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Bruce Lee Quotes

Posted on 29 January 2009 by admin

There are plenty of Bruce Lee quotes all over the internet. I thought I would do something a little different here and use them as a starting point for discussion (albeit a small discussion!). I think it's interesting to explore ideas, and Bruce makes it easy for me to do that because he was so interested in the philosophy of being human.

It's sometimes misleading to take quotes out of context, so I'll bear that in mind.

Bruce Lee Quotes For Exploration

I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times.

This is similar to the contrast between being a Jack of all trades and being a master of none. There is little use in being able to execute many kicks ineffectively. It's a kick's effectiveness that will stop your opponent, not your dazzling array of poorly executed kicks.

Simplicity is the key to brilliance

So often human beings complicate even the simplest of things. Wing Chun is the essence of simplicity and uses the philosophy of "just enough", be it movement, effort, whatever. We should just concentrate on achieving our objective in the most efficient way possible.

using no way as a way, using no limitations as a limitation.

I think Bruce Lee is talking about throwing off self imposed limitations here. Often we allow preconceived ideas about what we can achieve to shape our performance. It's well known that you have more chance of succeeding if you belive that you can succeed. Even if you have no shred of evidence that you can achieve something, you have a better chance of succeeding if you simply believe anyway. The "using no way as way" - is that a reference to the style-less Jeet Kune Do? That is, don't conform rigidly to a particular style if it is not as effective as some other response? I think he is talking about the limitations present when conforming rigidly to a particular style. Wing Chun has no ground game, so it might be a good idea to incorporate some BJJ training into your routine, for example.

Use only that which works, and take it from any place you can find it.

Isn't the whole concept of Jeet Kune Do built on this? It certainly makes sense. There is little advantage to be gained, in the context of fighting, from clinging on to traditional ways of doing things if they are ineffective. Better to learn from other successful practitioners. Look at what they do and how they do it, then test it yourself to see whether it works for you. Just don't tell sifu!

Don't get set into one form, adapt it and build your own, and let it grow, be like water. Empty your mind, be formless, shapeless — like water. Now you put water in a cup, it becomes the cup; You put water into a bottle it becomes the bottle; You put it in a teapot it becomes the teapot. Water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.

I think the idea of adapting existing forms and building your own is (possibly) viable if you already have a good grounding in the martial arts. This fits in with Bruce Lee's tendency to take on as Jeet Kune Do students only those people who were already competent in a martial art. Building your own form would obviously be too daunting a task for a complete beginner who has no basis on which to build. Testing is a necessary component of adapting and building your own forms, so that effectiveness is safeguarded. Before something new is incorporated into a form, it needs to be tested to see whether it works. Whether or not it works is a crucial factor.

Be water, my friend

Yes, yes! Be water! This has to be about fitting yourself perfectly around your opponent, responding appropriately to what they do. If they collapse their guard, you fill their space. If they push, you deflect. Flow easily with what is going on and don't resist - until it's time to crash.

Some quotes are taken from these videos:

Bruce Lee Interview Part 1

Bruce Lee Interview Part 2

Do not deny the classical approach, simply as a reaction, or you will have created another pattern and trapped yourself there.

I think that this is a very good point, and I'm glad Bruce made it. He made a habit of challenging tradition, testing existing practise, keeping what worked and rejecting what didn't. You would be mistaken if you thought his intent was to simply abandon tradition. Instead, it was to abandon what was useless. If something traditional is effective, it should be kept. It is the pattern of accepting without testing that should be rejected.

Take inventory of everyone with whom you have contact.

Everyone has something you can learn from. Even those who have a low level of skill can help you learn something new. I used to get annoyed (and still do if I'm honest) when chi sauing with partners who used too much strength. "It's just not chi sau!" Instead, I could be using this chi sau as an opportunity to improve my ability to deflect force and to use my partner's strength against them. Taking inventory of everyone with whom you have contact is also linked with Ip Chun's advice to touch as many hands as you can. Everyone has something you can learn from.

Make at least one definite move daily toward your goal.

The master of positivity! Doing this not only has the effect of moving you closer to achieving your objective, it also makes you feel more positive and more empowered. Personally, I've made a commitment to practise my Wing Chun for an hour before work every day, and to attend 3 classes a week. This means that every day except Sunday I'm making that one definite move towards my goal of Wing Chun mastery. Damn that Sunday!

Are you making at least one definite step towards your goal?

A goal is not always meant to be reached, it often serves simply as something to aim at.

The goal is not always the point. Often, setting an unrealistic goal and working towards it can improve your performance more than setting a goal you know you can achieve. The real goal is self improvement.

Mistakes are always forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them.

While it's true that graciously admitting your mistakes will endear you to your friends and colleagues, this practice has another benefit. You can only begin to correct something once you have acknowledged that something is wrong, or could be improved.

Real living is living for others.

I agree wholeheartedly with this. This reminds me of buddhist teachings and also the psychology of living a fulfilling life. Even Zig Ziglar advises that you can get everything you want in life if you'll just help enough people get what they want. There is a whole book's worth of content in exploring this one simple sentence!

To hell with circumstances; I create opportunities.

I interpret this as not being bound and limited by your circumstances. It's easy to feel like a victim and blame your situation for not being able to do this or not having that. It's then easy to think that you have no influence on your situation and must just endure it. However, there is always something that can be done (in most situations) even if it's "merely" changing your attitude. Examine what you can do to change your situation for the better.

If I tell you I'm good, you would probably think I'm boasting. If I tell you I'm no good, you know I'm lying.

Better to say nothing at all! And that is spot on. What if I say something about my ability that directly contradicts my actual performance? If I say I'm good and I then get beaten up, my words are irrelevant. Similarly, if I say I'm rubbish and then go on to defend myself successfully against someone bigger and stronger than me my words again are redundant. It's better for the opponent on the receiving end to judge :D

If you want to learn to swim, jump into the water. On dry land, no frame of mind is ever going to help you.

Is this a warning against thinking you can fight because you have practised martial arts? I think it might be, and if so, it makes sense. High level martial artists sometimes cannot protect themselves and conversely some people who have no formal martial arts training will whoop yo ass. The best way to get better at fighting.... is to fight. But I'm not suggesting you go and start a fight to test your skill!

It's not what you give, it's the way you give it.

I'm sure he missed the "baby" off the end!

Bruce Lee Quotes For Admiration

All fixed set patterns are incapable of adaptability or pliability. The truth is outside of all fixed patterns

Showing off is the fool's idea of glory.

When you're talking about fighting, as it is, with no rules, well then, baby you'd better train every part of your body!

Boards don't hit back.

Classic!

The happiness that is derived from excitement is like a brilliant fire — soon it will go out. Before we married, we never had the chance to go out to nightclubs. We only spent our nights watching TV and chatting. Many young couples live a very exciting life when they are in love. So, when they marry, and their lives are reduced to calmness and dullness, they will feel impatient and will drink the bitter cup of a sad marriage.

In Jeet Kune Do, it’s not how much you have learned, but how much you have absorbed from what you have learned. It is not how much fixed knowledge you can accumulate, but what you can apply livingly that counts. ‘Being’ is more valued than ‘doing’.

There is no such thing as maturity. There is instead an ever-evolving process of maturing. Because when there is a maturity, there is a conclusion and a cessation. That’s the end. That’s when the coffin is closed. You might be deteriorating physically in the long process of aging, but your personal process of daily discovery is ongoing. You continue to learn more and more about yourself every day.

I'm not in this world to live up to your expectations and you're not in this world to live up to mine.

Bruce Lee Books

Bruce Lee Memorabilia

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Wing Chun Forums

Posted on 08 October 2008 by admin

I initially wanted to do some research on the Wing Chun forums out there so that I could list what I considered to be the more useful ones. However, I'm a bit bemused at the moment. In the past, I haven't really been one to get involved in the martial arts online community, because to tell the truth, it just never occurred to me. The most important thing for me was to learn, and that was best accomplished simply by going to class and practising on my own. But then I got curious to see what was out there. Bewildered isn't the word! Some forums are dead. Others are active but provide nothing for someone studying Wing Chun.  Some do have an active Wing Chun sub forum, but are spoilt by childish bickering and personal insults! Some of the participants in these puerile scuffles are grown men! I've listed the best one I've found (in my opinion) first.

Martial Talk

I discovered this Wing Chun forum recently and I really like it. There are some knowledgeable people here who explain things well and it feels friendly.

Kung Fu Magazine

Despite ranking first in Google for "Wing Chun Forum", this forum is pretty quiet. Having been created in 1999, it's certainly well established. Be warned: check this thread out for childishness. I really don't know why the moderators don't step in. I'm not sure how representative this thread is of the forum as a whole, so it may just be a one off.

International Wing Chun Academy

Focused on Wind Chun in Australia.

The Wing Chun Archive

This is a very useful resource, comprising lists of Wing Chun schools, movies and videos, places to get wooden dummies and articles. There's also a comprehensive list of Wing Chun forums.

Martial Arts Planet

It comes up first when I search for "martial arts forum" in Google, but sadly there is no Wing Chun forum. There is a one for Kung Fu in which the odd thread concerning Wing Chun is created and then trashed.

As I said above, it's only recently I started looking on the internet for Wing Chun forums, so maybe there's a good one hiding somewhere.  The search continues.

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Training With An Injury

Posted on 24 September 2008 by admin

I don't know how I've done this but I've got an injured left knee. There was nothing specific I can remember that might have caused it, but there's a definite tightness around the joint, especially when I squat. It doesn't hurt and there's no visible swelling, but I can feel it nonetheless.

Although it causes me no problems I decided not to go to my Wing Chun class tonight. Although this problem is related to my abstaining from Wing Chun, the decision whether or not to train with an injury is common to many disciplines. In this instance, my main fear was that there would be a mammoth leg training session that would cripple me or that when chi sauing I would make a sudden movement and twist it.

Of course there's the inevitable argument raging in my head:

me: you should go to class, we don't train legs often. You'll be alright.

me: but if we do a lot of legwork, I'm either going to have to grin and bear it and risk injuring myself further, or I'm going to sit out. Aside from the mental impact of feeling defeated by that decision, there would be the feeling of loss having paid my $14 for the class, half of which I'm not part of

me: and so on

But...I think it's important to ere on the side of caution. One of the me's above is possibly right in saying we don't train legs often so I could get away with going. But there's too much to lose if I knacker my knee in completely. I won't be laughing if I then have to miss a month or so of training. If I can just keep this drama queen hat on a bit longer the risks are just too high!

Anyway, the class started at 20:30 and it's 20:34 so I'm definitely not going. And just to seal the decision, I've had a massive curry for my tea. Not going.

Update: OK, after a little internet research I think I know what the Mystery Injury might be. Water on the knee/bursitis. Stupidly, yesterday I was seeing how far I could push the joint by kneeling on the ground and seeing how far I could sit on my heels. It felt tight, and I shouldn't have done that. And a couple of days ago in the gym I was doing the same, the idea being that I should try and loosen the joint up. Jeez, I'm a hazard! I think rest, cold compresses and anti-inflammatories are the way to go. Duh, I can't believe that I've gone and aggravated the injury!

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Bas Rutten’s MMA Kick

Posted on 19 September 2008 by admin

OK I realise I'm getting off the beaten track here, I mean - MMA kick? Bas Rutten?? This is about as far from chi sau as you can get. But as I'm a fan of Bas and I think this video is interesting... here it is:

Fight Science MMA - Bas Rutten Kicks a Crash Test Dummy - More amazing video clips are a click away

But wait a minute. What's an MMA kick as opposed to a Muay Thai kick? By definition, Mixed Martial Arts (MMA duh!) includes Muay Thai so your MMA fighter may really be a Muy Thai fighter. There is no such thing as an MMA kick. And talk about a confusing report: earlier on the presenter says that Muay Thai fighters use shin bones but then to confuse matters in closing he explains that Bas is able to deliver such a powerful kick by, surprisingly, using his shin bone. Err... so like the MT kick then...? This is my first gripe.

My second gripe is that this isn't a comparison of different styles of kicking. This is a comparison of two different fighters and how powerfully they kick. Pit Bas Rutten against anyone and he will have a good chance of kicking/punching harder than them.

So are we to conclude from this stoopid video that 1) there is such a thing as an MMA kick and 2) MMA kicks are harder than MT kicks? This is just the kind of ridiulous 'pop science' that really riles me. It's presented by someone who is uninformed (not his fault) and unfortunately influences other uninformed people who will undoubtedly go off and regurgitate this rubbish.

But, crappy testing aside, what a kick! I'm glad I wasn't that dummy.

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Fascination With Boxing

Posted on 03 September 2008 by admin

I like watching boxing. If it's on the TV, I can't help but put everything else down and watch it. I wouldn't like to box myself, the risk of damage is too great for me.

Muhammad Ali Vs Joe Frazier

There are two fights I watched recently on KOTV (Knock Out TV?) that now stick in my mind. The first was Muhammad Ali against Joe Frazier. Unfortunately I joined the fight late and saw only the last few rounds which were a bit boring to tell the truth. I probably missed the snappy energy of the first rounds because in those in those that remained, the two boxers were so tired that they were just staggering into each other, guards lowered and very little could you call 'good technique'. I couldn't help thinking that in these latter stages, a boxing match just doesn't resemble a real fight. I would wager that there aren't many street fights that last as long as that Ali - Frazier fight. But then, whoever said that boxing purpose was supposed to resemble a real fight? And don't get me wrong - after such a gruelling fight I'm not surprised they were staggering into each other.

I can't help myself. I was going to embed a youtube video of just the bit I've been moaning about, but got distracted by mucg more impressive footage of the fight from round 3 onwards! Damn you youtube!

That's not to say that an experienced boxer couldn't whoop my ass! Because they probably could. I think that the training a boxer undergoes is good for self defence. A boxing match, however, is far removed from a real street situation where nasty people pick debris up off the road to use as weapons and kick you in the head when you are down.

Naseem Hamed vs Kevin Kelley

The other fight I saw was Naseem Hamed vs Kevin Kelley and the thing that struck me about this fight was Naseem's precision. I dare say that precision was present in Ali's and Frazier's fight but I came in towards the end of that and probably missed it. There were a couple of occasions where Naseem was virtually crouching and staring intently at Kelley as Kelley snapped out a vicious jab. Naseem didn't even flinch as Kelley's glove reached its full extent a matter of millimetres from his face. But of course he knew he was out of range. That's something I really envy (obviously aside from the speed, power, endurance, oh and cut physiques that these guys have). The precision to know that you are a few millimetres out of range. The two opponents are so close, but each knows the limitations of the their own and the other's reach.

I can't be bothered trawling through all of youtube's bad quality footage of this fight, so here's the one where Naseem gets floored (just because it made me smile). You'll have to endure PN's obligatory ego self massage at the start I'm afraid.

Struggling With Range

This is something I really struggle with. Range. Half the time when I'm chi sauing with someone I don't even know when they are in range. I know that this kind of awareness will come with experience, but I wonder if there is something I can do to speed up the process. Perhaps stand facing a wall and alter the distance until I can/can't reach it with my fist. Stand facing a door at what I think is a distance that puts me just out of range and use my full reach to punch - hopefully not messing up my knuckles? Or just watch more boxing matches and learn by osmosis. All three I reckon.

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