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Philosophy of Mt View Aiki Kai

Mountain View Aiki Joint training in India 2014

Mountain View Aiki Joint training in India 2014

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10152190989716034.1073741855.134558206033&type=1 Location - Bangalore, India
Dates - Last week of June 2014
Dojos represented - Bangalore, Mumbai, California and Texas

It was amazing to work pretty much in the same dojo floor where many of us got our initial grades and remember old time stories. We (Ramesh and Mahipal) still constantly say "Damo Arigato Sastri Sensei" for the gift of laying that strong foundation.in that spirit two branches of Kaze Arashi Ryu - Wind Storm Aiki Jujutsu (Kaze Arashi Ryu) - Bangalore, Indiaand Mountain View Aikijujutsu got together for a few sessions of both private classes and group classes in Bangalore recently. Two branches of the same tree - a foundation laid byClaire Sastri / Srinivasan Sastri Sensei, Menkyo Kaiden, head of the Indian League and Sr. Advisor to the Kita Yama Dojo.

Sensei Ramesh Rao flew down from Mumbai to spend time with the MVAK students ( Jeevan C. Gowda and Allan Johnson) and Mahipal Lunia Sensei. Ramesh and Mahipal Senseis spent time alone working on Kaiden level forms and worked in group settings with others.

In group settings advanced Oku Iri forms were shown by Ramesh Sensei to the visiting students, while Mahipal Sensei worked with the Bangalore students on Yawara Holds and Self Defense principles. Later Mahipal Sensei also shared knife work and advanced Taisabaki with the MVAK students privately.

Lastly some older students visited with us privately, and were shown some kokyu ho methods.

Thanks Wind Storm India for hosting us and allowing us to share some of our methods too.

MVAK/Mahipal Lunia Sensei

The Poetics of A Martial Education - Training Under Sastri Sensei

The Poetics of A Martial Education - Training Under Sastri Sensei

The Poetics[i] of A Martial Education

His knife sneakily came in from behind the shield hand, and made its way to my neck.  Instinctively, I rolled into the #6 taisabaki[ii], “adhering to the weapon hand” while moving the body to be “where the knife is not” and applied a lock on his arm. We both laughed as he then executed a rather elegant internal “turning palm change” and was out of the kansentsu waza, and thrust the knife with the other hand towards my belly. I slammed this knife hand while dropping my body weight to the ground: the “marriage to gravity[iii]” saved the day again.

We continued this for the next 45 minutes. Think of this as counter for counter[iv] and sticky weapons[v] put together.  He brings 25 odd years of training in Kuntao[vi] and Silat[vii] where I usually rely on my training in KAR Aikijujutsu. We ended our session as always with some green tea or chai/Indian Tea and discussions.

Whenever our schedules permit, my friend, a very high ranking member in another school, and I  enjoy comparing our concepts and techniques as well as figuring out solutions to the challenges posed by each other’s systems. We do this with the hope of discovering what works and what are the problem areas to work on. Over our chais he asked, “where did you learn those counters, I have never seen anyone do those things in my 25 years in martial arts!”

“From many places, however I predominantly credit my learning in KAR under Sastri Sensei and Vilaire Sensei for most of what you see me do plus some very personal expressions. And it was the time with Sastri Sensei in particular that opened my mind to what is possible and what one can accomplish. He put the art in the martial for me and he has always been more than a martial arts trainer to me- he is  a Sensei in the truest sense of the word.”

“It’s rare to find a true teacher of art. Tell me more, what was it like learning from Sastri Sensei?”

It’s a question I get often, and can’t answer often enough. Today I decided to try and unravel that question. “I don’t know where to start, it has always been intense. We trained 5-6 days a week in the heyday, and the learning went on for 90 minutes on the mat and equally long off the mat.”

We laughed as my friend added, “Same with my Master, these guys love to teach and talk, don’t they?”

I sipped the delicious ginger chai. “I think you and I are guilty of that now, yes, we do love to discuss and philosophize about the arts. Anyways training on the basics was constant, and we did many variations/henka to the same technique. Sensei would never do the same technique twice in a row. Initially it was overwhelming, until the pattern began to reveal itself, to emerge…and that pattern was natural principles.  The variations and escapes always blew me away and it was much later in the training that I realized that Sastri Sensei would slip in Menkyo, or as you would call Master, level techniques/concepts into our learning regularly. This only became obvious to me when the formal training in Menkyo began many years later, and many of the moves/counters were already self-evident.”

He was listening intently, fascinated with both KAR and my time with Sastri Sensei in particular. He too has trained in “the old ways” under a very well-known tough master. Since his graduation he has been exploring his own expression in the art. He continued, “but that can’t be it, it’s not just showing you advanced techniques early… what are you holding back?”

“Not holding back, I just don’t know how to frame it yet. The physical aspect is the easy part. If one sticks to it, most can at least imitate the moves and do it reasonably well. Sensei called that mode of learning Monkey See, Monkey Do.” We both laughed and continued sipping the tea. “However his greatest gift was opening the minds of those students who paid attention. To me, being with him was always about being cracked open to Wonder, Magick and Possibility. “

“Now we are getting somewhere Mahi, tell me about the opening of the mind. And how are you using the term mind – the somewhat limited western way or the more encompassing eastern way?”  He put his cup down, clasped his hands together and leaned in to listen with a sense of fierce curiosity.

I pondered a little, as sometimes English is a hard language for me to explain the more “subtle felt aspects” of the arts. “I think of those two minds as a continuum. Let me explain. Sastri Sensei introduced all of his students to NLP in the early 1990s. Not all followed, a few did while I completely embraced it, as evident even today. The brain based pursuit of elite performance was an eye opener. For the first time, I started making the transition from pure brawn, to thinking about things…even though it was at that time in pursuit of even more brawn.” We both laughed knowingly.

He jumped in, “You think about things? Surely you are mistaken.”

We continued laughing hard, and everyone in the café turned to look at two sweaty guys with sticks and knives on their sides, talking about weird things. I continued, “So I devoured the whole NLP thing, especially the modeling aspects of it, as I wanted to move like my Sensei did. And I would take diligent notes from his lessons and build mental models to test. This was the opening of the small mind – the brain, or the western mind as you say. However the real lessons were always about how we become better human beings. He demonstrated the path, with integrity and character. He is one of the most moral/ethical men I have the privilege of knowing.  When he said something, I knew he meant every word of it. And his love for the art, for his students and for his friends was unbounded. Neither money nor fame got in the way his martial arts.”

We almost had finished our chai, and ordered round two. I confessed, “you know, I f****d up quite a bit. In hindsight, my immature behavior back in the early days made enemies both in the dojo and outside. At one point I almost quit, primarily because of my ego. However, I owned up to my faults and apologized to him in person. He was compassionate and he warmly forgave and forgot everything. I must add, that I know there were times when he was angry at my behavior but he never once stopped teaching or leading by example.  This was the beginning of the opening to the bigger mind, the way we Easterners think about it.”

The next cup of chai was here, and the sweet smell of Darjeeling tea and ginger just warmed up the environment even more. My friend continued, “Yes, the bigger mind is all encompassing, and  the heart is the way. Western Science is just waking up to the wisdom of the heart – especially how it has its own grey matter if you will, and a decision center. You are familiar with the work of HeartMath[viii] of course. But, continue, I am curious about the training.”

As the sweet gingerly taste and rich conversation woke me up even more I continued, “yes that’s the bigger mind, opening of the heart. And what has to be learned is the courage to follow its impulses. I think that’s what most of the true meat is, it’s the place where training gives way to an education. Come one, if you are training for 20 odd years, it’s NOT to deal with a punch, lock, knife stab or a simple squabble. To walk on one’s path, to listen to one’s heart, and follow those impulses, (many of which may seem irrational) require courage. That ultimately is the training I believe he imparted on the handful who stuck through it.”

“ He laid the path from defending the physical self, to defending one’s mind to defending ones expression.  I know you, like me,  see the oneness  of the universe. And that journey is one we go on ALONE. However the right teachers prepare you for it.  Discipline the body, teach the mind to discern and invoke courage to follow one’s heart and passions. That in my opinion encapsulates my education under Sastri Sensei.  From there you do have to walk alone.  Martial Arts is the metaphor, if you will, that we used and still do. It’s our love. It’s our language. It’s our expression. But the target is elsewhere… it’s not just in the fighting.”

With that I felt done, complete. I had never quite articulated the training quite like this.

We finished our tea, and he paid. We started walking out to our cars, and figuring out our next play date. He continued, “Your language was interesting. While most talk about learning techniques and esoteric secrets that only they have, you seem to focus on a different plane.”

“Yes. I think good teachers educate you, teach you how to draw from within. They teach you to learn for & from yourself.  And that is what he taught me how to do. He used to always tell us – do not be my vomit.  Find out for yourself, show me your creativity. In the two decades I have been with him, he never tested two students the same way…..  I believe any art in existence today, especially the classical systems we study were once a hypothesis that was tested and adopted. However people made deities out of the founders, and forgot the message. Don’t get me started on that thread.”

We both laughed. “So the training with Sensei was learning how to learn, and becoming who you are.  And martial arts, was how we explored this. I see effective fighting as one of the benefits, not THE benefit of the learning from him. I continue to learn from him to this day, when we speak every week. We may not discuss MA techniques directly every time, but that’s the thread that informs, instructs and binds us together.”

He nodded, and I knew he understood. He continued, “I want to meet him some day and lets swap notes on specific methods of training next time.” I agreed and promised him that next time Sastri Sensei is in the Bay Area, he would.  I had hoped to do justice to the training and methods, though capturing 2 decades of learning over 2 cups of chai is impossible.  

“You know dude, we are both f****d.  Our schools will never be enrolled to the hilt, and most likely we will die unknown in the arts we love.” I wanted to end on a funny, humbling note.  We laughed hard at the irony of the whole situation.

Being a fellow philosopher and poet he said “Have you heard of Liu Yuxi[ix] famous epitaph -  Inscription for a Humble home?”  I know him well enough to know there had to be a point, and this was not a random tangent.

“Nope”

He stood tall, mockingly imitated an opera performer and began his preparation. I knew the poem meant a lot if he was ready to recite this “by heart.”  I stopped everything to pay complete attention to him for I knew there was going to be a deep point here.

Ever so softly, as though he was sharing a big secret he recited:

 

“A mountain is famous not for its height, but for its immortals.

A lake is magical not because of its depth, but because of its dragons.

This house may be humble, but it is fragrant with my virtue.

The steps are covered with green moss; the window screens reflect the verdant grass.

I laugh and chat with learned gentlemen; there are no illiterates among my visitors.

I can play the harp and read the Vajra Sutra[x].

There is no noise of string and wind instruments to disturb my ears,  nor any documents to tire me out.

Zhu Geliang[xi] lived in a thatched hut in Nanyang;

Yang Ziyun dwelt in a tiny shack in western Shu.

Confucius said, "How can that be considered humble?"

 

There was a deep silence for a minute.  We nodded, hugged warmly and said our good byes.  On my drive home the lines played in my mind, and I was going to soak myself in them. Poetry is the language of the mystical, and the more time you spend with it, the more it unravels. Much like the training with my Sensei, the more I go back to the lessons, the more they unravel.

That was the essence of the training with Sensei, sheer poetry.  Poetry that took hold opened the mind and heart.  Good poetry has layers, and layers. As the reader matures, the meaning of the poem transforms.  The lines sound the same, but are felt and experienced very differently. In the Martial Arts, the moves look the same, but feel and change one completely.  Hence I call it the Poetics of  A Martial Education – it is about how physical, mental and emotional education came together and was aimed to produce a higher ideal than just being an effective fighter. The language he used was martial arts, music, physics and ethics coming together to weave the fabric.

I hope to be able to impact those few students who come to my little dojo, in a similar way that my Sensei did in his.  Damo Arigato Sensei!

   



[i] Poetics is distinguished from hermeneutics by its focus not on the meaning of a text, but rather its understanding of how a text's different elements come together and produce certain effects on the subject

 

[ii] Tai sabaki (体捌き?) is a term from Japanese martial arts and which relates to 'whole body movement', or repositioning. It can be translated as body-management. It is a term used widely in kendo, jujutsu, aikido, judo, karate and ninjutsu. Tai sabaki is usually used to avoid an attack, such that the receiver of the attack ends up in an advantageous position and it is often wrongly referred to as evasion. The key distintion here, esp from a KAR perspective is moving from one circle to the next without interrupting the flow of energy

 

[iii] Marriage to Gravity – The principle of  Structural integration of moving body as one, while employing the advantage of gravity in all techniques. This is something that is deeply explored in Rolfing and related somatic disciplines, and certain schools of Kenpo. From a KAR perspective I have found a direct correlation of this is essential for executing good aiki, esp for the minimal use of force and multiple strikes. In essense this is Tai Ichi – Body as one and managing ones’ relationship to gravity

 

[iv] Counter for counter – it’s a drill where one person feeds a technique, and the other does this defense, with the aim of brining the person down. As he ends his technique, the other begins his defense against it. And this goes on and on. We use it specifically against different systems to help our own understanding of the system we train in.

 

[v] Sticky weapons is my variation drill of doing sticky hands with weapons. In essence one body part and/or weapon is always touching the other, to feel and to begin a series of moves once an opening is created or discovered.  To learn about sticky hands go to  http://kiaiyamabushiryu.tripod.com/Newsletter/sticky_hands_theory_and_practice.html

 

[vi] Kuntao or kuntau (Pe̍h-ōe-jī: kûn-thâu, Tagalogkuntaw) is a Hokkien term for the martial arts of the Chinese community of Southeast Asia, especially the Malay Archipelago. It is most commonly practiced in and associated with IndonesiaMalaysia (particularly Borneo), the Philippines and Singapore. Over time, kuntao and silat have influenced each other to the point where the distinction between the two can sometimes be blurred.

 

[vii] Silat (Minangkabausilek) is a collective word for indigenous martial arts from a geo-cultural area of Southeast Asia encompassing most of the Nusantara, the Malay Archipelago and the entirety of the Malay Peninsula. Originally developed in what are now Indonesiapeninsular Malaysia, south Thailand, and Singapore, it is also traditionally practiced in BruneiVietnam and the southern Philippines. There are hundreds of different styles but they tend to focus either on strikes, joint manipulation, throws, bladed weaponry, or some combination thereof

 

[ix] Liu Yuxi (Wade-Giles: Liu Yu-hsi; simplified Chinese: 刘禹; traditional Chinese: 劉禹錫; pinyin: Liú Yǔxī) (772–842) was a Chinese poet, philosopher, and essayist, active during the Tang Dynasty. He was an associate of Bai Juyi and was known for his folk-style poems. Most famously, he is known for his poem Lou Shi Ming 陋室銘, "Inscription of a crude house". It describes living in a simple dwelling, following a life that is rich in character, refined in culture and learning.

 

[x] The Vajra Cutter Sutra (also known as the Diamond Cutter Sutra or Diamond Sutra) is one of most well-known sutras of Mahayana Buddhism. The Vajra Cutter Sutra is a discourse on the Buddhist concept of emptiness or “Wisdom Gone Beyond.”

 

[xi] Zhuge Liang (181–234),[2] courtesy name Kongming, was a chancellor of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period. He is recognised as the greatest and most accomplished strategist of his era, and has been compared to another great ancient Chinese strategist, Sun Tzu.

Deep Immersion To Unfold Principles of Art & Life

Deep Immersion To Unfold Principles of Art & Life

This personal essay will explore the following ideas:1.    The difference between a coach, trainer and, a Sensei

2.    The concept of Finite and Infinite Games, and how only a true teacher takes you to the life playing infinite games

3.    The dangers of certain kinds of modeling—Deep Trance Identification and Borrowed Genius process

4.    How our experience of space-time changes based on mode of learning

5.    The real teacher/Sensei throws you back deeply into yourself

6.    Learning from the ultimate teacher—yourself

7.    The real Alchemy—inner transformation

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Walking down the steps from Udai Vilas (the grand palace of the Udaipur Royalty) toward Lake Pichola is a sight few ever get to see, and one you can never forget. At 5:15 am, Venus shone high above me while the other lake Palaces glittered in the light as though made of gold. The chill of the desert winter was forgotten as serenity and peace engulfed me like a warm blanket. I approached the water and waited as the sun’s rays made their first appearance, and the deep blue waters first turned a light saffron and then a milky white. As the light continued to infuse the environment and the birds started to sing, the reflection of the small wooden boat under me was perfect.

The ambiance created the perfect dojo. I found myself practicing both my advanced Kaze Arashi Ryu Tai Sabaki forms and BaguaZhang’s Thunder Palm change. Martial Arts have been my approach to the deepest recesses of my own soul: for me, the way of the warrior is about a deep immersion, a disciplined approach of going into one’s Self and then offering ones gifts/talents in the service of something far greater than oneself. This is what the Samurai ways mean to me—after all, the very word “Samurai” means to serve. Just as light from the sun changes the colors of the waters, so does one’s life and one’s environment when we allow the light from deep within the Self to radiate and infuse all. That morning, in that sacred aloneness, it was as though a bolt of lightning hit me. It was the perfect metaphor of the unraveling of the Self, of a student’s path towards mastership, towards being a light into himself.

For this requires a very disciplined approach, what I call the principle of deep immersion..

This insight transports me back to a few years ago, to the pristine beauty of a Shugyo at Marble Falls in California’s Sequoia National Park where the water crashes down mountains of marble. The water and surrounding marble slabs had been ice cold as we finished training Irimi Nage variations on the edge of the waterfall. Two students were now preparing lunch and asking questions. Our topic was the difference between the arts as a way of life and as a hobby. “We generally get what we put in, and for me, the real battle is the battle for your consciousness. The right to your consciousness has to be won. It can be neither traded for nor handed to you. And to win that battle is an approach to life, not a hobby. Be it the Warrior Monks of Asia, the Sufis of the Middle East, the Tantriks or the Yogis of India, The Gnostics of Europe, or the Mystics of the American Freedom movement—the discipline is lifelong, and, quite frankly, there are no shortcuts. The price of that freedom, of that consciousness, is your total dedication to it.

After a healthy lunch of fruits, nuts, and some bread, we started the hard hike back to the car. The senior student asked, “does not all martial arts practice lead you to this consciousness, Sensei?” This was a tricky question, for I wanted to do justice—not only to my approach, but to any other as well.

I replied, “there are many paths to this—mine happens to be martial arts. But other paths are just as valid. Over the years, I have learned from many fine teachers, but only a few have left their deep imprints. Those are the ones that truly taught me. In my opinion, you can learn from a coach, a trainer, an awakener, and finally from the Self. Each leads you to a different depth, a different rhythm, and a different perception of space/time and life itself. Each one serves a valuable role, depending on where you want to go. Therefore, choose carefully.”

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The path through the marbled mountain, sage trees, and ice-cold running water challenged and fascinated us, and our conversations gained an even deeper intensity. Perhaps the new student was both overjoyed and confused with this first wilderness trip, including the training on a waterfall’s edge—for he later confessed these were rather deeper and different conversations than he was used to. “I am not sure I follow, Sensei. Aren’t a coach, trainer, and sensei the same? Are they not just Western titles for the term ‘sensei’?”

“NO! There is a profound difference. Let me share some stories that may perhaps shed some light on this.” I continued, “There was a time when I studied competitive fighting seriously and won many competitions. My instructor emphasized competitive sport fighting techniques, and even though we studied Shotokan, we mostly drilled in just the few techniques that scored points. Combinations like uraken-gyaku zuki-mawashigeri (backfist, reverse punch, and roundhouse kick) were done hundreds of times. When we practiced Kata, we focused on the appearance and scoring ability of the form – not bunkai (applications). The emphasis was on the appearance of perfection. He had a clear goal: win as many medals as possible, and defeat those who stand in our way. But even the best of students has a small window of opportunity for fame, and after that, most just experience emptiness and quit. For he was a coach: he optimized students for the small term, competitive victories and then moved on to the next bunch of competitors.”

The students nodded and asked me to continue. “Z, you have taken a lot of sales excellence courses. You’ve had sales coaches—they come in and teach a few skills that have worked in the past with the goal of winning the account, usually by defeating the competition in any way possible. They probably put a lot of emphasis on things like creating rapport, influence strategies, and language patterns from Neuro Linguistic Programming. Their emphasis is on sizzle and pizzaz to impress, to close and to move on. There are metaphors like “it’s a dog-eat-dog world” or “it’s a rat race.” You live in a Zero-Sum World where the other has to lose in order for you to win. This is what James Carse, in his brilliant book Finite and Infinite Games, has called a Finite Game. Finite Games have a definite beginning and ending. They are played only with the goal of winning. A finite game is resolved within the context of its rules with the winner of the contest being declared and receiving a victory. Rules exist to ensure the game is finite. Think about this for a moment: if you buy into the dog’s world or the rat race metaphor—and even if you win—you still are a dog or a rat. Now, don’t get me wrong. I am not condemning the coach. I am, however, questioning the universe you want to live in and the metaphors you want to live by.”

The late afternoon sun was beating down on us and we sat for a small break. I pulled out my bottle of coconut water, relishing every drop of it. It has a high degree of electrolytes and is very similar to blood plasma in its composition. For me, this is perfect hydration. The two students cut up some mangoes and we devoured the sweet fruit in the hot sun. After burying the bio waste and adhering to our dojo’s “leave no trace behind in the wilderness” policy, we continued our journey down the switchbacks. The students were ready to continue our conversations and the senior student asked, “Sensei – what about the difference between the trainer and sensei?”

“You remember the Kenpo teacher who I have spoken about many times? He put a lot of emphasis on physical fitness along with a few key techniques, especially Kenpo’s signature move—the lightning-fast hand strikes. The physical form and the aesthetics of a powerful body were of prime importance, and we placed a lot of attention on attribute training: speed, power, endurance and flexibility. They are important, but are still in the realm of Finite Games. For while you train the body and its muscles, with age they decline. My instructor, though powerful, had seen his skill decline and seldom demonstrated techniques in full speed or form. Many times he would speak about philosophy and Zen, but it was not a lived or embodied experience. I see him as a trainer, as he trained us to be lean, mean fighting machines. And I must emphasize it was about us being lean fighting machines—not human beings.”

Here, I was marking out and adumbrating my students’ learning patterns with my peripheral vision, as I usually do with my more serious students. The skills I’ve learned over the years of deep immersion in NLP are useful tools in helping teach more effectively. Noticing that the newer student was a little confused and lacking in the martial art context, I attempted to connected things for him: “When you were being coached in sales, you later moved to learn more about personal development, yeah?” He nodded, so I moved in deeper. “You then attended expensive weekend seminars to learn things like strategies for success and modeling excellence—the heart of NLP. You can learn the mathematical precision on how things work, how both your mind and that of the other might work. This is the progression from being coached in applications like rapport and influence blindly, to being trained in learning how things work rapidly. And then there is another way, using processes like Deep Trance Identification (DTI) and Borrowed Genius.”

The students stopped in their tracks, for now I had their complete attention. Learning was about to truly begin. “Deep trance? Borrowing genius? What are you talking about, Sensei?” We sat down under a large tree, unloaded the 40-pound bags, and rehydrated ourselves—which is very important in any backcountry trip. “Milton Ericson coined the term ‘Deep Trance Identification.’ It is a profound state of deep trance where you step into the target/other to experience and identify their world fully from within them. I did DTI multiple times over the years to enter into the world of one of the most iconoclastic trainers in the world.  I stayed in the process for extended periods of time. And it started to change me from the inside. Interestingly, it also started to change my physical body, my tone, my language, my experience of time…everything.” The students got excited and wanted to learn the process from me. This was not the first time this request was made.

In response, like those many times before, I emphatically continued, “Don’t rush, wait a little and let me complete my story. The processes impacted my personal relationships drastically, and as far as my opinion is concerned, I learned a LOT, and my skill level in NLP skyrocketed…but I lost a lot more in the process.

I lost me.

I stopped doing the DTI and Borrowed Genius process completely, and instead invested in unlearning and rediscovering my core essence. Now, I won’t do or teach this process anymore—for I think it takes you away from the journey into yourself. If you want to satisfy your curiosity about this seemingly magical process, look for Milton H Erickon’s work on it, or Win Wegner’s work on Borrowed Genius, or Ostrander’s SuperLearning. And I must warn you again: I do NOT recommend even experimenting with it until you have a firm base in yourself, into the very core of who you are.”

The senior student protested, “Sensei, if I can do DTI with you, I could learn what you have to teach so much sooner and more effectively. Would that not be a logical way to pass down the knowledge you want to hand down?” I recognized the logic—for I had used it to justify my own decision to DTI many years ago—and it had cost me a lot. With compassion and love I said, “What I want to pass down is knowledge far greater than just martial skill. It’s about knowledge of oneself. Now if you spend time to become me effectively, to get access to my skill, metaphors and worldview—who will be you? And what happens if you suddenly discover you don’t like me or my universe—how will you unlearn this? Believe me, I would do you the greatest disservice if I tried to make you an image of me by teaching you these processes and enabling you. I again go back to JC (Joseph Campbell), who once said that the job of the educator is help the students see the vitality in themselves. It is about discovering your own aliveness, your own rhythm, your own beat—not replicating your teacher’s beat or rhythm. Helping you discover your own vitality is the job of an Awakener or True teacher, where as a trainer would be flattered to make you in his image and teach you the skill (for a handsome fee of course.)”

It was time to move on, and as we stood up I showed the students how to triangulate our position and our base camp by using high points in the environment. The path was clear and we resumed our hike. “Sensei, can we continue our conversation? This is fascinating.” The new student was raw, curious, and respectful, and I saw his potential in becoming a long-time apprentice of the arts. So I continued, “As you immerse yourself in truly learning things, you become an apprentice to power— personal power. This is where a true Sensei, true Guru, or true Master comes in. A master (Sheik in Sufism, Guru in Tantra, Sensei in martial arts) is one who forms a formal allegiance with the novice and takes him down the path he has travelled himself in order to help the student find his own path. When you are in his or her presence you will feel pulled into him/her. There is charisma in the truest sense of the word. See, a Sensei means someone who is father-like, someone who has walked the path before you. And the often misused Indian word ‘Guru’ is pregnant with meaning. It means to be heavy with heaven, to be the destroyer of darkness.”

The students and I continued walking slowly down the never-ending switchbacks. “The Sensei, Guru, and Sheikh, are what Robert Frost referred to as awakeners. He introduces you to yourself using everything he has at his disposal. He may use martial arts, dancing, or any other crazy tasks he dreams up to destroy the darkness around you. In the process of destroying this darkness, he expands the light in and around you so more of the universe becomes visible and navigable. Acharya Rajneesh/Osho in one of his discourses referred to this power of the Guru as a voice of God. He is a mirror. He reflects you, reflects God. The Guru always throws you back to yourself and does not bind you to him, because a Guru is life itself. The real Guru is God himself.”

The newer student jumped in with his question: “Who teaches this? Is there a person I can go learn this from? Are there courses to go to?” I laughed hard and said, “Well, you have to find them—and it’s not an easy task. I was lucky to have a few of them in my life, especially Sastri Sensei and Gundappa Uncle. One walked the way of the warrior and the other literally walked with Mahatma Gandhi on the path of non-violence. They both have taught me for two decades in very different ways, but they always pushed me back into/towards myself. Both taught me not to be a copy of them, or as Sensei would say, ‘don’t be my vomit!’ He has a flair for getting his points across dramatically and in a way that sticks. Gundappa Uncle would always gently laugh while advising to listen to that small voice in your own heart and to remember there is no enemy; there is just a part of us that is perhaps unaware. Now that’s what a Sensei or a true Guru really does. They introduce you to yourself, and start you on the journey deep into yourself. That’s why I like the term ‘Awakeners.’”


“They are the ones who bring James Carse’s Infinite Games exquisitely and effectively to life. Infinite games do not have beginnings or ends, and are played with goals of continuous play and bringing more people into their folds. The rules are allowed to change in order to allow the game to go on. Carse has rightfully identified life as the only true example of an infinite game. Hence the Awakeners bring you to life, or to your true vitality—to your aliveness.”

We were quickly approaching both night and end of our supplies, and had perhaps a mile to go. I wanted to wrap up this dialogue before we reached the car, as it required our utmost attention. “You know in India & Tibet we have a saying,” I continued to recite the Sanskrit verses and its translation:

Gurur-Brahma Gurur-Vishnu Gurur-Devo Maheshwarah.
Guru-sakshat Para-Brahma tasmai Shri Gurave Namah.

Guru himself is the creator, sustainer and the destroyer. He is the very transcendental divinity, (the timeless life-principle, which is the very essence of the creator) My reverential salutations to that glorious teacher.

“A guide in the ancient stone temples of Halebidu recently joked with me that that the word GOD is an acronym for Generator (Brahma), Operator (Vishnu) and Destroyer (Shiva). And damn, was he right on. The Guru is referred to as God in many Asian cultures because he helps create your soul, sustains your development, and systematically destroys your false ego. Replace the word ‘Guru’ with ‘Sheik’ or ‘Sensei,’ and you still have the same results. Don’t be stuck on the title.  And don’t assume I am suggesting you treat him like one; however, when I do find such a teacher, I treat him as the greatest blessing.”

The senior student was quick to catch on and said, “So this is why you always quote to us Hesse’s lines of ‘Every man is a journey to himself’.” I was overjoyed and said, “YES. Yes. Yes. The greatest secret perhaps is to find yourself where life happens naturally, effortlessly, and rightfully. Where the aliveness infuses you, and infuses all that comes around you. When you reach this place, nothing is now desired, yet everything is given. Allama Iqbal, one of Pakistan’s eminent poets captures this beautifully in Urdu:

Khudi ko kar buland itna ke har taqder se pehle
Khuda bande se ye poche bata teri raza kia hai

Make thy Self’s (higher self) presence/will so strong , that before every destiny is carved – the master asks his servant what is thy wish

We reached the car—the eight miles of hiking back after training on the waterfalls had come to an end. I wanted to close this loop before we headed back home: “Next, after been thrown deeply into yourself over and over again by your teacher, you start to wake up to yourself. You start becoming an individual, and in many ways a mirror back to the world. Perhaps now you too can help shine that light into and through someone else. I believe that’s all there is. In listening to Bucky Fuller many times, I was attracted to an idea where he referred to himself as ‘Guinea Pig B’ and experimented with the universal laws on himself. This is what Krishnamurti calls the pathless path you have to thread. You are the experiment of nature. You are the goal. You are the process. You are consciousness that needs to be awakened from the hypnosis society puts you in. You are IT. This is a continuous process. When learning more and more of yourself—from yourself—stops, you stop.”

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“And the more you journey into yourself, the lighter you become to yourself and the world around you. That’s what the dojo is supposed to do. To me, the word ‘dojo’ signifies the place of the way to yourself, and the sensei is the one who helps you find yourself. And for this journey, you need to have a deep immersion into the art that calls you. Surrender to it, and in the process you will surrender into yourself. The art you learn is also then transformed by the new life your Being will breathe into it. Once it again rejuvenates, it becomes fresh and timeless. What’s required is a deep immersion for the principles of nature itself to unravel.”

With this, we got into the car and started our drive back to the Bay Area. I had hoped I had explained to my students the difference between a coach, trainer, and a sensei. We had been driving mostly in silence for over 90 minutes when the senior student asked me, “Sensei you mentioned space-time in passing, and how that’s different in each approach. I am not sure I follow it. Can you say more?” This could go on all night, I thought, and I wanted to keep the contexts clean. So I said, “Think about it this way—a coach, a trainer, and an Awakener will take you to different depths. Each one of these approaches/worlds has a different rhythm, a different orientation of time and space. Let me use the example of cross-cultural communication, or anthropology, to be more precise. Ed Hall did some pioneering work here, and if you find time and want to be enriched, study his books—try The Silent Language, The Hidden Dimension, Beyond Culture and The Dance of Life. Now, back to cross-cultural communication. If you study a foreign culture from a book, or take a short course on it, you will not even scratch the surface. You are trying to cheat your way through a culture. Perhaps a little training in the language and its culture will open a bigger world for you. It will fascinate, but the differences will still frustrate you. Z (the senior student)—you have experienced this coming from Mexico to the United States a few years ago. Only a deep immersion into the culture will unravel its secrets to you over time, until it no longer is foreign. So each one of these ways of learning will open the world to you on different levels, and your experience of both the space you can feel and the time you can experience will transform completely. Similarly, as you dwell deeper, so will your sense of your Self, your world, and your time/timelessness.”

We reached home, and I was glad to be in bed. That next Tuesday’s session in the dojo, I began with a verse from the Rig Veda I had learned from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi:

Richo akshare parame vyoman Yasmin deva adhivishve nisheduh Yastanna veda kimricha karishyati Ya ittadvidus ta ime samasate

The verses of the Veda exist in the collapse of fullness (the kshara of ‘A’) in the field in which reside all the Devas, the impulses of Creative Intelligence, the laws of nature responsible for the whole manifest universe. He whose awareness is not open to this field, what can the verses accomplish for him? Those who know this level of reality are established in evenness, wholeness of life.

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“You see, until you don’t realize the source of your creativity and unfolding that lies deep within yourself, and until you don’t tap into this resource, you are just incomplete. All learnings—whether from journals or books or seminars—will be incomplete and not a state of reality. This is another way of thinking about the immersion principle, and the immersion is into oneself. Only the immersion deeply into oneself can be the wellspring of life. The Self is ultimately the MahaGuru (the great teacher),  the greatest Sensei. This is the journey from fragmentation to wholeness, and sometimes it is trial by fire to get there, but every bit is worth it. The tools I know are here in the martial arts primarily—so let’s get on with our training.” And with that, we started our practice on the variations of Irimi Nage, much like we had done on the edge of the waterfall.

But, at the end of the class, I wanted to connect the space/time differences back to the martial arts. “A coach will teach you to score points by focusing on your opponent’s miai (distance) and timing your attacks to his movement. A trainer starts to bring your awareness of your circle of safety (space/distance), and how to throw off the opponent’s timing by changing yours, perhaps using concepts like broken rhythm and variations of your own speed. The Awakener takes you to a place where a dance is happening, where flow is induced and nothing is interrupted. And when deep in yourself, you just enjoy the play of space/time around when need be. Enough for today. Go discover it yourself.”

I find myself now sharing this path of learning and self-expression fully with all the students who come along. My personal goal is to be a true Sensei—like my teachers before me. The path is fulfilling, and in the course of teaching the whole immersion method, I find that both my students and I change deeply. The better description is that it’s mutual alchemy. I was asked once why I don’t teach more students or in studios, and this is precisely the reason I won’t. This method of teaching and learning can only happen in small groups—the bond is sacred, and the only limits your results have are those of your input. This method of both learning and teaching have left me a far richer man than I was before—for the importance and power of what you deal with here matters far more than money or fame.

And in closing, it’s my hope that as you immerse deeply into yourself with whatever tools/paths take you there, that just as the Lake Pichola at sunrise transforms the colors from the engulfed darkness to the beautiful saffron to the clear white, a life like the boat is mirrored back for you beautifully.

– Mahipal Lunia, 9th January 2013

– Stream of consciousness writing to explain the guiding philosophy of Mt. View Aiki Kai by Mahipal Lunia Sensei. These are his own personal views, and do not represent the art/s, system/s, or teacher/s he has studied with.

Technorati Tags: Deep Immersion,Irimi Nage,Marble Falls,Coach,Trainer,Sensei,James Carse,Finite and Infinite Games,attribute training,Adumberate,Edward T Hall,Deep Trance Identification,Borrowed Genius,Awakener,Sastri Sensei,Gundappa Uncle,Osho,Allama Iqbal,Khudi,Alchemy,Mahipal Lunia,Mahipal Lunia Sensei

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Embracing Aliveness - Following Your Fascinations Fully

Embracing Aliveness - Following Your Fascinations Fully

“People say that what we're all seeking is a meaning for life. I don't think that's what we're really seeking. I think what we're seeking is an experience of being alive, so that our life experiences on the purely physical plane will have resonance within our own innermost being and reality, so that we actually feel the rapture of being alive. That's what it's all finally about.”   Joseph Campbell on The Power of Myth

 fascination The cold breeze in November at 4 am does more than wake you up, as I ride a few kilometers to pick a friend up for our early morning Kenpo classes. This was a daily routine, been going on for over two years to train with a rather eccentric and rather combat oriented  Sensei (teacher). I would return home at about 7:30 am to my frenzied mom who would make sure I am not late to school, and was our daily ritual for her to ask me “what teenage boy goes to bed at 9 so he can wake up to train at 4 am? what is this madness, what is this fascination with the martial arts, its not going to be profession you know- you are going to either become a doctor or work on growing the family business.” I would hurriedly gobble my breakfast down with a glass of milk and rush to school, and then to repeat the same process day in and out.  Fast forward a few years and the same cycle goes on with my training in Aiki under Sastri Sensei, and I remember that Christmas day clearly in 1996 when Ma’am ( as we referred to Sensei’s wife Terri) just looked at us and told Sastri Sensei “dont you want the boys to go home and celebrate the holiday.” and Sensei said “well they are here to train and I am going to teach them.”

Not many people understand this fascination, not many understand this passion, to many it seems madness and yet this is the path the individual must take in order to find healing, wholeness and give meaning to an otherwise meaningless existence.  However following the impulses that are generated and informed through your body proper is not an easy task, staying true to what emerges and informs you is an even taller order and yet the greatest blessing if you choose to stay true to them. Many disciplines teach you how to get in touch with them, however the hard part is staying true to what emerges. If you wish you explore these mediums I personally would based on my personal study recommend Mythic Body Work, Theatre, 5 Rhythms Dancing and The warrior ways.

These impulses have a way of leading you towards what one needs, they are more or less “postcards from the unconscious” waiting to become/made conscious through ones awareness of the body proper. They also open up new realms and worlds and create what Martin Heidegger once called “throwness.”  Let me share another small story here to show how this works. The training with Sastri Sensei continued 6 days a week for 3 years non stop, Sastri Sensei had left his comfortable life in New York City and come to Bangalore, and my path crossed his as I was getting ready to head out to Australia. I cancelled my plans of Australia and stayed to study with Sensei who had repeatedly said a few times to us “I am giving you three years of my life, the rest you have to do.” A small group (3 of us, of which I am the only one teaching today) worked with him almost 6 days a week while most others showed up 2-4 times a week. After that Sensei returned to the USA, and as life would have it, I found myself in school right in the same town, about 5 miles from Sensei and my training with him continued, and was introduced to Henri Robert Vilaire Shihan – with whom I have studied since 1998. During this time in the early 1990’s Sastri Sensei also introduced the small group to a whole body of knowledge including the works of Napoleon Hill, Anthony Robbins, Earl Nightingale among others.

While going through the Unlimited Power seminar tapes on Sensei’s and Ma’am’s recommendation, I got fascinated with a new subject – Neuro Linguistic Programming. The magic of rapport, the power of modeling, the structure of the subjective experience, the chaos of grammar & the grammar of chaos soon opened whole new worlds.  What followed was a furious learning and seminar attendance around the world to learn about the human mind, the power of discipline, the structure of subjective experience and the ability to learn rapidly. My teachers ranged from world renown trainers to absolutely secluded teachers who had shunned public limelight. This path continued to marvel and fascinate me. In 2003-2004 along with Sergey Berezin we started the Stanford NLP Club at Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA. At the Stanford NLP club I met with Arman Darini. This was the beginning of a beautiful friendship and great collaboration. Around 2006 the three of us got together again on University Avenue over a cup of coffee. I was working for a large software company, Sergey was designing systems and Arman was laying the foundation of his training business. Over coffee based on an impulse I threw out an idea of the three of us collaborating to bring about a new kind of service to the world – 3 perspectives on some of the topics of transformation, with NLP being the common language which we needed, as I was a Strategist (economics, business and martial arts as majors), Sergey was a scientist (Physics and systems science) and Arman was an entrepreneur (Artificial intelligence and Math major) .

Following this impulse we started the Radical Change Group (RCG)with a simple idea of transformation as a gift to all, no advertising or marketing, and a deep dive into topics that touch us deeply. This has from the humble beginnings in 2006 has bought us in touch with such path breakers and pioneers as Paul Rebillot, Richard Roberts, Gabriella Roth, Kathy Altman, Paul Kordis, Antero Alli, Marshall Thurber, David Neenan to name a few. This also got us access to the Nobel Laureate Buckminster Fullers lost tapes, Joseph Campbell's private recordings and the Advaitha vedanta of Arnauld Desjardin.  RCG aslo then worked with Sastri Sensei and Henri Robert Vilaire to bring about the first recordings of the obscure art i practiced and teach Kaze Arashi Ryu to the world in their own words for the first and only time. The results to the date are nothing short of stunning for me – over 210 published recordings, over 1 million downloads from 100 plus countries. That one impulse to study NLP and following it opened a whole new world of learning, that one impulse followed honestly of starting NLP created deep lasting friendships and some unprecedented contributions. This IMHO is the power of following ones impulses honestly, especially when the world does not understand it, and will want you to “get real” or “follow the path/system”

Fast forward a few years, on a Shugyo in the Sequoia Mountains where the redwood trees kiss the heavens, a student asked me “Sensei I am fascinated by so many things, if i followed them all I wont have time to do anything, how do i know which one is the most productive?” I laughed as i remembered having the same question many years ago and no one seemed to be able to help me with it then. I looked at him with both a mischief and some compassion in my eyes and asked “ what brings you ALIVE?” he looked at me more puzzled than ever, and I let him sit with the confusion and silence, which he started to fill with a 100 different things except answering what bought him alive. After a lil while, as he had exhausted himself of all answers from his mind, and noticing an emptying I continued “ there is a difference between curiosity and fascination – when you are truly fascinated by something, you lose track of time/space and there is a union/fusion that happens. The subject (you), the object and the process of relating/knowing between them  become one. There comes about a certain lightness in the being, and doors that were once closed suddenly open up, as though they were always waiting for you to wake up, to become Alive".

“Alive ?? Am I not alive right now??” he asked. “well aliveness is a quality that when you dial in, the world also comes alive. I think most people in the past have seen this as a rather chance happening, or luck. However I will tell you that this is an analogue dance – meaning you can track what happens in the body proper in a specific syntax and if you follow the strategy you will find the same result. Let me be a little more clear – this aliveness is a State of Consciousness and has a method/strategy to access it. By studying modeling you learn how to replicate a behavior in the other,  however what we want is to model ourselves in this state of aliveness, in this state of absolute flow, in this state of you being your best. Once you model this, you now know you a strategy and syntax to get to that state of aliveness. Bingo you are there, as simple as that.”

This analogue dance is what the Sufis pursue when they dance into ecstacy, this state is what elite sports persons dial into to arrive at their best performance, this state is what the Gnostics/Tantrics/Heretics/Magickians have called the “God Code.” In the past this has remained an accidental state for most, however it need not be. Much like The Swan in Rilke’s great poem, one can condescend to glide majestically. The study of NLP helped me learn how not to just model this, but also amplify this state greatly. All one has to do is follow simple steps

  1. Find the state where everything for you has been possible, where you have been totally alive
  2. Model the syntax of how you arrive there – in simple words what has to happen in the body for you to arrive there
  3. Follow the syntax/sequence with precision
  4. Now run through the sequence over and over again, till you can form a circuit with it
  5. Anchor it, and keep dialing into this state of BEING ALIVE”

“as simple as that eh Sensei? Then why does not everyone do it?” asked the student with a smug on his face. I have been used to this and have long given up trying to convince people. “Well simple does not mean easy, nor does it mean everyone does it. All it means is that its simple, it is  elegant that's it. Now I have my theory on why everyone does not do it but that's not relevant, what's relevant is that most people are not alive, so why do what most do? obviously the answer is elsewhere. Aliveness is an individual phenomena, its a creative act, and every truly creative act is also an act of rebellion – a rebellion against the mass hypnosis that society puts on all its members. This kind of aliveness is considered dangerous as it brings forth the true kind of creative acts – acts that change the structure of what is. I have told you guys many a times that I am only interested in making maps that change the territory. This is that realm. Guys I have told you of this other story, when I was training with Henri Robert Vilaire Sensei  this one time, and he was quite sick. I was doubtful whether we would be able to train, esp. since I had flown over a 1000 miles to study with him. He slowly walked put on his gi and as he got on the mat he transformed. He proceeded to throw me around like a rag doll for the rest of the day. This IMHO or rather in my languaging is him dialing into his Aliveness, and the warrior ways are his way. This is not an accidental phenomena, this is a possible state of consciousness available to all who will learn to pay attention to themselves in a new way. Perhaps this is the true meaning of the old adage  Man, know thyself”

If we do not get to know that which is within us and proceeds to act through us, there remains very little chance for us to know truly know anything else. The mystics have always understood this well, esp. the Sufis’.Their poetry always gives a clue or points the finger to the moon so to say. Lets look at these two examples that say so much about this same quality of following your fascinations and that state of aliveness. The first one is by RumiLet yourself be silently drawn by the strong pull of what you truly love.”  and the second is by the Pakistani Poet Sir Allama Iqbal

Pila dey mujhay woh mey pardah soz Key aati nahee fasl-e-gul roz roz Woh mey jis say roshan zameer-e-hayat Who mey jis say hai masti-e-kainat Pour me the wine which burns the veil For the season of the rose does not come everyday That wine which reveals the essence of life That wine which intoxicates the universe

 

This Maasti-e-Kainat is what we are after my friends, the passion that intoxicates the universe and brings all of it alive. This is the radical creative act, an illogical one, and yet the only wise choice. For within each one of us, there is a very unique template, a very unique experiment of nature itself, waiting to see itself expressed. She speaks to us – sometimes in dreams, sometimes in impulses, sometimes in intuition, sometimes through chance meetings – yet it brings about the same effect when its a true impulse – radical aliveness. So I say pay attention to your whole body and the impulses that emerge from it, then follow it – this is what I mean by following your fascinations to where ever it will lead you. As I have mentioned what started as being fascinated with martial arts, opened new worlds, bought some of my best friends into life, got me to travel the world as though magically. Life suddenly goes from being disjoined to coherence, wholeness and consilence.”

fascinations

The student continued to listen to me with complete attention, and I could see something inside him had shifted, and he moved a little lighter. We continued driving through the redwood forests of Sequoia National Park for our training. We reached the bottom of the Morro Rock and we decided to race to the top of it. I slowly climbed up with one other student who was not in his best shape on that day. On reaching the top we had unprecedented views of the mountains and this student said to me “I feel I can see my homeland Mexico from here.” We laughed and sat down to enjoy the beauty. The student asked again “Sensei what else should i remember about this aliveness.” I paused a little, as though in deep thought, its amazing what the power of the pause can do, and the students waited on. I finally said “Where your attention goes so does your life, put your attention on what brings you alive. Its usually your fascinations that will bring you totally alive, and lead to what will seem like a magickal life, so put your attention over and over again on coming alive.”

The sunset was in progress and the sky came alive with a fiery shades of orange and red – it seemed like a painting. We were filled with joy and gratitude to be able to see this from over 9000 feet away from the madness of the city and reconnect with nature. As it got dark and we started climbing down slowly I remembered the Joseph Campbell quote and recited it for the students “If you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. When you can see that, you begin to meet people who are in your field of bliss, and they open doors to you. I say, follow your bliss and don't be afraid, and doors will open where you didn't know they were going to be." I told them again, like I have numerous times before STUDY CAMPBELL, and if you don't have time to study him at least read this one book Reflections on The Art of Living. The students and I walked down and got into the car and were ready to drive back home, which is about 300 miles away now. As we drove away the question I always get when talking about following your fascinations finally showed by “but this is risky, there is no guarantee of success, I have responsibilities, what will society say, what if this does not work out?”  I remembered asking this exact same question to quite a few people including Paul Rebillot and Osho.

“Mahipal – Betrayal of the heart leads to decay, following it leads to a Heroic Journey. Life will always call you on an adventure, you have to follow it, if you dont – YOU SIMPLY ROT & DIE, your existence was wasted. So do not betray your heart. As my friend Alan Watts told once – better a short life in the direction of your heart than a long one being consumed inside out. So my child dont betray your heart, follow it. Dont fear the unknown, get curious about it. Leave the life you have to go to the life that is waiting for you to answer the call of adventure.”

Osho who always had a flair for jolting you into awakeness said something similar beautifully. “Never follow anybody else's idea -- that is very dangerous because you will become imitative. Always follow your own nature, self-nature; only then will you attain to freedom. It is better to die following one's nature than to live following somebody's else's nature, because that will be a pseudo life. To die following one's nature is beautiful, because that death too will be authentic.” Those words  of both Rebillot and Osho rung true deep inside me,and I shared them with the students and also my struggle when I betrayed the path. I recounted the 6 odd years when I had not heeded to the voice from deep within, and it wreak a havoc in my life, to the point where I was ready to kill myself (that story another time)  and the way out of the madness around me was to wake up to the aliveness and path again, and for me this was returning to my martial ways,  the way of the warrior. As I aligned myself back to it, magic happened again. I found myself training hard, Found Vilaire Sensei in California living with our dojo, RCG came into being, and I moved towards getting my Menkyo/license and dojos being set up in CA, South Dakota, Texas and Mexico City.

It was now time to drive back home after a heavy Mexican dinner in Three Rivers at the base of the redwood Forests, the three students were quite, two fell asleep while I was driving back home. It was well past 11 pm, and I had to be at work at 5 am the next day. In the silence of the night the same student finally said “you know Sensei, this makes a lot of sense, its like what Bruce Lee said - Always be yourself, express yourself, have faith in yourself, do not go out and look for a successful personality and duplicate it - its something like that yea?” A complete circle, back to martial arts, I laughed and remembered the times back in the day when I devoured everything Bruce did and said “something like that, something like that- forget what he said or what I say – listen to what your impulses say and come alive man, come alive the way only you can, that the best gift and legacy you can give yourself and to the world.”

I reached home at a little past 2 am, and took a short nap, and at 5 am it was time to be at work. After what seemed like a long day, wrapped up and it was time to be back at the dojo. A handful students including the two who spend the weekend training with me in the redwood forest showed up and as I got on the grass to teach and workout, all the tiredness was gone, and the aliveness returned, once again refreshed and ready to take on what shows up. Finished with the dojo and on the drive back home found myself humming these lines  I had written not too long ago

Ya Mere Khuda  / My lord, my highest self

Sunn Le Dil Ki Iltaaja  /Listen to my hearts deepest desire

Bande pe diwanigi aisi barsa  / Grant me the kind of passion

Jeete jeete ho jaye fanna  /That burns me like fire with every breath

And my wish to you is may you find that aliveness, that passion that burns deep inside!

- stream of consciousness writing to explain the guiding philosophy of Mt View Aiki Kai by Mahipal Lunia Sensei. These are his own personal views and do not represent the art or system or teacher/s

Nature & Self As Path and Destination

Nature & Self As Path and Destination

Lost

Stand still. The trees ahead

and bushes beside you

Are not lost. Wherever you are is called Here.

And you must treat it as a powerful stranger.

Must ask permission to know it and be known.

The forest breathes. Listen. It answers.

I have made this place around you.

If you leave it you may come back again.

saying Here.

No two trees are the same to Raven.

No two branches are the same to Wren.

If what a tree or a bush does is lost on you.

You art surely lost. Stand still.

The forest knows

Where you are. You must let it find you.

- An Old Native Indian Poem, translated by David Wagoner

After an exhausting day-long climb, we reached the top of Cloudsrest and marveled at the beauty of the Sierras while looking down on the iconic Half Dome. It was time for yet another shugyo deep in the backcountry of California’s famed Yosemite National Park. We put our 40 plus pound bags down, wiped the sweat of our brows, and found new energy from the beauty that surrounded and engulfed us. We experienced sheer silence, sheer presence, and a complete sense of belonging as we relaxed into our beings.

One of my students said, “This is so worth it—this view makes up for all of it. I am almost ready to cry.”  I told him to let go and let the tears roll, and forget yourself and fuse completely with nature all around. Later, as the sun set on the horizon and the temperatures dropped drastically, it struck me that “Nature and Self are both Path and Destination” and how much this has defined my own philosophy and how I teach my expression of the arts I have learnt from my teachers.

cloudsrest

There exist no conflicts or opposing principles in nature—the distinction of good and bad is a man-made context. And all conflict arises within this separation. There is no inherent conflict in nature itself. Later, cuddled up in my sleeping bag under the beautiful night sky, I remembered the reruns of Kung Fu with David Carradine that I had watched incessantly all through my childhood, waiting for my Master Kan. I was lucky to have not one, but a few. In one of the first episodes of Kung Fu, there is an iconic scene where Master Kan tells the young grasshopper, “In the Shaolin temple, there are three kinds of men: students, disciples, and masters. Development of the mind can be achieved only when the body has been disciplined. To accomplish this, the ancients have taught us to imitate God’s creatures. From the crane, we learn grace and self-control. The snake teaches us suppleness and rhythmic endurance. The praying mantis teaches us speed and patience. And from the tiger, we learn tenacity and power. And from the dragon, we learn to ride the wind. All creatures—the low and the high—are one with nature. If we have the wisdom to learn, all may teach us their virtues. Between the fragile beauty of the praying mantis and the fire and passion of the winged dragon, there is no discord. Between the supple silence of the snake and the eagle’s claws, there is only harmony. As no two elements of nature are in conflict, when we perceive the ways of nature, we remove conflict within ourselves and discover a harmony of body and mind in accord with the flow of the universe. It may take half a lifetime to master one system.” I fell asleep with a smile, thinking how wonderfully the threads of life weave themselves.

At the crack of dawn, I woke the three apprentices, as it was time to soak in the sun and train some more. Soaking in the beauty of the first rays of sun at 11,000 ft., I noticed my sense of Self had expanded far beyond my physical body and was zooming through space to merge with the rays of the sun itself. Frank Herbert, in his Dune Series, had brilliantly said, “Self is infinitely flexible, expanding to include desirable and useful others, and contracting to exclude the undesirable and harmful. Individually and collectively, how we fashion this entity determines the structure of the world we live in and the nature of the problems we must solve.” At this moment, it made perfect sense. And in those moments where everything is void, and therefore also possible, no limitations or problems appear. The samurai have long called this Mushin or ‘no-mind’ (which is a terrible term, but must suffice for now). This is the state of clarity every samurai warrior longed for in the battlefield and on the tatami mats. And yet, it is here, ready to be experienced. What is needed is a method to dial into it. More on a few techniques to dial into this state in future posts.

cloudsrest

We worked on the Katana (Japanese Blade/dagger) forms, and had the three apprentices take a portion of their test on the granite rocks of Sierras. Two hours in, we wrapped up and were ready to now begin the long descent down the mountain back to our cars parked deep down in Yosemite. One apprentice spoke up and said “This is so wonderful, but now its time to go back. I am sad.” I smiled, and explained to him that this beauty and sense of expansiveness is present everywhere—it’s not the domain of just the peaks/highs of life. This is how life is meant to be. It’s not just the destination/arrival that matters, but also how we arrive and depart from there.” He looked at me, half confused, but intently started walking down. After a few hours of silent walking interspersed by some discussions on Jesus, Osho, Bruce Lee, and our love lives, I bought the conversation back to the topic of path and destination.

“Nature and Self are both path and destination. Meaning, we use Nature and the body proper as the gateway to enter, traverse, and find that state of mushin/annyata/total fusion (martial arts/bhuddism/Tantra), which is ever present in Nature and the body proper. By learning to tune the body, in our case using the martial arts of Kaze, we are able to dial into that state where the I & Thou disappear—and something else entirely different emerges. It’s that something different that does the fighting when need be. It’s that something different that teaches when you are ready. And it’s that something different that dissolves all tensions and brings about a sense of complete calm.” I had my students complete, rapt attention as I continued, also somewhat surprised at my discovery and the words coming out of my mouth. David Whyte had once mentioned in a seminar, “Poetry is the art of saying things you did not know you knew.” I had experienced not only words, but entire forms of fighting emerge from that place in my body proper, much as my Senseis had told me years ago would happen.

I continued, “The body is the temple of the soul. Now, do you know what the word temple means? It comes from the word template—therefore, the really good question to ask is what is the body a template of?”  Seeing the confused looks, which I always love (as they are usually the beginning of something new ready to come in and take seat), I just continued walking away. This has taken years of practice to do, but always yields good results.  I wanted to leave them with the question, rather than a dogma or my truth.

A few days later, back in the dojo, the student walked up and said, “I felt peace in the mountains, and I want to go back there.” I told him there is no ‘there,’ and he needs to learn to have it here, as the body is the template of the universe itself, and in caring for the body proper and using it as both the path and destination, we arrive at that state of not leaving, wanting, or striving—and yet feeling fulfilled. It’s a hard task. I don’t claim to be able to do it all the time, and I train myself to take my body there every possible time—and hence, I show up at the dojo so often. Dojo—place of the way. Again, the place of the way to where? To the Self. As Herman Hesse so eloquently penned “every man is a path to himself.”

I closed the nested loop for my students, as I always do after a few weeks with this talk of “Nature and Self are both path and destination.” This is a foundational principle of how I specifically work with people at Mt. View Aiki Kai. This is my expression, my truth, and myself carving out my way. I want to close this piece with the words of the eminent mythologist Joseph Campbell, “ The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature.” And our way of doing this is with the martial arts of Kaze, and using both Nature and Self as path and destination. If you do not understand this, you probably won’t follow much of what follows. You will remain a student, and never quite become a disciple/apprentice, leave alone attain mastery. The way to understand this is not an intellectual endeavor, but rather a deeply felt sense of path and destination becoming one, of Nature and Self fusing. And yet, as Master Kan had said in Kung Fu, “It may take years to understand.”

- stream of consciousness writing to explain the guiding philosophy of Mt. View Aiki Kai by Mahipal Lunia Sensei. These are his own personal views and do not represent the art/s,  system/s, or teacher/s he has studied with.