Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

Zheng and Qi in Martial Arts

A Practitioner's Guide to the Orthodox and Unorthodox in Self-Defense


by CEJames (arthor) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


Prepared for the Study of Isshin-ryū Karate-jutsu and the Martial Arts

 

Introduction: Two Forces, One Fight

If you've spent time training in any serious martial art—whether it's Okinawan karate, Chinese boxing, Japanese jujutsu, or the classical military strategy traditions—you've almost certainly bumped into the paired concepts of zheng (正) and qi (奇). Sometimes transliterated as cheng and chi (not to be confused with the life-force qi/氣), these two characters sit at the heart of Chinese strategic thinking and have been filtering into hand-to-hand combat theory for well over two thousand years.


Masa [正] & Ki [奇] in Japanese


The short version: zheng is the orthodox, the expected, the directQi is the unorthodox, the unexpected, the flanking move. Together they describe the interplay between meeting force with force in a predictable way, and doing something your opponent absolutely did not see coming. In a real self-defense situation, understanding this interplay could be the difference between walking away and not.


This guide takes a conversational look at both concepts—where they come from, what they mean philosophically, and how they cash out in practical self-defense. Whether you're training in Isshin-ryū or just trying to understand the strategic substrate underneath good martial technique, this is worth your time.

 

Where Do These Ideas Come From?

Sun Tzu and the Art of War

The locus classicus for zheng and qi is Sun Tzu's Bing Fa (The Art of War), written sometime in the 5th century BCE. In Chapter Five, "Momentum" (Shi), Sun Tzu writes what is arguably the most important sentence in the entire text: "In battle, use the orthodox (zheng) to engage, and the unorthodox (qi) to win." That's it. That's the whole strategic framework in a nutshell.


The idea is that you cannot win a fight—whether a battle between armies or a street altercation—by relying only on conventional, predictable approaches. The zheng engagement sets the stage, fixes the opponent's attention, and occupies their response capacity. The qi strike is what ends the fight.


Sun Tzu goes further and points out that zheng and qi are not static categories. What is unorthodox in one moment becomes orthodox once the opponent anticipates it. The good fighter cycles continuously between the two, so that qi forever renews itself. "Those skilled at the unorthodox," Sun Tzu notes, "are as inexhaustible as heaven and earth, as unending as rivers and streams."


The Wei Liao Zi and Later Military Classics

The concept was elaborated in several of the Seven Military Classics of ancient China. The Wei Liao Zi, a Warring States period text, treats zheng and qi as the fundamental grammar of all tactical thinking—not just a trick to pull out occasionally, but the underlying logic of every engagement. You always have some portion of your force operating in the orthodox mode and some in the unorthodox mode simultaneously. The question isn't whether to use both, but how to proportion and sequence them.


By the Tang and Song dynasties, these ideas had thoroughly permeated martial culture. The same principles that governed how generals deployed cavalry were being applied to how wrestlers, swordsmen, and unarmed fighters thought about their craft. The transmission wasn't always explicit—often it was embedded in the structural logic of forms and training methods—but the lineage is real.

 

Unpacking Zheng: The Orthodox Engagement

Zheng carries several layers of meaning. At the most basic level it means "correct" or "upright"—the character depicts a foot stepping toward a target, suggesting straight forward motion. In martial contexts, zheng refers to direct, expected, orthodox technique: the straight punch, the linear kick, the frontal takedown, the guard you hold openly.


This sometimes leads students to undervalue zheng. If it's just the boring conventional stuff, why spend time on it? But that misreads the concept badly. Zheng is not weak or inferior—it's foundational. A few key points:


First, zheng establishes the engagement. Before you can win with qi, you have to engage with zheng. You have to be close enough, in position, with your opponent's attention and response capacity occupied. A half-hearted or absent zheng gives your opponent nothing to respond to, which means your qi has no context in which to be surprising.


Second, zheng is what conditioning and basics training builds. All the repetition work—your mawashi-zuki, your seiken-zuki, your stances and footwork patterns—this is zheng training. You are building reliable, functional, repeatable structure. This is not wasted effort. Without solid zheng, your qi techniques are tricks that collapse under pressure.


Third, executed well, zheng can itself become the finishing technique. Sometimes the fight doesn't require anything clever. Your opponent doesn't defend correctly, or they're overwhelmed, or the gap is just there. The straight hit lands cleanly and it's over. Overcomplicating things when straightforward works is its own tactical error.


In Isshin-ryū specifically, think about the vertical fist (tate-ken) as a paradigm of zheng structure—efficient, structural, direct. The whole system is built on removing excess motion and getting to the target without waste. That commitment to fundamental efficiency is zheng thinking.

 

Unpacking Qi: The Unorthodox Strike

Qi (奇) means odd, strange, extraordinary, unexpected. In military texts it's sometimes translated as "surprise" but that's a little flat. It's better understood as "what the opponent did not model and therefore cannot respond to in time."


In practical terms, qi in self-defense can mean a lot of things:


Timing that breaks pattern. You've thrown three punches at a certain rhythm. The fourth comes either much faster or with a deliberate hesitation that disrupts their parrying cadence. Same technique, but qi.


Targeting the unexpected. Everyone guards their face. The ear slap, the throat strike, the stomp to the instep, the eye gouge—these are qi targets. Not because they're secret or exotic, but because they're outside the normal defensive expectation frame.


Angle of attack. You're engaging frontally (zheng), then you suddenly slip offline and come from a diagonal (qi). In Okinawan systems this is built into the kata—the turns and directional changes aren't just about fighting multiple opponents, they're encoding qi angle-switching.


Use of environment. Suddenly creating distance, using a wall, putting something between you and the attacker, moving into a position that forces the attacker into awkward footwork—all qi.


Feinting as qi generation. The feint is a direct qi tool. It presents zheng (a believable attack), forces a response, and then the real technique comes while the response is in motion. Classic two-stage zheng/qi.


Verbal and psychological. Even before physical contact, surprising disruptions—a shout (kiai used aggressively), a sudden change of demeanor, saying something that arrests the attacker's OODA loop—these are qi in the pre-physical domain.


The key insight is that qi is relational and contextual. It's not a fixed list of techniques. What is unorthodox against a trained fighter who has seen everything might be completely orthodox against someone with no martial experience. You have to read your opponent to know what counts as qi in this specific encounter.

 

The Dynamic Relationship: Zheng and Qi Are a Cycle

Here's where the theory gets genuinely sophisticated. Sun Tzu is emphatic that zheng and qi are not opposites in the sense of being separate tools you alternate between. They are two aspects of a single dynamic system that continuously generate each other.


Think of it this way: You execute qi—something surprising. Your opponent now knows about it. The next time you do that same thing, it's no longer surprising. It has become zheng. But that means you now have new qi available: you can feint the previously-qi technique (which your opponent now guards) to open the door for something else. Former qi becomes new zheng, which enables newer qi. The cycle never ends.

This is why good fighters are never predictable even when using the same techniques they've always trained. They're constantly rotating the zheng/qi phase relationship. Your opponent thinks they've decoded your game, and at that moment your game changes.


For a self-defense practitioner, this has a specific implication: your training must include unpredictability training, not just technical drilling. Drilling builds reliable zheng. But you also have to train your ability to shift phase, to read what your opponent expects, to consciously introduce variation. This is what sparring and scenario training develop that kata practice alone cannot.

 

Direct Application to Self-Defense

The Attack Cycle and Where Zheng/Qi Lives

In a real self-defense incident, the zheng/qi dynamic operates at multiple levels simultaneously. Let's walk through a scenario.


A threat approaches with aggressive intent. At the psychological/verbal level, the "normal" (zheng) attacker expectation is that you'll be passive, back down, or escalate symmetrically. A confident, calm, non-aggressive assertiveness—combined with conscious positioning—is already qi at this level. You're not in the expected category.


If the situation goes physical, your initial response is probably zheng: a basic fence/guard position, a cover, creating space. This occupies the attacker's attention and gets you into the fight. But your zheng is also buying time to read what's available for qi: What is the attacker not protecting? Where is their weight? What are they expecting?


The finishing or controlling action is qi: the technique that arrives before the attacker can process and respond. This is why the "stop hit" concept (intercepting while the attacker's attention is committed) is so effective—it's inherently qi because it arrives in the gap between their attack initiation and their recovery of defensive capacity.


Practical Principles for Isshin-ryū Practitioners

Several structural elements of Isshin-ryū map directly onto zheng/qi thinking.


The simultaneous block-and-strike (ikken hissatsu attitude applied to integrated technique) is a zheng/qi fusion: the block is zheng (expected defensive response) and the simultaneous counter is qi (arriving faster than the attacker can process because it piggybacks on their own attack timing).


Zanshin—maintained awareness after technique—is partly a recognition that what was just qi becomes immediately zheng. The attacker now knows where you are and what you just did. 


Zanshin is the reset that prepares the next cycle.

The body of the Isshin-ryū kata encode specific angle changes, low/high combinations, and technique sequences that are, when read strategically, zheng/qi patterns. Seisan, for example, contains multiple instances of a direct linear attack (zheng) followed immediately by a redirected or angled technique (qi). The form isn't just a sequence of moves—it's a library of zheng/qi relationships.


Against Multiple Opponents

The zheng/qi framework becomes even more important when facing multiple attackers, which is a core concern in classical Okinawan self-defense scenarios. Against multiple opponents, you absolutely cannot allow yourself to be fixed. Qi, in this context, means continuous angular movement that prevents opponents from achieving simultaneous coverage. You use one attacker as unwilling zheng cover against the others, while your actual escape or counter-attack comes from an unexpected angle.


This is not a plan you can improvise in the moment without preparation. It requires that your footwork and off-angle techniques are so internalized that they're available under stress. Which is another argument for the classical training curriculum—the angles built into the kata are not accidents.

 

Common Misunderstandings

A few misconceptions about zheng and qi are worth addressing directly.


Zheng is not just for beginners. Some practitioners treat zheng technique as training-wheel stuff that you graduate out of. This completely misses the point. Elite fighters use fundamental zheng constantly—it's the foundation that makes everything else possible. What changes with experience is not that you stop using zheng but that your zheng becomes cleaner, faster, and better at setting up qi.


Qi is not trickery or dirty fighting. There's a tendency in some circles to equate unorthodox technique with cheating or street-fighting desperation. Historically and philosophically, qi is a category of legitimate strategic action. The Okinawan tradition was always practical—there's no shame in attacking the throat, the eyes, or the groin if that's what the situation requires. These aren't "dirty" tactics; they're qi targeting.


Qi is not always physical. Some of the most effective qi in self-defense is pre-physical: de-escalation framed in a way that short-circuits an aggressor's script, tactical positioning that makes the attack harder to initiate, or a sudden change in demeanor. The fight avoided is always the best fight.


Zheng and qi are not fixed categories. This cannot be stressed enough. The orthodox becomes unorthodox when least expected. What is qi against one opponent is zheng against another. The labels are useful as conceptual anchors, but they're descriptions of relational dynamics, not properties of individual techniques.

 

Philosophical Depth: Wuji and the Generative Paradox

One of the more interesting aspects of the classical Chinese treatment of zheng and qi is the metaphysical framing. The texts describe them not just as tactical categories but as a kind of fundamental polarity underlying all phenomena—similar to yin and yang, but specifically oriented toward activity and engagement.


The martial arts traditions that drew on Taoist thought (and most classical Chinese martial arts absorbed at least some Taoist vocabulary) saw zheng and qi as expressions of a deeper principle of continuous change and opposition. You don't win by being purely one or the other; you win by riding the transition between them. The fighter who clings to either the orthodox or the unorthodox has lost their fluidity and can be read.


This connects to a principle found in Sunzi and elaborated in later texts: the master fighter has no fixed form (wu xing). Not because they've abandoned structure, but because their structure is fully responsive and continuously adapting. The zheng/qi cycle is the mechanism by which formlessness is achieved in practice—not by having no technique, but by having technique that is never locked into a predictable phase.


For someone grounded in Isshin-ryū, which emphasizes efficiency and directness, the lesson here is not to become flashy or complicated. It's to train so thoroughly that even your direct techniques cannot be predicted, because your timing, entry angle, and target selection remain alive and responsive rather than mechanical.

 

Conclusion: Training Implications

So what do you actually do with all of this?

First, assess your current training for zheng/qi balance. If your practice is heavily kata and basics, you probably have strong zheng fundamentals. Ask yourself: do you have training structures that develop your ability to shift phase, to vary timing, to apply technique from unexpected angles under pressure? If not, add sparring, scenario training, or at minimum partner drills specifically designed to introduce unpredictability.


Second, when drilling partner work, consciously map the zheng/qi structure of each exchange. What is the setup? What is the finish? What becomes the new zheng after the qi lands? Building this analytical habit makes the framework automatic rather than theoretical.


Third, study the kata analytically with this lens. The direction changes in Seisan, the low-high combinations in Naihanchi, the angle switches in Sanchin's defensive applications—these are encoded zheng/qi patterns. Reading them this way enriches the kata practice rather than replacing the technical training.


Fourth, remember that self-defense is not just a physical problem. The zheng/qi framework applies to awareness, avoidance, de-escalation, and legal aftermath as well. Your orthodox (zheng) approach to a threatening situation is situational awareness and verbal assertiveness. The qi element is whatever disrupts the attacker's script before they commit to action. The fight that doesn't happen is always the best fight.


Zheng and qi are not esoteric secrets. They're a precise vocabulary for something every good fighter does intuitively. The value of making them explicit is that you can then train them deliberately, build them into your curriculum, and debug your game when something isn't working. That's what the classical tradition was always for—not mysticism, but precision.

 

Bibliography

Primary Sources

Sun Tzu. The Art of War. Translated by Samuel B. Griffith. Oxford University Press, 1963. (Original text c. 5th century BCE; Chapter Five, "Momentum," contains the foundational zheng/qi formulation.)

Sun Tzu. The Art of War. Translated by Roger T. Ames. Ballantine Books, 1993. (Alternative scholarly translation with extensive philosophical commentary on the zheng/qi dynamic.)

Sawyer, Ralph D., trans. The Seven Military Classics of Ancient China. Westview Press, 1993. (Includes translations of the Wei Liao Zi, Six Secret Teachings, and other classical texts that extend and systematize zheng/qi theory.)

Cleary, Thomas, trans. The Art of War: Complete Texts and Commentaries. Shambhala, 2003. (Includes Song dynasty commentaries by Cao Cao, Du Mu, and others that elaborate the zheng/qi framework in military and personal combat contexts.)

Classical Chinese Strategic Theory

Ames, Roger T. Sun-tzu: The Art of Warfare. Ballantine Books, 1993. (Scholarly treatment of the philosophical and historical context of Sunzi, with attention to the ontological dimensions of zheng/qi as opposed to purely tactical categories.)

Jullien, François. A Treatise on Efficacy: Between Western and Chinese Thinking. University of Hawaii Press, 2004. (Sophisticated philosophical analysis of Chinese strategic concepts including the zheng/qi polarity and how it differs from Western notions of force application.)

Sawyer, Ralph D. The Tao of Deception: Unorthodox Warfare in Historic and Modern China. Basic Books, 2007. (Extended historical treatment of qi (unorthodox) operations from antiquity through the modern period, with many examples from both large-scale military and small-unit engagements.)

Rand, Christopher C. "Li Ch'üan and Chinese Military Thought." Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 39, no. 1 (1979): 107–137. (Scholarly article tracing the transmission of zheng/qi concepts through successive commentators on Sunzi.)

Martial Arts Theory and Application

Draeger, Donn F., and Robert W. Smith. Comprehensive Asian Fighting Arts. Kodansha International, 1980. (Foundational comparative study of Asian martial systems including Okinawan karate; provides context for understanding how Chinese strategic philosophy entered Japanese and Okinawan martial culture.)

McCarthy, Patrick. The Bible of Karate: Bubishi. Tuttle Publishing, 1995. (Translation and commentary on the Bubishi, the classical Chinese text central to Okinawan karate's intellectual heritage; includes material on strategy and vital-point targeting that reflects zheng/qi logic.)

Lowry, Dave. Sword and Brush: The Spirit of the Martial Arts. Shambhala, 1995. (Accessible treatment of classical martial concepts including the orthodox/unorthodox dynamic across Japanese and Okinawan traditions.)

Oyata, Seiyu. Ryu-Te No Michi: The Way of Ryukyu Hands. Privately published, 1986. (Foundational text from the Okinawan karate tradition directly relevant to Isshin-ryū lineage study; addresses practical application principles that align with zheng/qi strategic logic.)

Funakoshi, Gichin. Karate-Do: My Way of Life. Kodansha International, 1975. (Memoir and philosophical reflection from the founder of modern karate; includes discussion of strategic principles underlying Okinawan practice.)

Self-Defense Theory and Tactical Application

Rory Miller. Meditations on Violence: A Comparison of Martial Arts Training and Real World Violence. YMAA Publication Center, 2008. (Critically important text for any serious self-defense practitioner; directly relevant to understanding how orthodox/unorthodox dynamics function in actual violence rather than sporting or training contexts.)

Siddle, Bruce K. Sharpening the Warrior's Edge. PPCT Research Publications, 1995. (Research-based analysis of performance under stress; relevant to understanding why zheng fundamentals must be automatic and how qi application depends on training architecture.)

MacYoung, Marc "Animal." A Professional's Guide to Ending Violence Quickly. Paladin Press, 1993. (Street-level analysis of violence dynamics that, while not using the classical vocabulary, describes zheng/qi logic in practical terms relevant to non-consensual real-world encounters.)

Grossman, Dave. On Combat: The Psychology and Physiology of Deadly Conflict in War and Peace. PPCT Research Publications, 2004. (Treatment of the psychological dimensions of combat; relevant to the pre-physical (qi at the awareness level) domain of self-defense.)

Decision Theory and the OODA Loop

Boyd, John R. "Patterns of Conflict." Unpublished briefing, 1986. Available through the Boyd Archive. (Colonel Boyd's foundational strategic framework; the OODA loop is essentially a Western reformulation of the zheng/qi dynamic in terms of information processing and decision cycles.)

Osinga, Frans P. B. Science, Strategy and War: The Strategic Theory of John Boyd. Routledge, 2007. (The definitive scholarly treatment of Boyd's strategic thought; valuable for understanding how zheng/qi logic maps onto modern decision-cycle theory.)

Note on Sources

The classical Chinese texts listed above exist in multiple translations of varying quality. For serious study, it is recommended to work with at least two translations in parallel—Griffith and Ames on Sunzi, for example—to triangulate meaning. The Sawyer translations of the Seven Military Classics are the most complete scholarly editions currently available in English and are the recommended starting point for deeper engagement with the broader strategic tradition within which zheng and qi are situated.


On Avoidance


Zheng and Qi: Orthodox and Unorthodox Force in Martial Self-Defense

ZHENG AND QI

Orthodox and Unorthodox Force in Martial Self-Defense

正  •  奇

 

A Tactical and Philosophical Examination


Introduction: The Roots of an Ancient Dialectic

Few ideas in the martial and strategic traditions of East Asia have proven as enduring — or as practically useful — as the paired concepts of zheng (正) and qi (奇). On the surface, zheng means orthodox, correct, or direct, while qi means unorthodox, extraordinary, or oblique. But these translations barely scratch the surface. Together, zheng and qi constitute a dynamic framework for understanding how force is applied, withheld, redirected, and transformed in combat — and, perhaps more critically for the self-defense practitioner, how conflict can be avoided, defused, or resolved without resort to violence at all.


The concepts appear most famously in Sun Tzu's Bingfa (The Art of War), almost certainly composed during the Warring States period (475–221 BCE), but their conceptual ancestry likely extends further into the Zhou dynasty's military and cosmological thinking. They were subsequently developed by a string of Chinese strategic theorists — Wu Qi, Wei Liaozi, and the compilers of the Wujing Zongyao — and eventually percolated into the martial arts traditions of China, Okinawa, and Japan, where practitioners concerned not just with battlefield tactics but with personal survival found them equally illuminating.


What makes zheng and qi especially rich for the modern self-defense student is that they describe not a static set of techniques but a living, relational logic. The orthodox becomes unorthodox when the opponent expects it to be orthodox. The unorthodox becomes orthodox the moment it is anticipated. As Sun Tzu observed, the variations between them are as endless as the variations in weather and terrain — which is to say, inexhaustible. This document explores how that endless variation informs the methods of avoidance that form the moral and tactical foundation of sound self-defense.

 

Zheng: The Orthodox, the Expected, the Foundation

Zheng is, at its most basic level, the acknowledged, the expected, the direct. In battlefield terms it describes the main frontal engagement — the force that pins the enemy, occupies his attention, and establishes the terms of the fight. In self-defense terms, zheng corresponds to the visible, normative presence you project: walking upright, making appropriate eye contact, maintaining a calm and unremarkable bearing. You are, in the fullest sense of the word, the ordinary citizen going about ordinary business.


But zheng is not passive or weak. It is the anchor. Without it, the unorthodox has nothing to play off. A musician who only plays surprises quickly becomes predictable; the surprise only registers against the backdrop of the expected. This is why foundational martial arts training is so heavily invested in drilling basic postures, stances, strikes, and movements until they are second nature. These are not merely fighting tools — they are the zheng of the practitioner's physical vocabulary. They establish the baseline from which the qi can emerge unexpectedly.


In avoidance-oriented self-defense, the practice of zheng also encompasses what Rory Miller terms "social scripts" — the choreography of normal human interaction that most people navigate unconsciously. When you respond to an aggressive stranger within the expected social script (calm voice, appropriate distance, non-threatening posture), you are deploying zheng in a very precise sense: you are giving the encounter the shape it is supposed to have, thereby depriving the aggressor of the irregularity he may be seeking as a pretext. You do not offer an irregular surface for his aggression to grip.

 

Qi: The Unorthodox, the Unexpected, the Decisive

Qi is the move that decides the encounter. It is the flanking maneuver, the feint, the sudden change of pace or direction that the opponent did not anticipate and cannot immediately counter. Where zheng creates the form, qi transforms it. Sun Tzu's famous declaration that "all warfare is based on deception" is, at its core, a statement about the ultimate primacy of qi — the ability to appear where you are not, to strike when you are thought to be retreating, to be weak when you appear strong and strong when you appear weak.


In personal self-defense, qi operates on multiple levels simultaneously. At the physical level, it might be the subtle weight shift that opens an angle of escape the aggressor does not see; the sudden release of tension at the moment he least expects movement; the use of environment — a doorway, a crowd, a change in lighting — to reframe the geometry of the encounter in your favor. At the psychological level, qi can be a question that disrupts a rehearsed verbal threat script, an apparent demonstration of calm confidence that deflates the predatory calculation, or a sudden unexpected humor that dissolves the social charge of a tense situation before it escalates.


What is critical to understand is that qi is not merely cleverness or trickery. In the classical texts, it carries connotations of naturalness and inevitability — the unorthodox move that, once executed, seems in retrospect to have been the only possible move. The best practitioners of qi are not performing; they are responding with a fluency so complete that what emerges is genuinely unexpected even to themselves in the moment, arising from the totality of their awareness and preparation rather than from a rehearsed trick.

 

The Dialectic: How Zheng and Qi Transform Into Each Other

Mutual Generation and Transformation

The most philosophically interesting aspect of the zheng-qi framework is expressed in Chapter 5 of the Bingfa, where Sun Tzu writes that zheng and qi give rise to each other endlessly — that their transformations are as inexhaustible as the cycles of the five tones, the five colors, and the five flavors. This is not mere poetic license. It describes an operational reality that any experienced martial artist or self-defense practitioner will immediately recognize: what is unorthodox in one moment becomes orthodox in the next.


The instant your opponent has been surprised by a particular movement once, that movement is already becoming orthodox. If you favor it, he will anticipate it. The qi of yesterday becomes the zheng of today, and must be replaced by a new qi. This is why the framework resists systematization into a fixed catalog of techniques. It is, rather, a mode of perception and response — a way of reading the relational space between yourself and an aggressor and acting from within that reading rather than from a memorized script.


For the Isshin-ryū practitioner, this dialectic has direct technical expression in the bunkai tradition. A kata contains both the zheng — the visible, named, structurally recognized technique — and the qi, the unseen application that violates the aggressor's expectation of what that movement will produce. The same body mechanic serves both purposes simultaneously; the practitioner who understands this does not need to learn a different technique for surprise but simply understands the existing technique more completely.


The Principle of Xu and Shi (Emptiness and Fullness)

Closely related to zheng and qi is the paired concept of xu (虛, emptiness or apparent weakness) and shi (實, fullness or real strength). Together, these four terms — zheng, qi, xu, shi — form an interlocking vocabulary for describing the topology of any combat situation. The avoidance-focused practitioner must learn to read which aspects of any confrontation are full (committed, real, invested with the aggressor's energy and attention) and which are empty (tentative, unsupported, open to movement).


In practical self-defense terms, the skilled practitioner avoids the shi — the committed attack, the moment of greatest force — and moves toward or through the xu. This is not passivity. It is a cultivated attentiveness to the rhythm and weight distribution of the encounter, physical and social both. The ability to identify xu in a confrontation — the moment of hesitation, the split attention, the overextension of verbal aggression that reveals psychological emptiness — and act from that perception without telegraphing the action is the highest practical expression of the zheng-qi framework in personal safety.

 

Avoidance as Strategic Doctrine: The Priority of Non-Engagement

The classical Chinese strategic texts are often misread as purely offensive handbooks. In reality, they contain extensive treatments of avoidance, withdrawal, and the superior desirability of winning without fighting


Sun Tzu's declaration that subduing the enemy without battle is the supreme excellence is not a pious sentiment tacked on for moral credibility — it is a strategic claim about efficiency, the conservation of resources, and the unpredictability of violence. The general who avoids unnecessary battles preserves his force and his options; the one who seeks them wastes both.


This same logic translates directly into personal self-defense. 

The practitioner who successfully avoids a violent encounter has not merely preserved his physical well-being. He has preserved his legal standing, his psychological equilibrium, his time, and his relationships. He has also denied the aggressor the outcome he sought, which is itself a form of tactical victory. Avoidance, properly understood, is not the absence of martial skill but its highest expression.


In the Isshin-ryū tradition and in Okinawan karate-jutsu more broadly, this doctrine is encoded in the phrase often attributed to Gichin Funakoshi: "Karate ni sente nashi" — there is no first attack in karate. This is not a prohibition but a philosophical statement about the nature and purpose of the art. The practitioner who has no need to initiate violence has mastered both the zheng of social navigation and the qi of environmental and psychological awareness that makes pre-violence conflict resolution possible.


The OODA Loop and Zheng-Qi Dynamics

Colonel John Boyd's Observe-Orient-Decide-Act (OODA) loop provides a useful modern framework for understanding why the zheng-qi dialectic is so effective in self-defense contexts. Boyd argued that the combatant who can cycle through the OODA loop faster than his opponent — who can observe, orient, decide, and act while the opponent is still completing his previous orientation — achieves a decisive advantage. Disrupting the opponent's OODA loop is, in operational terms, the application of qi against his orientation.


The avoidance-oriented practitioner weaponizes this insight at the earliest possible stage of a potential confrontation. By behaving in ways that are simultaneously unremarkable (zheng) and subtly repositioning (qi) — moving to create distance, altering the physical geometry of the encounter, introducing verbal patterns that interrupt the aggressor's rehearsed script — the practitioner can effectively collapse the aggressor's OODA loop before violence becomes a viable option. The aggressor who cannot complete his orientation to the developing situation cannot reliably execute his intent.


Marc MacYoung has described this as "winning before it starts" — a phrase that resonates directly with the classical strategic concept of shi (strategic advantage or positional force), which describes the accumulated advantage that makes the decisive action, when it comes, appear effortless. The practitioner who has established shi through awareness, positioning, and intelligent social navigation rarely needs to fight. When he does, the fight is already largely decided.

 

The Five Methods of Avoidance Through Zheng and Qi

1. Awareness and Situational Intelligence

The most fundamental avoidance tool is awareness — the cultivated ability to read an environment for developing threats before they solidify. This is pure zheng in its social dimension: the ordinary, expected behavior of an observant human being moving through the world with his eyes open. But it contains within it a constant qi element — the willingness to act on what is observed, to change routes, exit locations, alter timing, or engage with potential threats at the verbal level before they become physical.


Gavin de Becker's work on the gift of fear — the idea that intuition, properly cultivated, provides accurate pre-conscious threat assessment — describes a form of situational intelligence that maps closely onto the practitioner who has internalized the zheng-qi framework. The person who "just knows" that something is wrong in a parking garage and acts on that knowledge without needing to analytically justify it is responding to xu — to the emptiness, the wrongness, the departure from the expected — at a speed that formal analysis cannot match.


2. Environmental Positioning

The martial strategist's emphasis on terrain — the strategic use of ground, cover, exits, and chokepoints — applies with full force to the self-defense context. Choosing where to sit in a restaurant, which side of the sidewalk to walk on, how close to an exit to position oneself in a crowd: these are expressions of zheng (unremarkable behavior) that simultaneously constitute qi in the strategic sense — advantageous positioning that changes the geometry of any potential encounter before it begins.


Rory Miller's concept of the "pre-attack indicators" and the appropriate physical responses to them is directly relevant here. The practitioner who recognizes the profile interview — the aggressive conversational gambit that tests whether a target will comply or resist — and responds with calm, non-reactive repositioning is using the zheng of social normalcy to mask the qi of tactical disengagement. He appears to be simply continuing the conversation; he is in fact repositioning himself out of committed reach and creating lines of retreat.


3. Verbal De-escalation

Verbal de-escalation is perhaps the most undervalued tool in the self-defense practitioner's repertoire, in part because it looks like nothing from the outside. Done well, it is zheng of the highest order — a response so calibrated to the social expectations of the moment that the aggressor finds no purchase for his intent. But it also contains decisive qi: the reframing of the situation, the unexpected emotional register, the question that forces the aggressor into reflective rather than reactive mode.


Verbal de-escalation does not mean appeasement or compliance with unreasonable demands. It means speaking and listening in ways that give the encounter a shape other than violenceThis might mean acknowledging the aggressor's emotional state without conceding the legitimacy of his behavior; offering a face-saving exit; deflecting with humor; or simply maintaining a tone of such confident calm that the aggressor reassesses the predicted cost of escalation. The practitioner who can execute this well has achieved a victory more complete, in most self-defense contexts, than any physical technique could provide.


4. Tactical Disengagement

When awareness, positioning, and verbal tools have not resolved the encounter, tactical disengagement — physical withdrawal with maintained awareness and readiness — is the next expression of the avoidance doctrine. This is not flight in the pejorative sense. It is the strategic withdrawal that Sun Tzu commends when engagement offers no advantage: a deliberate, controlled repositioning that preserves options and denies the aggressor the close contact he requires.


The qi of tactical disengagement lies in its unexpectedness to an aggressor who has invested in the belief that his target is committed to the encounter. The sudden absence of the anticipated resistance — the man who simply is not where the aggressor expected him to be — produces the same disorienting effect at the personal level as the flanking maneuver does on the battlefield. It disrupts the rehearsed scenario, forces reorientation, and often, in itself, resolves the confrontation.


5. The Unavoidable Response

The framework of zheng and qi does not exclude the possibility of physical defense when all avoidance options have been exhausted. But it shapes the nature of that defense in important ways. The practitioner who has been faithfully exercising all available avoidance options has, by definition, not contributed to the creation of the dangerous situation. He has established, both in fact and in the eyes of any legal or social evaluation of the incident, that he was the reactive party — that his force, when and if it appears, is a genuine last resort.


When physical response does become unavoidable, the zheng-qi framework argues for decisive, efficient action targeted at the xu of the attack — the open line, the committed overextension, the moment of maximum aggressor investment and minimum tactical flexibility. The practitioner does not meet force with symmetric force; he redirects it, exploits it, and ends the encounter as rapidly as possible. In Nevada law and in the common-law tradition of self-defense more broadly, this maps onto the concept of reasonable force: not the maximum available response, but the minimum effective one.

 

Zheng, Qi, and the Ethics of Self-Defense

The philosophical dimensions of zheng and qi converge naturally with the ethical dimensions of self-defense. Just as the best general is the one who wins without fighting, the most fully realized martial practitioner is the one who resolves the greatest number of dangerous situations without resort to force. This is not weakness masquerading as principle; it is principle grounded in a clear-eyed assessment of the costs of violence — to the practitioner, to bystanders, to the legal and social fabric within which all of us live.


The practitioner who has deeply internalized the avoidance doctrine is also, paradoxically, more dangerous when forced to fight — not less. The confidence that comes from having genuinely attempted every available non-violent option, and having the skills to execute those options reliably, produces a quality of relaxed readiness that is itself a form of qi. The aggressor who encounters it often backs down without knowing why. The practitioner who does not need to fight is, in the fullest sense of the martial ideal, the one best prepared to do so.


Sun Tzu's conception of the supreme excellence — winning without fighting — is not an abstraction for the experienced self-defense practitioner. It is the daily practice of awareness, positioning, social intelligence, and the willingness to disengage. Zheng and qi provide the structural vocabulary for that practice: the orthodox presence that asks for no trouble and the unorthodox readiness that, when trouble comes anyway, resolves it as cleanly and decisively as possible.


Bibliography: Primary Sources

 

Sun Tzu. The Art of War. Translated by Samuel B. Griffith. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1963.

Sun Tzu. The Art of War. Translated by Roger T. Ames. New York: Ballantine Books, 1993.

Sun Tzu. The Art of War. Translated by Victor H. Mair. New York: Columbia University Press, 2007.

Wu Qi. Wuzi Bingfa [Master Wu's Military Methods]. In Seven Military Classics of Ancient China, translated by Ralph D. Sawyer. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993.

Various. The Seven Military Classics of Ancient China. Translated by Ralph D. Sawyer with Mei-Chün Lee Sawyer. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993. [Contains the Bingfa, Wuzi, Sima Fa, Wei Liaozi, Three Strategies of Huang Shigong, Questions and Replies Between Tang Taizong and Li Weigong, and Tai Gong's Six Secret Teachings.]

 

Chinese Strategic and Philosophical Sources

 

Ames, Roger T. Sun-tzu: The Art of Warfare. New York: Ballantine Books, 1993. [Includes substantial scholarly apparatus on the classical strategic tradition and the zheng-qi framework.]

Griffith, Samuel B. Sun Tzu: The Art of War. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1963. [Remains a foundational English-language commentary with extensive military-historical annotation.]

Sawyer, Ralph D. The Tao of Deception: Unorthodox Warfare in Historic and Modern China. New York: Basic Books, 2007.

Sawyer, Ralph D. The Tao of Spycraft: Intelligence Theory and Practice in Traditional China. Boulder: Westview Press, 1998.

Jullien, François. A Treatise on Efficacy: Between Western and Chinese Thinking. Translated by Janet Lloyd. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

Jullien, François. The Silent Transformations. Translated by Krzysztof Fijalkowski and Michael Richardson. London: Seagull Books, 2011.

 

Martial Arts and Self-Defense Applications

 

Miller, Rory. Meditations on Violence: A Comparison of Martial Arts Training and Real World Violence. Wolfeboro: YMAA Publication Center, 2008.

Miller, Rory. Facing Violence: Preparing for the Unexpected. Wolfeboro: YMAA Publication Center, 2011.

Miller, Rory. Force Decisions: A Citizen's Guide. Wolfeboro: YMAA Publication Center, 2012.

Miller, Rory, and Lawrence A. Kane. Scaling Force: Dynamic Decision-Making Under Threat of Violence. Wolfeboro: YMAA Publication Center, 2012.

MacYoung, Marc. In the Name of Self-Defense. CreateSpace Independent Publishing, 2014.

MacYoung, Marc. A Professional's Guide to Ending Violence Quickly. Boulder: Paladin Press, 1993.

de Becker, Gavin. The Gift of Fear: Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence. New York: Dell Publishing, 1997.

Nakamura, Tadashi. The Spirit of the Empty Hand. Tokyo: Japan Publications, 1986.

Abernethy, Iain. Bunkai-Jutsu: The Practical Application of Karate Kata. Cockermouth: NETH Publishing, 2002.

Abernethy, Iain. Throws for Strikers: The Forgotten Throws of Karate, Jujutsu and Tegumi. Cockermouth: NETH Publishing, 2003.

 

Strategic Theory and the Boyd Framework

 

Boyd, John R. "Patterns of Conflict." Unpublished briefing slides, 1986. Available through the Boyd Papers, Marine Corps University Research Archives, Quantico, VA.

Coram, Robert. Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2002.

Osinga, Frans P. B. Science, Strategy and War: The Strategic Theory of John Boyd. London: Routledge, 2006.

Lind, William S. Maneuver Warfare Handbook. Boulder: Westview Press, 1985.

United States Marine Corps. MCDP 1: Warfighting. Washington, DC: Department of the Navy, 1997.

 

Philosophy of Mind, Perception, and Martial Cognition

 

Polanyi, Michael. The Tacit Dimension. Garden City: Doubleday, 1966.

Dreyfus, Hubert L. "Intelligence Without Representation: Merleau-Ponty's Critique of Mental Representation." Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1, no. 4 (2002): 367–383.

Dreyfus, Hubert L., and Stuart E. Dreyfus. Mind Over Machine: The Power of Human Intuition and Expertise in the Era of the Computer. New York: Free Press, 1986.

Metzinger, Thomas. The Ego Tunnel: The Science of the Mind and the Myth of the Self. New York: Basic Books, 2009.

Herrigel, Eugen. Zen in the Art of Archery. Translated by R. F. C. Hull. New York: Vintage Books, 1953.

 

Legal and Ethical Context

 

Branca, Andrew F. The Law of Self Defense: The Indispensable Guide for the Armed Citizen. 3rd ed. Law of Self Defense LLC, 2017.

Ayoob, Massad. The Truth About Self Protection. New York: Bantam Books, 1983.

Nevada Revised Statutes §§ 200.120, 200.160, 200.200 (2023). [Nevada statutes governing justifiable homicide and self-defense.]

Nevada Revised Statutes § 200.275 (2023). [Nevada statute governing justifiable use of non-deadly force.]

 

正  •  奇

The orthodox and the unorthodox give rise to each other endlessly,

like a circle with no beginning.

— Sun Tzu, Bingfa, Chapter 5

Charles James  |  Isshin-ryū Karate-jutsu