Bruce Lee

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Zen Subtleties

In a time long past two Zen temples existed not far from each other. Each had a child protégé. In the morning Taowu always went to the market to buy vegetables. Without fail he would meet the other protégé Changkung. It was natural that they would try to best each other.
One day, just as in the past, Taowu left to go to the market. When Chankung saw Taowu he asked, “Where are you going?” Taowu replied, “I’m going wherever my feet go.” Changkung was so surprised by this correct answer that still didn’t tell him anything that he couldn’t come up with any reply. He talked to his Zen master who advised him to follow up Taowu’s reply with: “Suppose you have no feet, then where are you going?” Changkung gleefully imagined Taowu being forced to answer bluntly thereby losing the exchange.
So the next morning, when Taowu was walking past, Changkung asked again, “Where are you going?” This time Taowu replied, “I am going wherever the wind blows.” Once again Taowu couldn’t think of anything to say. He returned to his Master and complained, “I have lost again in the exchange. He did not mention feet, but changed it to wind.” The Master advised him to ask, “If there is no wind, where are you going?” Both Master and student smiled at their clever plan.
The next morning Changkung asked again, “Where are you going?” This time Taowu replied, “I am going to the market.” Surprised, the defeated Taowu and his Master could only look on as Taowu continued on his way.

From this story we see the power of clever, unrehearsed responses. Zen is instinctive and not dependent on logic thinking. Changkung was doomed to defeat as soon as he asked his Master for help. The subtlety of Zen is in the moment! Martial arts also emphasize using your instincts and on-the-spot decisiveness. The forms are just one way to train our muscle memory so when we face a real fight our body can use natural reactions. So just knowing the forms are not the answer. If you just want to use unmodified forms in a real fight you will end up badly surprised and defeated just the same as Changkung.

In Bruce Lee’s book “Jeet Kune Do” (edited by John Little) he talks about stylized form and no form.
“Forms and Katas are not the answer:
I think simply to practice gung fu forms and karate katas is not a good way. Moreover, it wastes time and does not match the actual (fighting) situation. Some people are tall, some are short, some are stout, and some are slim. There are various kinds of people. If all of them learn the same boxing (i.e. martial art) form, then who does it fit?
The highest state is no form:
I think the highest state of martial art, in application, must have no absolute form. And, to tackle pattern A with pattern B may not be absolutely correct. I feel that martial art should not be limited in a circle. That will produce in the students a wrong idea, thinking that a certain pattern will achieve the same result in fighting as in practice” (pg 27-8).

–Danny

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Here is a recent news article:
US Weekly editors decide they’ve had enough of Paris Hilton.
Paris Hilton gets out of jail on Tuesday and she won’t be on the cover of US Weekly on Friday? How, short of the Apocalypse, is this possible? “When it came down to it, the staff and I felt what I believe a lot of people in America are feeling. Which is just enormous Paris fatigue,” US Weekly Editor Janice Min said. As a result, Hilton not only won’t be on the cover, there won’t even be a mention of her in the magazine.
“I don’t think,” Min joked, “we even mention the city of Paris.” That was no easy task, she said, adding US Weekly editors had to comb carefully through every story and every fashion item to make sure there was not an offhand mention of the hotel heiress somewhere.

Common people devote most days of their life chasing fame and gain. Some people will go as far as they can to depart from the mainstream. In their rebellion against orthodoxy they don’t care whether their reputation is good or bad as long as they become well known. This is because most people think that when you are famous you can make a lot of money.

In the Mahayana path of Buddhism, Buddha is discussed as having three different kinds of body:
i. Dharmakaya: The absolute or spiritual body.
ii. Sambhogakaya: The body of bliss; or the functioning glorious body for a Buddha’s own use, or for the spiritual benefit of others.
iii. Nirmanakaya: The body of incarnation; a Buddha’s metamorphic body, which has power to assume any shape to propagate the Truth.
Besides Buddha’s three different kinds of body I think we all have two bodies: physical and spiritual. One day the physical body will die but the spiritual body can affect later generations for many, many years. Your reputation doesn’t just exist when you are alive but persists after you die.

To earn a good reputation you don’t need to be famous. For example, earning a reputation for being “loyal”. By being loyal to your-self, your job, your friends, your family… you don’t need worry whether or not you have a good or bad reputation either alive or dead.

People from every walk of life all have the potential to live on in our hearts i.e. Sakyamuni Buddha, Jesus, Confucius, Einstein, Beethoven, Picasso, Bruce Lee a teacher, a fireman…etc. When we read the story about them, listen to their music or appreciate their ideas…. their spirit is revealed to us. So, sometimes I’m curious about those notorious famous people: do they spend any time thinking about what kind of image they create in people’s hearts or do they just need to be famous?

–Danny

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