Self Defence


 

The very nature of science is that most of our current ideas are wrong, irrelevant or unimportant. Science progresses by demonstrating that our hypotheses and conjecture need to be overhauled, thrown out or modified.

(David Suzuki) 

Assumptions

Our lives are based on certain assumptions. We take things for granted without proof. We treat things as a given.
Ideas such as 'religion' and 'monarchy' are widely accepted. And unchallenged.

There is a certain arrogance implicit within an assumption; the idea is treated as reality, regardless of fact.
People often believe that they have a right to do things a certain way. They assume authority.

They sometimes think that their way is the only way to do things.

Consider 'Windows' on your computer...
There are different ways to open and close a window. Different ways to save data.
Each of these methods is equally valid.
We cannot assert that there is just one correct approach. We would be incorrect to make such an assumption.

Traditions

A tradition involves the passing-down of information from one generation to the next.
The knowledge is treated as a time-honoured, unchanging standard.
With tai chi, people have passed-down the art for centuries. But it has not remained static.
To a certain extent, it has evolved with the times.

Is this a bad thing?

Consider: if a 21st Century person was given a 16th Century martial art, would it have any real world value?
If you are honest, some aspects of the art would still be viable, but other material may be hopelessly antiquated.


Essence

There are certain conventions used in tai chi: softness, connection, gravity, not forcing, slowness, composure and energy.
These qualities are what make the art 'tai chi'.

Tai chi is not just the form.
After all, there are so many forms and they are all called 'tai chi'.
Some are a viable method for training internal strength, whilst others are merely dance.

The art resides in how you do the material, why you do it a certain way and what you choose to do with it.

In the tradition of tai chi, it is important that the essence of the art is passed-down.
Transmitting an empty form from generation to generation is pointless.


Contradiction

Some beginners are interested in performance art and competitions.
These approaches violate the taoist precepts upon which tai chi was built.

If we are going to follow the taoist approach to softness, smoothness, non-aggression and conflict, we cannot ignore their condemnation of competition.
Competition involves resistance, contest, rivalry, struggle, force, wilfulness and end-gaining.

If you want the art to work, you cannot seek to be soft on the one hand and then compete on the other.
There is a contradiction in that approach.
How you are must permeate all aspects of your art and your life. You do not have "one face for giving and one face for taking".


Familiar practices

People follow conventions because they are familiar. They see no need to 're-invent the wheel'.
However, not everything we have in modern society is viable.
Look around you.

The legal system, education, politics... does any of it really work? Be honest.
Computers are useful. But are they really all that good? Have we achieved the paperless office?
Do they really save us any time?

There may be an accepted way of doing things, but that is not the only way.

If you are smart, you will consider the nature, character, purpose, essence of what you are undertaking.
You will re-assess its validity.
Explore options, variables, alternatives. Adapt, change, improvise.
Take nothing for granted. Re-invent the wheel. Only this time, improve it.




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