Conquering Violence

Photo by Toni Josephson

Each day there are relentless images of graphic violence all over the web and T.V. news. Street brawls. War. Terrorism.

Hell, the world is a dangerous place. This ubiquitous violence may fuel martial artists to intensify training. Kick harder. Punch faster. “Martial” takes precedence over “art”. Traditional techniques are scrutinized for modern realism; stylized forms are downplayed. The Evolving Martial Artist strives to master reality fighting to keep our self-defense honest. Yet there is more to our path than justifying our immersion in ritual violence in the name of self-protection.

For an Evolving Martial Artist – warrior/scholar/monk – fighting is impetus to contemplate the nature of violence, it’s origins. Martial arts empowers us with “what if scenarios” but ultimately seeks to quell the root causes of violence.  Of course there are external personal, political and social causes.  But awakening to the spiritual philosophy inherent to martial arts we realize: we must begin with ourselves.

“Know yourself,” Sun Tzu, the military philosopher, taught as did Buddha and Socrates. Along the martial path we, hopefully, transform into inner warrior monks who dare to confront our own hidden violence that lurks deep within.  Through meditation we can discover negative unconscious motivations that unconsciously get us into trouble. The challenge of the spiritual side of the martial path that Bodhidharma pointed to use meditation to help tame our inner foes and discover an inner peace. Only then can we truly embody the wisdom of the martial arts saying that teaches: we practice fighting so we do not have to fight.

Keep training and meditating.

Lawrence Tan

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Comments (2)

Dan CosgroveOctober 7th, 2009 at 3:05 pm

I’ve found that studying martial arts allows me the humility to walk away from a fight, which ends up being more effective than self-defense.

People need to stop watching UFC and get back to the roots.

Nice piece!

tandaoOctober 7th, 2009 at 3:43 pm

We agree with you, Dan.

MMA and film fighting fantasy have value as sport and entertainment but dangerously distorts the true meaning of martial arts. Both neglect the roots, as you say, that deals with self discovery, self development and ,ideally, spiritual self transformation.

Thanks for your passionate writing on MA.

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