This page is dedicated to Zen, Martial Arts, and the many wonderful people I have met in the Dojo: OSU!
I
have started training Shotokan Karate at the end of 1978, in
I
am training presently with Western
Washington Shotokan Club ISKF/JKA, Chief Instructor Sensei Cathy Cline,
7th Dan.
Waves give vital energy to the
moon.”
Zenrin Kushu
Zen
begins at the point where there is nothing further to seek, nothing to be
gained. For all ideas of self-improvement and of becoming or getting something
in the future relate solely to our abstract image of ourselves.
The
difficulty of Zen is to shift one’s attention from the abstract to the
concrete, from the symbolic self to one’s true nature. The illusion of the
split comes from the mind’s attempt to be both itself and its idea of itself,
from a fatal confusion of fact without a symbol. We have to act on any level
whatsoever, physical or psychic, without trying at the same moment to observe
and check the action from outside Our decision upon the conventional level must
be supported by the conviction that whatever we do, and whatever “happens” to
us, is ultimately “right”. In other words, we must enter into it without
“second thought”, regret, hesitancy, doubt, or self-recrimination.
We
must concentrate on Zen practice without wasting time, thinking that there is
only this day and this hour. After that it becomes truly easy. We must forget
about the good and bad of our nature, the strength or weakness of our power.
Zen
is a liberation from time. For if we open our eyes and see clearly, it becomes
obvious that there is no other time than this instant, and that the past and
the future are abstractions without any concrete reality. There is only this now.
It does not come from anywhere; it is not going anywhere. It is not permanent,
but it is not impermanent. Though moving, it is always still. When we turn
round to find the self which knows this moment, we find that it has vanished
like the past.
Lovret F.J. The Way and the Power:
Secrets of Japanese Stategy, Paladin Press,
Westbrook A., Ratti O. Aikido and the
Dynamic Sphere, Charles E. Tuttle Company,
Sugiyama S. 25 Shoto-kan KATA, Published
by the author,
Nishiyama H. Karate: The Art of Empty
Hand Fighting, Charles E. Turttle Company,
Funakoshi G. Karate-Do Kyohan – The
Master Text, Kodansha, 1973.