Wednesday, June 29, 2005

about Giannfranco Pace (Chen taiji master from Italy)

"Then In December I had the opportunity to do a one-day workshop with Master Gianfranco Pace, a visiting Chen-style master from Italy who came to demonstrate and work with people. He had a rare touch that really reminded me of Sifu Chung, an ability to absorb any energy directed at him without giving way, the power to move you effortlessly. He was remarkable.I never went back.During the workshop I just kept putting myself in his shoes, imagining myself with the kind of power he had, and realizing that I did not want to spend years of my life learning how to injure people. Which is what it amounts to. The skill with which that man could hurt others effortlessly was astonishing, and frightening."

-David

Monday, June 27, 2005

"The greatest example of softness I've ever seen in Chen Style was demonstrated by Feng Zhiqiang, a famous student of Chen Fake. In 1982, Feng demonstrated his art with other Taiji masters outside of Shanghai in Jading. Feng's power was unbelievably concealed within the softness and resiliency of his joints. When he moved, the ground shook with what seemed like both primary and secondary seismic waves. (He gathered energy and used circulation not emission.) His body appeared to me to be as soft as jelly on the outside and as hard as a diamond on the inside. However, when a Chen family member, who also demonstrated in Jading that year moved, you it could see the force move and easily observe its origins. A definite difference in level and skill could be deduced. Feng Zhiqiang went on to demonstrate push hands and a variety of techniques with such deftness and softness, the power in what he did was clear. The reputation of Chen Style was enormously enhanced among the Taijiquan masters that were there for the demonstration. The one thing that is easy for the initiated to see is Feng's ability to extend and collapse his joints, especially the elbow, without the opponent being able to sense or detect Feng's sophisticated force. (This would not be the case if Feng moved from the waist first and shook in the way that some so-called master Chen Stylists do.)"

Monday, June 20, 2005

Turner had been meditating, by his own estimation, since he was three years old and had always felt isolated from others and unsure of his place in the world because of his inward-directed and deeply spiritual nature. In the presence of Nomura Roshi, who had just arrived from Japan the day before, Turner received instant confirmation of his own experience and promptly accepted him as his teacher. "After being initiated into the way of zazen [meditation] by the Master," he writes, "I continued to practice martial arts and do shikantaza [formless meditation] as if there were no relationship between the two. Imagine how surprised I was when one day as I sat in meditation there was a melting away of barriers, a blaze of light, and I immediately understood the secret of self-defense from the inside out. There was no mystery. When I arose from my seat, I felt as if everything was clear to me." With virtually no formal training in the martial arts, the youthful Vernon Turner had apparently—in "a blaze of light"—become a master.
Speaking of which, his gift offers a few side benefits, Adam says. "Inbasketball, when someone's going to pass the ball, there's a spike in theiraura. It only happens a split second before they pass, but that's enough togive you a bit of an advantage. I get a lot of interceptions that way."
"I had once talked to Billy Conn, the boxer, about professionals versus amateurs - specifically street fighters. One had always heard rumors of champions being taken out by back-alley fighters. Conn was scornful. "Aw, it's like hitting a girl," he said. "They're nothing."

- George Plimpton"Shadow Box"

Sunday, June 19, 2005

"So-called solid reality is only crystallized dream. It can be undreamed. There is nothing stronger than dream, because dreams are forms of THE LAW."

-William S. Burroughs

Saturday, June 18, 2005

Those of use who think that death is an evil are in error . . . . Let us reflect in another way, and we shall see that there is great reason to hope that death is a good, for one of two things:--either death is a state of nothingness and utter unconsciousness, or, as men say, there is a change and migration of the soul from this world to another. Now if you suppose that there is no consciousness, but a sleep like the sleep of him who is undisturbed even by the sight of dreams, death will be an unspeakable gain. . . . Now if death is like this, I say that to die is gain; for eternity is then only a single night. But if death is a journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? . . . What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus and Musaeus and Hesiod and Homer? Nay, if this be true, let me die again and again. . . . Above all, I shall be able to continue my search into true and false knowledge; as in this world, so also in that; I shall find out who is wise, and who pretends to be wise, and is not. . . .

-Socrates

Thursday, June 16, 2005

"the meaning of jutaijutsu" as Soke was presenting it :

1) Nothing you do should require any more physical "effort" than it takes to merely move your body through empty space without a training partner or opponent;

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

You Are That Which Never Moves

One day Bhagavan was looking at me intently and said: "It looks as if you are still hankering after meditation."

I replied: "What have I got except endless work in the kitchen?"

Bhagavan said with deep feeling:
"Your hands may do the work but your mind can remain still. You are that which never moves. Realize that and you will find that work is not a strain.

But as long as you think that you are the body and that the work is done by you, you will feel your life to be an endless toil.

In fact it is the mind that toils, not the body. Even if your body keeps quiet, will your mind keep quiet too? Even in sleep the mind is busy with its dreams."

I replied : "Yes, Swami, it is as natural for you to know that you are not your body as it is for us to think that we are the body....Why can't I remember always that I am not the body?"

"Because you haven't had enough of it."

He smiled.
Since everything is but an apparition,
perfect in being what it is,
having nothing to do with good or bad,
acceptance or rejection;
one may well burst out in laughter.

- Longchenpa
"Witnesses reported seeing the Daudi's mother carry him outside to a nearby bench, where paramedics were able to briefly revive him. But the child died about 5 p.m. at Celebration Hospital. "

Here's the kicker... He would likely have been fine to stay with his mom after being revived. But I bet they rushed him to the Hospital and promptly needled him up and started pumping crap into him. Every time I see someone admitted to the medical industry they do this. Stick needles in them and pump them up with crap.

Here, have a little trauma with your trauma...

[Listserv comment about 4 year old child who died after Disney Epcot Center space ride]

Friday, June 10, 2005

When people of this age think about knowledge worth saving, they usually think about belief in the Cartesian mechanical philosophy, that dead matter is the basis of reality, and about techniques for rebuilding and using machines that dominate and separate us from other life.

I'd like that knowledge to die forever, but I don't think it works that way. Humans or any other hyper-malleable animal will always be tempted by the Black Arts, by techniques that trade subtle harm for flashy good and feed back into themselves, seducing us into power, corruption, and blindness.Our descendants will need the intellectual artifacts to avoid this -- artifacts we have barely started to develop even as the Great Bad Example begins to fall.

In 200 years, when they are brushing seeds into baskets with their fingers, and a stranger appears with a new threshing machine that will do the same thing with less time and effort, they will need to say something smarter than "the Gods forbid it" or "that is not our Way." They will need the knowledge to say something like:

"Your machine requires the seed to be planted alone and not interspersed with perennials that maintain nitrogen and mineral balance in the soil. And from where will the metal come, and how many trees must be cut down and burned to melt and shape it? And since we cannot build the machine, shall we be dependent on the machine-builders, and give them a portion of our food, which we now keep all for ourselves? Do you not know, clever stranger, that when any biomass is removed from the land, and not recycled back into it, the soil is weakened? And what could we do with our "saved" time, that would be more valuable and pleasurable than gathering the seed by hand, touching and knowing every stalk and every inch of the land that feeds us? Shall we become allies of cold metal that cuts without feeling, turning our hands and eyes to the study of machines and numbers until, severed from the Earth, we nearly destroy it as our ancestors did, making depleted uranium and polychlorinated biphenyls and cadmium batteries that even now make the old cities unfit for living? Go back to your people, and tell them, if they come to conquer us with their machines, we will fight them in ways the Arawaks and Seminoles and Lakota and Hopi and Nez Perce never imagined, because we understand your world better than you do yourself. Tell your people to come to learn."

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Ultimate Ki workout set:

1. Nishino Breathing Method - 1 or 2 reps.
2. CXW style of 1-hand basic Silk Reeling - few minutes each side
3. Systema drill: pushup start position (fully "up"), static hold for 5 minutes.
4. TienShanPai/Shaolin: lunge-step gentle bounces, 30 each side.
5. Silk Reeling low circular sidekicks: a few each side.
6. Wall handstand static hold: 10 or so breaths.

Optional if time permits:
Ravi Singh's 'navel power' - 1st half of the set (about 1 dozen exercises, minus Singh's chants and meditations)