Hi Mel,
 
I want to thank you for your comments on this.  I  have to say that karate does 
seem better suited for males, given the comments here--though I know females  
also  practice this.  Tai Chi seems much gentler--which I like.  Its more 
ballet-like;)  
 
But as someone who has worked with sports psychologists for years, I am struck 
by how much "psychology" is involved in martial arts.  The whole  issue of  
focus and concentration fascinates me.  Being an active person, I get  as much 
or more  benefit from these types of moving meditation, as i do from my sitting 
practice.  It never ceases to amaze me how powerful the mind really is..
 
Thanks!.. ~k~


--- On Thu, 2/24/11, mike brown <[email protected]> wrote:


From: mike brown <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Zen] Martial arts
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, February 24, 2011, 12:29 AM


  





Hi Mel,


Hope you don't mind me making a comment on your post. Whether washng the 
dishes, taking the dog for a walk or performing a mawashi geri (rondhouse 
kick), one should be focusing on what is being done with no thought of a past 
or future result. For example, if I'm practicing strikes I focus on the strike 
'now' - I don't worry about the mistake I just made on the last one or think 
about conserving my energy for the sparring that is coming up next. Likewise, 
being "bored" or thinking about karate's health effects or how it can help in a 
fight are all superfluous to the 'spirit' of karate and budo martial arts.


Mike  




From: Mel <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, 23 February, 2011 15:11:58
Subject: Re: [Zen] Martial arts

  






Hi Kristy, Steve, and all
 
I practise Karate kihon and kata in slow, almost Taichi-like motion. SOME speed 
does pick up as I get warmer, but not that much speed. I think it's great that 
the martial arts are seen as beneficial to one's health. Any talk of health(or 
even PEACE, for that matter) is good. So far so good
 
The thing is that....that particular martial, combative spirit is what gets one 
further. This is not to say that one will survive a short but violent assault 
just because one trains to fight regularly, because one may actually die in an 
encounter no matter how much martial arts training he/she has gone through in 
the past. At my age of 48, I suffer from a variety of health problems. If 
Karate is merely a healthful exercise to me, I'd probably vary my gym 
matters and other regimes over a 12 month period. In other words, I'd save 
myself from boredom through variety
 
With a martial spirit, one works through the boredom. Let's think about it for 
a moment here...how can one be bored when one is doing something that could 
save one's butt(or even life) later on? Even that extra millisecond to take 
somebody down as one goes down could be significant. Basics in my Karate 
practise may bore many, but they helped me pull through some violent encounters 
in the past
 
This martial or combative spirit is like fuel(I say, fat) thrown into the fire, 
and makes all sorts of dojo-kun and lectures on love, peace, and other extras 
insignificant in the face of baseball bats, sharp-edged objects, and so forth. 
A lot of martial artists teach about such love and peace to appease frightened 
policy makers, and the whole population end up forgetting that Karate and other 
combative arts were(and still are) weapons of war. I had never understood why 
people spoke of love and respect through a 'karate life and 
spirituality'(?????), when such statement belong in the realms of religion and 
spirituality. I personally see nothing religious in either breaking a bar-stool 
over a violent psycho's head, or making for that dreadful elbow strike across 
the mandible area. To me, Karate is merely a tool, but a tool of great 
preference
 
Does the above sound harsh? Me? Harsh enough to get me off my lazy butt and go 
to the gym so that my blood sugar, pressure, and cholesterol may lower and 
stabilize....even when all I feel like is staying in bed all day. There is 
nothing martial or combative about laziness. Add Zen or Tao into the mix and 
one may end up with an individual who loses fear of death, or even of life 
itself
 
Buddha be praised
Mel
 

--- On Sun, 20/2/11, Kristy McClain <[email protected]> wrote:




  






Hi Steve,
 
I am learning Tai Chi as part of a mindfulness and extension of a spiritual 
practice.  Question?  Is Tai Chi considered a martial  art like karate, or no?  
Are  karate and  kung fu related?
 
Any tips on how to improve one's focus and concentration while practicing--as a 
beginner?
 
Thanks..k


 


  



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