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The Art of Learning: An Inner Journey to Optimal Performance

By Steven Moody June 9, 2016 Leave a Comment

“A core part of the way I train people is around the interplay of themes or principles and habits.  The habits are what we can actually train…the principles are what we are trying to embody.”
Josh Waitzkin, on The Tim Ferris Show

Art of Learning Waitzkin

When I started writing this blog in 2012, I was mostly driven by my desire to create the sort of resource (map) that was lacking when I started trying to find and then learn a functional approach to Wing Chun.

It’s no secret that many people who have trained in various Wing Chun schools discover their “skills” are not up to handling the sort of attacks they encounter from other fighters using other styles.  I looked for 8 years (because I’m crazy like that) until I found a teacher whose approach to Wing Chun (if you put in the hard work) was capable of handling any comers.

I always knew it existed and I found it and then I wanted to share what I had learned.  I wanted to share the the short-cuts I’d eventually found, and most importantly, the basic ideas.  Ideas are ultimately what make the difference.  As my Sigung says, “An ox works hard all day, but when night comes, he’s still an ox.”  You need the right ideas so you can train smart and not waste your time.

Over the course of writing hundreds of posts, I’ve discovered my “wheelhouse” or place in the Wing Chun community.

My job is to find the best ideas in Wing Chun and the best ideas from outside which can support Wing Chun and present them in a clear and simple fashion.  To put it more bluntly, my job is to separate the “shit from the Shinola” and present my findings.   Like a museum curator, I sift through the vast amount of information and bring only the jewels to your attention.  The real and the true.

The best ideas from outside Wing Chun often come from either other styles (Boxing, BJJ, etc) or the sciences, such as Engineering and Psychology.  They often show up inside books, such as The Art of Learning.

One of the most important skills you have to learn in order to go from beginner to intermediate as a fighter (or anything really) is the intelligent self-assessment combined with goal setting.

josh_training_taichi

You have to check yourself, see where you are, and figure out how to take the next few steps.  This is what my Sifu calls a “training direction.”

“If even for a blink of an eye you can control two of the other guy’s limbs with one of yours, either with angle or timing or some sort of clinch, then the opponent is in grave danger.  The free hand can take him apart.”
Josh Waitzkin

Waitzkin’s book is a chronicle of how he learned to learn.  This is a key concept and deserves emphasis.

The most valuable skill you can possess in the world is to know how to learn.

He goes into great detail examining the skills he developed on his way to becoming first a child prodigy chess player (he was the subject of the film Searching for Bobby Fishcher), then a world class Tai Chi Push Hands fighter (under William Chen), then a black black in Brazilian Ju Jitsu under Marcelo Garcia (considered by many to be one of the best pound for pound submission grapplers in the world, with whom Waitzkin started a BJJ school in New York).

Waitzkin boils his lessons down into principles and methods for going deeper into your art.  His book took me a long time to read, because its deep and very nuanced.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Fighting Books

The Book of Five Rings

By Steven Moody August 10, 2015 Leave a Comment

“Make your fight stance your everyday stance; make your everyday stance your fight stance.”
Miyamoto Mushashi

“Study strategy over the years and achieve the spirit of the warrior. Today is victory over yourself of yesterday; tomorrow is your victory over lesser men.”
Miyamoto Mushashi

“If you wish to control others you must first control yourself”
Miyamoto Mushashi

“You can only fight the way you practice.”
Miyamoto Mushashi

Vagabond“The primary thing when you take a sword in your hands is your intention to cut the enemy, whatever the means. Whenever you parry, hit, spring, strike or touch the enemy’s cutting sword, you must cut the enemy in the same movement. It is essential to attain this. If you think only of hitting, springing, striking or touching the enemy, you will not be able actually to cut him.”
Miyamoto Mushashi

“When you decide to attack, keep calm and dash in quickly, forestalling the enemy…attack with a feeling of constantly crushing the enemy, from first to last.”
Miyamoto Mushashi

The great sword saint of Japan was undefeated in 60 duels, all to the death, the first at age 13.

Author of The Book of Five Rings (Go Rin No Sho), a timeless book on strategy and philosophy.

The epitome of walking the walk.

There are many excellent stories of his life, including his own book (Five Rings), the classic novel, Musashi: An Epic Novel of the Samurai Era, the three 1950s films starring Toshiro Mifune (Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto, Samurai II: Duel at Ichijoji Temple, and Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island), and several manga, including Vagabond.

The main thing I learned from Musashi (and the Hagakure) is the necessity of accepting death as a prerequisite to maintaining clarity in the midst of a life and death struggle.  Can I do it in practice?  This remains to be seen – but I think of it and work on it.  I think of it as walking the razor’s edge, with destruction to the left and right and survival only forward on the slender thread of the blade.

In many ways, its the truth.  While statistically, you will live to be 77, we live in a world ruled by hazard, with a thin veil between our normal world and chaos.  I often think of the Germany of the early 1930s.  They were completely modern (telephones, airplanes, etc) yet within a few years, they veered off into the abyss and if you were the wrong religion or sexual orientation or race, your whole world went veering off the tracks.  People were butchered by the millions, shot in the streets, robbed of everything they had, raped ,experimented on.

One day it was civilization, and a few weeks later, they were in a completely different world with different rules.

And this sort of the thing happens in the world a lot more than you might think.  We’ve been lucky in the US for the last forty years or so.  You might say we haven’t had a war on our soil since the Civil War but regular guys got sent to WW II and Korea and Vietnam and for them, if they ended up on or behind the line. it was pretty much the same.  Murder is OK.  Raping and pillaging are going on.  The rules are swept away.

I think of being a warrior as someone who can land on their feet (as much as its possible) in such a collapse of the ordinary structures of society (even if the lack is only local to that space or moment) and protect yourself and your loved ones.

Of course, one man cannot oppose a country (unless you’re in a movie) but you can do more and have a better chance if you (and your friends) are capable of violence and of the clear thinking under stress that training in violence produces.

But just playing in the shallow end isn’t going to do it; you’ve got to train seriously, with your very serious goals in mind.

 

Filed Under: Fighting Books

The Inner Game of Tennis

By Steven Moody June 10, 2015 Leave a Comment

“How can you be consciously unconscious?…It sounds like a contradiction in terms; yet this state can be achieved.  Perhaps a better way to describe the player who is ‘unconscious’ is by saying that his mind is so concentrated, so focused, that it is still.  It becomes one with what the body is doing, and the unconscious or automatic functions are working without interference from thoughts…The ability to approach this state is the goal of the Inner Game”
W. Timothy Gallwey

“It is the mistrust of [the unconscious body intelligence] which causes both the interference called ‘trying too hard’ and that of too much self-instruction. The first results in using too many muscles, the second in mental distraction and lack of concentration”
W. Timothy Gallwey

The Inner Game of Tennis by W. Timothy GallweyI am currently reading an excellent book called The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance.

One of the things we can do to bring Wing Chun training into the 21st Century is to consider modern sports psychology.

Gallwey’s book (I recently discovered) is a classic in that it was one of the first books (in the West) to discuss the idea that sports performance could be affected by conflicts in the mind of the athlete.

Of course, in the East, it has long been understood that athletes, and in particular, warriors, can only reach the pinnacle of performance when they can reduce the interference of the ego.  Books like The Unfettered Mind: Writings from a Zen Master to a Master Swordsman examine how the warrior can learn to act without thinking, reducing reaction time and allowing the body to move with its own innate wisdom (using grooves of behavior laid down in the many hours of practice).

This is the key point to remember.   They aren’t saying that if you just let go and feel (like in Star Wars) you will have some supernatural ability.  First you train, learning the stance and the movements and doing everything many times.  Then you learn how to get out of your own way and let your body do what it has been taught in the moment.  Because fear and performance anxiety and self-criticism will hamstring your capabilities.

At a crucial point in your development as a fighter, these issues will become the most important, even more important than the physical training.

The book is not long (80 something pages) and here is a nice ten minute summary someone did on Youtube.

Once you learn how to learn, you only have only to discover what is worth learning.
W. Timothy Gallwey

“It is the duty of your opponent to create the greatest possible difficulties for you.”
W. Timothy Gallwey

This is Part 2 of a two part examination of the excellent book, The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance by W. Timothy Gallwey.  The book, written in the 1970s, was an early (Western) examination of the link between meditation and sports performance and a seminal work in the personal development and sports psychology fields.

Of course, I filter everything through Wing Chun!

I often find that I need to learn the same lesson 50 times or 50 different ways before I can get it into my fighting, so I like to study materials outside of Wing Chun, such as the psychology of learning, habit formation, sports physiology, etc.

Many of Gallwey’s points have relevance to us as Wing Chun practitioners (and really, as humans).

Like so much in athletics and fighting specifically, there are lessons that can make you a better athlete, but which bleed over into your regular life.  This is, in fact, the point with much of martial arts training.  You may not be super likely to find yourself in a fight to the death (but it DOES happen!) but you do have to learn to concentrate and deal with stress.

I took a bunch of notes and here a few ideas I marked as relevant along with my application of these ideas to fighting:

Acute awareness of where the racket head is located

One of the things you want to develop as a fighter is a sort of three dimensional picture of the fight.

You need to know where you are and where they are, down to a pretty fine point, and you should always be able to answer the question “can they hit me?”  This is a question of range.  Of course, some people (notably Bruce Lee) are very good as bridging a long distance with footwork.

This why the cops have their 21 Foot Rule.

How do you develop this sense?

Train slow!

Feel your body in motion and pay attention to your own range.  Where does it start and end?

Train in slow motion.  I know, its hard because each training partner will suddenly move faster and you get “hit.”  Who cares!  You have to “learn to lose.”  The goal is the overall goal of getting better, not “scoring points” in this particualr training session.

Compete with yourself, not your training partners.  They will probably not be there when you suddenly need martial skill.

I came very close to moving away from Oakland a while back and I started training differently, as I kept thinking to myself: “What matters is what I can carry away in my mind and body — whether I hit or get hit in any particular moment is of little consequence.”

Rhythm

This is very important for fighting – the making of rhythms for traing and learning how to create broken rhythms and making sure to introduce randomness and to go slow and fast in response to your opponents patterns.

Don’t go “dat da dat da.”

Go “dat dat da da dat dat dat da.”

The Everlasting Now

The fight is always NOW.

Learning to keep the mind in the present takes practice.  Most of us begin by dwelling on our mistakes or taking actions to prevent what we fear (being hit).  We get ahead of ourselves and do the wrong action based on our incorrect prediction of what will happen.

We have to wait and respond to reality.

This keeping the mind in the Now can be trained with more chi sao (guided to work on this issue of developing patience and waiting) or with other types of focused concentration, such as mediation.

Ego Games

It is sometimes difficult to let go of the ego drive when involved in ego defensiveness or one-upsmanship or trying to be the best or whatever.

“The desire to prove oneself competent and worthy of the respect of self and others.”

Other various motivations, such as making friends or building social status.

These sorts of mental approaches to training can result in your “becoming embroiled in an unrealistic chasing of perfection.”

Always compare yourself to yourself, and chase incremental improvements.

Avoid the sort of mindset where “Playing well = winning = being worthy.”

Concentration

He talks about losing concentration by ruminating about the past or speculating in the future.

He describes a circle of awareness with three rings, tightening from outer to inner: Awareness, Attention, Concentration.

Concentration is a point.  Awareness is diffused.

He discusses methods for taking your ego off line to allow your other mind (unconscious) to respond as trained, effortlessly.

His example is focusing on trying to see the seams of the ball.  This concentration distracts the mind from mico-managing the “body.”

What I find works for me (sometimes!) is to focus on waiting.  I resist my urge to rush (to defend or attack) and wait for him to act.  Wing Chun is a second action system.  “He hits first, I hurt him first” as Gary Lam would say.

“Concentration is the supreme art…By learning to concentrate while playing tennis, one develops a skill that can heighten his performance in every other aspect of his life.”

Detachment and concentration.

The second (unconscious) self  (what Galwey calls Self2) is shown through “visualization and felt action, not commands, especially not with emotional force.”

You can’t beat yourself into doing it right.

I have learned it is best to be patient and take the long view, taking on one change at a time.

Have faith in the process and expect results, but be patient.  Relax.

Interestingly, he discusses something I have experienced a little, the idea that this sort of training, of letting go and letting the body do what it knows how to do, is less satisfying to the ego, or consciously controlling mind, which always prefers to make it happen itself.

This results in a progress that is somewhat less satisfying since it isnt the ego satisfaction of forcing the body by will – its more like letting go and letting something outside YOUR control to do it.

It just happens.

Tennis

Filed Under: Fighting Books

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Hi. I'm Steve, a professional researcher. I've studied Chinese martial arts for over 20 years. During that time, I've learned from some of the best teachers in the world (including Greg LeBlanc, Gary Lam, and Bernard Langan). Plus, I've done hundreds of hours of research into fight science. This website contains the best of what I've learned. Contact: steve@snakevscrane.com

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