Karate Must Keep the High Ground

Kris Wilder

Karate must keep the high ground and here is proof from nature, history, battle, sports, and bars. Nature kills a horse from the ground up. What that means is the ground is bad and for us as martial artists. The ground is a bad place for a warrior. I addressed this in my 1st book, Lessons from the Dojo, close to twenty years ago.

I want to take a moment and add more color to this. Years ago, I was on a farm, the guy who owned the farm had several horses. The owner had a farrier come out of those new shoes on the horses. The farrier began to do his business clipping, cleaning, and fattening the horse’s hoofs.

Karate High Ground and Horses

Watching the farrier do his job is interesting. But then again, I find it entertaining to watch anybody who is a master of their craft.

While watching the farrier with the horses I started asking questions of him. One of the more obvious questions was, “Why do we need to do this I don’t see anybody putting shoes on horses in the wild?” He answered that the ground was different from where the horses once lived. The ground was not as soft as a stall, or a track, and the horses’ hoofs grew rapidly and that’s why he has to come in and cut. This of course is designed to make it easier for the horse to get around.

The farrier hadn’t become annoyed by my questions. He did have an interesting answer when he was shaping the horse’s shoe. “Putting on and fitting them (the horseshoes) is everything.” I acknowledged, “You are being precise about that.” He concurred, “I have to be because nature kills a horse from the ground up.”

Breaking Bones and Bugs

That required some thought. Instead, what I did was I asked him more questions. Standing up and turning to me adding clarity. “The ground can break a leg. The ground can do a lot of things, there are pathogens in the ground, there are infections that happen,” as he was explaining all these bad things that could happen when a horse comes in contact with the ground. These all kill a horse from the ground up. He noted, the other thing was a horse was dead, “If the horse can’t run, it becomes prey to the mountain lion.”

The simplicity and profundity of his story were clear. The farrier is pointing out, for us, the ground is a bad place to be for all the reasons that a horse wants to avoid the ground. This is the beginning of knowing karate must keep the high ground,

Agincourt

In 1415 the battle between the English and the French took place at Agincourt. The French arrived armored. The metal used by the French in their armor was exceptional.

The French metal was resistant to the English arrows. The English bows couldn’t generate enough force to drive an arrow enough to pierce the French metal. Confident the French showed up with a 3:1 ratio over the English in the number of men. Those numbers and the armament say The Battle of Agincourt should be a rout by the French over the English.

It didn’t turn out that way.

The ground became an instrumental aspect in the French loss. The ground at Agincourt had become wet and had turned into a kind of clay a muddy sticky adhesive clay. When the French would walk in the water-bound clay the clay would adhere to the soles of their feet. If you’ve ever experienced this you have had to stop and scrape the clay from your feet.

Without removing the clay, it continues to build-up. Scraping the clay off the soles of their armor is time-consuming and any residual clay attracts more clay. The French became heavily bound in the mud.

The ground was pining the best of the French forces down and the English were able to seize the day with hammers and picks. The English using picks and hammers to strike through the armament of the French and kill them. Yes, hammers made the difference, but in essence, the ground ruining the French ability to fight offensively resulted in their loss.

Castles, Bombers, and Karate

The high ground is always sought in a battle. The castle is built on high ground, not in valleys. Air superiority since World War II has had a component of any battlefield or battlefront.

Once you own the high ground your power is in a superior position of the high ground. The low ground being a poor position. One of the things that Sun Tzu says in his book, The Art of War, is one should never fight uphill. That’s clear at least in the context of the warrior, or the karate-ka, karate must keep the high ground.

Going to the ground is a bad thing in combative applications

In a sports competition, it’s a fantastic idea. Let me tease some of that out. In the sporting arena, the goal is to be able to survive so you can compete again. In most sporting competitions, not every sport, but going to the ground is either submission or end of the play. Two examples being boxing or, as in a football player being downed.

Going to the ground in a sport is often a method of avoiding an injury. A broken wrist, hyperextended elbow, or a concussion as examples. Hitting the ground poorly ruins the chances for continued practice and competition.

The listed injuries are the things you’re trying to achieve in a combative situation. You want the ground to hit the other person hard. If you dislocate or break something all the better.

Judo and wrestling underscore the importance of falling correctly. Keeping your feet, and the dominant high ground position. In our world, today, losing your feet in a riot, or a mob is deadly. In this situation, the ground is a bad place to be as the mob has no mercy. Mobs never have had mercy and never will, they are incapable of mercy.

Swords and The History of the High Ground

The Japanese Tachi, a sword, and as I understand it, a precursor to the Katana. The Tachi was longer than the katana. The longer blade of the Tachi allows the horseman to hack down at the foot soldier.

This sword style is not exclusive to Japanese culture. You can find this kind of sword usage in other parts of Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. Long swords swinging down from horseback is omnipresent because it works. All are a demonstration of the desire for the high ground.

Children and The High Ground

Thinking about a child learning to walk. We learn to walk as children because it’s better. It’s better to stand. It’s better to have some height so you can survey the surroundings. It is better to acquire a potential threat at a distance.

The higher I am the farther I can see. Now the advantage of standing is clear. The advantage of high ground to be able to see. That’s why reconnaissance airplanes exist, as alluded to before. That’s why we have unmanned drones, and spy satellites.

History and nature prove that being on the ground is bad. Learning to control your falls is important for sports and for last-ditch efforts to survive a throw.

As further proof ask a bouncer and they will tell you the guy who goes down to the ground in the bar is the one who’s in jeopardy. No bouncer wants to go to the ground at any time, it’s nasty down there in many ways.

A Farrier, a battle in 1415, where to build castles, an ancient manuscript, sports, swords, and the nature of standing upright.

What more proof do you need to avoid the ground and keep your feet underneath you. Karate must keep the high ground. You can get more information and tactical recommendations in our book. Their are several levels of action listed in the book, Dirty Ground, but the bottom line is: Karate must keep the high ground

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KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession of Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.

The Future of Karate Instruction

Kris Wilder

The Future of Karate Instruction. Not the total future, but a part of it. In the conference room in San Diego, I was having a casual chat with one of the invitees to the meeting.

We discovered we both had degrees in marketing. He owned a marketing company and I had at one time done the same. I pointed to the years that had passed since I had earned my degree and my skills were from the age of Magellan. He responded that his marketing skills were out of date too, as of that afternoon. His point, the world is changing fast. Here is the future of karate instruction.

To stay relevant in such a fast-moving field as marking takes effort. It is incumbent on people to keep present, to stay up to date in their skills. We understand this, we need to sharpen our skills daily.

Here is an Update for Karate Instructors

It is a simple act, yet necessary. A rule of thumb in marketing for a new product was you needed to present the product name seven times. Seven times was the magic number before a person remembers the name of the product.

This was the introduction of the name of the product. After the seven-time name familiarity process, you begin to share the value of the product. The product made things cleaner, brighter, better, last longer, etc.

The Modern Mind is Different

The number is not seven anymore it is thirteen. You need to be in front of somebody thirteen times before the product name sticks. The easy culprit for this is people lack focus, screens, big and small, lack of interest. You can add more to the list.

Teaching a movement, an idea in martial arts you should adopt this idea. Start to present in higher repetition. This isn’t about if the need for repetition is necessary or not. It is necessary. And it is one of the elements of the future of karate instruction.

It is Necessary, Because it is The Future of Karate Instruction

This is not a lament on how the world has changed, or students aren’t the way they used to be, etc. it is a statement of fact. And as Dr. Drew Pinsky is keen to say. “You have to deal with reality on realities terms.”

Being creative in this presentation, change it up, bury the message in a drill, say the message in different ways, demonstrate it from different angles. Meet your student where they are and then turn pointing down the road, saying, “Go that way.” Hopefully, they will become the future of karate instruction,

A few other links you may find interesting

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KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession with Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.

Your Energy is Key Now

Kris Wilder

Your energy is key now “In these times.” That’s what the radio announcers and broadcasters like to say. “In these uncertain times,” or “These unprecedented times.” Yeah, yeah, yeah, heard a million times.

Your Energy is Key Now, Right Now, More Than Ever

The question is, “What do I do?” “What do we do in these times in this situation?” “Where do I go what’s supposed to happen?” Well, that is a lot of questions and I don’t have any specific answers for you. Except for one very important statement. Energy is key.

Energy between two people

You see those questions I ask about a moment ago they lack energy. They are like a rudderless ship casting about with neither a compass nor a sail. The energy that goes into the smallest efforts that you undertake at these times. That’s the place you see energy, positive energy, is one of the most important elements you can have in your life.

The Kids in The Hall Made Fun of it Years Ago

Ask anybody you want to be around the positive person or you want to be around the dour and sour person. People want to talk about the negative it’s a natural defense mechanism. It’s something that is kind of built into us, but it’s also made fun of.

The Kids in The Hall

If I could reach back years and years ago there was a great TV show called, The Kids in the Hall. You may be familiar with it. It was a comedy troupe out of Canada. One of the skits they would do was an office skit. The guys would dress in drag and pretend to be office administrators. Invariably the episodes began with, “Oh it’s a Monday, Oh I know Monday’s.” That’s bad energy. But we know that and yet we still can make fun of it because, well it continues.

Look here’s the deal, fake it. Shower on time, shave, put on your good clothes, clean whatever you need to clean. Put as much order into your life as you can. Keep the positive energy. Because even though you may be faking it makes a profound and final difference in how you live your life.

A Simple Action That Sets Your Sails

Stop waiting for things to get better. Simply do this, fake it. The positive energy. You’ll soon begin to believe it and so will your body. You’re going to find yourself in an extraordinary position of seeing the world as potential and not a negative stasis. A world we have to exist in that stasis and wait for somebody to put a compass or rudder and sail on our own personal ship.

Sailboat, sailing away

Some related links you may find of interest

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KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession of Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.

An extra hit. I think this is one of the funniest, odd, weird Kids in the Hall skit called, “Drunk Father Birthday Advice.

My Love of Karate is Lost

Kris Wilder

My Love of Karate is Lost. The breakpoint, the loss of love is often the sensation of not finding purpose in martial arts.

Internal Talk

Internal Talk looks like this

The internal conversation can be damaging. When you think you have lost your love of karate it sounds like a bad relationship in the last stages. “Why are we even doing this? Neither of us is happy.” This internal conversation is a dual killer of discipline, and desire. A relationship worth saving is worth working on.

Doldrums are Normal

Treat your martial arts doldrums in this manner. Talk with others, measure your life, and the training. You may not be in the right place, you may want to explore another art, or you are not getting what you need at your school. Students move from one University to another often. People take new jobs requiring relocation and pro athletes change teams. But before you pour that concrete sidewalk on your way out the door. Don’t. Once you pour that mental concrete it will set and you will walk that path.

Be Reasonable and Be Circumspect.

Perspective can be everything. An example is a conversation I had with a woman whose boss was hard on her. He had fired four other people on her team and she suspected she was next.

The other way to look at this could be, your boss sees something in you and is willing to cultivate it. The proof is the other four have been fired, you remain. See him as a mentor, not an executioner. Simplistic? Sure, many dynamics are at play and this is an abbreviated example. Is it possible you are looking at a similar situation?

Balancing balls

It is difficult to solve a dynamic issue with a proclamation, “Doldrums are normal.” You may not be looking at the loss of love of karate with the correct orientation.

Baby Steps, or Chunking

Take small steps. Those small steps need to be forward toward the goal. You can call them baby steps. Baby steps are a fantastic example. A toddler has a goal, to walk like all the other people around them.

I have yet to meet a baby that after plopping down for the umpteenth time says, “That’s it, I’m not going to walk.” Baby steps are small, but the action never stops. Not walking is unacceptable. A real-world example of resilience and chunking. Chucking is breaking a goal down into manageable sections. In small increments a task is completed. Stand, get balance, step. Small and manageable.

Linked Legos

When you have lost your love of karate. Know there are ups and downs, be reasonable in your internal conversation. Take baby steps.

Give yourself some time and let the love you once had sprout on your path. Take baby steps toward that wonderful experience you knew before you pour a concrete path.

Once that path hardens it is set and you will walk it. And that hard path leads away from and unlikely toward something.

Some other pieces of information you may enjoy

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KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession with Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.

Karate Teachers Making You Learn

Kris Wilder

Karate teachers making you learn. Not really, teachers don’t make you learn. As a student, you are not required to learn. In the United States, the law says you will attend school. The goal is to get a basic education. But that goal is missed by the law.  You are required to attend a school, but you are under no obligation to learn.

Coach and Trainer

Trainers don’t make you healthy. Coaches point the way. Trainers have experience. Trainers also understand motivation, inspiration, enthusiasm.

As you think of the trainers and coaches you have experienced, they have these three elements. Superbowl winning coach Pete Carrol and David Goggins U.S. Navy SEAL are examples. The possession of motivation, inspiration, and enthusiasm are internalized.

Doctors don’t make you healthy. Your health is your responsibility, not the Doctor’s duty. Western medicine is generally designed to fix the broken, not prevent.

Your karate instructor is a teacher, a trainer, and not a doctor. You’re at the martial arts school because you want to learn. Push-ups and multiple repetitions of a movement are done to get better than that day before.

Listening and Action

You listen to the ideas in the teaching. Take notes, read books, watch videos on the martial arts, and related ideas. Some of those related ideas can be kinesiology, the study of movement and anatomy, some yoga? A change in diet. The point is you are expanding yourself on your terms.

Teachers don’t make you learn. Trainers don’t make you strong, and Doctors don’t make you healthy. But when you have the fire. The inspiration, when you are receptive when you see the value you will learn. You get better and build for the future all while being in the grove of the moment.

And here is the Pareto Distribution. The rule in its elemental version is, 80% of what happens is because of action by 20%.

You want to be in the 20% That choose to take action on your education, your training, and your health.

Look around your martial arts school. How many people are on the floor, 10? Are you one of two?

And here is the secret. When you become one of those two, the instructor will give you more. The teachers, trainers, they can’t help themselves, they are compelled to give you more.

Karate teachers making you learn?

No one makes you do your karate, but when you choose to live in the 20% your world changes. Teachers take notice, trainers recognize your work, and when Doctors rarely see you, they praise you.

Being the elite 20% is not just a wish, but an imperative.

Here are a few other posts you will find interesting

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KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession with Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.

Old Style Karate is Just That, Old

Kris Wilder

Old style karate is just that, old. This is not a condemnation of traditional karate, so before you dismiss what I say take a moment a read on. The silo of classic training tools. Posts driven into the ground to make for movement and balance drills is an example. Or the classic stone lever, called Chishi.

These tools are two examples of found elements. You find what you have around you and make do with that element. You use the item to further your training. It is resourceful and that is attractive.

Romanticizing history in by its nature incomplete, it’s putting select views into silos. Romanticizing karate is a real as a Harlequin Romance novel.

The idea that traditional karate read that as old style karate, is bad. Not in principle but the silos in which aspects of that art exist are insufficient.

If you are looking for a specific, “Stop doing that, this is wrong,” no, I’m not going that direction. I’m asking for dilation of your view of karate training.

An example of how old-style karate needs a view expansion is by using the analogy of flight. The Wight Brother pulled of the first powered flight at Kitty Hawk North Carolina in 1903. Since we have added radial engines to aircraft, then inline engines to reduce drag. Pulse Jet, Ramjet, Turbine engines, and more.

Evolution is Success, Even in Old Style Karate

Ailerons have replaced twisting the wings to turn. If the fixed wing-powered flight was a failed platform it would not evolve, but it did evolve. You can point to the progress of aircraft design. The car, the microwave, vaccines, these all have successful progressions, evolution.

A computer you wear on your wrist observing your bioactivity is incredible. The adage, “What doesn’t get measured doesn’t get done,” fits here. You can now measure parts of your workout that only a medical specialist once possessed.

Adaptability and Focus

Watch Sandra Sanchez, world kata champion training routine here.

You will see the adoption of tools and techniques used in ways the masters never dreamed.

And it’s good.

We understand much more about human performance, physiology, and even sleep. Sanchez is a champion and hasn’t thrown out old style karate, she has improved it with modern means.

The Example of Sleep Being Important

Enjoy this segment from the Joe Rogan Podcast. This is Matthew Walker a professor of neuroscience at the University of California. The 8-minute segment will change your view on sleep, or sharpen what you already know.

Again, no specific recommendation other than one. Be a seeker of new or improved methods. New or improved methods of learning, training, and thinking. Don’t forsake the old methods, but do evolve. Just like the aircraft, the wings are still wings, but the performance is worlds apart.

We have learned more about flight in 118 years since the Wright Brothers flight than birds have learned in their entire evolution. That is a sign of adaptability and intelligence. We should do our best to live healthy lives. We should avail ourselves of every opportunity to do so and neither dream romantically nor silo our art.

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Kris Wilder in karate gi

KRIS WILDER

Kris Wilder is a martial artist based in Seattle Washington. He has authored many martial art books, including the classic, The Way of Kata. Making no apologies for his obsession of Football he can be found telling any who will listen about the nuances of the Canadian Football League.