MartialIntent said:
2. A greater knowledge of who you are, what you can do and where you can be is available to you by the physical application of your martial art. But if students don't already know that, who's gonna tell them? Their instructor? Nope... Afraid. Students' conclusion? There is no spirituality in martial arts and we really are punching machines, but hey, we all love a superficial punching machine - *so* easy to train... [devil's advocate]
Respects!
First this does not upset me, but the above quote could be considered insulting.
Second. If you wish to pursue spirituallity in Martial Arts that is fine, I will defend your right to do it. But to maintain that I do not becuae I either am afraid of it or do not understand it by your definition I simply do not agree with.
Pointing a child away from drugs to martial arts is spiritual to him/her, I have no idea. Is it a good thing? By all means YES.
Training to move internal energy to emit fajing, nope..Don’t see spirituallity here. Even though it takes a long time to do and required, surprisingly enough, no punching.
I feel the spirituallity forced on martial arts is ruining them. I have seen many a Tai Chi class degenerate into a Tai Chi mediation/Yoga/self development group and completely leave the martial arts behind, and leave it behind to a point were if you mention it or wish to pursue it you are labeled anti-spiritual, anti-social and/or overly violent. I have heard these Tai Chi practitioners say things like "I don't DO martial arts I DO Tai Chi" as if martial arts were bad. I have had people walk out of Tai Chi classes at the mere mention of Tai Chi and Martial Arts in the same sentence.
If you want western spirituallity study Tai Chi Chih, I have no problem with this what-so-ever. But if I were to walk into one of these classes and tell them they are wrong or afraid of martial arts, that would be just wrong and all would agree. But if someone walks into a martial arts class and start talking about spirituallity and is not get greeted with open arms and acceptance of their way of thinking then those people in that martial arts class are afraid of the truth. I just don’t get the double standard.
From my experience it is not the lack of spirituallity in a Tai Chi class that is the problem it the over abundance of it and the complete refusal of those pursuing Tai Chi for spirituallity to except the fact that it is a martial art. If you want spirituality or to experience an epiphany that is great, I will once again support it. But many of these people look down on simple martial artists as some sort of lesser human. So is there spirituality in arrogance and prejudice?
There is no fear here of spirituallity there is only the feeling of being sick and tired of hearing about it from those that are attempting to force some mystical, spiritual, religion on it were one, for all intensive purposes, may already be there in a way you may just not understand. If you want spirituallity in martial arts I suggest you study where they came from before you impose your brand of spirituallity on it. I personally do not see it as spirituallity, but I am willing to admit knowing what I know about eastern religions that it is very possible that it is there already.
If you do practice internal martial arts there is a WHOLE lot beyond punching and if your art emphasizes punching as the be all end all of the art I suggest you find another teacher. But please do not judge me by your standard. I have done for the most part and the majority of the last 15 years only internal martial arts. And internal martial arts stress development of internal energy and focus, I do not call this spiritual but if you do that is fine. But please do not tell me that I do not understand it or I am afraid of it because I do not agree with your point of view.
MartialIntent said:
W
1. Why, oh why do so many confuse spirituality in the martial arts with religion when spirituality concerns enlightenment and religion is about adherence to doctrine? I say it's because of the eastern traditions - the relentless permeation into our martial consciousness of the images of sages on isolated snowy mountaintops, the inheritance of the notion that we have to be as Bodidharma or Morehei Ueshiba or Mr. goddamn Miyagi to appreciate deeper knowledge through the arts and the notion that spirituality is somehow *beyond* what we as grass-roots martial artists are capable of - who's at fault is irrelevant, this lie has become a truth.
Respects!
These are once again western perceptions of eastern mysticism.
Mr. Miyagi is a character from a movie.
Morehei Ueshiba was the founder of Aikido, which I previously stated a Do is more for self development than combat. This is not to say that an Aikido person is not a force to be reckoned with, quite the contrary they are very good martial artists.
I do not think that a martial artist is not capable of spirituallity, I however do think forcing in upon a martial art where it either does not exist or already may exist in some other fashion you do not understand is wrong.
As for religion and spirituallity, I am willing to accept the fact that you separate them. I however see spirituallity as being spiritual, which to me implies some sort of religious conviction.
Enlightenment, to me, is gained by people that dedicate a lot more to something that studying martial arts. As I previously stated, enlightenment is for those such as Buddha, the Dalai Lama, Zen monks, Taoist monks, etc, not this simple martial artist. I do not consider the term enlightenment one to be taken lightly nor claimed so easily.
These things are a whole lot harder to achieve than most people want to believe.