Thursday, 9 July 2015

Findings (part two)


EXTRACTS FROM EUGEN HERRIGEL “ZEN IN THE ART OF ARCHERY”


1.       … Anyone who subscribes to this art today, therefore, will gain from its historical development the undeniable advantage of not being tempted to obscure his understanding of the “Great Doctrine” by practical aims – even though he hides them from himself – and to make it perhaps altogether impossible. For access to the art – and the masters of all times are agreed in this – is only granted to those who are “pure” in heart, untroubled by subsidiary aims … the exercises are mystical [internal] exercises, and accordingly can in no circumstances mean accomplishing anything outwardly [with the fist], but only inwardly with oneself … Wrapped in impenetrable darkness, Zen [Wu Shu] must seem the strangest riddle which the spiritual life of the East has ever devised: insoluble and yet irresistibly attractive … remember that [Wu Shu] is not meant to strengthen the muscles … Relax! Relax! … not a technical trick, but liberating breath-control with new and far-reaching possibilities … despite all equivocation and sober reserve, the results obtained by the new breathing are far too definite to be denied …

2.       … Since the remotest times its symbol has been the yielding and yet unconquerable water, so that Lao-tzu could say with profound truth that right living is like water, which “of all things the most yielding can overwhelm that which is of all things most hard” … the physical loosening must now be continual in a mental and spiritual loosening, so as to make the mind not only agile but free: agile because of its freedom, and free because of its original agility; and this original agility is essentially different from everything that is usually understood by mental agility. Thus, between these two states of bodily relaxedness on the one hand and spiritual freedom on the other there is a difference of level which cannot be overcome by breath-control alone, but only by withdrawing from all attachment whatsoever, by becoming utterly egoless: so that the soul, sunk within itself, stands in the plenitude of its nameless origin …

3.       … Even if the pupil does not at this stage grasp the true significance of his [movements], he at least understands why [Wu Shu] cannot be a sport, a gymnastic exercise. He understands why the technically learnable part of it must be practised to the point of repletion. If everything depends on the artist’s becoming purposeless and effacing himself in the event, then its outward realization must occur automatically, in no further need of the controlling or reflecting intelligence. It is this mastery of the art that the method of instruction seeks to inculcate. Practice, repetition, and repetition of the repeated with ever increasing intensity are its distinctive features for long stretches of the way. At least this is true of all the traditional arts. Demonstration, example; intuition, imitation – that is the fundamental relationship of instructor to pupil …