Category Archives: free martial arts books

The Proof is Mounting that Martial Artists with Tattoos are Weaker!

karate muscles

I got your chi right here...beotch!

Watching the martial artists on the UFC last night.
The first two matches the fellows with less tattoos won over the fellows with more tattoos.

Then I went to the UFC house, and the guys with more tattoos won!
Wait a minute, this isn’t the way the statistics have been going!
Then I realized, the coach for the guys who happened to have no tattoos wasn’t even showing up. So I would say that the results are skewed. Still, I can’t ignore them, I just have to expand my database. And I’m going to have to take into account factors such as the disappearing MA coach. Oh well. It’s still fun.

My website is Monster Martial Arts, and a lot of people get interested in my book on The Punch, which lists the concepts and training routines you need to have the strongest punch in the world. There’s a free martial arts book on the home page.

The Three Geometries of the Internal Martial Arts

When one is defining the Internal Martial Arts they are, of course, speaking of Tai Chi Chuan, Pa Kua Chang, and Hsing i. These arts are considered soft, and they are designed to build chi power. Interestingly, while there is similarity, there must be difference, and the differences can better be understood by examining the specific geometries of each fighting discipline.

baguazhangTai Chi Chuan is the art that most people know of. It is done slowly, and attention is paid to the circulation of chi through the internal organs. This gives a ‘body of steel wrapped in cotton.’

Then there is Pa Kua Chang, which is a circular art in which chi power is said to spiral through the limbs and torso.

Last is Hsing i, which is more straightforward, developing the soft, internal power fist.

Now, Tai Chi doesn’t go anywhere. One deals with an attacker with subtle motions, not giving way, but rather redirecting force, then utilizing one’s own power.

Pa Kua goes in circles, which is a lateral motion.

Hsing i comes straightforward, more of an aggressive attacking sort of art.

The point here is that Tai Chi is the point on the ground, Pa Kua, though circular, describes sideways motion, and Hsing i creates forward and back motion.

Thus the three geometries create  plus, or a cross.

While this is not mystical, it does tend to create three methods of combat strategy which, when put together, create a wholistic fighting method.

If the attack is delivered with irresistible force, the tai chi student can shift to pa kua and move aside.

If the attack is not aggressive enough, one can shift to using i and mount a quick but penetrating attack.

Thus, fight or flight, slip or shift, the student who knows all three arts will have much more combat potential than the fellow who doesn’t. And that is the summation, be it a sketch it should still be handy in the overall viewpoint, of the three geometries of the Internal Martial Arts.

Discipline in the Martial Arts and Hanging the School Teacher!

I just wrote an article on discipline in the martial arts, and there are several things to be understood about this. Unfortunately, the article was sort of dry, it happens some times, can’t hit a home run every time, but, heck, I can just blog and fix my thoughts that way, right?

So, there is self discipline, and there is no other kind of discipline. If somebody is forcing discipline on you, yes, there may be a dictionary word or meaning relating to that, but the fact is discipline is something that you make for yourself. Nobody else can make it for you.

Guy beats you to make you have better handwriting, that’s not discipline, that is threat and violence.

hardest kicks

True discipline has to do with you ordering yourself, taking control of yourself, and there is no other kind.

the other kind, you see, doesn’t last, has adverse effects. Eventually you’ll hate playing the piano. And you might even beat up the piano teacher.

Reminds me of the hilarious story of the school teacher, back about a 125 years ago, wild west times. He was mean to his students, then he quit and left, and then, years later, he came back. They strung him up. All his students were grown men, saw that he wasn’t very nice, that you don’t treat kids that way, so they hung him.

Now, is that  a lesson or what? I mean, hanging the darned school teacher! I guess he won’t give out no more Fs. Eh?

Ha!

Anyway, the martial arts are incredibly perfect for giving discipline. People love to do them, they force themselves to do them, they see worth, they get things out of, and the whole thing is the best way of making oneself firmer, straighter, able to study harder, able to feet to where one is going, and so on.

So, the next time you think about putting your little Johnny into a karate class, just so the instructor will give him a little discipline…it’s you that needs the discipline.

Force is not discipline it is punishment, unless the student decides to do it for himself. And I guess that’s what Ir early wanted to say about martial arts discipline. And if you agree, or at least think the matter is worth a little more consideration, check out the free books page in the menu above. It’s a kick, and you can even get a martial arts course for half price. Now that’s a deal!

Getting Kicked in the Balls, and What Bruce Lee Told Joe Lewis

hardest kick

Don't just focus your fist, learn how to focus your feet!

Having a ball today. Maybe I shouldn’t use that word. One of the stories I posted was about the time I got Kicked in the Balls. I still had kids, but I don’t know why. Still, I had a sweet revenge, an artistic revenge, if such a thing is possible.

The other article I posted was on three things Bruce Lee taught Joe Lewis. This is one of those things that you think is urban legends, then you find out it is real, and it is why Joe Lewis became the world Karate champ, and many people consider him as the best karate fighter in the world.

Anyway, you can find those articles if you look in the humor section and the technique section. You could probably do a search for them with the top right hand search box. Up to you.

Double anyway. Had a great work out today. I try to fit three forms into the time it takes my oatmeal to boil. I make it, but just barely.

Still, the whole work out thing is incredibly mental. It’s not how many forms I can do how fast, it’s whether I can relax my body so that each strike or block in the forms is perfectly executed.

Perfection comes from the amount of space you have in your mind.

If you’re thinking about work, or TV, or something else, then you don’t have an empty mind. An empty mind is possible when you concentrate on one thing and only one thing.

Throw out all distractions.

That is what zen is, you know, just being able to focus on one thing. Some people want to build it up as mystical, but the mystical happens after a few years of concentrating on one thing at a time. And the mystical isn’t always what you think it is.

But, I should explain mystical some other time. Got to write more articles, do more forms, have more fun. Here’s a light, little power kick to send you off with. Have fun. Grin.

hardest kicks

Martial Arts Illustrations Reveal Failing Human Intellect

martial arts illustrations

Martial Arts Book technology back in the 1960s

I was sort of struck by this thought, and there is a certain amount of truth to it, but on considering Martial Arts Illustrations over the past few decades it appears that the human intellect is failing.

To understand this, consider the media I have worked with over the past forty years.

Photographs, and the drive up 24 hour developer was cutting edge. Of course, you usually only got black and white (10 cents a photo) because color was too expensive.

Then color became more predominant, people wanted color, and it was actually cheaper to get color photos developed than black and white. Go figure!

And I used to cut and paste those puppies by hand. Then I had to put those sheets through the xerox by hand. Doing that for a while sort of made you want to do more writing and less photos. Yet, photos were the best way to get the ideas across.

Then came the computer age, and I traveled through a variety of software. I made stick figures with appleworks, tweaked with iPhoto to crop and level and such, and the programs kept getting bigger and bigger. Eventually, I picked up a poser, and life became illustrious.

Now, you have an idea of some of the media traveled through, and that is just this lifetime, so I want you to consider the bigger picture.

Cavemen drew pictures on cave walls. There was your history, your daily newspaper, your tribal biography.

Mud tablets were invented, and drawing twigs were picked up by a whole new generation. Of course, the writing was just a bunch of smaller pictures, but it was progress.

Then papyrus was invented, and ink, and actual symbols were used to create language. Pictures slowly went into the background, and the human intellect became more and more able to grasp abstracts.

It is man’s ability to handle abstract thought that illuminates his higher mental abilities. Not the opposable thumb, as some monkeys would have you believe, else the monkey wrench would have been invented long before man came along.

Anyway, (that was a good pun, wasn’t it?) I was looking through martial arts books the other  day. Specifically, I was inspecting a book that came out a hundred years ago, one that came out fifty years ago, twenty-five years ago, and ten years ago.

There used to be more words and less printing.

Well, of course, printing pictures was harder than moveable type.

But, as man became more able to print pictures, words tended to fade into the background.

The point is that we once were cavemen, scrawling pictures on the walls with mud dipped sticks. Then we developed abstracts, and the ability to print them, and now, think about it, we want stuff simple. We just want to look at pictures. He who can make pictures without all the distraction of words sells more.

Well, I suppose that isn’t entirely true, but for some it is, and that means, for some, that the thrust to understand abstracts (because of having to read and write with word symbols) has receded, and the desire for pictures (and no heavy thought stuff, doh!) has risen to the fore.

Remember that the next time you click on youtube and try to follow the moves on the shiny screen thing.

And, if you want some real abstracts, and a mental that is truly mental, drop on by Free Martial Arts Online. You’ll find pictures there, sure, but you’ll also find some of the most cutting edge abstract thought this side of the Lensmen. Pick up a free book while you’re there.

Here’s a few Free Martial Arts Books Online!

reading martial arts book

Knowledge is in Free Martial Arts Books!

I love freebies, and I know that people love them, and that means you’re gonna love free martial arts books, right?

I started off with my three free Matrix books. They are short, little manuals describing what Matrixing is and where it comes from.

Right now I’m searching through military files, the net, everywhere I can to find more free books. I’ll build a list, and if anybody has a free martial arts book, one that is in the public domain that others would love to see, let me know.

I mean, yes, we have to take lessons, but we should also augment them with as much quality information from other sources as we can. Right?

So here are three free martial arts books to start, and I’ll talk to you later.

Blog!

Click on the headline right above this and on the right. It says ‘New Martial Arts Website….’ Click on that and follow the blog.

BTW, Feel free to comment on any post, but remember, how you speak reveals your intelligence. Smart people use the correct language. Dumb people don’t.