Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
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dokkodo
Warrior:
From the Fred Neff and Bruce Tegner books I studied as a kid in the 70s, to my Judo competitions, military years, karate, taekwondo, and finally settling with Hapkido as my primary martial art, I physically trained and also devoured every text about warriors I could find. Through this training and study, I’ve come to believe that character is the most important element of living as a warrior, more important than the physical skills, more important than weapon skills, and more important than determined discipline. It’s taken many years of study to realize this. When younger, I was most interested in the physical skills. I wanted to be able to place a bullet down range with precise marksmanship; I wanted to physically defeat those I faced in competition or in those ugly circumstances in barrooms and parking lots; I wanted to be able to use gun, knife, stick, or empty hands to defend myself; I wanted the determined discipline to win at all costs. Fortunately, through all the training, another message seeped through and permeated my consciousness and became a central focus of my warrior training. Not to the neglect of my physical training, but as an integral part of my complete warrior training. I’ve come to realize, as many have before me, that character training must accompany the physical training or you only create thugs, scoundrels, and unscrupulous denizens with fighting ability, not warriors. When Musashi wrote “Think lightly of yourself and deeply of the world,” I believe he too, as he aged, came to realize that there were things more important to the warrior than the physical skills he worked so hard in his youth to hone and master. In this precept we see benevolence and the true core of honorable character; selflessness and compassion toward the world. The precept reminds me of the writings of Kumazawa Banzan (1619 – 1691). Kumazawa was around 26 years old at the time of Musashi’s death, and I have no idea if Musashi’s writings were ever read by Kumazawa, as his beliefs seem to come from his study of Confucianism, Shinto mythology, and his experiences in public service. Kumazawa believed in a concept of social service as the foundation of warrior culture, and among his writings, he stated, “A good warrior is always courageous and deeply devoted to the way of the warrior and martial arts; he takes care not to stumble no matter what happens, respects his ruler, pities everyone from his wife and children to the old and young all over the world, and prefers peace in the world from a humane and loving heart.” I believe both men came to realize what most warriors realize as they age, and that is that selflessness and benevolence surpass might and force when one considers those things that are truly important in life. When your world revolves around service and the death of others and the possibility of your own death, you realize your own insignificance. You look for the greater good. This allows you to think lightly of yourself and more deeply of the world. Unfortunately, it is a precept that I believe will be lost with youth and only appreciated and learned by those with a number of years behind them. I especially fear this when I witness the constant bombardment of selfish materialism through every media imaginable. Despite the current narcissistic selfie-stick popular culture, every once in a while I witness a young student following the path of his or her elderly warrior instructor, and I have hope. Download 1.13 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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