gaze
14 09 2006
“It is crucial not to fix your eyes on one place,” states Kadensho, the Hereditary Book of the Martial Arts, by Yagyu Tajimanokami Muenori (1571-1647). His essential advice for martial artists is also true for spiritual seekers. It describes a certain state of mind.
“In judging your opponent’s reaction to the trap you set for him, see him without looking at him; that is, do not fix your eyes on one place. Keep your eyes in motion all the time, and catch glimpses between each movement.”
I have been reading stuff like this for years. It sounds great, but what does it mean in practical terms? There are people in everyday life who possess a degree of understanding about this. A dedicated martial artist comes to understand it, and to realize it. Boxers know this, as do world class tennis players. They hardly think about the game - it is coming too fast. They go into a zone.
Here is what this saying means to me: learn to gaze when I look at someone or something. Because the thing I am looking for, the thing I am wanting to connect more deeply with is ‘in between’ movement, in between words, in between right and wrong. It can be found in a gaze, and in a feeling. Stop thinking so much. It is in the middle, in the center… a place I am unaccustomed to looking at and dwelling in.
Tabata, Kazumi. Secret Tactics. Tuttle: North Clarendon. 2003. (6)
Photo credit: Gaze, by Manuel Librodo 
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Categories : centering, martial arts


