things like controlling timing and
spacing begin with mental awareness and focus. I don’t care how good
your technique is, if your timing or spacing are off, the technique is
worthless. Understanding timing and spacing is mental. It’s about
awareness and focus. This is where practice gets interesting. Learning
another armbar variation, or another way to do kiriorshi frankly
doesn’t teach you very much that can be applied anywhere except in the
very closely defined realm in which it is learned.
Learning
to let go of all the stuff cluttering up your mind so you can pay
attention, stay alert, be focused and aware of the world is tough stuff.
I’m still learning how to do it. One of the nice things about budo
practice is that the correction is usually really fast when you lose
focus and let your alertness, your awareness, go. I’ve gotten hit in
the head more than once because I wasn’t paying proper attention. The
physical practices should lead us into the mental ones.
In
budo we often talk about zanshin 残心 and mushin 無心。 You’ll notice that
the last character is the same in both words. It means heart/mind and
represents “the psyche; the mind; the emotions” (definition form the
Kenkyusha Online Dictionary). In zanshin, the first character is for
something that remains, that is left, that stays. The idea is one of
staying aware, staying alert, your mind remaining on the situation at
hand. In koryu bugei, as well as in kendo and many other modern budo
styles, the idea is that the kata doesn’t end when the action ends.
You
have to stay aware and focused even after the fight is finished. Even
though you have ostensibly won, you can’t just relax and let your focus
go rushing away. The action might not be over yet. What if your
adversary has friends who come along suddenly? Or what if the adversary
isn’t quite finished? If you just relax, drop your guard and start
thinking about how glad you are that the fight is over, you will be
surprised by anything that comes next. The Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu kata
called Yaegaki
is a great example. The kata assumes an adversary directly in front of
you. Once she has been dispatched, you start to sheath your sword.
When it’s almost all the way back in the saya, the adversary rallies to
take a swing at your leg. If you have relaxed, you won’t be able to
respond in time to save your leg. If you are still aware, if you are
practicing zanshin, you can.
All
koryu bugei kata that I am aware of require that the student practice
maintaining awareness, zanshin, even when the action is over.
Really
though, the training is to be aware from well before the action starts.
In kneeling kata like Yaegaki or the much less complicated Mae, the
kata doesn’t begin when the action starts. It begins at the moment you
start to kneel. In paired kata, such as in kenjutsu, the kata starts
as soon as you bow to your partner, and it doesn’t end until you’ve
moved apart and bowed to signal the end. I have memories nearly as
vivid as the bruise I got one day when my attention wandered after the
action of a kata was finished and my partner, the instructor, recognized
this and caught me in the solar plexus. I had dropped my attention
because we were “done”. Except that we weren’t. We were still close
enough together to be immediate threats, and I should have been
maintaining zanshin. I wasn’t, it was clear to my partner, and he gave
me a gentle reminder.
Zanshin
is focused awareness, but it’s not so narrowly focused that you forget
about the rest of the world. You have to be aware of what is around you
at the same time that your attention is focused on your adversary.
This is the mental extension of the metsuke
that I wrote about previously. With metsuke, you want to keep you keep
focused on your adversary, but you can’t lose your peripheral vision
and awareness of your entire opponent. If you only look at his weapon,
you miss what he’s doing with his body. If you only look at his face,
you don’t know what he’s doing with his weapon. The saying in budo is enzan no metsuke 遠
山の目付, or roughly, “looking at a far mountain”. The idea is that your
gaze is focused on one point, but your peripheral vision is still active
and taking in the whole of the scene. In budo, the idea is that you
are focused on your partner but you can still see his entire body and
weaponry in your peripheral vision.
This
focused awareness, in my experience, is something like this. Your
attention is fully focused on your partner, but you are still aware of
your surroundings as well. In the dojo you don’t want to move into the
way of another group who are also training, you don’t want to run into a
wall, and you don’t want to hit anyone you aren’t training with at that
moment. I first experienced this type of awareness at judo practice.
During randori (open grappling practice in this case), the mat would be
filled with grappling pairs, most standing, and a few on the ground. I
had to be completely focused on what my partner was doing while at the
same time being aware of the people around me on the crowded mat.
At
first I had trouble just keeping my attention on my partner. I would
drift back into my own mind thinking about what to do and immediately
get thrown. I didn’t have enough awareness to encompass my partner and
the rest of the people on the mat. Fortunately, my partners generally
did. Gradually my ability to focused improved, and then my awareness
started to expand. I learned to be aware of the world around me without
taking my attention off of my partner
This
is a part of zanshin. You have to maintain your focus on your partner
without losing your awareness of the rest of the world. In solo iai
practice, the reasons for this can be made explicit; they adversary may
not be finished, or there may be other adversaries still around. It’s
more difficult to model this in paired kata, but the aikido training
technique of multiple attacker randori can do a good job of this. You
have to remain aware. Zanshin. 残心.
This
whole line of thought was kicked off by a piece I read in which the
author talked about trying to make a list of things to do while she did
dusted the dojo. Since dusting didn’t require her focus or real
awareness, she tried to do other things like make to-do lists with her
awareness. One of the long, slow lessons I have taken from studying
budo is that whatever I am doing, just do it. I don’t have enough
awareness to spread it out to multiple activities and do any of them
well. The more I practice just doing one thing and being aware of what I
am doing, the better I get at it.
This
is a lesson that is not unique to budo, but is fundamental to any of
the Ways. In fact, it’s one that is probably better taught in other Way
traditions such as shodo and sado than in budo. In calligraphy and tea
ceremony, the practice of focusing on what your are doing, and only
what your are doing, is right out in front. In budo it’s awfully easy
to get tied up in the cool techniques and dealing with an opponent and
forget to be focused and aware of what we are doing.
Zanshin
is helpful in just about anything we do, even simple, mundane tasks
such as dusting. I find that the simple tasks get done faster and
better when I am mindful of what I am doing. If I let my mind go
flitting wherever it pleases, I miss details of what I’m doing and end
of doing a poorer job than I can. But the other benefit of doing simple
tasks mindfully is that I am practicing being mindful and aware of what
I am doing. The more I practice this with simple tasks, the easier it
becomes with more difficult, complex tasks (like trying to catch the
tsuka of sword while the swordsman is trying to hit me with the sword).
And as I get better at mindful awareness in the dojo, the better I am
at applying it throughout the rest of my life.
That’s
the thing about training a Way, whether it is budo or sado or shodo or
kado or any of the others. The training is not just about the
particular isolated skill of fighting or making tea or writing pretty
characters or arranging beautiful flowers. It’s training for all of
life. In this case, it is training our mind how approach and deal with
any task, to be focused and aware of what we are doing, but not so
absorbed that we forget the whole world. We have to remain aware.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
Metsuke
A
friend of mine was commenting on someone’s metsuke, and how she really
wouldn’t want to cross it. I’ve known a number of teachers like that.
My iai and jo teachers are particularly fierce. Just their glance is
enough to make any sensible person back up and rethink their options.
Their whole being seems to fill their eyes and their gaze.
But what is “metsuke” 目付? Checking in the Kenkyusha Online Dictionary gets you a meaning completely unrelated to the term’s use in budo practice. There, it is “lower superintendent officer (in the feudal age)”. Great, a profound budo term has its origins in a bureaucratic title from the feudal age. Doe this mean it’s really about having a gaze like a low level bureaucrat? I’m pretty sure that’s not the meaning we’re looking for.
The kanji that make up the term metsuke are 目and 付. 目is pronounced “may” in this case and 付 is pronounced “tsoo-kay”. 目 is the kanji for eye, while 付 is the kanji for to attach, to apply (and many other uses). In this case, it is means something like “sticking eyes to ~” or “attaching your eyes to~”. That’s what we get from the kanji. The lesson we can take from this is that reading kanji and trying to understand the meaning without knowing the context won’t give you a useful meaning.
In practice, metsuke is really about what you’re looking at and how you’re doing the looking. Kendo teachers are fond of the phrase enzan no metsuke 遠山の目付, which they use to describe how to fix your gaze in kendo. The idea here is that when you look at something in the distance, you perceive things close by in your peripheral vision without focusing on them. This counters the all too natural tendency to stare at your opponents weapon, or just as bad, your intended target.
Where you look is pretty fundamental. We humans are exceptionally visual creatures, and for anything beyond the grappling range, seeing is our primary means of connecting with our adversary. We have to connect with the whole of our adversary, not just the tip of their weapon, or our own. Beginning students have a habit of staring at the part they think is going to hurt them, whether it is a hand, sword, staff or giant peanut butter spreader. If they think that’s the thing that’s going to hurt them, they stare at it, and forget all about the person it’s connected to. Do this, and what you are staring at will hurt you, because you won’t be able to respond in time to what your partner is doing to avoid getting hit.
If
you’re looking at your partner’s eyes, you’re going to have the same
problem, only worse. Not only can’t you respond to what she is doing in
time, but you can easily be led to even further weakness through eye
feints and bluffs. If you’re staring at their eyes, you’ll react when
they do something besides look back at your eyes. The worst part is
that staring at your partner’s eyes really won’t tell you anything about
what they intend to do if they are any good at all. Kiyama Sensei has quite clearly corrected me on this point. He says develop the strength and look your partner in the eye.
Enzan no metsuke is a good starting point for developing metsuke, but in the koryu budo I study, my teachers have pulled my metsuke in a lot closer than a distant mountain. My teachers have me looking at a point a little above the bridge of my partners nose. They are very clear that I am not to be looking in anyone’s eyes. With this gaze, I can see my partners whole body at most distances, and I can sense intentions from subtle changes and shifts in posture. I can respond to attacks without taking my gaze away from this point, so that I don’t become locked onto the attacking weapon, leaving me unaware of what’s coming next.
This is important. You can start out well but then have your focus stolen by movement or attack. Even when the attack comes from an angle, you must maintain your focus on your whole partner and not let it slip away to something peripheral. The video here is a good example. While the weapon may come from straight ahead, the left or the right, both people maintain their focus on their partner. The partner is the adversary and real source of danger. The weapon is a tool and gains all of its direction from the wielder. If our focus slips off the person wielding the weapon and gets stuck on the weapon we open ourselves up. If we are following the weapon and we knock it to the side, we will follow the weapon to the side, leaving ourselves wide open to the opponent who is still in front of us.
It takes a tremendous practice, and often not a few bruises, to learn this focus. Great practitioners have incredible focus. You can almost feel the weight of their concentration on you when you face them. This is what my friend was talking about. I remember the feeling when I was first studying jodo and training with one of seniors, Kohashi Sensei. Kohashi Sensei is a tiny woman, maybe 4’ 11 inches (148 cm). She looks like someone’s kindly grandmother, at least until she picks up a weapon and prepares to attack you. Then you become the focus of her entire being and the world is blocked out by the strength of her focus. She is really, truly frightening, so much so that her metsuke becomes a weapon of its own.
Kohashi Sensei’s metsuke is exceptional, but all of the experienced budoka I have met have strong metsuke. The power comes from their well-developed and practiced concentration. You are the subject of their focus, and that focus is pure. There is nothing distracting them. There is no part of their mind that is wandering about wondering what they will have to drink after they have reduced you to a grease spot on the floor. There isn’t even a part of their mind thinking about reducing you to a grease spot. They aren’t thinking about their sword, or yours. They are purely focused on you, and you can feel this. There is no room in them for distraction.
A person with a developed metsuke has a powerfully honed mental focus, and the strength of their gaze is an outer manifestation of this. The focus and concentration of their gaze is a mirror for the focus and concentration of their mind. They are seeing you as the only thing in their universe. A person who has mastered their metsuke can shut out all the distractions around them and maintain focused concentration on just one thing. As a student of budo, this regularly means that senior teachers are bringing all of this focus and experience to bear on you.
Over time, as you become proficient enough that you stop thinking about which foot goes where, and what is the proper stance for this situation, and you remember to breathe regularly without having to tell yourself to breath, you begin to be able to focus on your teacher. To me, this is when you really start learning budo, when you can stop focusing on yourself, and start focusing on the conditions you are dealing with, without letting them overwhelm you. It’s not something that comes full blown. One day you’ll have it for half a kata, and then from time to time you’ll manage to hold your focus together through an entire kata.
Metsuke, and the underlying mental focus and concentration takes time to develop. Without it though, you can never really be proficient at any form of budo, even if what you do doesn’t use the term. I study metsuke everytime I go into the dojo. I’m looking at what my teachers are doing, and what my juniors are doing, and trying to figure out how to improve my own. I’ve also noticed that my peers, the people I started with, have improved their metsuke tremendously over the years. I’m still in awe of the focus and intensity of some of my teachers.
I’m particularly impressed by those who can project this intensity when doing iaido. With no partner to provide a focal point, and no weapon actually attacking them, they have to generate 100% of the intensity and concentration from within. This level of focus is something I’ve only recently come to think I am getting a handle on. When I first started iai it was all I could manage to move my hands and feet at the same time and not stab myself with my own sword. Now I’ve learned to visualize my adversary well enough to be able to bring some of the focus I have in paired arts to my solo iai practice.
It’s still a work in progress. It’s very easy to start looking at your own weapon during iai, since it’s the only thing in your field of vision that’s moving. Keeping focused on the adversary is always difficult, but when she only exists in your mind, it gets really difficult. Watch people when they do budo, whether it is solo kata, paired kata, or some sort of sparring. What do they do with their eyes? Where are they looking? Are they giving away control by looking at their opponent’s weapon or eyes? Are they distracted by something else going on in the room? Do their eyes move in coordination with their body (this is a tough one to describe. I’ve done whole practices on this). If they are doing solo kata, can you tell exactly where their adversary is from the way their eyes, body and weapon work together and focus? If they are working with a partner, does the combination of their focused attention, body and weapon all come together to create a single barrier between them and their adversary.
Those are some points I’m working on for myself, and I always notice when I see video of myself. I’m never completely satisfied with what I see in my own practice. Some of them I get fairly consistently and some need a lot of work. But that’s budo, and maybe a bit of mental metsuke as well.
But what is “metsuke” 目付? Checking in the Kenkyusha Online Dictionary gets you a meaning completely unrelated to the term’s use in budo practice. There, it is “lower superintendent officer (in the feudal age)”. Great, a profound budo term has its origins in a bureaucratic title from the feudal age. Doe this mean it’s really about having a gaze like a low level bureaucrat? I’m pretty sure that’s not the meaning we’re looking for.
The kanji that make up the term metsuke are 目and 付. 目is pronounced “may” in this case and 付 is pronounced “tsoo-kay”. 目 is the kanji for eye, while 付 is the kanji for to attach, to apply (and many other uses). In this case, it is means something like “sticking eyes to ~” or “attaching your eyes to~”. That’s what we get from the kanji. The lesson we can take from this is that reading kanji and trying to understand the meaning without knowing the context won’t give you a useful meaning.
In practice, metsuke is really about what you’re looking at and how you’re doing the looking. Kendo teachers are fond of the phrase enzan no metsuke 遠山の目付, which they use to describe how to fix your gaze in kendo. The idea here is that when you look at something in the distance, you perceive things close by in your peripheral vision without focusing on them. This counters the all too natural tendency to stare at your opponents weapon, or just as bad, your intended target.
Where you look is pretty fundamental. We humans are exceptionally visual creatures, and for anything beyond the grappling range, seeing is our primary means of connecting with our adversary. We have to connect with the whole of our adversary, not just the tip of their weapon, or our own. Beginning students have a habit of staring at the part they think is going to hurt them, whether it is a hand, sword, staff or giant peanut butter spreader. If they think that’s the thing that’s going to hurt them, they stare at it, and forget all about the person it’s connected to. Do this, and what you are staring at will hurt you, because you won’t be able to respond in time to what your partner is doing to avoid getting hit.
Enzan no metsuke is a good starting point for developing metsuke, but in the koryu budo I study, my teachers have pulled my metsuke in a lot closer than a distant mountain. My teachers have me looking at a point a little above the bridge of my partners nose. They are very clear that I am not to be looking in anyone’s eyes. With this gaze, I can see my partners whole body at most distances, and I can sense intentions from subtle changes and shifts in posture. I can respond to attacks without taking my gaze away from this point, so that I don’t become locked onto the attacking weapon, leaving me unaware of what’s coming next.
This is important. You can start out well but then have your focus stolen by movement or attack. Even when the attack comes from an angle, you must maintain your focus on your whole partner and not let it slip away to something peripheral. The video here is a good example. While the weapon may come from straight ahead, the left or the right, both people maintain their focus on their partner. The partner is the adversary and real source of danger. The weapon is a tool and gains all of its direction from the wielder. If our focus slips off the person wielding the weapon and gets stuck on the weapon we open ourselves up. If we are following the weapon and we knock it to the side, we will follow the weapon to the side, leaving ourselves wide open to the opponent who is still in front of us.
It takes a tremendous practice, and often not a few bruises, to learn this focus. Great practitioners have incredible focus. You can almost feel the weight of their concentration on you when you face them. This is what my friend was talking about. I remember the feeling when I was first studying jodo and training with one of seniors, Kohashi Sensei. Kohashi Sensei is a tiny woman, maybe 4’ 11 inches (148 cm). She looks like someone’s kindly grandmother, at least until she picks up a weapon and prepares to attack you. Then you become the focus of her entire being and the world is blocked out by the strength of her focus. She is really, truly frightening, so much so that her metsuke becomes a weapon of its own.
Kohashi Sensei’s metsuke is exceptional, but all of the experienced budoka I have met have strong metsuke. The power comes from their well-developed and practiced concentration. You are the subject of their focus, and that focus is pure. There is nothing distracting them. There is no part of their mind that is wandering about wondering what they will have to drink after they have reduced you to a grease spot on the floor. There isn’t even a part of their mind thinking about reducing you to a grease spot. They aren’t thinking about their sword, or yours. They are purely focused on you, and you can feel this. There is no room in them for distraction.
A person with a developed metsuke has a powerfully honed mental focus, and the strength of their gaze is an outer manifestation of this. The focus and concentration of their gaze is a mirror for the focus and concentration of their mind. They are seeing you as the only thing in their universe. A person who has mastered their metsuke can shut out all the distractions around them and maintain focused concentration on just one thing. As a student of budo, this regularly means that senior teachers are bringing all of this focus and experience to bear on you.
Over time, as you become proficient enough that you stop thinking about which foot goes where, and what is the proper stance for this situation, and you remember to breathe regularly without having to tell yourself to breath, you begin to be able to focus on your teacher. To me, this is when you really start learning budo, when you can stop focusing on yourself, and start focusing on the conditions you are dealing with, without letting them overwhelm you. It’s not something that comes full blown. One day you’ll have it for half a kata, and then from time to time you’ll manage to hold your focus together through an entire kata.
Metsuke, and the underlying mental focus and concentration takes time to develop. Without it though, you can never really be proficient at any form of budo, even if what you do doesn’t use the term. I study metsuke everytime I go into the dojo. I’m looking at what my teachers are doing, and what my juniors are doing, and trying to figure out how to improve my own. I’ve also noticed that my peers, the people I started with, have improved their metsuke tremendously over the years. I’m still in awe of the focus and intensity of some of my teachers.
I’m particularly impressed by those who can project this intensity when doing iaido. With no partner to provide a focal point, and no weapon actually attacking them, they have to generate 100% of the intensity and concentration from within. This level of focus is something I’ve only recently come to think I am getting a handle on. When I first started iai it was all I could manage to move my hands and feet at the same time and not stab myself with my own sword. Now I’ve learned to visualize my adversary well enough to be able to bring some of the focus I have in paired arts to my solo iai practice.
It’s still a work in progress. It’s very easy to start looking at your own weapon during iai, since it’s the only thing in your field of vision that’s moving. Keeping focused on the adversary is always difficult, but when she only exists in your mind, it gets really difficult. Watch people when they do budo, whether it is solo kata, paired kata, or some sort of sparring. What do they do with their eyes? Where are they looking? Are they giving away control by looking at their opponent’s weapon or eyes? Are they distracted by something else going on in the room? Do their eyes move in coordination with their body (this is a tough one to describe. I’ve done whole practices on this). If they are doing solo kata, can you tell exactly where their adversary is from the way their eyes, body and weapon work together and focus? If they are working with a partner, does the combination of their focused attention, body and weapon all come together to create a single barrier between them and their adversary.
Those are some points I’m working on for myself, and I always notice when I see video of myself. I’m never completely satisfied with what I see in my own practice. Some of them I get fairly consistently and some need a lot of work. But that’s budo, and maybe a bit of mental metsuke as well.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Budo, the Mental Side
People talk a lot about the physical
technique of budo. Budo is obviously a physical art, with techniques designed
to handle the very real and serious business of violence. Depending on the martial art you could be
learning striking, throwing, joint locking, or any of the myriad of weapons
that are taught in the various martial arts.
Before one can use those techniques in a real way however, development
of physical technique must be paired with development of mental technique. If you mind is not properly prepared and
ready, the technique will not be there.
You can’t be thinking too much about what you are doing, and you can’t
blank and forget everything either.
Ironically, the mental state that is the goal
in classical Japanese martial arts is mushin無心、most often translated as “no
mind”. Better writers and far greater
martial artists have written numerous treatises on mushin, so I’ll just say
that it is a calm, quiet mind that reflects what is around it without imposing
assumptions. Good practice will help
develop this mental quality, but I would say that that mushin is much harder to
develop than good technique, and frankly, much more useful. Violence is a rare occurrence in the
industrialized world, but we need our minds all the time.
This is the mental side of what is ostensibly
a physical practice. It’s also the head
fake of good training practices. When we
start our training, we are so excited by the physical techniques, and so busy
trying to master them, that we hardly notice that we are training our minds at
the same time. The mind and the body are really one, so what is happening with
one is always reflected in the other. If
we are training and forging our body, we are necessarily also training our
mind. The question, and what sets budo
and other michi apart from mere
sports, is “Does our training have effects beyond the dojo.” The answer, certainly, is yes. Martial artists and other teachers have been
talking about this in Japan for hundreds of years. Yagyu Munenori, Miyamoto Musashi, and Takuan
Soho are just a few of the older, and greatest writers on the subject.
When we train physical technique, whether it
is kata or freeform, we strive to master our breathing and to keep our mind
quiet and relaxed but as ready as our muscles have to be. This is often hardly treated in regular
practice, hidden within kata that we repeat and repeat until we no longer have
to think about the physical movements.
(And if you think your art doesn’t include kata, what do you think those
repetitions of structured exercises are?).
As we become more familiar with the movements, we strip away more and
more physical input from them. When we
are first learning the motions, we stiffen and tense our whole body, activating
muscles that have nothing to do with the motions being practiced. As we train, we strip more and more of this
excess input out of technique, becoming faster, more efficient and
effective. Each time we stop activating
unnecessary muscles, we reduce counterproductive activity. When we activate muscles that aren’t
necessary, at best we waste energy and at worst we are actively working against
ourselves, weakening the effect of the necessary muscles, causing unbalances in
our posture, and ruining our technique.
Is it possible training could help us do that same thing mentally? That we could learn to deactivate the
unnecessary, wasteful parts of our minds?
Practicing recently, I was working on an iai
kata that assumes 3 adversaries. You have to move your attention from
adversary to adversary without becoming stuck on any of them. When I
would allow my attention to stick to the middle adversary, the quality of my
cuts to the sides became so bad I’m not sure they would raise bruises, much
less actually cut. Your attention has to be fluid, but not scattered.
In this particular kata, the three adversaries are ranged in front of
you. You approach with open attention, aware of all of them without
strongly focusing on any one. The first cut and your attention go to the
adversary on your right. The next cut is to the adversary on your left, but
while moving your attention from the right to the left, you must allow your
focus to strike the adversary in the middle, to make him react to the
possibility that you are coming for him and to allow you the chance to react if
the middle adversary is able to attack you already. You can’t let your
attention stick to him though. It has to
strike him and move on. This has to be accomplished in the time it takes
to sweep your sword around to the left so that you can transfer your attention
to the adversary there. If you don’t get your attention moved, you won’t
have ki-ken-tai icchi 気剣体 一致, or
unified mind, body and sword (I know, I’m taking a liberty translating 気 as mind in this case, but if you have more
effective translation, please share it).
If your attention sticks to any of the adversaries, the lack of focus in
your mind is immediately reflected in your body.
On this occasion, that means my cuts fell
apart completely. I swung the sword, but
it was a poor imitation of the movement I should have been making. The mind guides the body, and once my mind
was tuned to something besides where it should have been focused, my body’s
integration and technique collapsed.
Once the mind was no longer guiding the body, there was nothing to
integrate my movement and make it effective.
The speed with which this was reflected from my body as my technique
fell apart, back to my mind for the third cut, was amazing. By the third cut my mind was completely
rattled from the poor performance of the second cut and I probably would have
been better off not even attempting it.
My mind was busy trying to reorganize my body structure and integration
so I could make a good cut, but because it was focused on my body rather than
on the project of cutting, my third cut was even less effective than the
second.
The next time through the kata I kept my
focus moving. As I swept the sword from
the right to the left I let my gaze slam into the middle adversary but didn’t
let it stop there. When I swung the
sword to the left my gaze and my mind were right there with my body and the
sword, moving together. When the cut was
done I immediately moved my focus back to the middle adversary and the sword
followed. When I did the cut it was
completely on my terms and fully integrated.
It felt great. The trick now is to keep that sort of mind and body
integration all the time, not just when I’m swinging a sword.
When I’m training regularly the control of my
breathing and the mental stillness that I strive for in the dojo become habits
that I automatically reach for and use when I’m out of the dojo. I know that I’m
calmer when I’m training regularly. In the dojo I work to breath and stay
calm while people are trying to throw me or to hit me with sticks. In Judo if I don’t stay calm during randori I
get winded quickly and find myself focusing on getting another breath rather
than what my partner is trying to do. In
Jodo I have to stay calm and control my breathing or else I find myself trying
to take a breath when I should be getting out of the way of someone who is
trying to whack me in the head. This is
a fairly stressful environment in which to practice these things, but that’s
good. It means that when you are in a
stressful environment outside of practice you’ll be accustomed to dealing with
the stress.
The breathing practice and mental stillness
that are required for effective budo are great things outside the dojo, just as
much as being in good physical condition is. We spend some time in our
society teaching people how to hold their body and we value good physical
posture and movement. We spend no time at all teaching people how to relax and
control their mind and take effective metal postures. In the dojo, the
mental “Do” side of practice is just as important as the physical training.
It may be more important, since we don’t have business chains all over
the place offering to develop our mental strength and posture. Practicing
the calm, clear, placid, reflecting mind that is required of any “Do”, martial
or otherwise, and that is especially important for effective responses in “Bu”,
is also tremendously useful outside the dojo. It’s wonderful to be able
to remain calm and unruffled while everyone around you is losing control.
When my focus fell apart during the kata, all
it took was a breath to relax me and pull my focus and my body back together. In the grand world outside the dojo, all it
takes for me to pull my mind and body together and bring them into a relaxed,
unified posture is a breath or two as well.
The most difficult thing sometimes is remembering to take that calming
breath. It’s easy to get lost in the
emotion of argument, especially when someone is attacking you. The longer I train though, the more likely I
am to be more disturbed by a disorganized mind/body state than I am by the
argument, even if I’m busy trying to defend myself from a verbal attack. The great side benefit of this is that when
someone is verbally attacking you, they want you to be intimidated. They will
be looking for the physical cues of intimidation or of defense. If you take that breath and relax your mind
into your body, you become physically relaxed.
Once you are relaxed, you are in control of yourself, and you can choose
how to respond. If you are relaxed in
mind and body, you can respond to the situation fluidly without getting stuck
on any part of the interaction. Being
relaxed, you have the possibility of being confident in your response because
you are choosing it, not just reacting.
You are relaxed and responding as you see fit, rather than being herded
by someone who is expecting a tense, off-balance response. Often this failure to react as expected to
their script is all it takes to make a verbal aggressor back off.
This is one of the more extreme day-to-day
applications of budo training, but the basic technique is available to a budo
practitioner throughout life, whatever she is struggling with.. Tension and lack of focus attack all the time,
usually without as clear a source as someone yelling at us. The more we train, the more quickly and
easily we can reintegrate our mind and bodies, relax them, release unnecessary
tension and activity from our awareness and move forward to clearly respond to
the world as it truly is, rather than as our tension filled minds would like to
view it.
This may be the greatest benefit of budo
training. As we learn to relax our
minds, we learn to release our preconceptions so we can see the world as it is,
rather than as we think it is. This is
the mind like a calm, smooth pond. It
clearly and properly reflects the world around it without distorting
anything. If the pond is disturbed, it
moves this way and that distorting the reflection of everything. As we practice budo, we work to keep our
bodies calm so that we can respond accurately and appropriately to anything our
partner does. As we do this, often
without being aware of it, we are also training our minds to be calm like that
pond so we can respond to anything appropriately without the activity of our
own mind distorting our vision or our actions.
The first big step is when we can consciously recognize that we are
upset need to relax, and we can choose to take that breath or two that is
necessary to restore our calm, placid mind.
The next big step is when we take that breath before we are aware that
we need it. When we start doing that, we
may be starting to master a portion of budo.
Thursday, January 3, 2013
The Value of Bu and Do
I
train in budo. I admit it, I love budo training. It’s fun. It’s
exciting. It’s intense in a way that nothing else I do even comes close
to. I could happily spend a lot of time every day training. Learning
attacks and defenses from sword and staff and kusarigama and empty hand,
and, and, and, I never seem to get my fill of training and learning.
Budo is great. In addition, because it’s not a sport you play for
amusement, but training in skills that can be applied in the world
outside the dojo, I can easily recommend that everyone get some sort of
budo training, whether it is their passion or not. It’s a useful skill
set to have.
But how valuable is that skill set? The value of “do” 道、is that it is a way of looking at the world, of approaching the world and the way we live in it. The Taoists and Buddhists have written quite a lot on the value of “Do” 道、so I want to look at the relative value of “bu” 武。 In a society where physical conflict is rare, and the vast majority of people get through life without any training in budo, just how valuable is the “bu” half of budo?
If you have a job that places you in the line of physical conflict, of course budo training can be useful, but that sort of job is rare. So, thankfully, are instances that might require physical responses in modern, industrialized societies, particularly when compared with pre-industrial periods. But we do still have conflicts. How we handle conflict has clearly gotten more peaceful over the centuries, but we still have conflicts. And occasionally these conflicts become violent, so there is still a slim chance that someone might have a literal need for the skills learned through budo training. Outside of a few, specialized professions though, that need is rare.
So for those of us who can’t get enough of budo practice, how valuable is it really to our lives? What can it contribute? The easy one is that budo practice can be great physical activity in an era when we spend more time sitting in front of screens than is healthy. Unfortunately, this isn’t a very compelling reason to do budo, since there are lots of things that can provide physical activity. Lots of them are much better overall forms of exercise than budo.
That brings us back to budo training for dealing with violence. Even though violence is relatively rare, there plenty of reasons for training. I want my daughters to learn effective “bu” even if they don’t ever embrace my love of budo. I want to protect them by teaching them to protect themselves. Many of the facets of budo training that are not directly violent can protect them. They can certainly use the awareness and confidence that comes with budo training to avoid and handle potentially violent situations so they never become violent.
The above logic though forces me to face one aspect of the value of budo’s primary focus of dealing with violence. Budo is valuable for what it can protect, not for any inherent value that it possesses. I value budo training for my family because I value my family, and not because I value budo. I want my children to deal with the world from a position of confidence and personal security, and I think budo is one of the best tools to help them achieve that level of confidence and personal security.
And there it is. Budo is a tool, not an end in itself. Budo is valuable for what you can build with it and what it can defend. Budo is not a beautiful house to be lived in. Budo is the hammer and saw used to build the house. Budo, like any “Do” 道 is a method for perfecting the practice of some particular activity, and through the proper practice of that activity, for helping to perfect the practitioners.
“Bu” 武 alone is not much to practice. In fact, it’s rather gruesome to spend a lot of time week after week studying ways to control, constrict, disarm, disable, cripple and kill your fellow man. That’s what we do in budo practice. It’s not beautiful, and if we are training ourselves honestly, we should not flinch from saying it publicly or to the mirror. If we don’t start with an honest understanding of what we are doing, there is no way we can honestly value it.
I value a lot of things from my budo practice besides the physical conflict skills that are the foundation of the practice. I value the understanding of physical limitations, both mine and a potential adversary’s, that make it nearly impossible for me to be physically intimidated in an office situation, even though people frequently try. I admit it, I find it amusing when the office bully tries his tactics on me and gets confused when they utterly fail.
I appreciate the understanding of spacing that allows me to control distances between myself and people who might actually be dangerous. If I understand the distances involved in violence, I can prevent it from happening by not allowing the spacing to develop that makes violence possible. That’s a nice one.
Ultimately though, these are all applications of budo lessons using budo as a tool for protecting something else. So this leads me to the question of what the proper value and place budo training should have in my life. When I was in college, it filled huge sections of my life. I spent hours every day at the dojo training. I built my life around budo. It was huge fun and I made friendships that still sustain me. I know now that these friendships are much more important than the budo practice that nurtured them. The dojo was like fertile ground where the friendships grew.
Budo is a fabulous tool for my life, both the “Bu” and “Do” portions, but it is a tool and I have to be careful to value it as such. The dojo is a wonderful place for me, and there are few places where I am more comfortable and completely at ease than in a good dojo. One of the lessons I’ve had to take away is that being comfortable and at ease is not how I want to be all the time though. I have used the dojo as an escape and release from stress in my life, and it would be easier than I care to admit to hide in the dojo all time.
That would require sacrificing things that I find valuable for themselves alone. My family, my friends, the people I love. These people are what makes budo such a valuable tool. It’s great value comes from what it can do for them. I have to remember that when I want to escape to the dojo every night. When I go a few times a week, my training benefits everyone involved; me, my wife, my children, the rest of my family, my friends. An appropriate amount of training is good for me physically and mentally. I get a great, intense physical workout in the dojo. It’s amazing how much and how fast you can convince yourself to move when someone is trying to throw you, choke you, or hit you with a stick. I could get that exercise in a gym, but I like the efficiency of getting exercise and honing skills at the same time.
Then there are the mental benefits. I’m calmer when I’m training regularly. The breathing practice, and mental stillness that are required for effective budo are great things outside the dojo, just as much as being in good physical condition is. We spend some time in our society teaching people how to hold their body and we value good physical posture. While mental training that is part of the “Do” side of practice in the dojo is just as important as the physical training. It may be more important, since we don’t have business chains all over the place offering to develop our mental strength and posture. Practicing the calm, clear, placid, reflecting mind that is required of any “Do” and is especially important for effective responses in “Bu” is also wonderfully useful outside the dojo.
I love being in the dojo, and there are few places where I feel as comfortable and completely at ease as I do in the dojo. I could easily spend my time escaping from all the pressures of life by spending every available minute in the dojo. If I start spending too much time in the dojo, and sacrificing quantity and quality of time with the people I love, I’m showing with my actions that I value budo over the people in my life. I’m showing that I value the tool more than the relationships with wonderful people that it can help build and protect. It’s nice to want to spend my time where I feel comfortable, but that excessively values the tool of budo and undervalues the rest of life.
Budo is wonderful. It’s a part of life that I love. It’s only a part of life though. We have to value it appropriately. If we allow our love of budo to let our practice take over our life and blot out many other difficult but wonderful things that are part of life, our budo is taking a place in our lives it doesn’t deserve. I’ve seen people over value their practice and they pay the price in all the other aspects of life. Budo is not life. It is a tool for life. It is a little “Do” pointing at the big Tao. Don’t mistake the finger for the moon.
But how valuable is that skill set? The value of “do” 道、is that it is a way of looking at the world, of approaching the world and the way we live in it. The Taoists and Buddhists have written quite a lot on the value of “Do” 道、so I want to look at the relative value of “bu” 武。 In a society where physical conflict is rare, and the vast majority of people get through life without any training in budo, just how valuable is the “bu” half of budo?
If you have a job that places you in the line of physical conflict, of course budo training can be useful, but that sort of job is rare. So, thankfully, are instances that might require physical responses in modern, industrialized societies, particularly when compared with pre-industrial periods. But we do still have conflicts. How we handle conflict has clearly gotten more peaceful over the centuries, but we still have conflicts. And occasionally these conflicts become violent, so there is still a slim chance that someone might have a literal need for the skills learned through budo training. Outside of a few, specialized professions though, that need is rare.
So for those of us who can’t get enough of budo practice, how valuable is it really to our lives? What can it contribute? The easy one is that budo practice can be great physical activity in an era when we spend more time sitting in front of screens than is healthy. Unfortunately, this isn’t a very compelling reason to do budo, since there are lots of things that can provide physical activity. Lots of them are much better overall forms of exercise than budo.
That brings us back to budo training for dealing with violence. Even though violence is relatively rare, there plenty of reasons for training. I want my daughters to learn effective “bu” even if they don’t ever embrace my love of budo. I want to protect them by teaching them to protect themselves. Many of the facets of budo training that are not directly violent can protect them. They can certainly use the awareness and confidence that comes with budo training to avoid and handle potentially violent situations so they never become violent.
The above logic though forces me to face one aspect of the value of budo’s primary focus of dealing with violence. Budo is valuable for what it can protect, not for any inherent value that it possesses. I value budo training for my family because I value my family, and not because I value budo. I want my children to deal with the world from a position of confidence and personal security, and I think budo is one of the best tools to help them achieve that level of confidence and personal security.
And there it is. Budo is a tool, not an end in itself. Budo is valuable for what you can build with it and what it can defend. Budo is not a beautiful house to be lived in. Budo is the hammer and saw used to build the house. Budo, like any “Do” 道 is a method for perfecting the practice of some particular activity, and through the proper practice of that activity, for helping to perfect the practitioners.
“Bu” 武 alone is not much to practice. In fact, it’s rather gruesome to spend a lot of time week after week studying ways to control, constrict, disarm, disable, cripple and kill your fellow man. That’s what we do in budo practice. It’s not beautiful, and if we are training ourselves honestly, we should not flinch from saying it publicly or to the mirror. If we don’t start with an honest understanding of what we are doing, there is no way we can honestly value it.
I value a lot of things from my budo practice besides the physical conflict skills that are the foundation of the practice. I value the understanding of physical limitations, both mine and a potential adversary’s, that make it nearly impossible for me to be physically intimidated in an office situation, even though people frequently try. I admit it, I find it amusing when the office bully tries his tactics on me and gets confused when they utterly fail.
I appreciate the understanding of spacing that allows me to control distances between myself and people who might actually be dangerous. If I understand the distances involved in violence, I can prevent it from happening by not allowing the spacing to develop that makes violence possible. That’s a nice one.
Ultimately though, these are all applications of budo lessons using budo as a tool for protecting something else. So this leads me to the question of what the proper value and place budo training should have in my life. When I was in college, it filled huge sections of my life. I spent hours every day at the dojo training. I built my life around budo. It was huge fun and I made friendships that still sustain me. I know now that these friendships are much more important than the budo practice that nurtured them. The dojo was like fertile ground where the friendships grew.
Budo is a fabulous tool for my life, both the “Bu” and “Do” portions, but it is a tool and I have to be careful to value it as such. The dojo is a wonderful place for me, and there are few places where I am more comfortable and completely at ease than in a good dojo. One of the lessons I’ve had to take away is that being comfortable and at ease is not how I want to be all the time though. I have used the dojo as an escape and release from stress in my life, and it would be easier than I care to admit to hide in the dojo all time.
That would require sacrificing things that I find valuable for themselves alone. My family, my friends, the people I love. These people are what makes budo such a valuable tool. It’s great value comes from what it can do for them. I have to remember that when I want to escape to the dojo every night. When I go a few times a week, my training benefits everyone involved; me, my wife, my children, the rest of my family, my friends. An appropriate amount of training is good for me physically and mentally. I get a great, intense physical workout in the dojo. It’s amazing how much and how fast you can convince yourself to move when someone is trying to throw you, choke you, or hit you with a stick. I could get that exercise in a gym, but I like the efficiency of getting exercise and honing skills at the same time.
Then there are the mental benefits. I’m calmer when I’m training regularly. The breathing practice, and mental stillness that are required for effective budo are great things outside the dojo, just as much as being in good physical condition is. We spend some time in our society teaching people how to hold their body and we value good physical posture. While mental training that is part of the “Do” side of practice in the dojo is just as important as the physical training. It may be more important, since we don’t have business chains all over the place offering to develop our mental strength and posture. Practicing the calm, clear, placid, reflecting mind that is required of any “Do” and is especially important for effective responses in “Bu” is also wonderfully useful outside the dojo.
I love being in the dojo, and there are few places where I feel as comfortable and completely at ease as I do in the dojo. I could easily spend my time escaping from all the pressures of life by spending every available minute in the dojo. If I start spending too much time in the dojo, and sacrificing quantity and quality of time with the people I love, I’m showing with my actions that I value budo over the people in my life. I’m showing that I value the tool more than the relationships with wonderful people that it can help build and protect. It’s nice to want to spend my time where I feel comfortable, but that excessively values the tool of budo and undervalues the rest of life.
Budo is wonderful. It’s a part of life that I love. It’s only a part of life though. We have to value it appropriately. If we allow our love of budo to let our practice take over our life and blot out many other difficult but wonderful things that are part of life, our budo is taking a place in our lives it doesn’t deserve. I’ve seen people over value their practice and they pay the price in all the other aspects of life. Budo is not life. It is a tool for life. It is a little “Do” pointing at the big Tao. Don’t mistake the finger for the moon.
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