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The State of Total Inner Calmness

Karate practice develops body, spirit and fighting abilities. Since these three aspects of education are closely connected in the kata, kata training allows progress in all of them. This kind of learning is a real pleasure and can be a never-ending one.

In the Edo period (17th to 19th century) the samurai of the Nabeshima fief on Kyūshū Island (now Saga prefecture) were educated on the basis of the famous warrior code Hagakure12. The first rule a samurai had to follow was about his attitude towards aging. This rule demanded that learning and practicing should never end. No matter which level of abilities a samurai may have reached, how high in the hierarchy he might be, there is no reason for conceit, no reason to stop learning and improving oneself. 13

Those who learn only in order to win over others, to be better and stronger than others, are people who in fact learn for others. This is not the right way. A real master follows his way by continuously trying day by day, all his life, to improve himself. If one does not practice karate with joy so that nothing can stop oneself whatever people might say, this cannot be called true karate. Only if one enjoys practicing karate for oneself, not for others, if one cannot stop even if one would like to, one will experience karate as an endless path and reach a state of total concentration and inner silence.

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