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.

Transfer of Learning

Knowledge That Travels

 

Old kata, new ground —

the body already knows

what the mind forgets

 

Water finds its path

through every strange vessel poured —

skill has the same grace

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


CAVEAT  (Keikoku [警告])

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force.

Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors' imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental.

All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

Introduction

Let's start with something honest: most of what we learn, we learn in one place. You study mathematics in a classroom. You learn a kata in the dojo. You rehearse a speech in front of a mirror. But the real question — the one that separates useful learning from mere academic exercise — is whether any of that knowledge actually travels with you when you walk out the door.


That question has a name. Psychologists and educators call it transfer of learning, and it is, arguably, one of the most important ideas in all of cognitive science. If learning doesn't transfer, it is little more than a performance executed on demand. But if it does transfer — if a skill honed in one environment genuinely equips you for another — then learning becomes something closer to liberation.


What follows is an exploration of that idea: what transfer is, why it matters, where it shows up in ordinary life, and why we should be honest about its limits as well as its promise.


The Parable of the Old Carpenter

There was once an old carpenter named Hideo who had spent forty years shaping wood in a small workshop in the mountains. He worked with chisels, mallets, and hand planes — tools that demanded patience, a feel for grain, and the discipline to let the wood speak before imposing his will upon it.


When Hideo's grandson, a young software engineer named Kenji, visited one summer, he laughed — gently, with affection — at his grandfather's ancient tools. "Ojii-san," he said, "at work I design structures in three dimensions on a computer. I work with tolerances of a fraction of a millimeter. What could you possibly teach me that I don't already know from school and software?"


Hideo did not argue. He simply handed Kenji a piece of cherry wood and a worn hand plane and said, "Tell me what you feel."


Kenji pushed. The plane skipped, then bit too deep. He pushed again. The wood tore.


"You are fighting it," said Hideo. "A computer forgives force. Wood does not. Neither does any real problem. You must learn to read resistance — not just overcome it."


Three days later, Kenji sat at his design workstation back in the city, modeling a load-bearing bracket for a bridge component. Something had changed. He found himself thinking not just about computational tolerances but about grain — the direction of stress, the hidden logic of the material. He slowed down. He read the resistance.


His supervisor, reviewing the revised design, noted it was the most elegant solution Kenji had ever produced.


Hideo never used a computer. Kenji never returned to hand planes. But something had crossed between them — something that carries no weight in the hand but alters everything it touches. We call it, properly, transfer of learning.


What Transfer of Learning Really Means

Transfer of learning, in its simplest formulation, is the application of knowledge or skill acquired in one context to a new and different one (Perkins & Salomon, 1992). It is what happens when a martial artist's trained instinct to read body language serves them in a tense business negotiation. It is what happens when a chess player's habit of thinking several moves ahead shows up in their financial planning. It is what happens when a poet's ear for rhythm makes them a better public speaker.


The research tradition on this subject goes back at least to Thorndike and Woodworth's (1901) foundational studies on the "transfer of training," which challenged — somewhat iconoclastically for the era — the popular theory of "formal discipline." That theory held that studying Latin or geometry would strengthen the mind generally, the way physical exercise strengthens a muscle. Thorndike and Woodworth found something more nuanced: transfer was not automatic, not broadly general, and certainly not guaranteed. It depended critically on the degree of overlap between the original learning context and the new one.


This finding has been refined and extended for over a century. Today we understand transfer as neither fully automatic nor fully impossible — it is conditional, dependent on how deeply something is understood and how skillfully the learner can recognize when a principle applies beyond its original setting.


Near Transfer and Far Transfer

Researchers generally distinguish between two kinds of transfer. Near transfer refers to the application of learning to situations that closely resemble the original. A mechanic trained on a Ford engine who then maintains a Chevrolet engine is performing near transfer. The surface features differ; the underlying principles are recognizably similar.


Far transfer is the application of learning to situations that are significantly different from those in which the original learning occurred


Kenji's bridge design drawing on Hideo's philosophy of working with rather than against a material's nature — that is far transfer. The surface features could hardly be more different. What travels is the principle.


Far transfer is harder to achieve and harder to measure. It requires what Perkins and Salomon (1992) called "mindful abstraction" — the learner must step back from the specific details of what they have learned and ask what general principle might apply in an unfamiliar context. This is not a passive process. It requires metacognition: thinking about thinking, reflecting on the underlying structure of one's own knowledge.


Bransford, Brown, and Cocking (2000), in their influential synthesis How People Learn, observed that transfer is enhanced when learners develop deep understanding rather than surface fluency — when they grasp why something works, not merely that it does. A student who has only memorized the quadratic formula cannot apply it creatively; a student who understands the relationships it describes may recognize its shadow in unexpected places.


Why This Matters — and Where It Shows Up

The implications are broad. In education, designing curricula that promote transfer rather than mere reproduction of learned material is a central challenge — and one that many systems fail to meet (Haskell, 2001). Students who can pass an examination but cannot apply what they learned two weeks later in a slightly different context have not truly learned; they have performed.


In martial arts, this is the difference between a student who executes a flawless kata in the dojo and a practitioner who can access that same precision under duress: in a parking lot, in poor light, when frightened. The kata is not the point. What transfers from the kata — the structural understanding of balance, timing, distance, and flow — that is the point.


In professional settings, transfer is what makes experienced practitioners valuable in ways that newly trained ones are not. A seasoned emergency physician brings more than memorized protocols; they bring a library of internalized pattern recognition that allows them to sense what is happening before they can fully articulate why they think so. That recognition is transferred learning — refined across thousands of encounters into something that travels into every new room they enter.


Cognitive scientists note that contextual variation during learning enhances transfer. When a concept is learned in only one setting, the brain encodes it as context-specific. When it is encountered across multiple settings, the brain begins to abstract the underlying principle (Roediger & Karpicke, 2006). This is one argument for varied practice, deliberate interleaving, and the kind of experiential breadth that allows a learner's knowledge to grow roots before it is tested.

☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️

A Counter-Argument Worth Hearing

Let us be honest about something: the case for transfer of learning, compelling as it is, is not without its critics. And intellectual humility demands that we take those critics seriously.


Perhaps the most persistent challenge comes from research finding that transfer — especially far transfer — is surprisingly rare and fragile in practice (Detterman, 1993). Detterman, writing with characteristic directness, argued that the ordinary expectation that learning in one domain will meaningfully transfer to distant domains is largely wishful thinking. His review of experimental literature found that participants frequently failed to apply principles learned in one context to structurally identical problems presented in a different context, even when the connection seemed obvious to the experimenters who designed the study.


This is not a trivial finding. It suggests that the parable of Hideo and Kenji, inspiring as it is, may represent the exception rather than the rule — and that the exception may depend heavily on factors the parable tends to romanticize: Kenji's reflective disposition, the quality of his relationship with his grandfather, the deliberateness of the teaching moment, and a great deal of good fortune.


Haskell (2001) echoes this concern from a different angle, arguing that educational institutions pay lip service to transfer while doing precious little to actually teach it. We assume transfer will happen. We do not teach students how to transfer. And without explicit instruction in abstraction, pattern recognition, and reflective metacognition, many learners will remain prisoners of the context in which they were trained — able to perform in familiar settings, and largely helpless outside them.


We should also attend to a subtler objection: not all knowledge is meant to transfer. The master sushi chef's kinesthetic knowledge of knife work is not best understood as a general skill waiting to be borrowed by surgeons or carpenters. It is a specific excellence, honed for a specific purpose, and there may be genuine dignity in that specificity. The demand that all learning prove its worth by transferring elsewhere might reflect a kind of cognitive imperialism — the assumption that abstraction and generalization are always superior to deep, situated expertise.


These are legitimate concerns. They do not demolish the concept of transfer, but they complicate it usefully. Transfer is possible — and perhaps even common when conditions support it — but it is neither automatic nor universal. Teaching for transfer is a distinct educational commitment, not a byproduct of teaching well in general. If we want Kenji to meet Hideo halfway, we must prepare both of them for the crossing.


Closing Thoughts

Transfer of learning is one of those ideas that, once encountered, you begin to see everywhere. The chess player who plans ahead in life. The nurse whose clinical instinct saves the patient the algorithm missed. The veteran whose situational awareness, trained in one country, serves them quietly in another. The old carpenter whose feel for resistance crosses generations and professions.


None of this happens by accident. It happens when learning goes deep enough to become principle rather than procedure — when a person understands not just what to do, but why, and when that understanding is flexible enough to walk into rooms it has never visited before.


That is, at its best, what education is for. Not the reproduction of knowledge, but its migration. Not performance on demand, but wisdom in motion.


The old masters of martial arts understood this instinctively. They did not, in the end, teach techniques. They taught principles clothed in techniques — knowing that the clothing would wear out, and that what the student needed was what lay beneath.


Hideo knew this. Kenji, eventually, came to understand.

The wood doesn't care where you learned to listen to it. It only cares that you did.

 

Bibliography

Bransford, J. D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. R. (Eds.). (2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school(Expanded ed.). National Academy Press.

Detterman, D. K. (1993). The case for the prosecution: Transfer as an epiphenomenon. In D. K. Detterman & R. J. Sternberg (Eds.), Transfer on trial: Intelligence, cognition, and instruction (pp. 1–24). Ablex.

Haskell, R. E. (2001). Transfer of learning: Cognition, instruction, and reasoning. Academic Press.

Perkins, D. N., & Salomon, G. (1992). Transfer of learning. In T. N. Postlethwaite & T. Husén (Eds.), International encyclopedia of education (2nd ed., Vol. 11, pp. 6452–6457). Pergamon Press.

Roediger, H. L., & Karpicke, J. D. (2006). Test-enhanced learning: Taking memory tests improves long-term retention. Psychological Science17(3), 249–255. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01693.x

Thorndike, E. L., & Woodworth, R. S. (1901). The influence of improvement in one mental function upon the efficiency of other functions. Psychological Review8(3), 247–261. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0074898

Page of

Physiokinetic Sigh Breathing Method

A Physiological Reset for Stress, Focus & Autonomic Regulation


HELPFUL: Consider this, upon waking to start your day perform the physio-sigh three cycles, perform three more cycles before linch and finally before going to sleep. It takes about ten to fifteen seconds and cost ... wait for it ... NOTHING!


two breaths fill the lung

long exhale calms the body—

the storm becomes still

 

double inhale, then

the slow tide carries tension

out beyond the shore

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

3F5ADD53-9EDD-4CDD-8362-AE4DB477DEE9.png

 

Overview

The physiokinetic sigh breathing method — sometimes called the physiological sigh — is a neurologically grounded respiratory technique consisting of a deliberate double nasal inhale followed by a prolonged oral exhale. Unlike most deliberate breathing protocols that require extended practice sessions, a single cycle of the physiological sigh has been demonstrated to produce immediate, measurable reductions in subjective and physiological markers of stress.


The mechanism is elegantly simple: the lungs contain millions of microscopic air sacs — alveoli — that collapse partially under sustained tension or shallow breathing. The first nasal inhale expands the lungs substantially; the second short 'sniff' re-inflates those collapsed alveoli, maximizing gas exchange surface area. The subsequent long exhale through the mouth activates the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system, decelerating heart rate and downregulating the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) stress axis.

 

The Three-Phase Protocol


Phase 1 — First Nasal Inhale (~2 seconds)

Draw a full, deep breath through the nose, allowing the diaphragm to descend and the lower lungs to expand. Aim for approximately 80% of maximum lung capacity. This phase initiates the inflation cascade and begins recruitment of the respiratory musculature — intercostals, scalenes, and the diaphragm itself — in a coordinated, controlled sequence.


Phase 2 — Second Nasal Inhale (~1 second)

Immediately following the first inhale, take a short, sharp 'top-up' sniff through the nose. This second inhale — smaller in volume but critical in function — forces air past partially collapsed alveoli, re-inflating them through a pressure differential effect. The lungs now approach maximal functional capacity, optimizing CO₂ and O₂ exchange ratios.


Phase 3 — Extended Oral Exhale (~6–8 seconds)

Release the breath slowly, smoothly, and completely through a slightly parted mouth. The exhale should be two to four times longer than the combined inhale duration. This extended exhalation is the physiologically active component: it increases vagal tone, reduces sympathetic drive, lowers cortisol signaling, and produces a measurable slowing of the cardiac cycle within a single breath.

 

Applications

The physiokinetic sigh is applicable across a broad range of professional and personal contexts. In martial arts and tactical training, it serves as an immediate pre-engagement and post-exertion reset, restoring cognitive clarity and motor control under adrenaline load. In clinical and therapeutic settings, it offers a rapid, drug-free intervention for acute anxiety states. In performance and cognitive domains — public speaking, high-stakes decision-making, competitive athletics — it provides a reliable on-demand tool for autonomic regulation. One to three cycles is generally sufficient to produce a perceptible effect.

The Thirty-Six Stratagems

Applied to Pre-Violence Methodology and the Art of Self-Defense


Calm reads the storm first —

the warrior who does not fight

wins before the fist.


Thirty-six open doors —

walk through one without violence;

this is the true art.


CEJames

Akira Ichinose, Editor and Research Assistant


Keikoku / 警告

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. 


All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force. 


Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental. 


All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.


Introduction

The Thirty-Six Stratagems (三十六計) constitute one of the most enduring works in the canon of strategic thought. Compiled during the Northern Qi dynasty and attributed to various sources in the Chinese military tradition, the stratagems catalog a repertoire of tactical principles drawn from centuries of warfare, diplomacy, and court intrigue. Unlike Sun Tzu's Art of War, which grounds strategy in philosophy and moral leadership, the Thirty-Six Stratagems are concrete, situation-specific, and often confrontational in their methodology. They are tools, not values—and like all tools, their worth is determined by the wisdom of the hand that employs them.


This document applies the Thirty-Six Stratagems not to military command or competitive advantage in the business sense, but to the domain most urgently relevant to the martial arts practitioner: the pre-violence phase of a self-defense encounter. The martial tradition has long understood that the finest victory is the one that never requires force. 


Okinawan karate masters of the Meiji and Taisho periods consistently emphasized that the purpose of training was the cultivation of character and the development of judgment—not the production of fighters. The empty hand is empty for a reason.


Pre-violence methodology encompasses all the cognitive, perceptual, positional, verbal, and psychological strategies available to a practitioner before a situation becomes physical. 


The OODA loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, Act), 

situational awareness frameworks, 

de-escalation theory, 

proxemics, and 

verbal judo 


all contribute to this discipline. The Thirty-Six Stratagems provide an ancient, culturally rich, and practically relevant overlay that deepens and enriches this toolkit.


The stratagems are presented in their traditional six-chapter structure. Each chapter covers six stratagems. Each stratagem is presented with its traditional Chinese name and character, its classical proverb, and a specific application to pre-violence self-defense strategy. The reader is encouraged to study these not as a list to be memorized but as a framework for developing the adaptive, situation-responsive mind that effective self-defense requires.

 

Chapter I — Winning Stratagems: The Posture of Readiness

Strategies 1–6: Establishing dominance of position before contact occurs

 

Strategy 1: Deceive the Sky to Cross the Ocean  瞞天過海

"Prepare too perfectly, suspect nothing. Move in the open, unseen."

The aware practitioner does not announce readiness. Calm body language, relaxed posture, and steady breathing signal to a potential aggressor that you are unaware—while you are, in fact, conducting full situational assessment. The ability to appear non-threatening while maintaining tactical awareness is the foundational skill of pre-violence posture. In Isshin-ryū terms, this reflects the discipline of mushin—a mind that is empty of agitation yet filled with presence.

 

Strategy 2: Besiege Wei to Rescue Zhao  圍魏救趙

"Attack the source, not the symptom. Strike what the enemy cannot leave undefended."

Before violence, the practitioner identifies what the aggressor values or fears—ego, reputation, audience, or escape route—and addresses that. De-escalation that allows a hostile party to disengage without public loss of face often resolves the conflict by attacking its emotional source rather than its surface expression. Removing the crowd, offering an exit phrase, or redirecting social pressure are applications of this stratagem.

 

Strategy 3: Kill with a Borrowed Knife  借刀殺人

"Let another's weapon do your work. Preserve your own resources."

In the pre-violence context, this stratagem suggests leveraging environmental and social resources. Requesting bystander assistance, positioning near a security presence, involving authority, or placing physical barriers between yourself and a threat uses the environment as a surrogate defense. You do not engage directly when indirect means can neutralize the threat more safely.

 

Strategy 4: Wait at Leisure While the Enemy Labors  以逸待勞

"Rest while your opponent exhausts himself. Calm outlasts anger."

Emotional regulation is the practitioner's primary weapon at this stage. An aggressor who is agitated, intoxicated, or emotionally inflamed is burning energy. Controlled breathing, stillness, and refusal to mirror hostility preserve your cognitive clarity. The patient person who does not respond to provocation with escalation denies the aggressor the emotional fuel that drives violence.

 

Strategy 5: Loot a Burning House  趁火打劫

"Act when the enemy is in disarray. Use disorder as an opening."

Defensively applied, this stratagem calls for recognizing the moment of an aggressor's psychological hesitation or social disruption—the instant he is distracted, loses audience support, or is uncertain—and using that window to create distance, de-escalate, or exit. The practitioner does not wait for a perfect moment; he reads disorder and acts within it.

 

Strategy 6: Make a Sound in the East, Then Strike in the West  聲東擊西

"Distract, then act. Where the eye goes, the mind follows."

Pre-physical application of this stratagem involves verbal and positional misdirection. Drawing an aggressor's attention toward a conversational direction, an object, or a concern while you reposition—creating distance, clearing your flanks, or improving your footing—is a lawful and prudent tactical move. This is not trickery for attack but maneuver for defense.

 


Chapter II — Enemy Dealing Stratagems: Reading Threat and Intent

Strategies 7–12: Assessing the adversary with clarity before commitment

 

 

Strategy 7: Create Something from Nothing  無中生有

"What does not exist can be made to seem to exist. Perception shapes reality."

The perceptive practitioner understands that threat projection can neutralize encounters before they materialize. A firm, confident bearing—without aggression—communicates capability. An aggressor calculating risk weighs apparent ability to resist. The martially trained individual who does not look like prey changes the aggressor's risk calculus. Presence itself is a deterrent.

 

Strategy 8: Openly Repair the Gallery Roads While Secretly Marching to Chencang  明修棧道,暗渡陳倉

"Show one movement, make another. The seen action is never the real action."

During a confrontation, verbal de-escalation can serve simultaneously as genuine communication and as a screen for physical repositioning. While speaking in measured, calm tones, the practitioner moves toward exits, places barriers, or establishes a defensive stance that is not obviously defensive. The aggressor attends to words; the defender attends to ground.

 

Strategy 9: Watch the Fires Across the River  隔岸觀火

"Observe the conflict. Do not be drawn in. Let it resolve without your involvement."

Not every confrontation is yours. The disciplined practitioner distinguishes between situations that require intervention and those that do not. Unnecessary engagement is itself a tactical and legal error. The highest expression of martial awareness is knowing when to leave. Removing oneself from a situation that has not yet become one's problem is wisdom, not cowardice.

 

Strategy 10: Hide a Knife Behind a Smile  笑裏藏刀

"Offer friendliness. Conceal your readiness. Let warmth mask alertness."

Situational awareness need not present as vigilance to the observer. Cordial, open social behavior can mask a state of complete tactical readiness. The practitioner who can make pleasant conversation while maintaining 360-degree environmental awareness, identifying exits, cataloging potential weapons, and assessing the emotional state of everyone nearby has achieved a rare skill: invisible preparedness.

 

Strategy 11: The Plum Tree Sacrifices for the Peach Tree  李代桃僵

"Sacrifice the lesser to preserve the greater. Accept a small loss to avoid a catastrophic one."

In self-defense strategy, this stratagem instructs the practitioner to willingly accept a minor social cost—an insult unanswered, a confrontation walked away from, a perceived loss of face—to avoid the far greater costs of physical engagement: injury, legal jeopardy, psychological trauma, or worse. Ego is a small tree. Life, liberty, and safety are the peach.

 

Strategy 12: Take the Opportunity to Pilfer a Goat  順手牽羊

"Exploit every small advantage as it presents itself. Accumulate gains."

Throughout any tense pre-violent interaction, the practitioner continuously exploits minor tactical advantages: a half-step of distance gained, a better position relative to a door, a moment of distraction that allows verbal re-framing. No single gain resolves the situation, but a pattern of small positional and psychological gains accumulates into a commanding defensive position without triggering escalation.

 


Chapter III — Attack Stratagems: Verbal and Psychological Engagement

Strategies 13–18: Managing the interaction to prevent physical violence

 

 

Strategy 13: Beat the Grass to Startle the Snake  打草驚蛇

"Test before committing. A probe reveals what cannot be seen directly."

Indirect verbal probes—asking an apparently neutral question, making an ambiguous social approach, testing a de-escalation phrase—reveal an aggressor's emotional state and intent before full engagement. The practitioner watches how the potential threat responds to low-stakes stimuli. Overreaction, rigid posture, or failure to track normal social cues are indicators of elevated danger.

 

Strategy 14: Borrow a Corpse to Resurrect the Soul  借屍還魂

"Use the old to serve the new. An ancient vessel can carry fresh purpose."

Social rituals, conventional phrases, and cultural scripts of respect can de-escalate volatile individuals when applied with genuine understanding of their psychological need. The offer of deference—even when not deserved—can resurrect a cooling interaction from the brink of violence. Traditional forms of address, appeals to shared identity, or use of humor grounded in cultural familiarity can redirect aggression through familiar channels.

 

Strategy 15: Lure the Tiger Off Its Mountain  調虎離山

"Draw the enemy away from strength. Fight on ground of your choosing."

A hostile encounter in an unfavorable environment—an alley, an enclosed space, a territory where the aggressor has social dominance—places the defender at a disadvantage. Creating conditions that move the interaction to open, public, well-lit ground removes the aggressor's home advantage. Suggesting an adjacent and more public location, redirecting movement toward occupied spaces, or simply walking in a favorable direction changes the battlefield.

 

Strategy 16: In Order to Capture, First Let Go  欲擒故縱

"Release what you hold too tightly. Retreat invites advance; advance creates commitment."

Tactical withdrawal—creating deliberate space in a confrontation—often causes an aggressor who was posturing to over-extend, losing social credibility when you do not respond as expected, or to reconsider when forward momentum is not met with counter-pressure. Backing away is not the same as backing down if it is done with conscious intent as a movement strategy rather than fear-driven retreat.


Strategy 17: Toss Out a Brick to Attract a Piece of Jade  拋磚引玉

"Offer something of lesser value to receive something greater."

In verbal de-escalation, the practitioner may acknowledge a partial grievance—even an unjust one—in order to receive the far more valuable outcome of a peaceful resolution. Validating a fragment of the aggressor's complaint costs little and frequently interrupts the emotional momentum driving toward violence. The agreement is strategic; it need not reflect capitulation.


Strategy 18: Defeat the Enemy by Capturing Their Chief  擒賊擒王

"Remove the source of control and the structure collapses."

In group confrontations, there is almost always a primary instigator. Directing verbal engagement, appeals to reason, or social pressure toward that individual—while maintaining awareness of others—can resolve a multi-person threat more efficiently than engaging each individual. The group dynamic collapses when the leader de-escalates, withdraws, or loses social credibility.

 


Chapter IV — Confusion Stratagems: Managing Perception and Reality

Strategies 19–24: Using perception, misdirection, and uncertainty as defensive tools

 

 

Strategy 19: Remove the Firewood from Under the Pot 釜底抽薪

"Do not fight the fire; remove what feeds it."

Violence, like fire, requires fuel: anger, audience, alcohol, grievance, and perceived threat. The pre-violence strategist works to remove these sources before the flames rise. Separating combatants from their audience, addressing the underlying grievance rather than its expression, or reducing perceived threat through genuine de-escalatory language removes the conditions that make violence possible.


Strategy 20: Fish in Troubled Waters  混水摸魚

"Confusion benefits the prepared. Act with clarity when others cannot."

In crisis situations—a sudden confrontation in a public space, an unexpected social rupture—the practitioner who has trained for stress inoculation can act with deliberate clarity while others around them react with confusion. The ability to think procedurally in chaos—identify the threat, assess options, act decisively—is a direct product of scenario-based training. Confusion is the environment of opportunity for the prepared.

 

Strategy 21: The Cicada Sheds Its Shell  金蟬脫殼

"Leave the appearance in place while the reality withdraws."

This stratagem describes the art of disengagement: creating the appearance of continued presence or continued engagement while actually withdrawing. Verbally maintaining a conversation while incrementally moving toward an exit, maintaining eye contact while creating distance, or using a social convention to step away cleanly without provoking the aggressor's predatory instinct to pursue is an advanced skill of non-confrontational withdrawal.

 

Strategy 22: Shut the Door to Catch the Thief  關門捉賊

"Close the exits, then act. Do not let what must be contained escape."

Applied defensively, this stratagem pertains to your own vulnerability to flanking, ambush, or group attack. The aware practitioner closes his own exposure: walls to the back, sightlines maintained, exits preserved for himself, routes of approach monitored. It is also the basis of the legal principle that one who sets a trap cannot claim self-defense. Know what this stratagem means when it is used against you.

 

Strategy 23: Befriend a Distant State While Attacking a Nearby One  遠交近攻

"Align with what is far to neutralize what is near."

In social confrontations, identifying and cultivating potential allies—bystanders who can be recruited as witnesses, nearby individuals who share your interest in peace, staff or security personnel at a venue—creates a surrounding context that makes aggression socially costly. The practitioner works the social environment, not just the immediate adversary.


Strategy 24: Obtain Safe Passage to Conquer the State of Guo  假途滅虢

"Use a path offered in good faith to accomplish what cannot be achieved by direct approach."

Some social encounters require a legitimate pretext for disengagement. Excusing oneself for a practical reason—a phone call, a necessity, an obligation—removes both parties from an escalating dynamic without either side needing to explicitly de-escalate. The pretext preserves social face and removes the fuel of direct confrontation. The exit does not require justification; it only requires a door.

 


Chapter V — Gaining Ground Stratagems: Maintaining Legal and Tactical Position

Strategies 25–30: Preserving lawful standing while managing a threat

 

 

Strategy 25: Replace the Beams with Rotten Timber  偷樑換柱

"Alter what supports the structure. The form remains; the substance changes."

The aggressor's narrative supports his justification for violence. Reframing that narrative—introducing alternative interpretations, questioning the premise of a grievance, or gently correcting factual errors in his account—can destabilize the psychological structure that makes violence feel warranted to him. This must be done without direct confrontation to the ego, which would produce resistance.

 

Strategy 26: Point at the Mulberry Tree While Cursing the Locust  指桑罵槐

"Speak to one, address another. Indirect language carries what direct language cannot."

In tense social confrontations, addressing a general principle rather than making direct personal accusation can communicate what needs communicating without triggering defensive aggression. Speaking aloud to no one in particular about the presence of cameras, the arrival of authorities, or the witnesses present sends a message to the aggressor without the direct confrontation that would require a defensive response.

 

Strategy 27: Feign Madness But Keep Your Balance  假痴不癲

"Appear to be what disarms. The fool is never challenged."

Appearing non-threatening—confused, harmless, vaguely uncertain—can reduce an aggressor's threat assessment of you, buying time and disengagement opportunities. This is distinct from performing genuine incapacity; it is the skilled management of your presentation. Equally, appearing not to understand a clear threat—buying deliberate seconds of apparent processing time—gives you room to assess and reposition.

 

Strategy 28: Remove the Ladder When the Enemy Has Climbed Up  上屋抽梯

"Allow the advance. Then remove the retreat."

For the defender, this stratagem applies to managing de-escalatory commitments. When an aggressor makes a face-saving gesture toward withdrawal, accept it fully and remove any social obstacle to his retreat—do not pursue, mock, or challenge the retreat. If you remove his ladder by blocking his exit, he will fight from desperation. An aggressor who can leave without humiliation frequently does.

 

Strategy 29: Deck the Tree with False Blossoms  樹上開花

"Make the sparse appear plentiful. Display strength you do not yet possess."

Projecting calm, capability, and resolve in a confrontation—regardless of internal fear—is a critical skill. An aggressor reads vulnerability. The trained practitioner whose internal state may include significant stress still projects controlled readiness. This is not deception in any harmful sense; it is the martial discipline of composure under pressure, and it directly affects the aggressor's risk calculation.


Strategy 30: Make the Host and the Guest Exchange Roles  反客為主

"The one who was passive becomes directive. Reframe who leads."

Taking conversational and spatial control of an interaction—without aggression—can shift a deteriorating encounter toward resolution. Asking a direct question, offering a clear direction, naming the situation calmly, or suggesting an alternative course of action redefines who is directing the encounter. The practitioner moves from reactive to proactive without escalating, which frequently re-orients an aggressor who was operating on social dominance assumptions.

 


Chapter VI — Desperate Stratagems: The Edge Before Force

Strategies 31–36: The last measures before physical self-defense becomes unavoidable

 

 

Strategy 31: The Beauty Trap  美人計

"Use what the enemy desires to lead him. Desire creates vulnerability."

Applied to pre-violence strategy, this stratagem refers broadly to the use of appealing incentives—social affirmation, apparent agreement, flattery, or positive framing—to redirect a hostile individual toward non-violent options. An aggressor who feels respected, heard, or socially vindicated has less emotional need to pursue physical dominance. Satisfaction of the underlying emotional need can dissolve the immediate physical threat.

 

Strategy 32: The Empty Fort Strategy  空城計

"When you have no defense, show no defense. Stillness implies abundance."

When caught without tactical advantage—no weapon, no allies, no position, no exit—extraordinary composure and confident presentation can cause a calculating aggressor to hesitate. The appearance of readiness where there is limited readiness creates doubt. This stratagem is high-risk and should not be romanticized; however, confidence and stillness are often the only remaining non-violent tools and should be deployed with full commitment.

 

Strategy 33: Let the Enemy's Own Spy Sow Discord  反間計

"Use what the enemy trusts against him. His own assumptions become your weapon."

In group confrontation dynamics, the aggressor's associates may not share his level of commitment to violence. Creating conditions—through words, positioning, or behavior—that cause the aggressor's allies to reconsider their involvement can fracture the social support that makes aggression feel safe. Speaking directly to hesitant bystanders within the aggressor's group, appealing to their good sense or describing legal consequences, can dissolve a coalition.


Strategy 34: Inflict Injury on Oneself to Win the Enemy's Trust  苦肉計

"Sacrifice something of value to prove what words cannot."

In a hostage, robbery, or extreme coercive scenario, compliance with minor demands to preserve safety—surrendering a wallet, complying with repositioning—can demonstrate non-threatening intent while preserving the conditions for eventual safety or escape. This is the stratagem of lawful compliance under duress: yield on non-essential things to preserve what cannot be surrendered. It is also the basis of sound advice in predatory crimes—property is replaceable.

 

Strategy 35: The Interlocking Stratagems  連環計

"Link your moves so that each leads to the next. Do not act in isolation."

No single de-escalation technique resolves a volatile encounter; they must be layered. Eye contact management paired with open body language, combined with verbal de-escalation, combined with positional movement, combined with social recruitment of bystanders—each technique reinforces the others. Pre-violence strategy is a chain of interlocking responses, not a single tactic deployed in isolation. Train the entire chain, not individual techniques.

 

Strategy 36: Running Away Is the Best Strategy  走為上

"When all else fails, withdraw. To survive is to prevail."

The thirty-sixth stratagem is the most important and is deliberately last: when pre-violence strategies have failed or are unavailable, when de-escalation has been genuinely attempted and refused, when escape is possible—leave. The willingness to disengage, to sacrifice pride for safety, and to prioritize survival over confrontation is not weakness. It is the highest expression of strategic judgment. Legally, demonstrating that flight was your first option strengthens any subsequent claim of justified self-defense. In Isshin-ryū philosophy, the empty hand is the hand that chooses not to strike. That choice, when possible, is always superior.

 

☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️

Closing Observations

The Thirty-Six Stratagems describe a complete strategic philosophy: 


  1. begin with advantage, 
  2. read the adversary, 
  3. engage the mind before the body, 
  4. manage perception and terrain, 
  5. preserve lawful standing, and—
  6. when all else has been exhausted—make the one decision that the ego most resists and wisdom most requires. Run. Walk away. Leave. Survive.


For the Isshin-ryū practitioner, these stratagems are not foreign to the tradition. The Tode Sakugawa dictum—do not fight if you can avoid it; avoid if you can run—is the thirty-sixth stratagem expressed in the Okinawan idiom. Chojun Miyagi's observation that the first kata of karate is a bow is an application of Stratagem Eleven. Shimabuku Tatsuo's instruction that kata contains everything the practitioner needs is an application of Stratagem Thirty-Five: the interlocking chain.


The relationship between the ancient Chinese strategic tradition and the Okinawan martial tradition is not incidental. Both emerged from cultures that understood violence as a cost to be minimized, not a virtue to be expressed. The warrior traditions of both cultures placed wisdom above ferocity, positioning above power, and restraint above aggression. These documents share a common ancestor: the understanding that mastery of conflict begins with the refusal to enter it unnecessarily.


Study these stratagems. Return to them after difficult encounters. Ask: which stratagem did I apply? Which did I miss? Which did my adversary use? The after-action review of an avoided conflict is as instructive as any kata debrief. The practitioner who analyzes what worked in the verbal and psychological space becomes a more complete martial artist—and a more difficult target.


References

Cleary, T. (1991). The art of war. Shambhala Publications.

de Becker, G. (1997). The gift of fear: Survival signals that protect us from violence. Little, Brown and Company.

Giles, L. (Trans.). (1910). Sun Tzu on the art of war: The oldest military treatise in the world. Luzac & Company.

Krause, D. G. (1995). The art of war for executives: Ancient knowledge for today's business professional. Penguin Books.

Miller, R. (2012). Meditations on violence: A comparison of martial arts training and real world violence. YMAA Publication Center.

Miyamoto, M. (Trans. Wilson, W. S.). (2004). The book of five rings. Shambhala Publications.

Pearlman, M. (Trans.). (1991). The thirty-six stratagems: A modern translation. Foreign Languages Press.

Rowe, N. (2009). Verbal judo: The gentle art of persuasion. HarperCollins.

Siddle, B. K. (1995). Sharpening the warrior's edge: The psychology and science of training. PPCT Research Publications.

Thompson, G. J. (1993). Verbal judo: Redirecting behavior with words. Paladin Press.

Wilder, M. (2007). The way of kata: A comprehensive guide for deciphering martial applications. YMAA Publication Center.

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