Breaking the Chains of the Ancient Warrior

BREAKING THE CHAINS OF THE ANCIENT WARRIOR
Tales of Wisdom for Young Martial Artist
• RESPECT •

Building Character by Mastering
the Martial Arts Code of Conduct

FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

YOU ARE THE INHERITOR OF THE ANCIENT WARRIOR!
If you treat him as your enemy
and try and fight him,
He will conquer you and be passed on to the next generation.
If you pass the tests of character,
and respect the Ancient Warrior within,
and look fear in the face,
you will understand how to—
DEFEAT THE ENEMY WITHOUT FIGHTING!
Are you ready for the tests of wisdom?
Beware: the Ancient Warrior is very powerful!

FOR ADULTS

CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT THROUGH THE MARTIAL ARTS
This book teaches young people to develop strength of character and healthy values which will guide them in creating goodness in their lives.

The stories and teachings in BREAKING THE CHAINS OF THE ANCIENT WARRIOR can be used by:

• Martial Arts Instructors—as required reading for rank advancement.
• Parents—as examples of healthy and humane alternatives to conflict.
• Educators—as curriculum resources for relationship-building skills.
• Counselors—as a context within which young people can learn to understand themselves.


BEGINNER'S MIND
The Test of Wisdom

Three students were sitting cross-legged on the hillside overlooking a wide, long valley. The sun behind them bathed everything in the golden, late afternoon light. Lofty, lazy puffs of clouds hung suspended in a bright, blue sky. A gentle breeze cooled the backs of the sitting students. Birds flew from tree to tree; silence abounded.

The students sat quite still with their hands folded gently in their laps. Their eyes looked down at the ground. They were oblivious to the beauty around them. Nothing distracted their intended objective. They breathed in a controlled, precise manner. They seemed asleep, yet were indeed conscious—but not awake.

The Teacher approached them from behind. He stopped for a few moments and keenly observed the three students. He picked up two good-sized rocks from the ground and began to rub them together, creating an irritating, grinding sound. At first, the noise of the two rocks being rubber together did not seem to bother the three students, but after a while, they could no longer keep their silence.

"Excuse me, Sir, but what are you doing?" asked one of the three students, trying to keep the sound of annoyance out of her voice.

"I am rubbing stones together to make a mirror," the Teacher called back, continuing to grind the two stones together.

"You cannot create a mirror by rubbing two stones together," the student responded politely, but with irritation.

"Neither can you attain enlightenment by sitting cross-legged," responded the Teacher with a smile.

"But, Sir, this meditation was handed down to us from our Teacher's Teacher's Teacher; it comes from the time of the Enlightened One from the Orient. Our style can be traced back to the original monastery where the Martial Arts began. Sitting meditation is our heritage; it calms the small mind so the Big Mind can enter. Through sitting, one will obtain Enlightenment, freedom from the prison of illusionary thought, free from the Warrior's past," the student replied proudly.

"Dear students, what is it you are trying to get free of?"

"We are freeing ourselves from ourselves—our desires, our past which chains us to the present," one of the students answered.

"How can you free yourself? This is like trying to lift yourself up with your own bootstraps! You are the chains...you are the past...you are the Ancient Warrior. Trying to get rid of the chains of the past is futile, because the you who is trying to free yourself from the past is one and the same thing. It's like trying to divide yourself up into two people—the past person who is not wanted and the present person who is trying to dismiss the past person. Like a house of mirrors, it is a trick of the mind.

We are so greedy. We think we can get everything. Money, fame, position, power, and the most desired achievement of all—enlightenment, that pure state of being, free from suffering and pain. But trying to free ourselves by some mechanical practice such as sitting only creates the illusion of freedom and brings more annoyance, pain and conflict."

"But, Sir, this tradition has been ongoing for thousands of years. It is the way of the ancient Martial Arts Masters," the student replied in a shocked tone.

"What makes you think that simply because something has been going on for thousands of years it is right? And why do you unquestioningly accept the authority of the 'Masters of Old'? How do you know they were right? If you accept the authority of the past because it sounds impressive, because it is very old, then you become a blind follower and will create more suffering. Find out for yourself what is true! In finding out through questioning, you will become alert, intelligent. It is this intelligence, this questioning, which will understand the chains of the past, the Warrior, and will end it. Not through sitting, but through your being alive, awake, and sensitive, will you achieve this. The intelligent Martial Artist has respect for his or her Teachers and elders but does not blindly follow their psychological authority, no matter how old their style, no matter how far back their Teacher's lineage goes. It doesn't matter if you have any heritage. What's important is to look for yourself now at this immense problem of conflict in human relationships—how we are chained to the past, the Warrior, and the mentality of war. A Martial Art can give you physical skill and a deep inward confidence so you do not automatically react to a threat by fighting or running away. It can also bring you to a point of psychological understanding of how the human brain has been conditioned to accept fighting and war as an honorable solution to solving the problems of relationship."

"Excuse me for being rude, but who are you to say that? Who are you to tell us what to do? How do you know? Isn't that just your opinion?" one of the students challenged, offended by the Teacher's words.

"I appreciate your boldness in questioning me. This is just what we are encouraging you to do. But we are also asking you to listen and find out for yourselves if what we say is true. I am not asking you to accept what I tell you; however, I am asking you to take it into consideration, to see if there is truth in it. For if you find out what I have said to be the truth, then it is not my truth—it is a truth anyone can see. Therefore, I don't have to tell you what to do or not do. You will know. Do you understand?"

"What you say is a shock to us because we believe in our Teachers and their absolute authority. In our school, we repeat the sayings of the Masters, but now I wonder about this. I've never questioned it before; no one pointed out this was something to question. I have just accepted what was considered to be true. We repeat the school slogan each day at the start of practice, but now I wonder if this is just another habit which dulls the brain and puts us to sleep," one of the students responded thoughtfully.

"Looking at life anew is called 'Beginner's Mind.' Such a mind is 'pure' and sees life with freshness and vitality; like a child's mind, it is innocent and curious. An alert, active, and alive mind questions the authority of the past and sees through illusions. This 'Beginner's Mind' is not habitual or mechanical. It does not fall asleep under the weight and authority of the past or of the 'Great Masters', no matter how glorious that past may sound or how important those Teachers seem. But be very careful. Don't fall in love with the words 'Beginner's Mind' either! If you do, then you have again fallen into the trap, because the words have then taken on the power and illusion of authority. You might think, I am obtaining 'Beginner's Mind', and be caught up by the same old game of trying to get to an imagined state of freedom. Watch, be alert, and question. Now—how will you know if what I am saying is true or not?"

BOOK REPORTS

Breaking the Chains of the Ancient Warrior
Brian (12)

This book has taught me a lot. This book has taught me a lot of respect and it had my favorite martial artist in here, Bruce Lee. It has taught me not to fight unless you need to. And it taught me a lot more self-discipline. Bruce Lee was teaching some children some of the martial arts. He taught how to focus, respect and self-discipline like it taught me. And this book was amazing because I like reading chapter books. And this guy could shoot a bull’s eye with both of his eyes closed and he made it. And Terrence Webster-Doyle is an awesome martial artist too but Bruce Lee is still my favorite martial artist.

The book also taught me some healthy values to live by. I truly enjoyed reading it.