Qigong.. A Master shows Non violence through non rivalry.

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John Moosie

climber
Beautiful California
Topic Author's Original Post - Mar 1, 2009 - 01:11am PT

I thought yall might enjoy this video of a True Qigong master, Lama Dondrup Dorje, teaching and demonstrating the art of non rivalry. It is worth watching all four segments which are about 10 minutes apiece.

http://www.myvideo.de/watch/4083688/A_Discourse_on_the_Heart_Sutra_with_Chi_Kung_1_4
Porkchop_express

Trad climber
thats what she said...
Mar 1, 2009 - 01:58am PT
just watched all 4 at one sitting- very intriguing.
Porkchop_express

Trad climber
thats what she said...
Mar 1, 2009 - 10:44am PT
doubt is the natural reaction to have- I too feel this way. But I still would like to believe that it's possible... you know IF it is, then that would be huge...big if though.
kimgraves

Trad climber
2 exits North of the Gunks
Mar 1, 2009 - 11:37am PT
All four parts:

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

It is hard to believe that this is not staged - it looks like some manifistation of "the force." 35 years ago I was studying Tai Chi and was pushed like this by one of Cheng Man-Ch'ing's students. It wasn't as dramatic as this, but I too lost control of my body. It is not something you can see and believe. You have to experience it.

Best, Kim
Willoughby

Social climber
Truckee, CA
Mar 1, 2009 - 01:37pm PT
I don't know if it's "faked" or not, but it never seems to work too well when the opponents aren't their students. Apparently the key to overcoming this voodoo, is to grab the old "master" by the arm, and then just start wailing on them. Even if it did work, I regret to say that guns, laser-guided missiles, and all that jazz would still be more effective.
Porkchop_express

Trad climber
thats what she said...
Mar 1, 2009 - 01:44pm PT
So how do two guys who both know Qigong fight eachother? I am picturing something akin to the battle between Egg Chien and Lo Pan in "Big Trouble in Little China" ... not making light, just trying to understand. More importantly, how can this relate to climbing? I climb a lot more frequently than I fight...
Willoughby

Social climber
Truckee, CA
Mar 1, 2009 - 01:50pm PT
It probably looks a bit like this
NMClimber

climber
New Mexico
Mar 1, 2009 - 02:03pm PT
I find it odd that we all claim to be "open minded" and then see the reactions and hear the responses of people when they view something seemingly impossible. Then judgment is created that it is fake or staged.

It wasn't long ago that humans "believed" the earth was flat. Doctors believed to touch the heart muscle was a sin. People were burned alive because they were believed to be witches. It was claimed that no human could never run a mile under 4 minutes.

Quantum physics has proved that everything is made of energy. You, me, the rocks we climb on, the lap top I am typing on, EVERYTHING is energy. The human mind has the capability to ask energy to change, if we only knew how to ask.

These teachings date back to Socrates. "The Secret", the law of attraction, manifestation, Buddhism, Taoism, and even modern religion can be translated into these teachings.

Through out history, there have been many humans that have acquired or developed the skills to ask energy to change. Perhaps this gentleman has some of those skills.

How is it that a human can break stacks of bricks with just a hand? Every day someone does something that is thought to be "impossible". Will someone climb 5.17 someday? Is it possible?

Does your own thoughts of what is possible or impossible keep you from achieving or becoming something greater than what you are?

Tyler
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 1, 2009 - 02:12pm PT
I used to have a Qi kong meditiation tape, back in the Walkman day. Anyone have a favorite, mp3/iTunes/etal link?

Just watched the first of those clips, fascinating, but hard to accept. I remember watching a PBS show by Bill Moyers when he was in China. In it, they showed what must have been the same thing. Mr Moyers was clearly skeptical, but the participants professed their sincerity.

I wonder if anyone has attempted to use this in an academic seating. I have students who rebell, because they are contrary, not that it fills any purpose for them, quite the opposite. If I could get in their chi like the guy in that video, they could be more productive, and they would appreciate the benefits.

Thoughts, links, anyone?

and, that was pretty funny, Willoughby of the absent ankle.
John Moosie

climber
Beautiful California
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 1, 2009 - 02:38pm PT
Nice post Tyler. I agree. Everything is energy and we are only beginning to tap into the power of the mind.

One problem is that there are so many charlatans, so people are fooled and then they refuse to belief anything anymore. I once saw a demonstration similar to this video, though it was very short and the man was not as powerful. I am usually skeptical of most things, but I have learned to have an open mind.

Werner talks about the different types of people on this planet and how there is a warrior class. I don't necessarily believe that there are different classes of people, though I understand that we all have different talents. This man has taken his devotion to mastering energy and used it for self defense. Others may use their mastery for healing and others for creating a more beautiful world.

One of the keys, if you listened to the teacher talk as he was demonstrating, is that one must be without ego to wield this power and this is why our military has not been able to use this. Too many giant egos competing for power. Most folks on this planet are not yet ready to give up their egos. They still think that their egos give them something. I think that this video is just one more demonstration that giving up the ego is a positive step.

stevep

Boulder climber
Salt Lake, UT
Mar 1, 2009 - 02:47pm PT
I'm open-minded Tyler. That doesn't mean one can't be skeptical.

People have certainly definitely demonstrated brick-breaking in controlled circumstances, and the evidence is obvious. Either you end up with real broken bricks or not.

If this guy could repeat this using individuals other than his students, under controlled circumstances, with independent observers, then I'd be only too happy to believe.



John Moosie

climber
Beautiful California
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 1, 2009 - 02:59pm PT
That was not his students. This was a demonstration at a national symposium on martial arts. The person he used in the demonstration was a 3rd degree black belt in Karate who had a local school of his own, not devoted to Qigong, but to karate. By being part of the demonstration, he was basically shooting himself in the foot by showing that there was a higher way to be, though likely few will believe even what they see and so he will continue to have plenty of students because few want to give up their ego.
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 1, 2009 - 04:11pm PT
If all is as it appears, he should have students, though they can see that there is a place for them to go after graduation...
WandaFuca

Gym climber
San Fernando Lamas
Mar 1, 2009 - 05:27pm PT
I only watched the first few minutes of part 1.

If it's not faked, then it is more likely the result of hypnosis than energy fields.

It's interesting that he identifies the problems people have as stemming from people fantasizing about their future and being too absorbed or involved in their lives, but these are also the characteristics of people that are most hypnotizable: having an active fantasy life and having the ability to become deeply absorbed or interested in something and tune out other stimuli.
WBraun

climber
Mar 1, 2009 - 05:49pm PT
One can be beaten up without being so called physically touched and be hurt.

Just look at this forum for an easy example.
J. Werlin

climber
Cedaredge
Mar 1, 2009 - 06:31pm PT
Ding Ding! Round 1 goes to Locker.
Dick_Lugar

Trad climber
Indiana (the other Mideast)
Mar 1, 2009 - 09:46pm PT
The Force is strong with this one...


I say, to settle this once and for all, put Qigong up against the current UFC heavyweight champ and see how he fares...if he can do it then, then I'll believe!
Robb

Social climber
It's like FoCo in NoCo Daddy-O!
Mar 1, 2009 - 10:12pm PT
I prefer this method.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uomFNhzw1qk&feature=related
It has a nice rythm to it no?

PS: Kind of reminds me of LL Cool J's Going Back to Cali.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC7iIttp6cY
Jaybro

Social climber
wuz real!
Mar 1, 2009 - 10:28pm PT
Deal is, I really wanna have this be real. no matter what it looks like, Bill Moyers suggested that it could be real, and I tend to believe him. I'm interested in following up on that. If anyone can prove it wrong that is equally useful.
WBraun

climber
Mar 1, 2009 - 10:49pm PT
Then go see him Jaybro and slap him in the face, hurt him.

That will be honorable.

Talking about what's real and what isn't doesn't work on talk.

Even then he might reject you and do nothing. Test your sincerity.

A sincere man can step off the cliff and never hit the bottom ....
stevep

Boulder climber
Salt Lake, UT
Mar 1, 2009 - 10:50pm PT
I too want to be like Mulder...I want to believe.

And I have heard of scientists measuring monks that can make their heart rate very low, and change body temperature a few degrees through meditation. These things I can understand, as they involve working with one's own body.

Telepathy or telekinesis is a different deal, and until I see it done under controlled conditions, might as well be Penn & Teller doing it.
Willoughby

Social climber
Truckee, CA
Mar 1, 2009 - 11:34pm PT
"A sincere man can step off the cliff and never hit the bottom ...."

This could really change the face of BASEjumping. Who's first!?!?!?!
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Mar 2, 2009 - 04:13am PT
I don't know about this particular instance, but I've met a few, very rare, people with HUGE, powerful energy fields.

As sort of a "Double Blind" example, I was outside the lower floor bookstore of this ashram and people I couldn't see were passing overhead on a catwalk. Suddenly I felt what felt like an intense electromagnetic sort of energy pass overhead. Unmistakable.

It was so vivid that I ran out to see what it was. The Master had just walked overhead.

This was almost 30 years ago. He's gone now.

Peace

Karl
Dick_Lugar

Trad climber
Indiana (the other Mideast)
Mar 2, 2009 - 09:52am PT
My wife spent time in Tibet and witnessed monks driving nails into boards and moving objects with their chi. So sure, anything is possible, but lets put the claim through some rigourous testing with some actual full contact fighting to see if it works. That shouldn't be too hard to do.
J. Werlin

climber
Cedaredge
Mar 2, 2009 - 10:30am PT
I see the Master's "powers" more as a side effect or
manifestation of the spiritual work he is doing, rather
than a sought after result.

Perhaps the intended lesson here is more along the lines of
expanding our consciousness rather than creating the
next Vegas side-show act.
kimgraves

Trad climber
2 exits North of the Gunks
Mar 5, 2009 - 10:14pm PT
Hi Gang,

So I sent these tapes to my friend, "DK", who has been practicing tai chi seriously for 35 years. He's been all over the world studying.

Me: I found these fascinating. My wife is very skeptical of the “action at a distance” demonstration – it looks like “the force.”

DK: she should be. my teacher was a famous debunker back in taiwan, and all the guys who could throw ch'i like that ran away from him. to the ones who didn't run away, he would say "Do it to me." they would reply, "I can't. your ch'is too strong." meanwhile, his teacher flipped him around like a rag doll. kim, believe me, the world of tai chi and chi is wonderful enough without the touch-less martial stuff. it's bogus.

Best, Kim

Edited to add: Least there be confusion from my earlier post. I've been pushed so that I hopped across the floor, but by being touched. (Actually one of the defining moments of my life) But not with "action at a distance." AND once, just once, I was able to push someone so as to uproot them - also by touching them. (Also a defining moment of my life.)

The competition for students is pretty intense. When I was studying there was a lot of talk of "who's best" etc.

Largo

Sport climber
Venice, Ca
Mar 5, 2009 - 11:37pm PT
What's interesting to me is the man's crafty adaptation of the Heart Sutra. Strange, becauce I just heard a dharma talk on the Heart Sutra last night. No sh#t.

JL
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Mar 5, 2009 - 11:44pm PT
And so far, nobody has even managed to help me see a really good dragon

Perhaps what is important is not dragons, but the possibility of dragons.
pip the dog

Mountain climber
planet dogboy
Mar 6, 2009 - 06:38pm PT
[Massive Post Warning -- think PgDn key]

I just watched the four video frags. I was at once fascinated, and like many on this thread, somewhat disbelieving. The 'black belt' just didn't seem to go at him hard enough.

Watching it brought to mind a friend of mind. He has been studying Aikido for many years. He is insanely strong and quick, and also a nuclear physicist at perhaps the best outfit in the world.

I had looked up the basics of Aikido (I myself have never studied a martial art), I knew it was a defensive tradition. But I asked this friend to explain the heart of it to me.

He showed me an old grainy B&W film (on a VHS tape) from the late fifties or early sixties. It showed Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido, “defending” his discipline against the other eastern martial art disciplines of the day. This was apparently a big deal, as martial arts and all things eastern were becoming big in the west, and with big came big money. The established historical traditions, centuries old, were quite serious about not letting any newcomer just show up and call their variant a true tradition.

So this video was a record of the major, well known, and ancient schools of eastern martial arts “putting Aikido to the test.” Up to that point, all other recent traditions had been demolished in these ‘tests.

So there is Morihei Ueshiba, frail and i think in his early seventies, up against a whole lineup of the most ripped and skilled representatives of the famous ancient traditions. And it was the job of these ripped experts to, well, take his head off. Not kill him, of course, but hammer him so hard and so quickly as to leave no doubt that his new school didn’t cut it.

It was amazing to watch. This guy was tiny and skinny, old and obviously rather frail. And the 8 or so studs who went up against him were ripped like, well a young Largo. And while each of them bowed to him with respect, they immediately went at him with what even I could see was full on, highly skilled violence. Pretty much any of those attempts would have snapped me in two.

And this old guy just stood there, calmly, looking almost bored, deflecting full on crushing kicks from guys a third his age and twice his size with no more than the back of his hand. He just kind of re-directed all of their massive energy with this fay wave of the hand that looked no stronger than what the current Queen Elizeabeth in her dotage might do. All eight of them, one after another.

And in this old B&W video, there was absolutely no question (to my mind, and I am confident to yours when you see it) that his attackers weren’t faking anything. They’d come at him with lightning fast punches to his head, and huge snap kicks to his torso, and end up flying past him and hitting the floor behind him _ hard _. Some of them got up clearly pissed and embarrassed and went at him with even more violence – and again ended up spinning across the floor with their shirts up over their heads and their faces all red. This was not a polite demonstration at some college in england. This was true masters attempting to defend the traditions they had devoted their lives to.

In the end (though not on the tape) Aikido was quietly accepted by all of the major ancient traditions as a genuine and unique form.
~~~

This buddy of mine is now a, uh, I don’t know how high a dan. I do know that he has for years had to fly to Japan to test for the next belt/dan. In recent years he stopped caring about rank.
~~~

That and I once saw his training and tradition in action. Back in the late 90’s he and I and our sweethearts were walking home from a goth party in a rather desolate and scary part of the outer SOMA in SF. The ladies where dressed to the nines, in high spike heels, long tight dresses, and much mascara.

We headed towards my car (me hoping it was still there – but as it was a POS I figured who’d bother). As we walked down the sidewalk a beer bottle (green, I’m thinking Rolling Rock – this wasn’t a Heineken neighborhood) went sailing inches in front of the face of both ladies and smashed on the brick wall beside them, leaving them rather beer splattered.

My pal and I turn and see this very big guy absolutely frothing at the mouth and holding yet another green beer bottle. My pal says to me “go slow this freak down while I get Rebecca and Abby out of here” and with that he hustles our dates off.

Great, now what. So I use my best weapon, my sharp irish tongue. I walk up to this guy and say “Excuse me, sir, someone just threw a beer bottle at my sweetheart’s head. Did you see who did this?”

And this guy is positively snaked. His eyes and the veins in his neck are all bulging out. I’d seen that look before -- PCP and crystal meth. An ugly combo, not recommended. He hisses at me “I didn’t do it!” and I say “Of course you didn’t, you are obviously a gentleman – I was just wondering if you saw the jerk who did do it. they are women after all, and that’s just not right.”

Meanwhile, my pal had hustled the ladies to a gay dance club a few doors down and left them inside, telling one of the patrons, in brief, what was up and to look after them. This patron and his pals said absolutely.

With this my pal is quick standing behind me – only I don’t know this just yet. I’m still trying to buy time. But at this point this mutant is clearly loosing it and says “So what the F##k if I did do it, what’r’you going do about it? And with this he takes this huge roundhouse swing at me. If it had connected, I wouldn’t be here to write this. But he was so hammered that it came in like slow motion and I was able to duck and run.

At this my pal (who I just then noticed) walks up to within 2 feet of this mutant and says “You threw that bottle, didn’t you?” And the mutant says “No!” then he says “What if I did?”

With this my pal holds out just two fingers, the two closest to his right thumb, and says “Listen, you need to crawl back to whatever hole you came from right now, for if you don’t, I will take just these two fingers and demolish your trachea (think ‘adams apple’) such that you will spend the rest of your life talking like Donald Duck – that is if you survive at all”. My pal said this in a calm voice as if he was talking to a four year old.

At this the large mutant swings at him hard with his remaining beer bottle and my pal just raises his hand like Queen Elizabeth giving one of those elbow-elbow/wrist-wrist waves. And the mutant is suddenly on the ground. He bounces up and goes back at my pal with a now broken beer bottle aimed directly at my pals neck. And my pal takes those two fingers and snaps him in the adams apple. The guy gets knocked down and is thrashing around gasping for air.

My pal, knowing that I had some trivial EMS training says “do what you can for him – but don’t get too close. I’ll go call the cops and an ambulance.”

And that he did. me I basically tried to keep a safe distance but eventually rolled the mutant onto his side in the hope he might not drown in his own puke and blood. The cops and the ambulance soon arrived. And as the cops quick recognized him as quite the ne’er do well, I was free to go. I met up with my pals at the gay night club where they were drinking free drinks at the bar. Seems this mutant was well known therein and not at all popular. Soon after we found my car and went home.
~~~

so, do I believe those specific 4 video frags are legit? I dunno. Am I sure a rare few people have that level of skill and understanding – I absolutely do.

Sorry for the long post. Perhaps I should change my moniker to “PgDn” hmmm...

Be well, and avoid mutants on PCP and meth in the dark alleys,

^,,^

(maybe someday I’ll come up with a way to tell this tale in less than 2000 words. maybe someday, maybe in utah...
tooth

Mountain climber
Guam
Mar 6, 2009 - 07:02pm PT
Watch the videos again.But use one hand and cover the master. Watch the student. I'm pretty sure every bodily movement was self-induced. Unless it looks like he has wires on and is moving sideways or backward as a result of an unseen force (keep your hand over the master) I'd be more inclined to say he was hypnotized.

Although my SCUBA instructor/patient here on Guam told me that he has seen this no-touch happening, and throwing the opponent across the room, I still don't believe it. He is 5th degree black belt in something and teaches as well.

Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Mar 6, 2009 - 09:31pm PT
Stop apologizing for your posts Doggy. They are great gifts for us all.

Naturally the highest levels of any attainment are rare there may be imitators as well. Best to admit we don't know when we don't and call fraud when we do (or stand awestruck)

I was meditating with my eyes closed here in India a few days ago and that same experience (with a different master) repeated itself. I felt the force of his presence coming out of a room and passing me so strongly and vividly, I just knew it could only be one guy...I opened my eyes and it was.

Peace

Karl
Ricky D

Trad climber
Sierra Westside
Mar 6, 2009 - 09:42pm PT
There was a guy named Oofty Goofty who traveled the foothill communities of California during the gold rush days claiming he was imperious to physical pain.

To back this claim and to earn a few bucks - he would charge passerby's 25 cents to smack him with a stickbat.

Oofty worked this angle for over 6 years until that fateful day when the stranger he propositioned to smack him turned out to be the reknowned pugilist John L. Sullivan.

Sullivan paid his quarter - picked up the bat, swung, and broke at least 2 veterbrae in Oofty's back.

Oofty limped for two more years before dying due to complcations from his injury.



Patrick Oliver

Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
Mar 6, 2009 - 10:04pm PT
Having practiced the martial arts seriously since 1972 or so,
I do know there are people with some remarkable abilities.
There are people with a high level of understanding of chi,
but also there are a lot of charades that go on. In the
case of the video shown here, the opponent is the dead
give away. He is a very low-level fighter and certainly
not a third degree in any group for which I have
any respect. I honestly believe Tom Muzila's
fourteen year old son could easily take that guy. And this
person the master throws around is clearly the pupil
of the "master" and friend. But one can study the movements,
and there is a combination of some actual manipulation
through chi but also a kind of success that depends
greatly on the high vulnerability of the pupil. These
"techniques" would not work, of course, against a
high level karate master, for example, such as Ono
or Ohshima. I would not say the "master" in the video
is a total phoney, and some of what he says is in keeping
with some of the true principles. He might very well not
be trying to pull off a charade, but to a degree he
does pull off one. And I do not say this because I
am not open-minded. On the contrary. My sensei has
abilities that would rather blow the mind of the
untrained observer and that are not magic or in any way
in defiance of natural law but rather are the result of a
lot of very hard work for many years. Very profound things
become almost simple to one who has done the work and broken
through the mental barriers. This is, by the way, the main
focus of the martial artist, to break through our mental
barriers and become better people: not to learn how to
beat up others...


Patrick Oliver

Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
Mar 6, 2009 - 10:18pm PT
Also, with regard to the Aikido entry. All the great
masters of the various forms have done such
demonstrations, usually against their wishes, and
they are basically invincible at those higher levels, but
almost never do they act in the role of the attacker.
The great martial artists know that chi works best in
reaction to attack rather than as an attack. Mr. Ono
would be invited to the world championship Tae Kwon Do
tournments, and he simply would stand in a back stance,
and anyone who came toward him with one of their flying
back double side kicks, or whatever, were subject to a
simple down block that would either break their leg or
injure it. He didnt' have to make a single attacking move.
They stopped inviting him to their "world championships."
The great masters are humble. They don't get into fights,
as a general rule. But certainly they would not play the
role of an attacker in a demonstration of another's defensive
abilities. By so doing, they would reveal their lower level,
in fact, not to mention they would play into that other
person's strength.
Ricky D

Trad climber
Sierra Westside
Mar 6, 2009 - 10:24pm PT
Okay - serious question for you Martial Arts aficionados if you would so indulge me.

"Could you win a fight with a street gang kid?"

Allow me to elucidate before you answer.

I have known numerous guys who had their butts kicked once or twice in their lives who turned to the martial arts for guidance.

Every one entered a dojo determined to learn how to kick some ahole's butt in a bar fight.

Every one that stuck with the art sooner or later started talking like a born-again with the voodoo of "chi" and "oneness with self" and the whole "the art of the master is to never actually fight" sermon.

Yet...I've always asked the same question - "If you were jumped by some stringy muscled half-breed street rat raised by wolves in the ghetto who fought every day of his life - could you beat him?"

"Or, has your regimented ballet faux sparring with other suburban Rambo's only really taught you how to dance real purty?"

But seriously - when did your art shift from the crude physicality of combat to more of a pursuit of knowledge?
Doug Buchanan

Mountain climber
Fairbanks Alaska
Mar 6, 2009 - 11:37pm PT
I did not view the video.

I read the comments.

Martial arts are often based on sufficiently using one's mind to recognize physical attack movements from the initial most subtle indicators, and responding more quickly to advantageously position one's body to defeat the attack motion. But that is still a physical mechanism.

It is said that the true master of martial arts learns to NEVER use physical force. That is the demarcation of a true master.

Some people perceive that to be the type reaction to force, that is the subject of this thread. But it is still based on physical force, with or without contact.

Notice the antiquity of martial arts, and the societies of its origin and popularity. They are still involved with the use of force, predicated on police, militaries and black belts. The street thugs, cops and armies are still pounding, stabbing or shooting their victims who still hold no non-force defense. The test of time reveals a flaw in martial arts. It is force-based. The masters have failed their societies for centuries.

Now therefore, consider that the human mind holds no mechanism for one mind to force another mind. Perhaps read that again, for the knowledge you can derive. The mind's only mechanism for conveying useful knowledge between minds, such as how to resolve contradictions that often cause fights or use of force, is reasoning, the asking and answering of questions of perceived contradictions.

Now consider that you had zero recourse in the use of force, master martial arts or otherwise, zero.

Would you not therefore decide to learn the knowledge of how to detect the pending use of force in sufficient time to utilize expressed reasoning when it is still available to resolve the contradiction? Well?

That simply requires more developed thinking skill than the martial arts chap. You can learn to identify the "threat", days, months or years before it is manifested.

Would you then not learn how to express reasoning in a manner that caused the attacker's MIND to respond as you desire, BY ITS DESIGN?

No human can escape the design of the human mind, by design.

Would you not therefore learn the functional design of the human mind?

What species, predicated on its mind, would be so primitive as to not first and foremost teach its young the functional design of the human mind? Which laughably primitive species still ends up with national leaders who wage Presidential Ego Gratification Wars, such as the Bush wars and Obama wars?

Would you teach your offspring martial arts, or the design of the human mind? Well? Your answer?

It does not matter if the videos were faked or real. The master was a primitive mind still mired in the use of force, having not decided to learn the design of the human mind.

Therefore, if you wish, ask and answer all the questions to learn the functional design of the human mind. You have one handy for the questioning. It is the same design as everyone else.

With the knowledge, you can defeat any mind, because the knowledge comes with your having learned how to defeat yours, against every question any human can ask, by design.

And for those times you chose to enter the close quarters arena of thugs, carry a hand gun of sufficient caliber to preclude the known hazard of the occasional failure of this or that martial arts technique, which are inherently flawed, just as your gun may misfire. Take good care of it.

May you learn the most knowledge of the most concepts, most efficiently.

And have fun doing that.

DougBuchanan.com

Patrick Oliver

Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
Mar 8, 2009 - 09:40pm PT
To answer Ricky D's comments about martial
artists not being able to take the good street
fighter. That is often true, if the martial
artist is from one of the mainstream kind that is a
money-making affair and sends people through,
with a rainbow of different-colored belts to
keep them motivated and paying their hundred
dollars a month. I've had black belts come into
my dojo to learn and practice with us, and they
wouldn't be brown belts in my group. But the
bottom line is the quality and seriousness of
the training. The purpose of the martial arts
is, in some grand ideal, the perfection of the
self through the perfection of an art. So naturally
humility, meekness, kindness, and so forth are
qualities one should develop, and the true martial
artist, while gaining in ability also grows less
inclined to walk around with a chip on his shoulder.
The Walker Texas Ranger mentality isn't the real
world of high level martial arts. Nor would Walker
Texas ranger even remotely measure up to the real
masters. Nevernomind about that. But now and then,
though they rarely get in fights, those high level
martial artists find themselves in a situation.
My friend Sadahura Honda, three time national champion
of Japan, is a little guy, and one day in New York
he was jumped by some hardened street gang types.
He didn't hurt them, just broke a couple arms with a
few easy, glancing blows. They quickly realized they
were utterly out matched and ran away. There was some
kind of story about it later in the newspaper, as it
was witnessed by some people. Those guys made the mistake
of thinking because he was small he would be easy prey.
Believe me the good martial artists are extremely
skillful, but nor do they provoke people or act in
ways that would make people want to try to punch them
out. These are remarkable people. While,
on the other hand, mainstream martial arts, as a general
rule, have a lot of ballerina choreographing and are
a charade. Not all, but many. I will never forget one
day spotting two guys kicking the crap out of some other guy
on the street. I pulled my car over, stopped, and
told them they should stop. I asked them what their
purpose was and what kind of coward they were beating up
on someone half their size, and there being two of them
against only one of him. The one big guy said he was a black
belt in karate. I told him he wouldn't be a white belt
in my group. He told me he had learned most of his skills
through video tapes sent to him by his father. I chuckled
and told him no serious martial art would be beating up
on someone the way they were. For some reason they didn't
try to turn their hostilities toward me. The guy getting
the beating was grateful. But that's an example of so-
called martial artists who aren't. I always laugh when I see some kind of sign in
a dojo window, "earn your black belt in five months, or
even quicker if you bring three friends to the dojo." Ho
hum. The real masters train for years and years, and with
mentors (senseis) from whom you could learn more in one
day than you could in two years from some other teachers.
Nor do the high level people participate in cage fighting or
that sort of stuff. They don't need to be validated by
the world around them. Mr. Ono would destroy in a few
seconds almost any of those talented brawlers. But I
wouldn't expect anyone to believe me. People like
Sadahura Honda and Mr. One know who they are. They are
among the most humble people I've ever known.
Ricky D

Trad climber
Sierra Westside
Mar 8, 2009 - 10:03pm PT
Wow Patrick - that's the answer I was looking for.

In my town, every ex-military with a doo-rag has set up some sort of dojo or another. Yet whenever I have looked at their practice- it's just that - practice.

It's watching a carefully choreographed dance with students "attacking" in the same way with the same low level of intensity. The suppossed "master" even corrects the student's attack so that the element of surprise is completely lacking.

While I will never profess to having martial arts skills of any kind - I was a bit of a street fighter BITD and still remember a thing or two about taking down some barroom black belt.

I am intrigued by the mental discipline angle that comes from focused repetition - seems like " artful meditation within movement" to me from afar.

But as a martial art - originally designed to attack and defend in the midst of chaos - I think most modern day psuedo practitioners would get their butts kicked by any ghetto kid.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Mar 8, 2009 - 10:05pm PT
"Every one entered a dojo determined to learn how to kick some ahole's butt in a bar fight.

Every one that stuck with the art sooner or later started talking like a born-again with the voodoo of "chi" and "oneness with self" and the whole "the art of the master is to never actually fight" sermon.

Yet...I've always asked the same question - "If you were jumped by some stringy muscled half-breed street rat raised by wolves in the ghetto who fought every day of his life - could you beat him?"

This 'if' question is just that..."if" What actually happens to us reflects the whole state of our mind and emotions. "the art of the master is to never actually fight" doesn't arise from just calm talk but a whole way of being that doesn't gravitate negative energy in your path.

That said, it depends on the person and what's really within them. I had a client whose martial arts expertise (wrote books about it and such) was breaking bricks, boards and such things. He did get jumped by some hoodlums in South America who put him right out from behind with some choke hold. He said they knew what they were doing and he never had a chance.

Peace

Karl
qigongclimber

climber
Mar 8, 2009 - 11:33pm PT
The relationship between what this guy is "explaining" and the Heart Sutra is pretty much in name only. He uses a few key phrases like "suffering", but the Heart Sutra has nothing to do with rivalry or with most of what this guy is talking about. I attended the Dalai Lama's three day Heart Sutra teaching in Mountain View CA in 2001, and the concept of rivalry never came up (or i missed it). If people are interested in a quick, extremely interesting read on the essence of Buddhism, read 'Essence of the Heart Sutra' by Thupten Jinpa. Jinpa is the DL's amazing translator and this book is a distillation of the three days' teaching. As far as the Qigong goes, I've studied with nationally known (in China) Qigong masters in China, notably Master Wan and Master Duan who are featured in the PBS Documentary 'Qigong - Ancient Chinese Healing for the 21st Century'. I've had plenty of first-hand experience with qi. Qi is definitely real. There's no question about that. However, I never experienced (saw, felt, heard about, etc) what is shown in the videos. If there's no touching, you can pretty much assume it's fake, or you have a very willing or highly suggestive accomplice. This isn't the first such video like this to publicly surface. Search for 'eisenberg qigong' on YouTube and watch that video. To understand what Qigong is really all about, see http://www.qigonginstitute.org. By the way, Chris Sharma and Tom Frost practice Qigong.
stevep

Boulder climber
Salt Lake, UT
Mar 8, 2009 - 11:49pm PT
On the streetfighters beating skilled martial artists front, there's a recent obvious example -- Kimbo Slice. This guy was billed as the toughest street fighter ever, and was a huge internet sensation.

Then he tried to move to serious MMA.

After a couple of very unimpressive fights against tomato cans that he barely won, he was floored by a punch from a very middle of the road fighter and then pummeled until the ref stopped the fight. He wouldn't have had a chance against one of the top guys.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Mar 8, 2009 - 11:53pm PT
I can't speak of for martial arts but the touchless Chi force that I've seen Masters capable of wielding wouldn't be acting as a force against the body but rather the attacker would 'feel' Whoa, intense vibes, feel humble, stop right now."

There are some guys you feel scared just sitting in front of them

Peace

Karl
GDavis

Trad climber
Mar 8, 2009 - 11:55pm PT
You can scopes it but this has been tried, tested and debunked long ago. The only martial art that unequivically supreme is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Fact.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLVgPN43xhw


Thats humane self defense, cut off the circulation to the brain, let them take a nap, fight is over. Wake up none the worse for wear!
GDavis

Trad climber
Mar 9, 2009 - 12:02am PT
wait, if you haven't seen this - EPIC FAIL.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEDaCIDvj6I
Skyman

Trad climber
SLC, UT
Mar 9, 2009 - 02:29pm PT
This is just a demonstration. It would not have that effect on a "real" attacker. I've been involved with QiGong, for many years. The game you see being played takes two consenting individuals. Have you ever heard of "empty force"? That is what this is a demonstration on. It would not be that way in a real attack. Empty force is real if you both know the game being played.

K
John Moosie

climber
Beautiful California
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 9, 2009 - 02:56pm PT
"He uses a few key phrases like "suffering", but the Heart Sutra has nothing to do with rivalry "

What I understood him to be saying about rivalry is that rivalry is how most people view life, but the heart sutra teaches you that we are all one and thus there is no rivalry.

This is a very deep subject and will not be understood simply by thinking that we are all one. It has to come from a very deep realization of oneness. A realization that overcomes all sense of separation and all the beliefs that stem from separation. That usually takes many years and often many lifetimes to achieve. Which is why few can wield their Chi in any affective manner. Chi is not about attacking. It is about defense. But it is not about egoic defense, where one is defending ones self to prove how tough or unbeatable one is. In oneness there is nothing to prove.

I believe that skyman is on the right track about this demonstration. One's chi can not be used to hurt another. It is a true empty hand defense. Not meaning that one does not have a weapon, but that one has no desire to hurt, not even in defense of self.

One who has attained complete mastery over ones Chi has no need to attack. That is non rivalry.

couchmaster

climber
Mar 9, 2009 - 03:49pm PT
I have no trust that the video is not doctored. Sorry. Have to agree with Roxjox, extraordinary claims should have extraordinary proof.

My only experience from martial arts comes from getting into a fight with 5 guys and I had to resort to a knife. It was a bloody mess all the way around and a bunch of us wound up on the ground and later in the hospital. After my head quit looking like a watermelon and the hospital stay had ended for me, I started doing Tai Kwan Do 2 times a week. Essentially it involved practicing forms (pom sei) for an hour and full contact round robin sparing with 2 black belts and a brown belt for another hour until we were all panting from exhaustion. I do this for well over a year with my goal was to never fight again, and to learn to restrain my temper. I think I'm doing well, however, 2 months after I get out of the military, I'm in London walking down the street at 1 am with my buddy Al when I see 6 young skinhead punks take down a black guy from behind 1 city block ahead. I immediately attacked. Ran at them full tilt. When I was fairly close I yelled a berserker scream and they all jumped up and ran away. Till they got about a block away and realized what had transpired. So they came back, looking pretty much like a pack of hungry wolves. About then Al finally comes up, he's a lover, not a fighter and the black guy is shaking so hard I thought he'd piss his pants. Up walk the cowards, talking nasty. It doesn't help that they're all bigger than me. I didn't say a word but stepped right up to them. They have a few bad words then one of them off to my far right took a swing and tried to blind side cold-cock me. I felt it coming and moved my head so he barely glanced off my face and simultaneously pushed his blow off with with my hand in a single fluid movement with the result that he was extremely off balance... almost to the point of it being funny if the situation hadn't been so grimly serious. They quickly changed their minds and with a flurry of nasty words, moved away, leaving us unscathed.

I was asking the fella if he was OK and why did they do that but the black guy never uttered a single word, but just shook the whole time. That was my last chance at getting in a fight and it's been 33 years. I've often wondered if I could have taken them all. I suspect I could have, I was in good shape and practice then - but I'm glad I didn't have to find out. I think that any kind of practice at a martial art is a good thing, and can't hurt for sure. I suspect that Akido, as noted above, would be the best thing to learn. It is true that the JuJitsu guys win active fights like the MMA contests, but like in a bar, under attack, from what I know - an akido artist would rule the day every time: no question about it.
GDavis

Trad climber
Mar 9, 2009 - 04:40pm PT
naw aikido is dancing. I guess saying Jiu Jitsu is king is sort of a farce - fact is, GRAPPLING is king. In that year training Tae Kwon Do, how many months did you spend on the ground? I'm going to go on a limb here and say none. Almost all fights go to the ground, and that is a fact. A good grappler can keep it standing or put someone on the floor and submit them. I don't plan on getting into any fights - not a good idea! You may have jitsu, but the dude may have a knife.



While I'm at it, training in knife fighting is a waste of your time. If I have a knife, I won't let you know I do, and if I KNOW you have a knife, I'm going to run away.


One of my instructors used to teach self defense in addition to the sport aspect of BJJ, but decided it was kind of useless. "Once you've been grappling for a few years, you walk around like an orangutan and no one messes with you." Thats the truth.



Really though, you want to win STREET fights? All about this, homey. All about this.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQVaTEPOsTA
pip the dog

Mountain climber
planet dogboy
Mar 14, 2009 - 05:32pm PT
i just happened to be prowling back through this thread, as i am at present so bored with the work i need to do to get the fook out of here that, well...

three comments struck me:

first, Ricky D
> Okay - serious question for you Martial Arts aficionados if
> you would so indulge me.
> "Could you win a fight with a street gang kid?"

well, as i wrote at way more than enough length above -- i have personally watched a pal not even as big as me (and i am _way_ scrawny) stand up to a serious dope-dealing dope-enraged gangster with 100lbs more muscle mass than my pal -- and control this frothing screaming huge freak (the one swinging the sharp broken beer bottle) as if he was no more than a 4lb chihuahua.

now i have no training or expertise in any martial art. but i _saw_ that, personally. the cops who showed up later told me this big (and suddenly rather broken) gangster now frothing on the ground was, in their personal experience (though apparently not quite in a courtroom) a true killer. the real thing. and my pal had just stood there, way up close and personal, and waved him off with just the flick of his wrist. eventually, on this big dudes second attempt to murder him, my pal all but killed him with a quick snap with just two fingers.

like i said, i _saw_ that. up close, and personal -- and, frankly, scared to death for my own fay life. i hope you never have to stand up that close and witness just that.

but then, what do i know?
~~~

second, GDavis,
> naw [is that Nah?] aikido is dancing.

i kinda suspect that you might pray to all that is sacred to you to be able to dance like that -- if perhaps some guy twice your size wired on PCP and meth comes at your neck with a broken beer bottle.

fwiw, as my pal mentioned later, quietly, the 'two fingers to the trachea' trick is not Akido, but rather something he had learned as a kid in juvi-hall in south boston. he said that he did that for me. and as i was at that moment all stumbling and scared sh!tless and still at close range, i am certain that is true.

for i am certain that my pal could have "re-directed' this monster's best shots all night if he wanted to.
~~~

and third, Porkchop_express
> More importantly, how can this relate to climbing?
> I climb a lot more frequently than I fight...

as i rocket into my dotage, i am coming to suspect it has _everything_ to do with climbing. but i just can't, as of yet, explain precisely how. i kinda feel it in my gut more than get it in my head. if i ever can say it in actual words, you'll be the second to know.

ummm, yeah, i'm sure this stuff is really useful. sheeesh...


^,,^
kunlun_shan

Mountain climber
SF, CA
Jun 26, 2015 - 09:19pm PT
Nostalgia bump..... :)

[Click to View YouTube Video]
MisterE

Gym climber
Being In Sierra Happy Of Place
Jun 26, 2015 - 09:44pm PT
This is something that finally makes sense in this crazy world.

Thanks
Reeotch

climber
4 Corners Area
Jun 27, 2015 - 07:12am PT
No way, man, Bruce Lee would kick everybody's ass . . .

Ok, so I found this on youtube:
[Click to View YouTube Video]

I don't know. I might have believed this a few years ago, but I kinda think it's fake. Which kinda pisses you off. But, whatever, this world is full of quacks and charlatans, and people who are willing to believe.

This thread, however, is very interesting. I have to come to approach climbing as a martial art. No, it is not combative, but that's not the point even of traditional martial arts at the highest levels, right?

It's about intense focus, being totally immersed in the moment, ready for anything. It is about perfection of movement. That's the attraction of bouldering and toproping. Don't be afraid to get some route at your local crag mercilessly wired - it shows you how efficient movement feels - then you can bring that refined type of movement to your onsight attempts.

Imagine the equivilant of the above "demonstration" in climbing: Wow! he really floated up that problem, like Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. More of a magic trick, not real climbing.
climbski2

Mountain climber
Anchorage AK, Reno NV
Jun 27, 2015 - 08:12am PT
His name is Peter Yeung and he is a classic charlatan. The students may not actually be faking due to belief..like folks who faint at faith healers are often not faking.

Lot of reports about this guy on the web ..bullying and harming students or non student those who do not show him deference seems to be a pattern of behavior for this guy over many years. Apparently has some real skill in martial arts...but basically a cult leader type.

http://thedaobums.com/topic/23785-lama-dondrup-dorje/

look up more if you like.

Here is a post from another website by a young student who began to doubt..sad stuff and classic cult issues


http://www.dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?t=13442
Hi everyone

I'm new to this forum, but don't know where else I can turn to regarding this issue I want to raise. Does anybody here have experience of the Pathgate Institute of Buddhist Studies in Newcastle, UK?

I ask because I took refuge with the teacher there, Lama Dondrup Dorje, several years ago, and only recently have begun coming across many suggestions and reports that the Institute is not genuine, that Rinpoche hasn't been ordained, that students are brainwashed, even that our root guru Penor Rinpoche of the Nyingma tradition had once labelled Lama Dondrup as a liar. Saying these things come quite difficult to me as I've been taught to show utmost respect and faith in my teacher, and to not show disrespect to my tradition, but as Buddha taught to investigate fully our experience and especially the qualifications of our Dhamma teachers, I feel I need to raise this and see from others with more experience in practicing Dhamma whether my concerns are valid. Certain things I've experienced have left me feeling unsettled about the whole deal and seem to contradict my understanding of Buddhism, which have included:

 being verbally abused and told that we know absolutely nothing in comparison to the teacher (in the exact words, you know 0.00000000001% of what I know) - it seems all the students believe being yelled at and put down is good for them, it cuts away their egos
 everything we've ever done in life is wrong
 that we shouldn't read any books on Dhamma because whoever wrote them doesn't know what they're talking about, and that even when we listen to his verbal teachings we have no clue what he is talking about
 that we should be compassionate toward but avoid any meaningful relationship with anyone who hasn't taken refuge, including our friends and family
 I've even been out drinking with Lama Dondrup, which I thought was to relax my 'fixation' on abstaining from alcohol
 I've been made to feel guilty and ashamed to tell my partner my feelings toward them because that's 'attachment' and that my love isn't real

My biggest concern in all of this is my partner. She has paid over $10,000 to go to a two month summer retreat there. In the time she's gotten more and more involved, I've seen her gradually cut off all her old friends, she's begun to treat her family very badly and distance herself from them, believes she doesn't have to work anymore and that the universe will provide all she needs, and that she has to give up everything she once loved because, to begin with, all her goals and wishes were 'wrong in the first place'.

So please, any feedback or advice on what I've raised will be really appreciated.

Thank you
Lord Buddha: Sariputta, do you believe this teaching
Sariputta: No, I don't yet believe it
Lord Buddha: Good, good, Sariputta. A wise person doesn't readily believe, he should consider first before believing
STEEVEE

Social climber
HUMBOLDT, CA
Jul 2, 2015 - 04:22pm PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]
This video shows what happens to Kung Fu "Masters" without their "believers". Excitement begins around 2:29.
zBrown

Ice climber
Jul 2, 2015 - 08:18pm PT
Qigong

jgill

Boulder climber
The high prairie of southern Colorado
Jul 2, 2015 - 10:24pm PT
This thread should be linked to "What is Mind", where emptiness has the power to seduce the wary.
zBrown

Ice climber
Jul 3, 2015 - 07:29am PT
OK

http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/1593650/What-is-Mind
Mark Force

Trad climber
Ashland, Oregon
Jul 3, 2015 - 09:33am PT
Anybody have a link for the video of Morihei Ueshiba taking on all comers?
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