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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Wu Wei is not Hedonism

Wu Wei, the Daoist concept of "going with the grain, rolling with the punch, swimming with the current, trimming sails to the wind, taking the tide at its flood, and stooping to conquer"* is easily misunderstood. I guess especially by Westerners, as it originates from a very different culture. I myself feel like I certainly misunderstood this concept in some ways. It's important to note however, that with my interpretation of wu wei, which is about to follow, I do not claim that that is the right way to understand it. It's just how I personally feel about it right now and what I feel I have misunderstood previously. First, let's get an idea of what wu wei is about, so that afterwards it will be clearer what it isn't about.

*Alan Watts in Tao - The Watercourse Way

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Realizing Purposelessness in Martial Arts and in Life

Purposelessness doesn't really sound like anything anybody would want to realize in their lives, does it? Particularly to western ears - I know this because I myself happen to possess a western pair of ears -  the first connotations might be that if there is no purpose in something, it's something useless and terrible which is to be avoided. Further this may lead to accusations of laziness or hedonism because if you do something that has no use you are not productive. Taking a look at the Martial Arts with this in mind, it may seem even wronger. Every move you make in a fight fulfills a purpose and going into a fight with a carefully worked out gameplan has proven to be effective for fighters at all levels, including the highest. Maybe though, just maybe there is something to be learned from accessing a state of purposelessness, at least sometimes.

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Mountain Presence with Nietzsche, Lin-Chi and Conan the Barbarian


Lin-Chi
This text can probably be described as one step further from the last one. In the last text (Let the Thunder Rumble: Natural Movement with Thoreau and Chuang Tzu) I wrote about how moving in accordance with nature, which means constantly adapting, may reduce some of the suffering most of us live through (caused by the refusal to accept nature/change). Going further, it seems to me as if embracing this chaos of change, also makes for a special kind of person. "The torch of chaos and doubt, that's what the sage steers by.", is how the Daoists put it.*