Zen http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/ en Zen is Meditation http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/zen_is_meditation <article data-history-node-id="57" role="article" class="contextual-region node node--type-article node--promoted node--view-mode-teaser clearfix" about="/zen_is_meditation" typeof="sioc:Item foaf:Document"> <h2> <a href="/zen_is_meditation" rel="bookmark"><span property="dc:title">Zen is Meditation</span> </a> </h2> <div data-contextual-id="node:node=57:changed=1480647298&amp;langcode=en" data-contextual-token="Il2-GMGDoy10NFraW35Pvm4T74FN3XwBPnesnfT8ZuU"></div> <span property="dc:title" content="Zen is Meditation" class="hidden"></span> <span property="sioc:num_replies" datatype="xsd:integer" class="hidden"></span> <footer> <div class="meta"> <strong>Posted on:</strong> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-09-10T20:42:20+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime">Sat, 09/10/2016 - 16:42</span> <strong>By:</strong> <span rel="sioc:has_creator"><span lang="" about="/users/tom_swiss" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="">Tom Swiss</span></span> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-09-10T20:42:20+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime" class="hidden"></span> </div> </footer> <div> <div> <img rel="og:image rdfs:seeAlso" src="/sites/skyhandroad.com/files/field/image/670px-Kanji_zen.jpg" width="670" height="600" alt="" title="&quot;Zen&quot;: caligraphy by Galagorn, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kanji_zen.jpg" typeof="foaf:Image" /> </div> <div property="content:encoded"><p>An old friend with whom I started my karate training many years ago recently contacted me on Facebook to ask about the actual definition of Zen. So I thought that it might be useful to review it for my current students.</p> <p>The simple answer is that “Zen” is how the Japanese pronounced the Chinese word “Ch’an”. That was short for “Ch’anna”, which was how the Chinese pronounced the Sanskrit “dhyana”, which means “meditation”. </p></div> <div class="field field--name-field-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-above clearfix"> <label class="field__label">Tags</label> <ul class="links inline"> <li><a href="/tags/zen" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Zen</a></li> </ul> </div> <ul class="links inline"><li class="node-readmore"><a href="/zen_is_meditation" rel="tag" title="Zen is Meditation" hreflang="und">Read more<span class="visually-hidden"> about Zen is Meditation</span></a></li><li class="comment-add"><a href="/zen_is_meditation#comment-form" title="Share your thoughts and opinions." hreflang="und">Add new comment</a></li></ul> </div> </article> Sat, 10 Sep 2016 20:42:20 +0000 Tom Swiss 57 at http://skyhandroad.com Training Paradoxes http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/training_paradoxes <article data-history-node-id="55" role="article" class="contextual-region node node--type-article node--promoted node--view-mode-teaser clearfix" about="/training_paradoxes" typeof="sioc:Item foaf:Document"> <h2> <a href="/training_paradoxes" rel="bookmark"><span property="dc:title">Training Paradoxes</span> </a> </h2> <div data-contextual-id="node:node=55:changed=1471100849&amp;langcode=en" data-contextual-token="-gSAhVlju5tn0B0c0d_5lMrI-wcwh3DiarzpP0RXEAM"></div> <span property="dc:title" content="Training Paradoxes" class="hidden"></span> <span property="sioc:num_replies" datatype="xsd:integer" class="hidden"></span> <footer> <div class="meta"> <strong>Posted on:</strong> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-08-13T10:00:34+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime">Sat, 08/13/2016 - 06:00</span> <strong>By:</strong> <span rel="sioc:has_creator"><span lang="" about="/users/tom_swiss" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="">Tom Swiss</span></span> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-08-13T10:00:34+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime" class="hidden"></span> </div> </footer> <div> <div> <img rel="og:image rdfs:seeAlso" src="/sites/skyhandroad.com/files/field/image/Impossible_0.png" width="504" height="388" alt="" typeof="foaf:Image" /> </div> <div property="content:encoded"><p>Sometimes in your training you're going to hear contradictory things. Maybe I tell you to do a certain stance one way, and then a few weeks later I tell you to do it a different way, or you go take your promotion test and Sei Shihan Kate tells you something different.</p> <p>Now, sometimes that's because I was just wrong the first time! It does happen.</p> <p>Or sometimes there's more than one way to do something. A few weeks ago we went over two different ways to do ushiro mawashi geri, the back spin kick. So if I like one way and another instructor likes a different way, sometimes that's ok, we could both be right.</p> <p>And sometimes you'll be doing something differently at two different times. So maybe one day I'll tell you to make your jodan uke higher, and another day tell you to not make your jodan uke so high -- maybe it was too low one day and too high the other. Or maybe we're drilling different aspects at different times, so I tell you that you need to kick faster one day, then next week I'm making you do it slowly, to emphasize different parts of the skill.</p> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-above clearfix"> <label class="field__label">Tags</label> <ul class="links inline"> <li><a href="/tags/zen" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Zen</a></li> </ul> </div> <ul class="links inline"><li class="node-readmore"><a href="/training_paradoxes" rel="tag" title="Training Paradoxes" hreflang="und">Read more<span class="visually-hidden"> about Training Paradoxes</span></a></li><li class="comment-add"><a href="/training_paradoxes#comment-form" title="Share your thoughts and opinions." hreflang="und">Add new comment</a></li></ul> </div> </article> Sat, 13 Aug 2016 10:00:34 +0000 Tom Swiss 55 at http://skyhandroad.com Everything Is Contingent http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/everything_is_contingent <article data-history-node-id="54" role="article" class="contextual-region node node--type-article node--promoted node--view-mode-teaser clearfix" about="/everything_is_contingent" typeof="sioc:Item foaf:Document"> <h2> <a href="/everything_is_contingent" rel="bookmark"><span property="dc:title">Everything Is Contingent</span> </a> </h2> <div data-contextual-id="node:node=54:changed=1466658605&amp;langcode=en" data-contextual-token="OhatvXJcKVS9RZq66JFAMw865_v6u8rsOzv49G5TDJA"></div> <span property="dc:title" content="Everything Is Contingent" class="hidden"></span> <span property="sioc:num_replies" datatype="xsd:integer" class="hidden"></span> <footer> <div class="meta"> <strong>Posted on:</strong> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-06-23T04:44:37+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime">Thu, 06/23/2016 - 00:44</span> <strong>By:</strong> <span rel="sioc:has_creator"><span lang="" about="/users/tom_swiss" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="">Tom Swiss</span></span> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2016-06-23T04:44:37+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime" class="hidden"></span> </div> </footer> <div> <div> <img rel="og:image rdfs:seeAlso" src="/sites/skyhandroad.com/files/field/image/600px-Indrasnet.jpg" width="600" height="600" alt="" typeof="foaf:Image" /> </div> <div property="content:encoded"><p>A few weeks ago I attended the 40th anniversary celebration of the World Seido Karate Organization. One evening featured a Seido history roundtable with our founder, Kaicho (Chairman) Tadashi Nakamura and some of his senior students, people who had been there since the start, or nearly so -- or before the start, in some cases, people who had started training with Kaicho Nakamura when he was still part of his old organization, the Kyokushin-kai.</p> <p>One story that came up is a dramatic event that happened shortly after Nakamura left the Kyokushin-kai. His autobiography tells how he was shot, probably by a Mafia hitman -- I've always gotten a bit of a black humor chuckle of the way the book jacket says he was "gunned down in a Manhattan parking lot" in contrast to the way the calm way the story is told in the book, how he and a few students were trying to fix a flat tire on Nakamura's car (in retrospect, an apparent trap) when they heard a loud noise, and he only realized he'd been shot in the leg when he went to chase after the shooter (!) and his leg started to hurt. Fortunately the bullet had passed cleanly through the muscle. Many of us assumed that the shooter had been trying to "kneecap" him, to end his martial arts career with a crippling injury.</p> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-above clearfix"> <label class="field__label">Tags</label> <ul class="links inline"> <li><a href="/tags/seido" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Seido</a></li> <li><a href="/tags/zen" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Zen</a></li> <li><a href="/tags/interbeing" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">interbeing</a></li> </ul> </div> <ul class="links inline"><li class="node-readmore"><a href="/everything_is_contingent" rel="tag" title="Everything Is Contingent" hreflang="und">Read more<span class="visually-hidden"> about Everything Is Contingent</span></a></li><li class="comment-add"><a href="/everything_is_contingent#comment-form" title="Share your thoughts and opinions." hreflang="und">Add new comment</a></li></ul> </div> </article> Thu, 23 Jun 2016 04:44:37 +0000 Tom Swiss 54 at http://skyhandroad.com Don't Follow Your Bliss -- Confront Your Desires http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/dont_follow_your_bliss_confront_your_desires <article data-history-node-id="35" role="article" class="contextual-region node node--type-article node--promoted node--view-mode-teaser clearfix" about="/dont_follow_your_bliss_confront_your_desires" typeof="sioc:Item foaf:Document"> <h2> <a href="/dont_follow_your_bliss_confront_your_desires" rel="bookmark"><span property="dc:title">Don&#039;t Follow Your Bliss -- Confront Your Desires</span> </a> </h2> <div data-contextual-id="node:node=35:changed=1407436373&amp;langcode=en" data-contextual-token="w6Ur9qqujnFOfCw6nmP1m3R2Oea3WHt--GoNn2KVtSQ"></div> <span property="dc:title" content="Don&#039;t Follow Your Bliss -- Confront Your Desires" class="hidden"></span> <span property="sioc:num_replies" datatype="xsd:integer" class="hidden"></span> <footer> <div class="meta"> <strong>Posted on:</strong> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2014-08-07T18:32:53+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime">Thu, 08/07/2014 - 14:32</span> <strong>By:</strong> <span rel="sioc:has_creator"><span lang="" about="/users/tom_swiss" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="">Tom Swiss</span></span> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2014-08-07T18:32:53+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime" class="hidden"></span> </div> </footer> <div> <div property="content:encoded"><p>Over at his blog "Hardcore Zen", Zen teacher (and punk rock bassist) Brad Warner has a very good piece <a href="http://hardcorezen.info/desire-and-happiness/2955">on the Buddhist concept of "desire" as the origin of suffering</a>:</p> <blockquote><p> This is why meditation is such a brilliant solution. It forces us to confront our desires head-on, over and over and over again. When you sit in non-goal-seeking meditation you are forced into direct confrontation with some very basic desires such as the desire to not be sitting there facing a blank wall, the desire to be doing something productive or at least interesting, the desire to not be bored…</p> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-above clearfix"> <label class="field__label">Tags</label> <ul class="links inline"> <li><a href="/tags/zen" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Zen</a></li> </ul> </div> <ul class="links inline"><li class="node-readmore"><a href="/dont_follow_your_bliss_confront_your_desires" rel="tag" title="Don&#039;t Follow Your Bliss -- Confront Your Desires" hreflang="und">Read more<span class="visually-hidden"> about Don&#039;t Follow Your Bliss -- Confront Your Desires</span></a></li><li class="comment-add"><a href="/dont_follow_your_bliss_confront_your_desires#comment-form" title="Share your thoughts and opinions." hreflang="und">Add new comment</a></li></ul> </div> </article> Thu, 07 Aug 2014 18:32:53 +0000 Tom Swiss 35 at http://skyhandroad.com Busted Back to White Belt http://skyhandroad.com/index.php/busted_back_to_white_belt <article data-history-node-id="16" role="article" class="contextual-region node node--type-article node--promoted node--view-mode-teaser clearfix" about="/busted_back_to_white_belt" typeof="sioc:Item foaf:Document"> <h2> <a href="/busted_back_to_white_belt" rel="bookmark"><span property="dc:title">Busted Back to White Belt</span> </a> </h2> <div data-contextual-id="node:node=16:changed=1362618522&amp;langcode=en" data-contextual-token="yH1J6Ck9xSbBQFifiIu4rsfC0IVyRE-MN4D9OjbSxzs"></div> <span property="dc:title" content="Busted Back to White Belt" class="hidden"></span> <span property="sioc:num_replies" datatype="xsd:integer" class="hidden"></span> <footer> <div class="meta"> <strong>Posted on:</strong> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2013-03-06T23:59:46+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime">Wed, 03/06/2013 - 18:59</span> <strong>By:</strong> <span rel="sioc:has_creator"><span lang="" about="/users/tom_swiss" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="">Tom Swiss</span></span> <span property="dc:date dc:created" content="2013-03-06T23:59:46+00:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime" class="hidden"></span> </div> </footer> <div> <div property="content:encoded"><p>For the past few weeks, I've been showing up to my sensei's class in white belt. No, it's not because I committed some great offense and was stripped of rank, nor because she's finally decided that I'm just hopeless on anything more advanced. It's because she's gone through with <a href="http://skyhandroad.com/thoughts_on_rank">her hints from a few months ago and recommended me for promotion</a> to <i>godan</i>, fifth degree black belt. And as part of the <i>dan</i> testing process in Seido Karate, students go back to white belt for a while.</p> <p>The hope is that this will remind us of the importance of <i>shoshin</i>, "beginner's mind". Shoshin is an important idea in both Zen and in the martial arts. The idea was perhaps most famously summarized by the Soto Zen teacher Shunryu Suzuki, who wrote <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen_Mind,_Beginner%27s_Mind">"In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert's there are few."</a> (Suzuki Roshi is not related to D.T. Suzuki, the famous popularizer of Zen.) </p> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-above clearfix"> <label class="field__label">Tags</label> <ul class="links inline"> <li><a href="/tags/shoshin" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">shoshin</a></li> <li><a href="/tags/promotion" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">promotion</a></li> <li><a href="/tags/zen" rel="dc:subject" hreflang="en">Zen</a></li> </ul> </div> <ul class="links inline"><li class="node-readmore"><a href="/busted_back_to_white_belt" rel="tag" title="Busted Back to White Belt" hreflang="und">Read more<span class="visually-hidden"> about Busted Back to White Belt</span></a></li><li class="comment-add"><a href="/busted_back_to_white_belt#comment-form" title="Share your thoughts and opinions." hreflang="und">Add new comment</a></li></ul> </div> </article> Wed, 06 Mar 2013 23:59:46 +0000 Tom Swiss 16 at http://skyhandroad.com