Jiu-jitsu for me is the lens I use to see and interpret combat and, by extension, life. That is why I choose to see it as a complete martial art first and as a sport second. So why compete at all?
When I am a student in a martial arts class, I am not competing with my training partners. My will to win barely exists in that context. The dials are all turned down, most of the time at least. I go for things chiefly because I want to discover their flaws and how I can fix them. My aim is simple:
Perfect technique – Perfect timing and weight distribution – Perfect spirit.
When I compete, however, I live in the now and I wear my heart on my sleeve. When I take on the role of an athlete, as opposed to that of a coach, instructor or training partner, there is no diplomacy. No middle grounds.
When I win, I feel amazing! I raise my arms and shout as my happiness and endorphins rush through my veins.
When I lose, I always feel like burning my gis. I don’t want to talk to anyone. I don’t want to watch any matches. I don’t even want to be in the competition venue any more.
Win or lose, however, I always feel like parts of both me and of my competitor have died and melted into the tatami, into the arena and down to the core of the Earth.
Adult life can often be too tame and full of the necessary masks of civilisation. True genuine moments exist, of course: When I share a deep laugh over an inside joke with a loved one. When I finally get “too-cool-for-school” students to understand how to tackle a mathematical problem (or at least care enough to engage with it in the first place!). Rare moments, where the masks fall off.
Likewise, you will occasionally come across the downhill spiral when you don’t get what you were hoping for. When we suddenly have to deal with loss, rejection or “failure”. One-way ticket to “The Zone of Self-Pity”. We’ve all been there.
But we remind ourselves that we are adults. We keep up the mask. We soldier on.
The thing is…
We need to feel.
We are not machines, nor are we meant to be.
We live in a society today where, for whatever reason, we are discouraged from feeling too much –
Don’t get too excited either way and, for God’s sake, don’t overshare! It’s best to remain all zen and neutral. I appreciate that. I respect that and, as a Buddhist, I get how inner-peace-inducing all that is.
As a child I was incurably diplomatic and not to mention afraid of conflict. Maybe it’s growing with parents going through that treacherous time before the separation (which, luckily, came later when I was an adult!). I grew up carefully crafting my words, not wanting to tip over any carts or step on any toes.
This is why I am eternally grateful for the Martial Arts for, frankly speaking, forcing me take a chance on myself.
I took a risk to step into my first dojo. I took a risk to do my first grading and finally took a huge risk to step onto the competition mat.
The Martial Arts, specifically the sportive side, forced me to take the risk to feel.
When I look back over my twenties and thirties, pure (non-combative) sports never truly appealed to me. Sure, I enjoyed playing them with friends, but I never felt victory in winning nor defeat in losing. Instead, it is through competition in Martial Arts where I allowed myself to feel the most.
Nowhere else are you as alone as when you stand facing an opponent on the tatami. The world outside the 4-lines comes to a true standstill and while no one remembers their matches in their entirety, every match will have its one or two intense moments that are forever etched on our souls.
And it was in those moments, when I took the chance to do something I was afraid to do, that I felt the most intense joy and despair. No middle ground. Strong spirits clashing.
That is why I compete.
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ZHOO ZHITSU IS FOR EVERYONE!
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Beautifully written and poignant. You captured my feelings and I'm sure the feelings of many martial artists wonderfully. Especially loved the commentary on how we have to act civilised in society despite not being designed that way as humans. Much love bro
ReplyDeleteMuch love brother. Many thanks for the kind words. There's the dichotomy again: Kind words from a savage!
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