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The Tao Of Gung Fu :
A Study In The Way Of The Chinese Martial Art
(Handwritten essay by Bruce Lee dated May 16, 1962.)
Gung
fu is a special kind of skill, a fine art rather than just a
physical exercise or self-defense. To the Chinese, gung fu is the
subtle art of matching the essence of the mind to that of the
techniques in which it has to work. The principle of gung fu is not
a thing that can be learned, like a science, by fact-finding or
instruction in facts. It has to grow spontaneously, like a flower,
in a mind free from desires and emotions. The core of this principle
of gung fu is Tao - the spontaneity of the universe. The word Tao
has no exact equivalent in the English Language. To render it into
the Way, or the "principle" or the "law" is to give it too narrow an
interpretation. Lao-tzu, the founder of Taoism, described Tao in the
following words:
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The
Way that can be expressed in words is not the eternal Way;
the Name that can be uttered is not the eternal Name.
Conceived of as nameless it is the cause of Heaven and earth.
Conceived of as having a name it is the mother of all things.
Only the man externally free from passion can contemplate its
spiritual essence.
He who is clogged by desires can see no more than its outer form.
These two things, the spiritual (Yin) and the material (Yang),
though we call them by different names, are one and the same in
their origin.
The sameness is a mystery of the mysteries.
It is the gate of all that is subtle and wonderful. |
In Masterpieces of World Philosophy: "Tao is nameless beginning of
things, the universal principle underlying everything, the supreme,
ultimate pattern, and the principle of growth." Huston Smith, the
author of The World's Religions, explained Tao as "The Way of
Ultimate Reality---the Way or Principle behind all life, or the Way
man should order his life to gear in with the Way the universe
operates." Although no one word can substitute its meaning, I have
used the word Truth for it---the "Truth" behind gung fu; the "Truth"
that every gung fu practitioner should follow. Tao operates in Yin
and Yang, a pair of mutually complementary forces that are at work
in and behind all phenomena. This principle of Yin-Yang, also known
as T'ai Chi, is the basic structure of gung fu. The T'ai Chi, or
Grand Terminus, was first drawn more than three thousand years ago
by Chou Chun I. The Yang (whiteness) principle represents
positiveness, firmness, masculinity, substantiality, brightness,
day, heat, and so forth. The Yin (blackness) principle is the
opposite. It represents negativeness, softness, femininity,
insubstantiality, darkness, night, coldness, and so forth. The basic
theory in T'ai Chi is that nothing is so permanent as never to
change. In other words, when activity (Yang) reaches the extreme
point, it becomes inactivity; and inactivity forms Yin. Extreme
inactivity returns to become activity, which is Yang. Activity is
the cause of inactivity and vice versa. This system of complementary
increasing and decreasing of the principle is continuous. From this
one can see that the two forces (Yin-Yang), although they appear to
conflict, in reality are mutually interdependent; instead of
opposition, there is cooperation and alternation. The application of
the principles of Yin-Yang in gung fu are expressed as the Law of
Harmony. It states that one should be in harmony with, not in
rebellion against, the strength and force of the opposition. This
means that one should do nothing that is not natural or spontaneous;
the important thing is to not strain in any way. When opponent A
uses strength (Yang) on B, B must not resist him (back) with
strength; in other words, B does not use positiveness (Yang )
against positiveness (Yang), but yields to A with softness (Yin) and
leads A in the direction of his own force, negativeness (Yin) to
positiveness (Yang). When A's strength goes to the extreme, the
positiveness (Yang) will change to negativeness (Yin), and B can
then take him at his unguarded moment and attack with force (Yang).
Thus the whole process is not unnatural or strained; B fits his
movement harmoniously and continuously into that of A without
resisting or striving.
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The
above idea gives rise to a closely related law, the Law of
Noninterference with Nature, which teaches a gung fu man to forget
about himself and follow his opponent instead of himself; he does
not move ahead but responds to the fitting influence. The basic idea
is to defeat the opponent by yielding to him and using his own
strength. That is why a gung fu man never asserts himself against
his opponent, and never puts himself in frontal opposition to the
direction of his opponents force. When being attacked, he will not
resist, but will control the attack by swinging with it. This law
illustrates the principles of nonresistance and nonviolence, which
were founded on the idea that the branches of a fir tree snap under
the weight of the snow, while the simple reeds, weaker but more
supple, can overcome it. In the I'Ching, Confucius illustrated this:
"To stand in the stream is a datum of nature; one must follow and
flow with it." In the Tao Teh Ching, the gospel of Taoism, Lao-tzu
pointed out to us the value of gentleness. Contrary to common
belief, the Yin principle, as softness and pliableness, is to be
associated with life and survival. Because he can yield, a man can
survive. In contrast, the Yang principle, which is assumed to be
rigorous and hard, makes a man break under pressure (note the last
two lines, which make a fair description of revolution as many
generations of people have seen it):
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Alive, a man is supple, soft;
In death, unbending, rigorous.
All creatures, grass and trees, alive
Are plastic but are pliant too,
And dead, are friable and dry.
Unbending rigor is the mate of death,
And yielding softness, company of life;
Unbending soldiers get no victories;
The stiffest tree is readiest for the ax.
The strong and mighty topple from their place;
The soft and yielding rise above them all.
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The
way of movement in gung fu is closely related to the movement of the
mind. In fact, the mind is trained to direct the movement of the
body. The mind wills and the body behaves. As the mind is to direct
the bodily movements, the way to control the mind is important; but
it is not an easy task. In his book, Glen Clark mentioned some of
the emotional disturbances in athletics:
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Every conflicting centre, every extraneous, disrupting,
decentralizing emotion, jars the natural rhythm and reduces a man's
efficiency on the gridiron far more seriously than physical jars and
bodily conflicts can ever jar him. The emotions that destroy the
inner rhythm of a man are hatred, jealousy, lust, envy, pride,
vanity, covetousness and fear.
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To
perform the right technique in gung fu, physical loosening must be
continued in a mental and spiritual loosening, so as to make the
mind not only agile but free. In order to accomplish this, a gung fu
man has to remain quiet and calm and to master the principle of
no-mindedness (wu hsin). No-mindedness is not a blank mind that
excludes all emotions; nor is it simply calmness and quietness of
the mind. Although quietude and calmness are important, it is the
"non-graspiness" of the mind that mainly constitutes the principle
of no-mindedness. A gung fu man employs his mind as a mirror---it
grasps nothing and it refuses nothing; it receives but does not
keep. As Alan Watts puts it, the no-mindedness is "a state of
wholeness in which the mind functions freely and easily, without the
sensation of a second mind or ego standing over it with a club."
What he means is, let the mind think what it likes without
interference by the separate thinker or ego within oneself. So long
as it thinks what it wants, there is absolutely no effort in letting
it go; and the disappearance of the effort to let go is precisely
the disappearance of the separate thinker. There is nothing to try
to do, for whatever comes up moment by moment is accepted, including
nonacceptance. No-mindedness is then not being without emotion or
feeling, but being one in whom feeling is not sticky or blocked. It
is a mind immune to emotional influences. "Like this river,
everything is flowing on ceaselessly without cessation or standing
still." No-mindedness is employing the whole mind as we use the eyes
when we rest them upon various objects but make no special effort to
take anything in. Chuang-tzu, the disciple of Lao-tzu, stated:
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The
baby looks at things all day without winking, that is because his
eyes are not focussed on any particular object. He goes without
knowing where he is going, and stops without knowing what he is
doing. He merges himself with the surroundings and moves along with
it. These are the principles of mental hygiene.
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Therefore, concentration in gung fu does not have the usual sense of
restricting the attention to a single sense object; it is simply a
quiet awareness of whatever happens to be here and now. Such
concentration can be illustrated by an audience at a football game;
instead of a concentrated attention on the player who has the ball,
they have an awareness of the whole football field. In a similar
way, a gung fu man's mind is concentrated by not dwelling on any
particular part of the opponent. This is especially true when he
deals with many opponents. For instance, suppose ten men are
attacking him, each in succession ready to strike him down. As soon
as one is disposed of, he will move onto another without permitting
the mind to "stop" with any. However rapidly one blow may follow
another he leaves no time to intervene between the two. Every one of
the ten will thus be successively and successfully dealt with. This
is possible only when the mind moves from one object to another
without being "stopped" or arrested by anything. If the mind is
unable to move on in this fashion, it is sure to lose the combat
somewhere between two encounters. The mind is present everywhere
because it is nowhere attached to any particular object. And it can
remain present because, even when relating to this or that object,
it does not cling to it. The flow of thought is like water filling a
pond, which is always ready to flow off again. It can work its
inexhaustible power because it is free, and it can be open to
everything because it is empty. This can be compared with what Chang
Chen Chi called "Serene Reflection." He wrote: "Serene means
tranquillity of no thought, and reflection means vivid and clear
awareness. Therefore, serene reflection is clear awareness of
no-thought." As stated earlier, a gung fu man aims at harmony with
himself and his opponent. Also, being in harmony with one's opponent
is possible not through force, which provokes conflicts and
reactions, but through a yielding to the opponent's force. In other
words, a gung fu man promotes the spontaneous development of his
opponent and does not venture to interfere by his own action. He
loses himself by giving up all subjective feelings and
individuality, and he becomes one with his opponent. Inside his
mind, oppositions have become mutually cooperative instead of
mutually exclusive. When his private egos and conscious efforts
yield to a power not his own he then achieves the supreme action,
non-action (wu we). Wu means "not" or "non" and we means "action,"
"doing," "striving," "straining," or "busyness." Wu we doesn't
really mean doing nothing, but letting one's mind alone, trusting it
to work by itself. Wu we, in gung fu, means spontaneous action or
spirit-action, in the sense that the governing force is the mind and
not the senses. During sparring, a gung fu man learns to forget
about himself and follow the movement of his opponent, leaving his
mind free to make its own counter movement without any interfering
deliberation. He frees himself from all mental suggestions of
resistance and adopts a supple attitude. His actions are all
performed without self-assertion; he lets his mind remain
spontaneous and ungrasped. As soon as he stops to think, his flow of
movement will be disturbed and his opponent will immediately strike
him. Every action therefore has to be done "unintentionally" without
ever "trying." Through wu we, a "reposeful ease" is secured. This
passive achievement, as Chuang-tzu pointed out, will free a gung fu
man from striving and straining himself:
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A
yielding will has a reposeful ease, soft as downy feathers, A
quietude, a shrinking from action, an appearance of inability to do.
Placidly free from anxiety, one acts with the opportune time; one
moves and revolves in the line of creation. One does not move ahead
but responds to the fitting influences.
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Establish nothing in regard to oneself. Let things be what they are,
move like water, rest like a mirror, respond like an echo, pass
quickly like the nonexistent, and be quiet as purity. Those who
gain, lose. Do not precede others, always follow them.
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The
natural phenomenon which the gung fu man sees as being the closest
resemblance to wu we is water:
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Nothing is weaker than water,
But when it attacks something hard
Or resistant, then nothing withstands it,
And nothing will alter its way.
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The
above passages from the Tao Te Ching illustrate to us the nature of
water: Water is so fine that it is impossible to grasp a handful of
it; strike it, yet it does not suffer hurt; stab it, and it is not
wounded; sever it, yet it is not divided. It has no shape of its own
but moulds itself to the receptacle that contains it. When heated to
the state of steam it is invisible but has enough power to split the
earth itself. When frozen it crystallises into a mighty rock. First
it is turbulent like Niagara Falls, and then calm like a still pond,
fearful like a torrent, and refreshing like a spring on a hot
summer's day. So is the principle of wu we:
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The
rivers and seas are lords of a hundred valleys. This is because
their strength is in lowliness; they are kings of them all. So it is
that the perfect master wishing to lead them, he follows. Thus,
though he is above them, he follows. Thus, though he is above them,
men do not feel him to be an injury. And since he will not strive,
none strive with him.
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The
world is full of people who are determined to be somebody or to give
trouble. They want to get ahead, to stand out. Such ambition has no
use for a gung fu man, who rejects all forms of self-assertiveness
and competition:
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One
who tries to stand on tiptoe cannot stand still. One who stretches
his legs too far cannot walk. One who advertises himself too much is
ignored. One who is too insistent on his own view finds few to agree
with him. One who claims too much credit does not get even what he
deserves. One who is too proud is soon humiliated. These are
condemned as extremes of greediness and self-destructive activity.
Therefore, one who acts naturally avoids such extremes.
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Those who know do not speak; those who speak do not know.
Stop your sense, let sharp things be blunted,
Tangles resolved, the light tempered and turmoil subdued;
For this is mystic unity in which the wise man is moved
Neither by affection nor yet by estrangement,
Or profit or loss or honour or shame.
Accordingly, by all the world, he is held highest.
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gung fu man, if he is really good, is not proud at all. "Pride,"
according to Mr. Eric Hoffer, "is a sense of worth that derives from
something that is not organically part of oneself." Pride emphasizes
the importance of the superiority of a person's status in the eyes
of others. There is fear and insecurity in pride because when a
person aims at being highly esteemed and achieves such status, he is
automatically involved in the fear of losing his status. Then
protection of his status appears to be his most important need, and
this creates anxiety. Mr. Hoffer further states that: "The less
promise and potency in the self, the more imperative is the need for
pride. One is proud when he identifies himself with an imaginary
self; the core of pride is self rejection." As we know, gung fu is
aiming at self cultivation, and the inner self is one's true self.
So in order to realize his true self, a gung fu man lives without
being dependent upon the opinion of others. Since he is completely
self-sufficient he can have no fear of not being esteemed. A gung fu
man devotes himself to being self-sufficient and never depends upon
the external rating by others for his happiness. A gung fu master,
unlike the beginner, holds himself in reserve, is quiet and
unassuming, without the lest desire to show off. Under the influence
of gung fu training his proficiency becomes spiritual, and he
himself, grown ever freer through spiritual struggle, is
transformed. To him, fame and status mean nothing. Thus wu we is the
art of artlessness, the principle of no-principle. To state it in
terms of gung fu, the genuine beginner knows nothing about the way
of blocking and striking, and much less about his concern for
himself. When an opponent tries to strike him, he "instinctively"
parries it. This is all he can do. But as soon as his training
starts, he is taught how to defend and attack, where to keep the
mind, and many other technical tricks—which makes his mind "stop" at
various junctures. For this reason whenever he tries to strike the
opponent he feels unusually hampered (he has lost altogether the
original sense of innocence and freedom). But as months and years go
by, as his training acquires fuller maturity, his bodily attitude
and his way of managing the technique toward no-mindedness come to
resemble the state of mind he had at the very beginning of training
when he knew nothing, when he was altogether ignorant of the art.
The beginning and the end thus turn into next-door neighbors. In the
musical scale, one may start with the lowest pitch and gradually
ascend to the highest. When the highest is reached, one finds it is
located next to the lowest. In a similar way, when the highest stage
is reached in the study of Taoist teaching, a gung fu man turns into
a kind of simpleton who knows nothing of Tao, nothing of its
teachings, and is devoid of all learning. Intellectual calculations
are lost sight of and a state of no-mindedness prevails. When the
ultimate perfection is attained, the body and limbs perform by
themselves what is assigned to them to do with no interference from
the mind. The technical skill is so automatic it is completely
divorced from conscious efforts. There are big differences between
the Chinese hygiene and the Western hygiene. Some of the obvious
ones are Chinese exercise is rhythmic, whereas the Western is
dynamic and full of tension; the Chinese exercise seeks to merge
harmoniously with nature, whereas the Western dominates it; the
Chinese exercise is both a way of life and a mental cultivation,
while the Western exercise is merely a sport or a physical
callisthenic. Perhaps the main difference is the fact that Chinese
hygiene is Yin (softness), while Western is Yang (positiveness). We
can compare the Western mind with an oak tree that stands firm and
rigid against the strong wind. When the wind becomes stronger, the
oak tree cracks. The Chinese mind, on the other hand, is like the
bamboo that bends with the strong wind. When the wind ceases (that
is, when it goes to the extreme and changes), the bamboo springs
back stronger than before. Western hygiene is a gratuitous waste of
energy. The overexertion and over development of bodily organs
involved in Western athletics is detrimental to one's health.
Chinese hygiene, on the other hand, throws its emphasis on
conservation of energy; the principle is always that of moderation
without going to the extreme. Whatever exercise there may be
consists of harmonious movements calculated to normalize but not
excite one's bodily regimen. It starts out with a mental regimen as
a basis, in which the sole object is to bring about peace and
calmness of mind. With this as a basis, it aims at stimulating the
normal functioning of the internal process of respiration and blood
circulation. |
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