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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Dancing with the Dark Side

Let me continue a bit on the discussion of my last post:

I had an interesting conversation with a member of my group (Kyusho-jitsu Kenkyukai, KJK for short). He was telling me about how troubling an experience it is when you realize that you have both the skills to take a life, and the will necessary to employ those skills. It is the moment when you become the kind of person who is actually capable of killing.

Most of us start martial arts training because of a fantasy about martial arts. We imagine we are going to learn what the movie ratings people call "stylized violence." Stylized violence is noble, fair, cool, exciting, even fun. Real violence is messy and brutal. At some point, the true martial artist must come to grips with this messy, brutal reality. I call this "dancing with the dark side."

In order to be true martial artists, we must accept violence, accept that we are studying methods whose purpose is ultimately the harm of other human beings, accept that we have the capacity to cause such harm.

This applies even to our training. To do a pressure point knock out, one has to accept that – safe as they are to perform – our training partners might be injured. And, when we practice the more dangerous techniques (toate-no-waza being among the more dangerous) we have to accept that someone might be hurt, and be willing for our training partners to suffer harm at our hands.

This is a difficult step in the development of a martial artist. It involves finding a way to accept violence, finding the capacity to commit violence, finding the willingness to act violently, and finding the ability to control that violence. It means learning how to resolve the warrior's contradiction – to be able to kill when necessary without becoming a mere killer, to be able to cause injury to others while maintaining the strength of character to never cause such injury unless it is absolutely necessary and right. It is brutal power coupled with moral control, and it is a difficult task to master.

Now, most people who practice a martial art never face this challenge. They practice their fantasy of stylized violence, imagining confrontations which result in winning without any harm, and without feelings of sorrow, or regret on their part. They imagine victory without cost, victory which results in everyone becoming friends and drinking tea together. And maybe that is fine for them, but I practice a classical art – tode-jitsu – an art which is about the reality of conflict and the desire to somehow survive such a reality with one's life and character intact. I practice an art which is, at its heart, about dancing with the dark side.


Thanks for reading.


Now, go train!


Christ Thomas

3 comments:

  1. I'm reminded of Stephen R. Donaldson "Thomas Covenant Chronicles":
    "Do not hurt when holding is enough;
    Do not wound when hurting is enough;
    Do not maim when wounding is enough;
    Do not kill when maiming is enough;
    The greatest warrior is he who does not need to kill."

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  2. Good reference, April, I totally agree.

    I would add this to Donaldson's words
    Do not hesitate to kill when killing is required;
    Do not hesitate to maim when maiming is required
    Do not hesitate to wound when wounding is required;
    Do not hesitate to hurt when hurting is required;
    Do not hesitate to hold when holding is required.

    This is a secret of the greatest warrior, because the one who does not hesitate to hold will make hurting – and the rest – unnecessary.

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  3. A warrior friend/teacher of mine once told me when I asked this very question and I paraphrase:

    'We enter into the training of War to better understand the complexities of Peace'

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