Modern Vestments
/Check out this slide show of a new show at the Met in New York.
Here is an image of traditional Daoist Vestments:
Here is an image from the show:
North Star Martial Arts
In depth discussions of internal martial arts, theatricality, and Daoist ritual emptiness. Original martial arts ideas and Daoist education with a sense of humor and intelligence.
Books: TAI CHI, BAGUAZHANG AND THE GOLDEN ELIXIR, Internal Martial Arts Before the Boxer Uprising. By Scott Park Phillips. Paper ($30.00), Digital ($9.99)
Possible Origins, A Cultural History of Chinese Martial Arts, Theater and Religion, (2016) By Scott Park Phillips. Paper ($18.95), Digital ($9.99)
Watch Video: A Cultural History of Tai Chi
New Eastover Workshop, in Eastern Massachusetts, Italy, and France are in the works.
Daodejing Online - Learn Daoist Meditation through studying Daoism’s most sacred text Laozi’s Daodejing. You can join from anywhere in the world, $50. Email me if you are interesting in joining!
Check out this slide show of a new show at the Met in New York.
Here is an image of traditional Daoist Vestments:
Here is an image from the show:
My executive assistant tells me that this sort of blog post I've just written below is very obtuse. She says it is unreasonable to assume that my readers are going to try to connect all these seemingly disparate ideas. Normally the writer does that work. But perhaps readers will be inspired if I say that this type of obtuse post is a new type of puzzle, like one you might find in a daily newspaper, whereby readers have to stop and think about how it is possible that all these things are connected.
_________________
I've written a number of blog posts, and sketched out a few others in the last week, but could someone please explain to me how people finish things when the weather is so nice?
The weather in Boulder, Colorado, keeps trying to suck me away from my work. Fortunately I have my early morning practice/teaching otherwise my guilt level about not getting work done would be off the charts. I am considering becoming a night person and sleeping through the day. I don't want to become a victim of good fortune.
Speaking of being a victim, I found some pants that I really like. I can't even find the exact name (sorry) but they are made by Kuhl and are made out of stretchy material. They are strong and comfortable and you can kick over your head and do the splits in them if you can do those things!
I also wanted to comment on shoes. I'm hard on shoes they tend to get torn up form all sides if I'm doing a full range of training in them. The barefoot shoe movement has been fantastic. I have for years and years been pulling all the junk out of my shoes and trying to find the flattest, toughest, lightest shoes I can. I was very happy with Saucony-Hattori. They are the lightest and most comfortable shoes ever.
But I have also been wearing Merrell's, they aren't quite as comfortable, and they don't fit my feet quite as well as the Sauconys, but they are tougher. They really hold up to a beating. So I have to give it to the Merrell's trail runners. They are a better shoe, if I consider the big three; tough, flat, and light.
The sad part of this story is huge numbers of people have been getting horrid cases of plantar fasciitis. This actually has nothing at all to do with shoes, and everything to do with bad habits and overly enthusiastic marketing. I went into REI about a year ago and the shoe guy was trying to sell me 'barefoot' shoes and was explaining how I need to run on my toes or something. It was obvious he didn't know what he was talking about. It is simply a failure of personal responsibility all around. This is how the fashion goes.
Improvements in society, be they artifice, culture or freedom, can get taken away because people won't take personal responsibility. Usually it is a bit complex, like it is in this case, it is partly the fault of individuals, part marketing, part distributors, partly just problems seeing how changes in artifice, culture or freedom will change behavior.
It looks like the barefoot movement is on the way out because people are getting sued. I'm considering buying a ten year supply because I've been waiting for these shoes for 30 years, and there is a chance they will disappear.
If you missed the controversy about Miss USA Nia Sanchez, you can catch up here. Can I use the word retarded on my blog without offending people? There is actually a movement falsely calling itself feminist that is trying to promote less responsibly for women. It will fail, but it has the support of a lot of government agencies at the moment and a lot of universities too. It can do a lot of damage before it goes down in flames. Let me be clear, if you want personal agency, personal responsibility is non-negotiable. If taking a set of actions has consequences that would be different if you took a different set of actions, you are responsible for that. I mean, you can't have an anvil fall on your head unless you walk under it. Someone might be trying to kill you, that doesn't make you somehow not responsible.
That is the basic philosophy of self-defense. You are the agent of your own freedom. This is a new idea and I am grateful to Miss USA for helping to spread it.
After being on the road for three months and returning to San Francisco for just over a week, I headed up to Leggett California to join my wife Sarah at a Tibetan Buddhist Retreat Center called Rangjung Yeshe Gomde, or just Gomde for short.
Since I’ve gotten here I’ve had some time to work on my book everyday. The retreats here taper off with the end of the September and we are staying around to help run the place for the next three months. Hopefully this will give me a lot of time to write. Lots of people have asked me what I’m writing about so I’ve conjured a proto-title: Obscuring the Martial Arts; how and why the arts have been cut off from their roots and what finding those roots reveals about contemporary practice. It’s a start.
Anyway, Gomde is on the Eel River which is great for swimming this time of year and we have a canoe to paddle about in too. We are sleeping outside in a big tent until things quiet down for the fall. Hopefully by the time the rains start some private indoor space will open up.
In this part of the country you have to really look where you are walking because you might step on a hippy, there are a lot of them up here. I have deep respect for those highly evolved individuals who have developed the ability to manage incompetent people. Blessings.
Besides my usual gongfu practice, writing and helping with whatever needs to get done around here, I’ve been playing my tabla drum and chatting with the Tibetan language experts and various Doctoral candidates in Buddhist studies. Gomde is at the center of a project which is working on translating 84,000 Buddhist texts.
I do plan to write about Tibetan Buddhism a bit. I’m working up to it.
I often find myself, willingly I suppose, in conversations where the notion of martial arts is limited. I'm speaking here about the expectations of whom ever I'm conversing with. If someone where to randomly ask me, "Hey, what do you think martial arts are all about?" I'd be like, "I could easily give you a satisfying definition of all the elements of martial arts in a 22 hour lecture format." And after pointing loosely to the theatrical, the actual fighting skills, the religious, the healing, the asocial, the psycho-social, the sensory-somatic-developmental, the intuitive, the improvisational, the heroic, and of course the hermit-culture ways of thinking about the arts--I might elicit this response, "Oh, you mean, like, martial arts lifestyle! yeah, cool."
Wait a second. Is that what I mean? Not to be confused with self-defense lifestyle, I suppose. Or the tai chi lifestyle.
In any case, it seems really important to get the fashion correct. I wonder about the possible usefulness of leggings, explained here, there may be some health benefits, and I would think that wraps made out of leather, silk and chain might be the next big thing in urban armor. And I came across this umbrella page too, not really my thing but moving in the right direction.
China Beat, the blog, just gave up the scene. The final post was a bit unfocussed, something about Twitter and social networking having made blogging uncool. It hurts a bit. I mean, I don't where we are going! But the idea that I might be a representative of some kind of lifestyle is intriguing.
I keep hearing about people who don't have jobs right now, and I'm thinking, what is a job? Is there such a thing as job lifestyle? Back in June I moved to the Montclair part of Oakland, California. It is like a Daoist paradise up here. The gentle fog floats down in the valleys and all I see is a sea of spiralling mists with scattered trees poking up from the abyss. I can sit out on my luxurious deck and absorb the warm, fresh, quiet air. It's not that I'm consciously avoiding being busy in my languid effortlessly inspirational purple mist, it's just that the rest of the world is doing something important. (Even my wife is doing acupuncture and milking goats.)
The idea of "lifestyle," may trigger a bit of ironic caution in me but it is a potent force none-the-less. I remember living in San Francisco in the 1970's when you couldn't walk anywhere without stepping in dog poo. It was a constant struggle to survive. Perhaps we cursed the dogs, or the dog owners, but there was an inevitably about it. It wasn't until people with a gay lifestyle decided it was cool to pick up dog poo that the average person started to think, "Hey this is a whole group thing we're doing here, we can end this!" And now it's gone. A change in lifestyle, is a change in the social-mind fabric of spatial rightness and wrongness.
So that's what I'm thinking about, I'm thinking about the martial arts lifestyle, how can I make it happen? I'm not sure what the elements are yet, but I'll take a jab at it.
Fashion is big, fashion is communication. People who see us need to know we are living the martial arts lifestyle. A type of loose fitting but strong pants? A hat that can be manipulated for view obscuring, or to draw fire? A "business" knife? A think-twice-about-that pencil? Nearly barefoot shoes? A swagger? Clothing that rips easily? or perhaps indestructible tyvek? Short hair or long? a top knot? Stretchy and tight fitting clothes or loose and flowing? And what kind of bag is best? Is there a martial arts smell? Look, it is already obvious to me when a person has a bit of mojo, if we make it into a recognisable look, how far away could consciousness raising be?
Obviously it isn't just about fashion. It is about practice. And practice is about making time.
Ah time, we all knew it would come to this. Birth on one side, death on the other. I have stumbled into a career of sorts, teaching martial arts. My enthusiasm drives me even more than guilt. I'm like a kid in a candy shop, an archeologist in a tomb, a mountaineer on an ice waterfall! And yet, teaching ain't easy. The world changes around us. I started out as an artist, I did ceramics at the high school of the arts and then I moved into dance. I started thinking pretty early about how I could get the time to be an artist. How I could be free to do whatever I wanted whenever I wanted to do it. In the early 1990's before the Berlin Wall came down, there was a big fuss about the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). People were getting government money to make a type of art that was pretty offensive to a large swath of the tax paying public. There was a lot of protest art being made, in general; I participated in a bunch of "no limits on what gets funded" performance projects. For instance I danced naked at the LA Arts Festival and the Berkeley Art Museum, did the mud-people thing crawling through the financial district, weird public sex rituals, I'll spare you the details. Fun stuff, inspired movement, iconic imagery, heck I don't know, whatever; but I came out of it thinking, "You know, I don't really see why people should pay for me to dance naked if they don't want to." See I'm all for self expression, and breaking boundaries, and cutting edge, and protest, and offending the freaking pants off of people, but it just doesn't follow that government should be leveraged to that effect. Some people argue that controversial protest art wouldn't get made if the government didn't fund it. (Cricket sounds.)
So to make a long story short, if you want to practice, and have a martial arts lifestyle, you've got to get your money-time-eat-sleep-love-matrix in order. Most people think they can show up to a martial arts class and just start learning martial arts. But it doesn't work that way. This is where I have to admit I have often failed my students. The students who figure out how to practice on their own, usually have had some experience overcoming a profound obstacle to draw on. The practice-every-day model that most music teachers try to instill is a good place to start, so is the meditate-for-an-hour-without-fail gig American Buddhists have going. One would think that all the discipline we encounter in the world of sports and athletics would translate to a practice, but unfortunately these people are often motivated by a team, and even when they are deeply self-motivated they are often so aggressively goal oriented that the idea of practicing without a goal is too much of a leap. The other problem with people who already have lots of movement training, dancers included, is that they are going to have to un-learn. Un-learning is identity destroying. To use George Xu's rather crude analogy, you have to un-pack your sausage. Sausage, in this case, being a metaphor for muscles and minds conditioned to move in a certain way.
In this Twitter-text(oid)-chillax moment, private lessons are all the rage. Once upon a time, private students would get a time slot in my week, but now spontaneous flex-time is the norm. Hey, I'm cool with it. I'm thinking of making everything a private lessons. In a way, I'm already doing it. I mean, if you are going to a class, no matter what they call it, it's external martial arts. Internal martial arts is taught one to one, period. Even if I'm teaching a group, the instruction moves around the room, from person to person. This, by the way, is another factor which disorients students who think they are doing exercise. Internal martial arts might make you sweat now and then, but it isn't exercise in the sense of follow me, and now do twenty of these. That's all a head fake. Internal martial arts is about spontaneity and spatial mind flow.
Okay, hold it right there! I'm admitting I'm near the bottom and I don't know where we are going. There are some very accomplished teachers out there who have fallen into traps. Some become bitter, badgering their students for not being smart, or aware, or disciplined enough. Some teachers of the internal martial arts claim enlightenment. Some say you must do it their way! Meaning that they try to make you feel guilty for going on a non-internal hike with your husband over the weekend, or a non-internal swim at the pool. Yikes, it seems like there is this fence we're walking on, to one side it's all head-fakes and curriculum and goals and on the other side it's exclusive fidelity to a teacher's systematic, precious, transcendent ideology.
Hey, at least I know where I'm not going! That's where I got the idea for Martial Arts Cafe! There are no rules yet. If you want to come to a meeting of the Martial Arts Cafe send me an email and I'll let you know when it's happening next. A space to fight, unlearn, drink coffee, and deliberately develop a martial arts lifestyle.
I recently read The Yoga of the Yogi: The Legacy of T. Krishnamacharya, by Kausthub Kesikachar. It's not my intention to review it here, I'm not qualified to comment on his organization of Yogic theory and philosophy. I picked it up to learn more about the founder of modern yoga, who he was, his education, and his training. It does cover that material in a terse way, but as an American reader of history, I would have benefited from a lot more inclusion of historical context and clues about how his relationships to specific people influenced his decisions to pursue knowledge. Anyway please don't take my opinion as a review of the book.
The one thing that really caught my attention was that the author maintains a ritual practice of putting his guru's sandals on his head. He also tells us that the tradition dates all the way back to the time of the Ramayana. He frames this ritual practice around faith and devotion, but he also says that everything can be transmitted this way--meaning that because the practice is pure revelation, it transcends method.
What's that? I can learn Yoga from putting sandals on my head? But who even thinks about questions like this? They just throw these comments away. Even people who do the sandal practice just talk about faith and devotion. Only someone of the highest level would even think of suggesting such a practice.
It just occurred to me that if my students were to put my old shoes on their heads they might learn a lot faster. I have new found respect for Yoga. After 30 years of martial arts practice I understand why and how this works, however; 1) none of my students would do it, 2) if I explained it, none of them would understand it, 3) if by chance they did understand it, I would have to kill them.
Which brings me to another book which I am also not going to review: When the Body Becomes All Eyes: Paradigms, Discourses and Practices of Power in Kalarippayattu, a South Indian Martial Art, by Phillip B. Zarrilli. I believe I wrote a review of this book some time ago and decided not to publish it. The two things that interested me about Zarrilli's work, the theater connection and the China connection, don't get worked out in this text. Too bad. One thing I loved about the book was that he put everything he had to say about "Paradigms and Discourses" in the first chapter and outright tells the readers to skip that chapter unless they are a disembodied head stuck inside an academic box! Yes.
On page 45; "[In] playwright Bhasa's version of Karna's story, Karnabhara, which illustrates the divine gift of power (sakti) which requires no attainment from the practitioner. When a messenger gives Karna Indra's gift of an 'unfailing weapon whose sakti is named Vimala to slay one among the Pandavas', he asks, 'when shall I gain its power (sakti)?' The messenger responds, 'when you take it in [your] mind, you will [immediately] gain its power.'"
What? No hard work? No training? This is correct, this is the highest level. Do you really know what it means to put sandals on your head? Do you really know what it means to put a sword inside your mind?
The senses are our organs of receiving information from ourselves and from the outer world.
Perception is the psycho-physical process of interpreting sensory information. This process begins as potential and develops in response to experience. The dynamics of perception explores how we filter, modify, distort, accept, reject, and use sensory information to bond, defend and learn.
In order to perceive clearly, our attention, concentration, motivation or desire must actively focus us on what it is we are to perceive. This aspect of perceiving, pre-sensory motor focusing, patterns our interpretation of sensory information. Without this active focusing our perception remains poorly organized.
Sensory information comes to us through multiple channels. Touch and movement are the first of the senses to develop. They are registered throughout the whole body and establish the baseline for future perception through the sensory structures of the head: mouth, nose, ears and eyes. Sensory information from these structures is transmitted via the nervous system through cranial and spinal nerves...
[This workshop will explore:]
- The perceptual-response cycle.
- The developmental sequence of the senses and perception.
- The mouth as the first extremity to grasp, release, measure, reach, and withdraw. It sets the foundation for the movement of the extremities (head, tail, hands and feet).
The mouth and nose as the first initiators of movement of the head and spine.
The inner ear as it registers vibration, movement, auditory tone and body postural tone.
- The eyes as they are dependent upon all the previous senses and, the role of the eyes in helping to integrate the other senses into more complex patterns.
Cranial and spinal nerves from a cellular and nervous system perspective.
A place to train and learn about traditional Chinese martial arts, which are a form of religious theater combined with martial skills.