
Some Thoughts
on the travelogue of "life":
I want to begin this piece by drawing a clear and
unadulterated analogy between the "martial arts" as
practiced within the Straight Blast Gym and the bigger picture
of "life" in general.
Obviously, anything that is true will be manifested
in very similar ways in all kinds of different avenues, fields,
and spectrums. To steal a term from Theodore Roosevelt, a "truism"
will apply in any field, which is why it's called a truism.
The ideal of what we do, indeed the ideal espoused
by Bruce Lee in all his writings as it pertained Jeet Kune Do,
was to reach a level beyond "style", beyond partialization,
and compartmentalization. A level where the athlete/ fighter simply
"was" and expressed himself, as opposed to expressing
a "style", system, or method. I believe this conceptual
idea of what the perfect fighter would be has become a reality
in modern times with the advent of No Holds Barred competitions.
For
the first time in modern memory fighters are being created that
have no limits in terms of partialized styles, or methods. They
can fight on their feet, in the clinch and on the ground. The
flow smoothly from boxing to wrestling to submission, without
thought of what "style" they are now expressing. Indeed
they are not really expressing any one style but instead are adjusting
to the aggressive energy feed to them by their resisting opponent.
I don't know how you could ever come any closer to the freedom
and ideal state of being that Bruce talked and wrote about, and
I do not believe anyone could logically argue against this point.
Please keep in mind as well that this "ideal"
that was espoused as "Jeet Kune Do" was taken directly
from the writings and discussions of a well known teacher and
lecturer of the time, Krishnamurti. This acknowledgement is not
meant to diminish Bruce's contribution at all. On the contrary,
it is a true reflection of Bruce's genius that he was able to
see how any truth /"truism" can transfer, and translate
from one field into another.
Having said all that, (and hoping that the point
made was clear and simple enough), lets move on. Now that I believe
we have reached the potential to actualize the Martial Art ideal
of JKD in a very real and physical sense, how do we then translate
that back into everyday life? After all, if this idea of training
is indeed a truism then it should be relatable in all other aspects
of life in general.
One simple way to begin that process is to retrace
our steps as taken within the field of physical training and juxtapose
them as steps towards a philosophical truth. I have decided to
write a detailed explanation of such a comparison first, followed
by a simplified step by step progression and chart towards the
end. It should go without saying that this comparison
and analogy is my own and reflects my own experiences and thoughts.
You would be a fool to simply follow my path or anyone else's
(although it is this type of mindless mimicry that gets
passed of for organized religion these days). Your truth should
be reflected by your experiences, not mine. Perhaps this article
can help you define your journey in clearer terms, and it is my
hope that it does. But be forewarned, reading about anyone else's
journey whether its by your favorite philosopher, religious prophet,
saint, hero, writer, artist, or local trash collector, can never
serve as a substitute for your own personal trials, tribulations,
and peak experiences.
In 1964 a Psychologist by the name of Dr Abraham
Maslow wrote a small book titled "Religions, Values, and
Peak Experiences". In that book Dr Maslow espoused a very
simple idea, that religious experiences, be they Roman Catholic,
Protestant, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, etc, could be explained,
understood, and experienced by anyone using the tools of modern
science, and common sense. Although this may have seemed "radical"
at the time, it was of course an ancient idea (as all truisms
are). Even so this simple idea is still considered extreme, and
even blasphemous by many religious conservatives (much as JKD
is viewed by "traditional" martial artists).
Maslow divided up religious people into two very
distinct categories (again I am using very broad and simplified
generalizations of his work based on MY interpretations, you should
read his work yourself!) the "mystical" ones,
prophets, heroes, etc, and the legalistic, or organizational people.
Every major religion in the world started with the private, lonely,
personal illumination, revelation, or ecstasy of a prophet or
seer. Maslow called the experiences, or revelations that these
prophets or seers had "peak experiences".
To quote Maslow, "The characteristic prophet
is a lonely man who has discovered his truth about the world,
the cosmos, ethics, God, and his own identity, from his own personal
experiences, from what he would consider to be a revelation. Usually,
perhaps always, the prophets of the high religions have had these
experiences when they were alone."
"Characteristically the abstraction type
of the legalist ecclesiastic is the conserving organization man.
An officer and arm of the organization, who is loyal to the structure
of the organization which has been built up on the basis of the
prophets original revelation in order to make the revelation available
to the masses. These organizations can be seen as a kind of punch
card or IBM version of an original revelation or mystical experience
to make it suitable for group use and administrative convenience."
What separated Maslow from many others is that he
believed everyone was capable of having "peak experiences".
That everyone had within themselves the makings of a "prophet",
saint, or hero. Indeed Maslow argued that even without trying
virtually every human being has had at one point in time a "mystical"
or "peak" experience. Much of his research confirmed
this belief and is interesting reading. Occasionally he would
run into someone who denied ever having had a peak experience.
What he came to realize was that these people were very materialistic,
rational, mechanistic, anal retentive and obsessed with control.
These where people whose greatest fear was a complete loss of
control or a sense of being overwhelmed by emotion. As such, they
desperately hang on to some form of stability, control, reality,
etc. For such an obsessive person who is so scared of being overwhelmed
by an emotion (which is interpreted as a loss of control) peak
experiences are scary. Maslow realized that even these people
had had mystical experiences, they just denied them. He refers
to such people as "non peakers". I believe Maslow explained
the distinction between these two types of people best when he
wrote this brilliant statement:
"If you look closely at the internal history
of most of the worlds religions, you will find that each one very
soon tends to divide into a left wing and a right wing. That is,
into the peakers (those who except 'peak experiences') the mystics,
the transcenders, or the privately religious people, on the one
hand, and, on the other hand, into those who concretize the religious
symbols and metaphors. The people who worship little pieces
of wood rather then what the object stands for. Those who take
verbal formulas literally, forgetting the original meaning of
these words, and, perhaps most important, those who take organization,
the church, as primary and as more important than the prophet
and his original revelations. These men, like many organization
men who tend to rise to the top in any complex bureaucracy, tend
to be non-peakers rather then peakers."
"The cleavage between the mystics and the
legalists remains at best a kind of mutual tolerance, but it has
happened in some churches that the rulers of the organization
actually made heresy out of the mystic experiences and persecuted
the mystics themselves. This may be an old story in the history
of religion, but I must point out that it is also an old story
in other fields as well."
Now lets take a step back and draw a clear comparison
between what we know of the TRUTH of Martial Arts and what Maslow
calls peak experiences. The first basic tenant I teach at the
Straight Blast Gym is the abandonment of ritual, titles, and terminology.
For those of you who have read our other philosophy sections you
will recognize that as the fourth principle 'Attitude & Philosophy'.
From the point of view of the combat athlete, the ritual, dogma,
styles, and symbols found within the world of 'traditional
organized Martial Arts "styles"' serve little
use beyond how they directly translate into his/her own personal
PERFORMANCE. As the athlete grows and punches in plenty
of hours on the timecard of ALIVE training the development of
ones own personal style becomes apparent. It is that personal
style that is in the end true JKD. Anything less then that becomes
meaningless mimicry of another persons level of performance, having
little to no bearing, or reality, within the real world of violent
combat.
Lets compare that with what Maslow says about how
peakers view the ritual, organizations, and dogma of traditional
organized religion:
"From the point of view
of the peak experiencer, each person has his own private religion.
This develops out of his own personal revelations in which are
revealed to him his own private myths and symbols, rituals and
ceremonies. These may be of the profoundest meaning to him personally
and yet completely idiosyncratic, i.e., of no meaning to anyone
else."
From the point of view of a fighter, you can gain
ideas and a certain understanding from watching, listening to,
or reading about other fighters. However, you can never become
a fighter, or gain the ability to actually fight, unless you have
the balls to venture forth and actually fight yourself. This is
true no matter how great a fighter your teacher was, or is. This
is what we mean by ALIVE training. You must experience this aliveness
yourself; you cannot do it vicariously through attachment to another.
The clear, distinct, obvious and common sense comparison
that can made to religion itself should now go unspoken. If you
are still confused read the above paragraph then simply replace
the word fighter with mystic, the word fight with peak experience,
and the word teacher with Church.
In closing let me just remind you of a simple point,
Christ wasn't a Christian, Buddha wasn't a Buddhist, and Mohammed
wasn't a Muslim. These organized creations of other men came about
after their death, and with them came the titles, rituals, and
terminology's which created a separation of dogma. The terminology,
the 'word' printed and bound, became the thing. As Krishnamurti
said, "the name is not the thing". Shakespeare doesn't
exist inside the ink on the page, the soul doesn't exist within
DNA, and god cannot be found in a book.
Titles, terminology and ritual. . .sound familiar
yet?
If you look deeply within all the original teachings
within all the worlds major religions you will find similarities
within all there "truths". Of course this must be so,
truth cannot, does not belong to any nation, people, group, country,
or man. Truth is universal and thus will be found in everything.
| Peakers/
Fighters/ Experiencers
creativity, evolution, light, experience, growth:
ALIVENESS

Taking responsibility for your own life.
Living life on your own terms.
Looking within you for strength.
Looking within for a sense of worth and validation.
Confronting and overcoming fear.
Realizing the inner motivations.
Confronting the Ego.
A death with few regrets, and the Knowledge of true love,
beauty, triumphs, and humanity
|
Non
peakers/ practitioners/ critics
entropy, death, darkness, reification:
DEAD PATTERNS

Avoiding personal responsibility.
Following another's rules, way.
Looking to others/ groups, for strength.
Looking to others for their opinion of your worth for validation.
Avoiding and living with/in fear.
Repressing the inner motivations.
Hiding from the ego.
Meeting death having lived ones whole life bound by the
same chains of fear. |
- Matt Thornton
Copyright © SBGi. All rights reserved.
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