Sunday, April 23, 2017

The Future of Your Martial Arts - Part 1

The subject has always been a relevant source of discussion, especially since mankind has always had to find ways of defending life, limb and love. Technology creates the method for change. Change allows for technologies to advance. People continue to grow and learn, and so change occurs and technologies adapt for relevance. It holds true in martial arts and in life, in general.

When it comes to fighting, we are either starting it or hoping to end it. No matter the ebbs or even the rhythms of battle, we all aim to come away with as much life as we can hold onto. The wiser of us aim to interact with as little sustained violence as possible. There are several factors, but the most obvious factors include the nature of life being to mature. We get older, in other words. Wisdom should accompany that, but it does not always do so at a pace we can appreciate (in others, most often.) Either way, we all want to finish such interactions, intact.

As we mature, our understanding of the process of fighting changes. As we mature in the arts, in particular, our understanding changes according to what we are able to do. If we are suffering from a life of heavy burdens with the reciprocal badges that come of it (backaches, arthritis, etc.), we quickly begin to understand what adaptation means, internally.

I am privileged to have spent some time conversing with elderly martial artists, over the years, and prior to my own actual progression into becoming a more mature martial artist. I am not quite an elder, yet (to the children, I am probably considered ancient), but I took the wisdom I was given to heart.

The seniors I speak of all had certain things in common. Namely: 1. they all had been practicing and/or teaching martial arts for many years, 2. They had all reached a certain level in their training and understanding of the validity of martial arts, 3. They all appreciated that at some point the physicality would no longer be an advantage they could count on, and 4. They all understood that wisdom would be the best weapon in a fight.

This in mind, I wanted to discuss where we are and where our arts should be heading to. In my next blog (as part of this subject entry), I will go a little further with my thoughts on how I think the martial arts will be proliferated in the near future.



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