Fu_Bag said:
Hi All,
I was wondering if people would like to share their thoughts regarding the essence of martial arts? What do you believe the universal truth of martial arts is? Is there a universal truth? What do you believe the essence of your art to be?
I'm not sure I can give a complete answer to this one... I have a personal understanding, but I'm not sure I can verbalize it properly, but I'll try.
I don't think that there is a single universal truth of martial arts - but I think that martial arts can help people find their own personal truth. Partly, I think that this is because anyone who truly understands martial arts understands that being a martial artist is about change - about improving one's skills and understanding on a continuing basis. What this looks like, however, varies widely from person to person, and changes over time for each person. When I was a white belt, change was constant, largely physical, and easy to see... when I was a green belt, and started to learn more of the theory in addition to the movements, I thought I'd reached a level I couldn't go beyond... when I was a 1st Dan BB, I thought I had it made - I'd reached that magical black belt rank where everything would be made clear... which idea lasted about 3 seconds into the next class I attended. Now, as a 4th Dan, I know how little I know, especially compared to the "expert" label that encompasses 4th-6th Dan in ITF TKD. The essence of martial arts is change - and understanding that that change is ultimately individual.
To get back to the question of the
essence of the martial arts, along with my own personal conception of individuality as the heart of martial arts, self-improvement - physical, mental, emotional, moral and spiritual (if all those fit for you) - is the key. The particular art doesn't matter as long as it meets the needs of the practitioner. I suspect that, at the time I started TKD, nearly any art with the combination of mental and physical discipline I found in TKD, and an instructor sufficiently aware of individual differences and needs of the students, would have struck a similar chord. Certainly, in my research into other arts (which is not nearly as extensive as I'd like it to be... but I'm working on it) I see similarities at the very basic levels - one must learn to control one's body, mind, and emotions, one must strive to reach external standards as well as improve against a personal standard, one must use the skills one is taught responsibly, one must pass those skills on to others, and so on - the difference is in the details - terminology, techniques, the types of techniques focused on (e.g. grappling, striking, weapons or none, etc.) - not superficial, certainly, but still outside the core concepts that all arts seem to have in common.
Fu_Bag said:
How many arts would one have to practice in order to find the universal truth? Could you practice one but study the essence of many? I don't think I'd have a long enough life-span to try to train in every martial art in order to find the essence of it. That's why, if anyone is interested, I thought it might be interesting to share these types of ideas so that we can all, possibly, benefit from the experience of each other.
Honestly, I'm such a meathead that I don't know if I've found the essence of anything yet. One thing I remember reading recently is the idea that you can find the essence of all Ways if you are able to master one. What do you think about that?
I think it depends on the person, what s/he gets out of the particular art(s) studied, understanding of the underlying, core concepts - which may take one art and may take 20, depending on the person and how ready s/he is to understand those underlying concepts at the time they are studied. The free communication that boards such as this one offer are invaluable in comparing ideas that, for too many years, were often considered deep, dark secrets that could not be shared with "outsiders", whether those "outsiders" were from another instructor, facility, organization, style, country, etc.