13/04/2020
I've had a lifelong interest in practicing the martial arts, inspired initially like millions of others while watching the TV series Kung Fu, starring David Carradine. However many different styles of martial arts I tried, they always came across as shallow, focussing on physical techniques. Most martial arts centres now gain their revenue from teaching after school kids classes, or ultra violent mma styles. Many martial arts schools are even franchised. More recently as a Psychologist, I've been introduced to several forms of westernised mindfulness practices ( MBSR, MBCT, MBCBT), which all claim to strip away away the cultural baggage of buddhism to apply a scientifically tested version of the essence / active ingredient. When you think about it, the process is very similar to pharmaceutical companies that take a plant, and extract the most active ingredient, test it, patent it, and sell it. As the recent book, McMindfulness sheds light on the capitalistic, and corporatisation of buddhist principles, it occurs to me that this has also happened not surprisingly in yoga.
Ironically Bruce Lee was supposed to be cast in the Kung Fu Tv series, but the networks didnt want an asian actor playing the role.
My realisation is this : you cannot reduce these practices, yoga, buddhism, martial arts, to essences. Buddhism, yoga and traditional martial arts have strong ethical components to their practices, without which the benefits of practice will be unsustained, and will not lead to personal growth.
It is no accident that practices of meditation and mindfulness have become so ubiquitous in our neoliberal times.