Kung Fu and the art of living within systems
There’s conflict within every system, but we can learn to
respond with grace and creativity
by Jeremy Mathieu
I have been training in Kung Fu and Tai Chi for 10 years now. That
makes me a beginner in that field, as the traditional Chinese martial
arts are pathways of cultivation that take a lifetime to learn and grow
into.

Shaolin monk performance |
A student would traditionally follow the master for years to learn
the style, by repeating set movements and absorbing the way the master
lives, thinks and talks. Complete devotion would be expected of the
student, for by taking on the responsibility of learning a style, he or
she becomes part of a lineage, an unbreakable chain connecting the past
teachers to the future generations. The student holds the responsibility
to learn well so that he or she can one day pass the style correctly
onwards.
This traditional concept of filial piety is central to the practice
of martial arts, giving the student a place within a wider system. It
can be difficult for modern westerners to grasp and to accept. Seeing
ourselves as independent individuals is so closely linked to our ideal
of unrestricted personal freedom.
Through our current social and environmental crises, we are starting
to see the limits of this mindset of separation and unrestricted
individuality.
Many in the sustainability movement have started to realise how
interdependent we truly are, with human systems connecting us all
economically, politically and culturally, while being fully embedded
into natural systems.
Freedom
We are part of those systems, those physical and social webs of life.
While they could be thought of as a stifling limitation to our ideal of
freedom, being mindful of our interconnections allows us to take our
place within those systems more responsibly.
I would argue that we can learn from martial arts to realise
ourselves even more completely as individuals, by becoming more mindful
of our participation within all these systems. Their connecting chains
can help us go higher and further together, rather than keeping us
prisoners.
Chinese martial arts are grounded in Daoism, Confucianism and
Buddhism. All of which are disciplines of practice, geared towards
self-transformation rather than the search for an objective explanation
of a world beyond our experience. They bring the body and the mind
together as an unbreakable whole. No glorifying of the mind and seeing
the body as an aesthetic bystander that can be upgraded by going to the
gym and buying fancy new clothes.
Nor is the body somehow dragging us down to unholy and imperfect
material realms. The practice of martial arts brings the body to the
front.
It becomes alive! Through the hardship of training, the students
develop a renewed awareness of their bodies. It is experienced as the
seat of our senses and perceptions, as well as our first point of
contact with the natural world.
This process of cultivation does not come smoothly or easily. The
changes we experience can be quite deep, varied and challenging. We
encounter conflict at every turn and staying on this path takes
discipline, dedication, and a lot of patience.
The internal turmoil comes from the need to take responsibility for
all the outcomes in our lives.
No more excuses or blaming others. The students have to learn to be
mindful of how they prioritise their time, giving training and their
overall progress in life the right amount of care, and not letting
escapism or activities that do not enrich their lives proliferate beyond
measure.
Training
We also learn to reconnect to the various parts of our lives to build
more integrity, more ‘wholeness’. When training seriously, it becomes
harder and harder to leave parts of ourselves at reception when arriving
at work. We seek integration and not dispersion. All of these teach us
the hardest of all types of honesty, the one in which we have to be
honest with ourselves.
Letting go of our illusions and acting in full congruence with
ourselves. Then we start sparring and experiencing a more obvious form
of conflict.
By interacting with another person in a controlled, semi-contact
fighting environment, we learn a whole new level of humility. Mind and
body learn to work ever more closely together, to sense the environment
and react accordingly. I know of no better incentive to learn and grow
than knowing life or death depends on how skilled you are, as at the
origins of martial arts. We learn strategies and techniques, giving us
the tools to deal with any opponent, any situation. This is the most
visible part of the art of warfare, the direct confrontation between two
people or two systems.
But another level underlies it: the conflict between our inner ideals
and what is actually happening in our world.
We test our character and our ability to realise our potential. Our
quest for ‘silver bullet’ routes to victory soon shatters under the
recognition of the constantly evolving and changing nature of the
opposition. We are now on a never-ending road to self-improvement,
constantly testing ourselves against a live and organic environment.
Conflict
As we become more awake to our environment, we encounter yet another
level of conflict - the result of forces that are beyond our immediate
ability to solve. Global warming, economic crises, the rise of
nationalism: these are all examples of conflicts that are bigger than
any of us. Their violence can shatter lives and break communities apart.
Their scale is a reminder that our well-being depends on the quality
of care with which we maintain our various social webs - whether in our
work, community or family.
What we can’t resolve alone, we can improve by working with others.
Through mindful and responsible participation, we can increase the
resilience of the system as a whole.
So much for the ‘martial’ side; what about the arts?
Being mindful of these different levels of conflicts and how we
respond to them allows us to constantly expand our awareness and to
recognize patterns in our inner landscape as well as our environment.
The highest forms of fighting arts work with those patterns and flows of
energy rather than against them. We use the skills and strategies
embedded in the style to manipulate those subtle forces with ever more
elegance and efficiency.
Dealing with conflict becomes a creative expression - a real art
form. And since conflict can be found everywhere in our lives, the realm
of the ‘artist’ in the ‘martial arts’ is only limited by our imagination
and our ability to learn and to refine our skills.
Kung Fu instructor, scholar and author Danil Mikhailov defines the
martial arts as “the achievement of physical, mental and spiritual
self-transformation through the practice of a skill”. At its very roots,
he says, it is much more than the art of fighting: “it is the art of
living” - meaning any activity, dare I say any job, has the potential to
bring us onto this path.
Leadership
How many of us feel that our jobs help us do that? How could we learn
to build this process of self-transformation into our professional lives
and economies? These are questions not just for the next generation of
martial artists, but for all of us. We can all choose to see our lives
as works of art in progress, to learn from the Kung Fu method and to
grow from all the conflicts we encounter. It might just help us develop
the leadership we need to face the complex and ever changing challenges
on the journey to a sustainable future.
- GreenFutures
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