Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Heijoshin. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Heijoshin. Afficher tous les articles

lundi 27 mai 2019

Zanshin, Fudoshin, Mushin





How can Martial Arts help Zen practice ?


So I first was interested in Martial Arts, then I found Zen. I have heard many many time that Zen would help me get better at Martial Arts. And you know what ?

I really don’t think it happened.

I started martial art in 1969 (maybe 1968 - I am not sure).  But really got serious about them in 1986. That’s still 33 years ago. I have a decent level, I am not master, but if I keep training for 20 more years, I might become one.  All of this came for one and one reason only. I kept coming.  From 1986 up to now, even if I changed 3 continents, Only once have I been witohout training for  sveral month, because of medical problems. I must have been practicing at least 31 years out of those 33 years.

I am not gifted, I have met gifted people. They left. I stayed. I kept training, practicing, I got punched, kicked, I won some fights, I lost some. I lost more than I won, but when I lost I trained harder. I became better.

So I’d like for you to consider something. :

Zen won’t help you get better at Martial Arts, but Martial arts will help you get better at  Zen.


The reason for this is that if you try to it is more difficult to fool people with bullshit in Martial arts than it is with Zen.

Bullshit in Zen : 

Many people do not have a clear idea of what Zen is, even that it is anything Buddhist. So any one can pretend to do Zen and be a teacher, and write cool books about it, and give conferences and  seminars, and intellectualize a lot, and they will find a bunch of followers because people want the silver bullet. It is much easier to read a book, or listen to a Youtube speech about Zen, that it is to sit quiet and at times in pain watching thoughts pass and fade away.

Bullshit in Martial Arts :

There is little of it. If you really want to know how good you are, you get in the ring, and you see what happens. If you win, good for you, go try someone bigger and learn from them.  If you lose, go train harder. Don’t go read books about technique or motivation or fighting spirit, find a good coach, and train harder.

That’s what Martial Arts teach you. The truth is not in books or therapy or meetings. The truth is in your training harder :  keep training and keep coming.

The key to becoming a better at anything (Art, martial art, math, fly fishing...) is to train, and the keys to effective training are :

    • Dedication : keep coming. No matter how bad or discouraged you may feel.
    • A good coach or Sensei – someone who has been there.
    • Trust your coach.

These are also the keys to effective Zen training.

Now I understand that most of you are not at all interested in Martial Arts, but you do not have to leave, because a lot of what I am going to speak you can also practice in other disciplines  - Sports and Arts – without having to get in a ring. And I will be happy to answer some questions at the end on these matters.

There are many ways that Martial art training can help Zen training.


Today I will get into 3 different set of minds that we often mention in Japanese Martial Arts.


I will  shortly explain what they mean for martial arts or fighting (combat) purposes, then I will explain how this some how relates to Zen



1 - Zanshin, Fudoshin, Mushin


Now you realize that the 3 terms end up with the sound “shin”...

1.1 SHIN

Shin is often translated in English as “Mind”, but “Mind” is a very vague concept in English. Shin is better understood as the Heart and writes like it.

Shin is :
    • the Core or Heart of a person.
    • Willpower, Motivation, ability to act
     
This is different from intellect, intellect can give you very good reasons to do something, but if you do not have the heart, you won’t do it. 
Shin


1.2 - ZANSHIN: attentive mind, all encompassing awareness. 

It is being aware of your environment, ready to react. There is a little tension involved, you cannot be too tense because if you focus on something particular, you might miss other important signals.
Being too focused is the open door for your opponent to deceive you.
Zanshin is general awareness , global, peripheral vision. The more you train, the more you learn how to focus and detect potential threats.

Zanshin


At the end of a Iai waza, you return to the place you started from in a Zanshin state of mind. All your senses are alert, nothing is focused, you thrive to be aware of everything around you.

One day I was competing in a Karate tournament with a Bo (Long Staff) kata. The Kata included a long jab with the tip of the Bo before a 180 degrees turn. As I was going to jab, a young child from the crowd of spectators ran across the ring. I was in a Zanshin state of mind and saw the  child without looking at him. I stopped my Bo a few inches from him.

There is nothing special about Zanshin, anyone may train his Zanshin, the more you train, the better you become, unless maybe you've got ADD, (which I believe is only a sorry excuse)


1.3 - FUDOSHIN : immovable mind 

- a state of equanimity or imperturbability. The mind is quiet, not disturbed by anything. In a fighting or warring situation, this is ideal, total , natural, self control.



It is also sometimes called Heijoshin.


Let me read to you a quote by sword master Shimabukuro Hanshi from his book Flashing Steel :

Heijoshin (or peace of mind) is the by-product of a person’s complete inner being. It can only be achieved by refining the whole inner essence and this can only be accomplished if one’s intellect, emotions, and character are developed in balance. Heijoshin literally translated means constant stable spirit. Such a translation hardly does it justice...
To achieve heijoshin as a martial artist requires a lifestyle of discipline, effort, sacrifice and commitment. Such a commitment to developing excellence of character is what sets the martial artist apart from most people in a confused and unhappy society. As we discover, the true nature of martial arts training leads us to a fuller understanding of the nature of life itself. With this understanding comes peace of mind and true and lasting happiness.


Fudoshin

Only circumstances will let us know how good our Fudoshin is, once again it depends on training. Fudoshin is a higher level of achievement than Zanshin.
Training in fudoshin requires, on top of intellectual and emotional concentration, to developing one's acceptance of others and of circumstances.

Possibly, becoming aware of a deeper level of connection between oneself and others is one key to developing Fudoshin.


1.4 - MUSHIN : literally "no mind" or “Empty mind”

– sometimes defined as the spontaneity which allows immediate action without conscious thought; in my Martial Arts experience, I have experienced Mushin very few times. I actually had to use my training very few times in real fighting conditions. I was once in Paris and a group of obnoxious teenagers surrounded my sister and I . One of them became more disrespectful or threatening than the others. I kicked him without even thinking about it. (It might not have been the smartest thing to do, but we can speak about this later)  the point is that I did not even think about kicking this young man, it just happened).

I also experienced Mushin when practicing Ju Jitsu Katas with a partner. We did it, when it was over we could not believe how well it had been. This situation happened twice in over 30 years of practice.

Mushin is something you cannot speak about when it happens, only afterwards, you know that something close to perfect happened through you. And then you cannot find words to describe it.  Mushin is bigger than you. It just comes through you. When you realize how great it was, it's over, you are not in Mushin anymore.

You can also experience Mushin in other areas such as playing music, painting, or dancing.

Mushin


When it happens, it glows through you, there is awareness, but there is no feeling of ego. As soon as the ego comes back and gets aware of it, it is gone… I am sorry if this is not clear, like I said earlier, you cannot find words to describe.

I believe that in order to experience Mushin in a way or an other, is is much better to be very fluent in it. It might be possible to experience it with very little training, but this is not my case.

The danger with Mushin. There is a big danger with Mushin, which is to let everything and anything happen as it flows through you (as maybe I did when I kicked this guy) As we all know, terrible things can be and have been committed by individuals, who later on explained that they were not really responsible as they were in a trance like sort of state of mind.

This has to be seriously considered. I do not know how it can be prevented. The key might be to have a teacher you can debate this with.



2 - HOW DOES THIS HELP ZEN PRACTICE ?



    • Mindfulness
    • Zazen


2.1 - MINDFULNESS


And here I have to say something about mindfulness. We don’t teach it in Zen, we just teach Zazen. But Mindfulness practice really can help Zazen. It is a sort of warming up for Zazen- a “Zazen-light”.

in Mindfulness, the one I have practiced, you try to be aware of feelings and mind.

2.1.1 - Mindfulness of feelings :

Pay attention, you will realize there are only 3 kind of feelings.
    • pleasant,
    • unpleasant
    • neutral

Which correspond to
    • Greed,
    • Hate
    • Delusion.

This is Zanshin.

With practice, you will quickly realize that only one kind of feeling exists at the same time and that they can vary very quickly.

2.1.2 - Mindfulness of Mind (thoughts and emotions)

This is a little different, thoughts and emotions are more complex than feelings, there are lots of different kind of them, observing your thoughts and emotions will make you realize that :
  • No 2 emotions or thoughts happen at the same time. 
  • Thoughts or emotions – if given enough time and power - get one of the 3 feelings to arise.
  • Thoughts and emotions tend to follow patterns of habits : One particular thought generally leads to one particular emotion and a particular feeling. (often deluded thought leads to thoughts of greed or rejection)

So once you are aware of this, you become able to stop a pattern of thoughts, you recognize the sprout that is going to grow into a bad tree and you kill it right now. It is like when you feel your opponent is going to do something, sometimes you can even know it before he does. And you prevent it from happening.

Because you have become aware of the impermanence, constant firing and patterns of mind activities, it becomes easier to detach from them, kill them in the egg, before they becomes strong and upsets you. So you get closer to Fudoshin.


2.2 – ZAZEN

Zazen really is about Mushin – empty mind. We try to realize Mushin. So if we use the pond analogy we want our mind to be like the surface of a pond with no ripples on it.

So we try to not let the wind of thoughts or emotions come up and create waves on the surface of the pond.





But of course if we try to achieve anything there is already an attachment to something, we are doomed.

This is what practice is about. While in theory we are doomed, you can write many books about this kind of apparent contradiction. But it turns out that theory is not practice.

It is like in Tai Chi when you try hard to relax, on the paper it seems doomed, but in reality, this is the way it works, slowly.

If we practice and train hard, we can make it happen, little by little it is not hard anymore, we become fluent. so all that I described about Mindfulness applies to Zazen.

We use Zanshin to cultivate Fudoshin, and we sit patiently, then small moments of Mushin happen, which we won’t be able to describe, but we will remember. The whole idea is to let it happen, more and more often, without attachment to it.

And here Zanshin and Fudoshin help again. If Mushin happens, just acknowledge it, become aware of the possible pleasant feeling associated to it, and drop the feeling...



This is the transcript of a talk I gave at the Atlanta Soto Zen Center on  May 5, 2019



jeudi 16 septembre 2010

Takuan, Musashi and the Snake

Once upon a time the legendary swordsman Miyamoto Musashi was practicing zazen beside a stream with his life-long friend and mentor, Zen Master Takuan Soho.

Suddenly, he became aware of another presence nearby. From the corner of his eye, he saw a deadly viper slithering into the clearing toward Takuan.

Knowing that the slightest movement might frighten the venomous snake into attacking his friend, Musashi kept watching the serpent in utter stillness. When Takuan himself became aware of the snake's presence, a faint smile appeared on his face. The snake came toward him, and peacefully crawled across his thighs.

The serpent continued on its course toward Musashi. Several feet away, sensing Musashi's presence, he recoiled, preparing to attack, but suddenly scurried away into the bushes. Musashi had not moved. His fierce spirit undisturbed by the threat of the viper was so palpable that the snake had speedily moved away in fright.

Most men would be proud to possess such an intimidating aura, but Musashi felt only shame as he suddenly understood his own greatest shortcoming.


"What troubles you?" asked Takuan.


"All my life, I have trained myself to develop such skill that no man would ever dare attack me. Now that I have reached my goal, all sentient beings instinctively fear me. You saw how the snake fled from me!"

"I saw it", the priest said. "Since it dared not attack you, you defeated it without striking a blow, and because of that, both the snake and you are alive now. Why does that sadden you?"

"Because I am so strong that no one can ever grow close to me. I can never have true peace." Musashi pointed a finger at the priest. "Not like you", he said with admiration. "You did not fear the snake, nor did the snake fear you. Your spirit is so calm, so natural, that the snake treated you no differently than the rocks, the trees, or the wind. People accept you that way, too."


Takuan smiled and resumed his Zazen.


Musashi spent the last years of his life cultivating Heijoshin, the state of mind demonstrated by Master Takuan.


Please consider the similar story of the contemporary encounter between a Korean Tiger and Master Swordsman Yagyu Munenori, and the same Zen Master Takuan. Their main purpose is to illustrate the power of Heijoshin.


At a lower level, you might also want to ponder the point developed by Master Takuan. Because of the strength demonstrated by Musashi, no confrontation occurred, and no body got hurt. This is somehow the same as the doctrine of military dissuasion : You know that I am soooo strong that if you attack me, you will pay so very dearly that you won't even dream about it. It is in a sense a good thing - nobody gets hurt. However, the reason it occurs is that there is a balance of strength. If for an unknown reason the balance is broken, then there is no more deterrent, and war and destruction happen...

jeudi 10 décembre 2009

ZANSHIN, HEIJOSHIN, FUDOSHIN, MUSHIN

Zanshin, Fudoshin, Heijoshin, Mushin are words used to describe several states of mind significant in Martial Arts because of their value in developing actual combat effectiveness.

The common denominator to these words is SHIN. In Chinese Medicine, the Heart is the location of the Mind. I suppose this is the reason why the two most common translations for Shin are Mind and Heart.

Mushin is a state of mind also described in Zen. It is in fact often described as the goal (or the mean) of Zen. As I indicated in an earlier post, I intend in this blog for to spend time studying Mushin in the contexts of Budo and Zen.

In this first post, I would like to describe my own experience or understanding of these states in relation to Martial Arts. This is only my own experience, and as such it is questionable and should be questioned.


ZANSHIN : the remaining or continuous mind - an all-encompassing awareness, in which the practitioner is ready for anything, at any time. Zanshin is the easier part. A great practitioner always displays it – Awareness. The more you train, the more you learn how to focus and detect potential threats. At the end of a Iai waza, you return to the place you started from in a Zanshin state of mind. All your senses are alert, nothing is focused, you thrive to be aware of everything around you. Zanshin does not mean tunnel vision focus.
I was once competing in a tournament demonstrating Sho no Koun Bo (Long Staff) kata. The kata included a long and powerful jab before a 180 degrees turn. As I was going to jab, a, child from the crowd of spectators ran across the ring. I saw the child without having to look in his direction and stopped my Bo a few inches from him.This is Zanshin.

There is nothing special about Zanshin, anyone may train his Zanshin, the more you train, the better you become, unless maybe you've got ADD, (which I believe is only a sorry excuse)

FUDOSHIN : immovable mind - a state of equanimity or imperturbability. I believe this is also what Shimabukuro Sensei calls HEIJOSHIN in his book Flashing Steel : Heijoshin (or peace of mind) is the by-product of a person’s complete inner being. It can only be achieved by refining the whole inner essence and this can only be accomplished if one’s intellect, emotions, and character are developed in balance. Heijoshin literally translated means constant stable spirit. Such a translation hardly does it justice...

To achieve heijoshin as a martial artist requires a lifestyle of discipline, effort, sacrifice and commitment. Such a commitment to developing excellence of character is what sets the martial artist apart from most people in a confused and unhappy society. As we discover, the true nature of martial arts training leads us to a fuller understanding of the nature of life itself. With this understanding comes peace of mind and true and lasting happiness.


Only circumstances will let us know how good our Fudoshin is, once again it depends on training, but Fudoshin requires a higher level of training than Zanshin, I believe it requires, on top of intellectual and emotional concentration, developing one's acceptance of others and of circumstances.

It could also be that a key is to become aware of a deeper level of connection between oneself and others .

MUSHIN :literally "no mind" – sometimes defined as the spontaneity which allows immediate action without conscious thought.
I only experienced Mushin very few times. I actually used my martial abilities very few times in my life. Once I was walking in Paris with my younger sister. A group of obnoxious teenagers surrounded us. One of them was more vocal and threatening than the others. As he tried to reach for my sister's head, I kicked him. He was not hurt, but realized we might not be such easy targets as he had expected. But the kick happened without even thinking about it. It was almost as if I did not kick him, but as if the kick just came through me. This is Mushin.

I also experienced Mushin practicing a Ju Jitsu Kata with a partner I had been practicing for a long time with. We performed the kata, without trying harder than usual, and when it was over we thought "WOW, that was cool "; we could not believe how well it had been.Somehow, it was perfect (at least that's what we felt like)

Mushin is something you are not aware of at the time. You cannot speak about it when it happens, only after the fact do you realize that something close to perfect and bigger than you happened through you. When you realize how great it was, it's over, you are not in Mushin anymore.

One can experience Mushin in other areas such as playing music, painting, or dancing. It is a sort of trance-like situation: while you practice, you are not aware of yourself. "IT" just flows through you. Once you become aware of it, it is gone.

In order to experience Mushin in a way or an other, is is probably much better to be very fluent in that way. If one is gifted (but where does the gift come from ? ...), it might be possible to experience Mushin with little training, unfortunately, this is not my case.


The danger with Mushin is to let everything and anything happen as it flows through you. Terrible things can be committed by individuals who later explain and believe that they were not really responsible as they were in a trance like sort of state of mind when they acted...

This has to be considered...

dimanche 21 décembre 2008

HEIJOSHIN

In his book Flashing Steel, Masayaki Shimabukuro Sensei examines the essence of the Martial Artist and what sets him apart from others in society.

Peace of mind – which we all are looking forward to as a mean to achieve something else or an end in itself, is what Shimabukuro Sensei refers to as heijoshin:


Heijoshin (or peace of mind) is the by-product of a persons complete inner being. It can only be achieved by refining the whole inner essence and this can only be accomplished if ones intellect, emotions, and character are developed in balance. Heijoshin literally translated means constant stable spirit. Such a translation hardly does it justice. To understand the full nature of heijoshin one has to look to the nuances of the Japanese language. Heijoshin is comprised of three kanji (ideograms):


I) Hei - peaceful, calm, steady




ii) Jo - always, constant, continually




iii) Shin - translates as heart or the whole inner essence of the individual




Combining the kanji heijoshin is the whole inner being of person being continually at peace. One has peace of mind. Heijoshin is best understood not as a single attribute but as a culmination of several character traits. As mentioned above, to achieve heijoshin requires a high degree of mental development in three key areas: intellect, emotions, and integrity (or character).

Why is heijoshin important to us as martial artists? Although our bodies may give way to time and age, we can continue to practice and develop our character and mental faculties. Heijoshin is an unlimited quality. As martial artists, and in life, there is always room for more knowledge, greater compassion, stronger love, and a higher level of character development.

To achieve heijoshin as a martial artist requires a lifestyle of discipline, effort, sacrifice and commitment. Such a commitment to developing excellence of character is what sets the martial artist apart from most people in a confused and unhappy society. As we discover, the true nature of martial arts training leads us to a fuller understanding of the nature of life itself. With this understanding comes peace of mind and true and lasting happiness.


Some practice Zen to calm their minds, and they may reach elsewhere. Some practice to reach enlightenment. They may never find it, but might find Heijoshin. I do not think they are the same thing, but hey, I am not enlightened, so who knows ?

Lately I have been struggling trying to reconcile Martial Arts and Zen. They have a lot in common, and then, there is that precept : Do not Kill....

I understand that under certain circumstances, killing might be the only alternative. In that case one should be ready.

This is a difficult question, it might take a while, and it won't be through reading other's books or listening to self appointed experts or masters.


Nothing comes for free, I have no choice, we have no choice – Let’s train hard !


Shimabukuro Sensei will teach a seminar in Muso Jikiden Eishin-Ryu Iaijutsu in Pensacola on March 6, 7 and 8, 2009. The seminar will be held at the Pensacola dojo (Big Green Drum Japanese Martial Arts.)