Tai Chi Taiji Tai Chi Taiji Tai Chi Taiji Tai Chi Taiji Tai Chi Taiji Erle montaigue Erle Montaigue Erle Montaigue Erle Montaigue Erle Montaigue Taiji karate Taiji karate Taiji karate Taiji karate Taiji karate Chuan Taichi Chuan Taichi karate karate tai chi taiji tai chi chuan taijiquan tai chi qigong qi acupuncture self defense defence bagua bagwa, dim mak dim-mak, baguazhang internal martial arts
Chapter Five
The Mind in Internal
Gung-fu
From the new book by Erle Montaigue (1998)
"Internal Gung-fu" Volume One (of 12 volumes) "QI".
In order to understand Internal Gung-fu, it
is important to also understand at a basic level how the mind works. In
knowing this, we are able to understand why we have to perform forms or katas
and why they are so important.
I was alerted to the following by taking a
memory course by Kevin Trudeau which, for me had more relevance to the martial
arts than merely learning how to remember things! I have also read extensively
books such as "Super Memory" and have also found that what they
contain is relevant to the martial arts. This is one of Kevin Trudeau’s
experiments. I would like you to try this right now. As you read this chapter,
imagine that you are holding a big yellow juicy lemon in your hand. You must
SEE the lemon in your mind’s eye, you must feel the waxy texture and that
little lump at the end. Take a big knife and cut the lemon holding one half up
to your mouth and squeeze the juice into your open mouth.
What happened? Your mouth produced saliva
didn’t it. You really didn’t have a lemon, you were only imagining it.
Your mind however, still caused your body to do what it would have done had
you a real lemon!
It is the same with the martial arts. When
we practice our forms or katas, we imagine the opponent in front of us.
Provided that you have a good imagination, your sub-conscious mid will be
doing all of those self-defence applications as you go through your forms. The
good thing is however, that you do not have to imagine the applications every
time you practice. Only once or twice do you have to be told what the
applications are and only once or twice do you have to go through the whole
form imagining that you are performing those applications. After that, those
movements go into your ‘long term’ memory and you no longer have to think
about them, they will just happen sub-consciously. IT does not take long for a
‘short term’ memory to become long term. I have a way of remembering my
pin numbers where I make up a story using those numbers. Every time I have to
use my pin, I remember the story rather than the pin number. But the amazing
thing is, that after a short time, I no longer even remember the story as it
has become sub-conscious or ‘long term memory’. So the pin number just
comes without any conscious thought. Doing it this way, there is no chance
that you will forget the number after some time of not using it as it has
become long term, like your name. No-one forgets their name unless they have
some memory disease. And it is the same with the martial arts, before long,
the self-defence applications go into your long term memory and you no longer
have to think about them, they will just happen if you are ever attacked.
This is the beauty of doing form or kata
correctly, you do not actually have to go out and fight people in order to
learn about self-defence. You have of course to know how to strike hard
objects, and you have to have some form of interaction with other people in a
self-defence area such as in push hands or in what we in our schools call
‘offense/defensive’ sparring. I use the word ‘sparring’ with caution
however as most people nowadays know my thoughts on this silly pastime. What
most people call sparring is the most damaging area of one’s martial
arts/self-defence training. Of course if you are only doing a martial art as
opposed to using a martial art as a self-defence tool, then you should do
sparring. Sparring is a sport and if you are doing martial arts for sport,
then you will have to do sparring in order to win trophies etc. But do not
expect to be able to ever defend yourself using those same movements that you
use in the ring against some street-wise attacker. You will be beaten up
should you think that you could defend yourself because you have won some
trophy in some martial arts tournament! Street fights just do not happen as
they do in ANY ring fight no matter how realistic they TRY to make them or
call them. You have to do either sports or self-defence, the two can never be
mixed.
Offensive/defensive sparring is the only way
that my schools teach fighting. We do it this way; the instructor wears all of
the protective equipment that he can find so that he is not hurt. We even go
so far as to wear large neck equipment so that neck strikes are used without
killing the instructor. I say that it is only the instructor with many years
of training who I able to act at the attacker because he or she will have the
necessary control to be able to pull the attacks should they see that the
student is not going to defend against it! This is very important. However, we
do not let the student whose time has come for this type of training, know
that we will actually pull the attacks when necessary. The student believes
that they will be severely struck if they do not successfully defend
themselves. This is part of the mind training. In any confrontation, it is the
person with the strongest and most resolute mind who will win depending upon
relevant training of course. So I let the student believe that he or she will
be severely attacked with great force and if they do not successfully defend
against me, they will be hurt. I then attack as they would be attacked in the
street, totally illogically, without technique like an animal. As soon as I
register that the student has struck me in two or three deadly point like the
neck, I will stop the attack, as I have been defeated. This kind of training I
have found to be the greatest training aid for any self-defence method. The
students really feel intimidated as they would in the street, then they only
have their mind to rely upon. They must summon up automatically more yang Qi (energy) than what I am landing upon them, only then will they be assured that
their art will suffice in a real scrap.
In one training session of form or kata, we
have defended ourselves against an attacker often hundreds of times and these
methods become automatic eventually.
However, here is the rub; you must be
training in natural movement, that which is in tune with your natural flow of
internal energy. Only these movements will ever become sub-conscious reflex
actions. Movements that are jerky, stiff, not circular, will never become
reflex as they are moves that we have to always think about. Many karate
people around the world now are beginning to realize this and are changing
their katas slightly, so that they represent that which was originally kept
from them!
Your mind cannot tell the difference between
what is imagined and what is real. As an example, my children only ever
practice form thus far. But every now and again, I will simply attack them to
test out their sub-conscious learning. Without fail, each one of them is able
to defend against my attacks relative to their level of growth and strength of
course. But the sub-conscious is there never having any kind of normal
sparring. People who say that they only practice what is ‘real’ and never
practice form or kata will never be good at self-defence. We only have to look
at some of the great instructors such as Bruce Lee. No-one has ever come up to
his level. Why? Because people tried to learn what he knew and not HOW he
knew. Bruce Lee was well versed in a number of classical martial arts systems
including Taijiquan. It would be exactly the same should I try to teach my own
students and children what I know and not how I learnt it. Sure it is very
hard not to teach what I now know, as it is exciting for me to teach the
advanced stuff. But I must keep teaching basics to beginners, as they will
never reach an advanced level if I only teach them how to fight using my
system. In learning from the beginning, the classical internal systems, we
eventually learn to invent our own system where the art becomes ours; we own
the art, it does not own us. However, in order to own the art, it must own you
for some time in the beginning.
Bruce Lee was correct in saying in as many
words, that one must come across his own system, leaving all systems aside.
But in order to do that, we must first of all learn a system! A baby cannot
just get up and run, it must first of all learn a system of moving. When the
baby grows up, it has its own system of moving like no other person. At this
time, the baby has become the adult and has mastered the art of moving. It’s
exactly the same with the martial arts, we must firstly learn a system,
preferably a classical proven system, then we are able to convert that
knowledge to our own system. This is the reason that I always tell my
students, (at an advanced level), "don’t do it like me, find your own
way". However, in the beginning, they must do it exactly the same way
that I do it as these are the basic building blocks of those forms that have
been proven to lead you to greater things later. Many systems will not do this
for you however, as they are just not physically sound, they do not have
natural movement.
When you are first of all imagining the
opponent in front of you and performing the self-defence applications against
his attacks, you must have it in your mind as vividly as possible. See what
clothing the attacker is wearing; is he small or large, dark or light coloured
hair and complexion. Is he hairy or smooth? Really see that attacker as he
attacks you but do not use tension in your forms as this will block the Qi and
those movements will never become reflexive! This is what is wrong with the
so-called ‘dynamic tension katas’; they block the Qi. Be sure to put
yourself into the picture as this really helps with long term memory. This
sounds like I am also talking about push hands? And I am. Push hands has all
of the above elements and in the idea exercise for gaining reflex
self-defensive actions.
One last warning: Always be careful of what
you think! Because what you think, your mind is actually doing! This applies
to all facets of life and has a direct bearing upon your standard of life.
Someone can be on the outside a saint and have a miserable life because what
they are thinking on the inside is definitely not saintly! Your mind is the
most powerful weapon you have in both self-defence and in your daily life. Use
it wisely.