I love reading martial arts books. Over the course of my career, I have probably read hundreds of them. There are currently a dozen or more on my book shelf. I had to get rid of some that I no longer read to make space for the ones I constantly go back and refer to over and over again. Unfortunately, in recent years martial arts books have become boring and predictable. They have little real content and lots of pictures of techniques that don’t really mean anything unless you are taught them in person. I literally cannot remember the last martial arts book I read in the past few years that was worth talking about. Until now… Continue reading
Monthly Archives: November 2014
Stronger Than Fear
Are you stronger than your fear?
Or do you stay in your comfort zone and allow fear to get the better of you? You can tell every time when you start to push against the edge of your comfort zone – you begin to feel afraid. Maybe you don’t call it fear. Maybe it’s resistance. Maybe it’s discomfort. Maybe it’s just a queasy feeling in the pit of your stomach that goes away if you you stop pushing forward. Call it what ever you want. I know what it is. I call it by it’s true name – fear.
How do you become stronger than fear? By feeling it, acknowledging it, and doing the thing you fear anyway. As Mark Twain once said, “Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not the absence of fear.”
One way to face fear and push past it is by enduring brutal physical training. This type of training is NOT for the faint of heart. However, when you go through it, face it, and come out on the other end, you are a stronger person – mentally, physically, and spiritually.
Here is a sample of one conditioning workout with an MMA fighter I am currently training:
Like Paul Freakin’ Bunyan!
I was recently asked how one should train their psyche for martial arts. It seems like a weird question… Train your psyche?? Upon further reflection though, it’s actually a very astute question.
Psyche is defined as the totality of the human mind, conscious and unconscious. So training it must be essential. How then do we do it?
The basic meaning of the Greek word ψυχή (psūkhē) was “life” in the sense of “breath”, formed from the verb ψύχω (psukhō, “to blow”). Derived meanings included “spirit”, “soul”, “ghost”, and ultimately “self” in the sense of “conscious personality” or “psyche”.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psyche_(psychology)
Generally when martial artists talk about training the psyche, they speak in terms of mental toughness. How your threshold of pain equals your threshold of performance and things like that. Here’s another way to train the psyche that is a little bit different…
Train Your Psyche
When you practice your martial art, whether in solo training or with your training partners, picture yourself as a giant, like Paul Freakin’ Bunyan, standing taller than the tallest trees. Have a feeling that your enormous stature confers a comparable sense of self confidence, super human strength, titan like power, and a strength of will that you can accomplish anything. Balance it out with a supreme sense of benevolence like a warrior-protector.
Stand tall. Breathe deeply. Relax, yet remain full of energy and intent. Assume a completely nonchalant facial expression like nothing in the world can perturb you. In Japanese, this is Fudoshin – immovable heart.
Embody the characteristics you want to possess. This changing of your physiology, focus, and belief is the quickest way to change your state. Then the question becomes, how long can you maintain it? Practice well.
A Glimpse Into Internal Power Training – The Push Test
The push test is a very practical way of testing the quality of one’s solo training for internal power. As explained in Weakest Direction Theory is BS, the body, when properly trained, acts as an omni-directional structure. This allows the practitioner of internal power to neutralize any incoming force by diffusing it throughout the structure rather than having to surrender to it or resist against it. Either you can do it or you can’t. There’s no way to fake it. Continue reading


