Kijun, kankō, oyobi kitai [基準、慣行、および期待]
The fist thought 💭 that comes to mind is, “divergence.” In the martial community, due to the lack of valid historical data, the many diverge from the one. The one being that one true valid data stream about the particulars and concepts of the discipline.
It’s being human to have different perceptions, opinions and beliefs. It is marmalade for these to result in one turning aside or to deviate from an intended path, practice or objective. It explains why all systems and styles are fundamentally based on the same principles yet differ, diverge, into the plathora of systems, styles or karate preferences as to training, practice and application.
Styles are and were created by individuals who had an epiphany of their studies that simply put a label of perceived uniqueness, to make it special so it would fit a personal personality. Like putting chocolate vs. vanilla frosting on one’s cupcake 🧁.
Everyone of the members of the martial communities has their own “standards, practices and expectations” of themselves, of sensei and of the dojo and its members. Everyone is subject to suggestions from these sources as well but whether we change to fit in or not all depends on how suggestible we, the individuals, are according to said beliefs, etc.
One of the most important concepts we take on in our philosophical studies of the dojo is, “ego” and “change,” because it come down to our ability to change, especially in the face of beliefs, standards, practices and expectations, etc.
The roots that open the way to success in applying principles and principle based methodologies is the acceptance of the true self that lies just under our ego and ego has some pretty strong chains ⛓️around our minds, thus bodies and our spirits.
Mull this over a while!
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