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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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A sculpture of<br />

Buddha in seated<br />

meditation at<br />

Borobudur Temple<br />

in Indonesia, built<br />

in the ninth century.<br />

(Charles & Josette<br />

Lenars/Corbis)<br />

336 Meditation<br />

the realm of the most advanced masters<br />

of the martial arts.<br />

Meditative states can be induced<br />

through various postures incorporating<br />

breathing, movement, chanting,<br />

stress, and visualization. Deep abdominal<br />

breathing is a fundamental practice<br />

in many martial arts. Slow, smooth,<br />

deep, long abdominal breathing increases<br />

the volume of blood flow, calms<br />

the mind, and brings more oxygen into<br />

the body.<br />

In China, Daoist meditation often<br />

plays an important role in the internal<br />

arts of taijiquan, baguazhang (pa kua<br />

ch’uan), and xingyiquan (hsing i ch’uan).<br />

Daoist meditation begins with an emphasis<br />

on breath control and posture and<br />

moves on to visualizations and direction<br />

of energy throughout the body. Three<br />

major kinds of energy are cultivated: qi<br />

(vital life energy), qing (sexual energy),<br />

and shen (spiritual energy). By calming<br />

the mind and eliminating our normal internal<br />

mental dialogue, meditation restores<br />

access to what the Daoists call<br />

original mind: a state of mind that is spontaneous and rejuvenating, more intuitive<br />

than the conscious mind. Daoist meditation allows access to the natural<br />

potential for fluid and appropriate responses to the situation at hand.<br />

Buddhism gives two major approaches to meditation: concentration,<br />

or mindfulness, meditation; and insight meditation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most basic approach to mindfulness is awareness of breathing to<br />

the extent that breathing occupies one’s full attention. Once concentration<br />

is developed, this power is then used in insight meditation to gain wisdom<br />

through observing the mind.<br />

In Japan, the early martial arts (ca. A.D. 800–1200) were influenced by<br />

Daoism, Shintô, and Mikkyo (or esoteric) Buddhism. Shingon and Tendai<br />

are the two major schools of Mikkyo. Esoteric Buddhism utilizes visualizations,<br />

mudras, mandalas, and mantras to harmonize body, mind, and speech.<br />

Zen arrived in Japan from China around A.D. 1200 and was often<br />

used by the samurai as an adjunct to their martial training. <strong>The</strong> Zen approach<br />

to any task is single-minded concentration. Mushin (munen musô)

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