Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Tigers and Sheep

 


This is not new information, in fact, this has been taught and practiced by generations of martial artists from every nation and every culture for centuries. With the easy access of highly technical information available with the plethora of internet offerings, the sheep wearing tiger’s clothing seem to be multiplying. The tigers that read this will nod and smile in agreement; the sheep will hopefully gain some motivation to transition to a tiger. The sheep in tiger’s clothing will probably ignore this, get upset, and talk trash to all their little sheep buddies.  I don’t have much to add in the way of commentary – Tomoyose Sensei said all that needs to be said.

The following commentary is courtesy of Tomoyose Ryuko Sensei – Uechi Ryu.

“Sometimes karate training can be called training as a tiger or training as a sheep. If you train as a tiger — hard training and body conditioning — you can always train with tigers. Other tigers will also recognize you and you can train in peace with them. They know that when two tigers really fight that one will die of injuries today and the other will die of injuries tomorrow. Both will die, so they have nothing to prove.

If you train like a sheep — no contact and no two man conditioning — then you can only train with sheep. A tiger can train with tigers and he can also train with sheep. He just has to be careful not to hurt them. A sheep cannot train with tigers. Sheep see tigers as being very frightening and their conditioning, he says, will cause cancer. A sheep training with tigers will get eaten up.

Sometimes you see a sheep who sees the truth of tiger training and changes. In reality this sheep was actually a tiger in sheep’s clothing waiting to come out.

Watch people training. Look at how they act and how they behave. A tiger can be like a little kitty but dangerous even though he is friendly. They are quiet and watch everything. They listen and watch. They know who they are and they have nothing to prove — they are at peace.

Sheep, on the other hand, make all kinds of noises and demand to be heard. They run around and seem to crave attention. They are easily hurt and easily scared. They always group together for their own protection. When danger approaches they look towards the group for protection because they cannot defend themselves. They are easy prey for the tigers — whether it is one sheep or several, sheep are still sheep.”

-Tomoyose Ryuko, Hanshi/Uechi Ryu

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