There is this thing called The Way, or The Perfect Art, or The True Art. Oddly, though it is a concept that everybody has a knowledge of, there has never been a real definition for it. Until this article was written.
After all, if there is a definition for The True Art, it will make it that much easier to attain. It is always much easier to find something if you know where it is, or, in this case, what it is. Thus, I offer this article as a definition, and hope that it will speed up your progress to The True Art.
One of the first definitive things I ever hard concerning attaining The True Art was that it can?t be heard. I found this interesting, because while it provided proper instruction in the case of developing an Aikido shoulder roll, it didn?t necessarily hold true in the case of spirit shout, or Kiai. However, I eventually realized that placing the foot firmly without causing excessive sound provided for a purer transmission of energy from and to the ground, and thus was somewhat true, and I was on The Way.
Another definition I came across during my studies was that The True Art cannot be felt. For years I struggled with this concept, working my way through such ideas as Economy of Motion, the most gained for the least effort. Finally I realized that the concept of Do nothing until nothing is left undone, which was written in the Tao, was an attainable.
A tough concept for me to come to grips with was that The True Art could not be seen. This was summed up by one person I met through the oblique statement that energy is invisible. But, with enough practice, you do start to move in a different time frame than non-martial artists, the practice of the martial arts does establish a different universe that does coincide, yet be superior to, the universe in which we all live.
Finally, there is my personal method for encouraging people on this subject of defining The Path of The True Art. I advise students that The True Art is like a wobbling wheel, the less wobble, the more True it is. Thus, through the marriage of physics and our bodies, real time physics can be applied to the measurement and analysis of our motions.
Now, thus far, we have a definition that can?t be heard, felt or seen, but can, after a fashion, be measured. Combine that with the definition of God (that which cannot be named), or the definition of chi (it is everything and everywhere, but it cannot be seen), and we have something that is real in the abstract, and which can be measured. And, thus, we have a definition of The True Art.
In the end, having measured ourselves and sought perfection, we achieve The True Art. The question is how long is it going to take? The measuring methods of ancient cultures often take on the form of mysticism, and so tend to obfuscate as much as enlighten. However, through the religion of physics we can forge our own path, and this path can, indeed, be a speedy path.