Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Evolution of the Martial Arts

In the beginning, martial arts were promoted as the way of life, bushido, the way of the warrior. However, there were few people who wanted to be warriors and even fewer who were willing to do what it took to become a warrior. This was not a problem until modern times when martial art schools become businesses. To be profitable, the martial art businesses needed to attract more students.

Since there was not much demand for schools that taught warriors, martial art schools, in an effort to attract students, started promoting themselves as “secret” fighting arts that were known only to a few masters. They promoted themselves as manly fighting arts that boys could use to builEdit Postsd themselves physically so they could stop bullies from bothering them or their girl friends. When meditation and yoga became popular, martial arts promoted their relaxation aspects and how they promoted peace though personal fulfillment. The “kung-phooey” movie craze led to martial art schools concentrating on oriental weapons and fancy useless techniques. When aerobics became popular, martial art schools promoted their aerobic benefits and offered such things as kickboxing and boxer-cize. The Teenage Mutant Turtles got more children interested in the martial arts, so schools concentrated on teaching children. They began watering down the martial arts to please parents who did not want to teach their children violence. For example, students no longer learned fighting stances; they learned sparring stances.

Since their inceptions, the martial arts have gone from being fighting systems that taught you how to kill with your empty hands to the point that they now are being promoted as being nonviolent children sports. Why have these changes taken place? Has it been a logical growth path for fighting systems? I say—no! It has been because some people with an interest in the martial arts wanted to make money from the martial arts, so they kept reinventing them to fit the prevailing mores so they could attract more students, not to teach them true martial arts, but to make more money.

Nowadays, most of the martial arts have little or nothing to do with fighting or self-defense, they are martial art related sports for children designed to attract socially conscious parents. They only have adult programs to accommodate the children when they get older and to attract adults who want to stay fit using the latest “in” system. ]

Nowadays, you will have to search long and hard to find a modern martial art that is anywhere near being a real martial art. While there is still little demand for warriors, there is a need a need for people with warrior spirits and there are basically only two places to get that—the military and the martial arts.

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