The answer is to be happy and at peace isnt it ?
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ULTIMATELY- Why do you do martial arts ?
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Originally posted by HandtoHandOh you mean that Tae Bo video that i like to watch while i'm lounging on the couch, sipping coke, and stuffing myself with popcorn wont burn those calories for me.I guess i'm going to have get rid of all those mean nasty carbs.
Damn stupid Tae Bo. JK
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
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The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
Originally posted by ThisMomentThe answer is to be happy and at peace isnt it ?
What are fifteen and taking some kind of internal art that makes you feel warm and gushy all over? Stop smoking that Chi!
If that's why you take it then there's nothing wrong with that, I guess, but grow up.
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
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The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
Originally posted by HandtoHandOh you mean that Tae Bo video that i like to watch while i'm lounging on the couch, sipping coke, and stuffing myself with popcorn wont burn those calories for me.I guess i'm going to have get rid of all those mean nasty carbs. Damn stupid Tae Bo. JK
Comment
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
-
The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
Okay I'll tell you.
I have studied Martial arts since 1977 in one form or another. Unfortunately most of that time has been spent in traditional MAs. My journey through the martial arts has had a lot of ups and downs and changes.
My goals in Martial arts when I first started were to impress my friends and to stop kids from bullying me in school. My goals rapidly changed when I discovered tournaments, and from there they changed again to ring fighting, then to gaining culture experiences, now my goals have changed again towards reality based self-defense.
I still have fun sparring and it also keeps me in shape but my true intrest is in street combat and finding the truth about what strategies, tactics and techniques work and which don't!
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Registered User
- Mar 2004
- 126
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The greatest real advantage is an apparent disadvantage.
"The hard and strong will fall. The soft and weak will overcome." ~Tao Te Ching~
"You mean you'll put down your rock, and I'll put down my sword and we'll try and kill each other like civilized people?" ~Princess Bride~
Originally posted by ThisMomentThe answer is to be happy and at peace isnt it ?
1) Sword in Hand: the stage of physical training that taps the potential of your body and teaches you techniques.
2) Sword in Heart: the stage of mental training that taps the potential of your mind and fighting spirit.
3) Sword in niether Hand nor Heart: the stage of spiritual actualization where you are in harmony with the world around you and are filled with inner peace/happiness.
Martial Arts is such a huge subject with so many options, that you can ask ten people why they take it and they'll give you 25 different answers. Some train to be in good shape, to fight in tournaments, to defend themselves in the street, to protect their loved ones... but what do warriors do in times of peace? Sure, the primary goal of a martial art is effectiveness in combat, but a true art is so much more than just that. The most renowned ancient warriors of China were also poets, writers, artists, healers, philosophers, and monks - complete human beings! They sought the link between mind and body, enlightenment through self-mastery, and the direct experience of their spirituality through the application of their techniques. They learned to fight so that they wouldn't have to kill (if at all possible).
That is why Martial Arts to me is not something that you learn for a year to kick the local bully's ass, but a long-term commitment, the benefits of which find their way into each and every aspect of your life. Those arts that are quick to learn and simple to apply might be great for short-term goals, but odds are they will not bestow the full range of benefits that the arts with the slower learning curve have to offer in the long run. Because those arts don't only train to fight, they also train to become better people. Self-defense in that case is more of a by-product of all that that comes after many years of dedicated training and meditation.
Of course, I fully realize that is a luxury few can afford. I also realize that a large fraction of this board disagrees with what I said. That's too bad... to each their own *shrug*
Comment
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
-
The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
Originally posted by MulanWell, to me Martial Arts is best summarized by its 3 stages... for sake of quoting, the stages of swordmanship:
1) Sword in Hand: the stage of physical training that taps the potential of your body and teaches you techniques.
2) Sword in Heart: the stage of mental training that taps the potential of your mind and fighting spirit.
3) Sword in niether Hand nor Heart: the stage of spiritual actualization where you are in harmony with the world around you and are filled with inner peace/happiness.
Martial Arts is such a huge subject with so many options, that you can ask ten people why they take it and they'll give you 25 different answers. Some train to be in good shape, to fight in tournaments, to defend themselves in the street, to protect their loved ones... but what do warriors do in times of peace? Sure, the primary goal of a martial art is effectiveness in combat, but a true art is so much more than just that. The most renowned ancient warriors of China were also poets, writers, artists, healers, philosophers, and monks - complete human beings! They sought the link between mind and body, enlightenment through self-mastery, and the direct experience of their spirituality through the application of their techniques. They learned to fight so that they wouldn't have to kill (if at all possible).
That is why Martial Arts to me is not something that you learn for a year to kick the local bully's ass, but a long-term commitment, the benefits of which find their way into each and every aspect of your life. Those arts that are quick to learn and simple to apply might be great for short-term goals, but odds are they will not bestow the full range of benefits that the arts with the slower learning curve have to offer in the long run. Because those arts don't only train to fight, they also train to become better people. Self-defense in that case is more of a by-product of all that that comes after many years of dedicated training and meditation.
Of course, I fully realize that is a luxury few can afford. I also realize that a large fraction of this board disagrees with what I said. That's too bad... to each their own *shrug*
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Originally posted by ThisMomentThe answer is to be happy and at peace isnt it ?
Mike
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