Sunday, 28 September 2008

My first post and general introduction

Hi there, welcome and thank you for visiting my blog. I'm Dan and I've been fascinated with martial arts myths ever since watching Monkey Magic and The Water Margin as a kid. As a teenager, I was introduced into traditional martial arts and studied under a great many disciplines including Karate (Shotokan, Wado-ryu, Goju Ryu and Kyokushin-kai), Ninjutsu, Jujutsu, Aikido, Kendo, Shaolin Tiger-Crane Kung Fu, Tai Chi and Qigong. I train to this day, settling on Okinawan Goju Ryu Karate as my primary style under the expert guidance of Shihan Morio Higaonna and his IOGKF instructors.

Goju Ryu Karate has it's origins in a style know as Naha-te, Naha being the capital of Okinawa and Te meaning fist, therefore that style was literally the Naha Fist style. In honour of those great masters that preserved traditions for us to learn from today, I call my blog, London Fist and hope it will pay tribute to those who keep the fighting spirit alive through all the dark winters and rainy evenings that Britain throws at them.

All martial arts have something to them and require skill and dedication to practice. To me, the better martial art is not necessarily the one which is the most ferocious but the one is has the greatest depth. It should enable the practitioner to enjoy health over the long term, otherwise what type of self defence is it when we kill ourselves daily in preparation of an incident that may never happen? I also feel a true martial art might help the practitioner develop their character since it requires much devotion and often a certain level of suffering even to become a master of the art. Since martial arts are combat sports, how one learns to deal with stress, suffering and defeat must be clear pointers as to whether one can become truly adept, no?

Legends within martial arts abound. From stories of people defeating gangs single handed to fighters who kill with one strike, it excites the imagination to hear of what is possible on the outer boundaries of human performance. Fighters break solid objects with their empty hands while other masters endure blows so fierce the on-looker cowers away in pain. How true are these stories? Just what is possible in martial arts? And how many people have been able access these secrets? While there are many fight clubs around, they vary immensely in outlook. There are sport oriented styles like the kick boxers and judo students, through to the more esoteric and obscure like the Qi energy moving Shaolin fighters, Aikido-ka and Ninjutsu warriors. I have a very open mind and a lot of background in Chinese metaphysics so over the coming few months I hope to find out more about what is possible as I travel through the back streets and sweaty dojos of London, meeting the people who put put their fists to work on a daily basis to keep the traditions alive. I hope you'll join me, share with me your insights and help preserve the traditional ways of the warrior.

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