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Showing posts with label sensei mark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sensei mark. Show all posts

27 May 2013

All about righteousness


UNRIGHTEOus

If you think you're sure, you're not. 
If you're not sure, you're right. 
But if you think you're right, you're wrong.

26 May 2013

The journey of the monastic

Some monastics prefer a course of study. Others prefer a nap. It's all good.

OVERVIEW
In the monastery or convent, we enter a series of rooms. Each room has someone sitting in the room. Upon entering the room, they hand us a small slip of paper. On the paper is written a single word, a universal principle for us to practice while we sit in the room. We practice the single word, that particular principle, until we can apply it in any situation or circumstance. Arising, we open the door to the next room.

THE SEVEN ROOMS
1. Sage - the man or woman of wisdom or inexperience who, upon arriving at a certain moment in their life, realizes they are coming up short. This realization is a root of wisdom. The principle in this room is Balance.
2. Supplicant - a state of mind suggestive of wishing or hoping there to be a better way of living. The principle in this room is Adaptability.
3. Beggar - upon arriving at a state of humility, the man or woman of wisdom or inexperience, is willing to do whatever they need to do to find their answers. The principle in this room is Interaction.
4. Scribe - writing, music, art and nature are often turned to by the Scribe, to find inspiration and to find a deeper form of an inexplicable 'something' within him or her self. The principle in this room is Movement.
5. Hermit - a time comes when the monastic needs a retreat, to go into a cave or solitude, to reconsider and perhaps re-map their life and goals. The principle in this room is Mechanics.
6. Wanderer - emerging from solitude, the monastic embarks on a journey to give expression to that which they cannot explain. The principle in this room is Energy.
7. Simpleton - the simpleton begins to realize that the state of 'not knowing' is only the beginning of a boundless journey. The principle in this room is Harmony.

The principles shown in each 'room' are based on the Seven Fundamental Principles for Standing int the Face of the Truth, as taught by Great River Jiu Jitsu.

 -- [a href="https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B5Wu2nDStgwqR0VVczR5NWxfczA/edit?usp=sharing"]INTRODUCTION TO THE SEVEN FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES[/a]

19 May 2013

Harmony: birth of the roadmap





The Seven Fundamental Principles for Standing in the Face of the Truth
An Introduction

When we don't have harmony in our lives and our world, we are suffering from some kind of imbalance. As we strive to improve our relationship to the world and within ourselves, we reach out to family and friendship, exercise and nutrition, and religion and meditation for solace. 'Balance and Harmony' is an often-used phrase that sounds good on paper but isn't always so easy to achieve.

Interestingly, quietly residing between those two seven letter words lays a simple three letter word - 'and.' As we shall see, it's all in the 'and,' because hiding in that modest conjunction are five secrets to improved balance and harmony.

Years ago my teacher (Sensei) related he had been thinking a great deal about the term balance and harmony, noting that the phrase is tossed about quite a bit. He had been observing how people often have a hard time finding balance in their lives, and that they have an equally hard time transitioning to harmony. He emphasized that while the two words are often used as synonyms they are actually two completely different principles.

Pondering what was preventing people from finding balance and then making the transition to harmony, his questions became a serious study. He found himself wondering what it was that resided between balance and harmony. In a succinct moment of realization, he began to focus on the three letter word ‘and’.

In time he came to understand that a seemingly insignificant word actually represented five principles, and that the word ‘and’ was a transitional word in a much larger sense then had ever been imagined. For within that word resided five naturally flowing universal principles that reliably transition us from balance to harmony. If we are not in harmony, it is because we are stuck on one or more of the other principles.

With an understanding of how the principles work, including their interrelationships, there now existed, perhaps for the first time, a roadmap to achieving better harmony in our lives. Eventually, these principles became known as The Seven Fundamental Principles for Standing in the Face of the Truth. [1]

Brilliantly ordered and crafted, together these principles teach us how to stand in the face of the Truth, including how to face our inner demons and outer critics. Each principle successively reveals that we can not only be successful navigating the unknown, but that we have a universal, principle-based 'GPS guidance system' to take along anytime we go there.