How To Use The Martial Arts To Read Minds
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Written by: Al Case
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Word Count: 513 |
Date: Fri, 7 May 2010 |
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The first time I ever read someones mind was in San Francisco. My wife and I were wandering through the stores in Chinatown, and we entered a shop where a grumpy faced old Chinese lady sat on a stool in a corner. As we peered at the goods, the grumpy one snapped at her daughter, "Look, look, look, everybody just look!"
Walking down the street after we left the shop, I looked at my wife, "Did you hear what that old lady said?" "How could I," my wife tilted her head in confusion. "I don't speak Chinese."
Speaking in Chinese, and I had heard her in English. In essence, I had read her mind and translated her thoughts into English. And I could do this, I instantly knew, because of the martial arts I had been studying.
The mind is like a big radio transmitter, but it transmits, and picks up, thoughts. The sad fact, however, is that the mind is always full of static. Children can usually read minds, but they outgrow the ability and don't even remember it when they are adults.
In the martial arts you use the discipline of the body to clear out the clutter and distractions. You do this by concentrating on perfecting the moves of your form. Eventually, the distractive static lessens, and the original ability to read minds is once again possible.
The problem, of course, is that the martial arts are so messed up that it is difficult to find a form, or series of forms, that work well anymore. Oddly, almost any form can work in this manner, if it is properly analyzed, and tweaked so that it is scientific and true. This normally takes a tremendous amount of work, occurring over decades, but the process can be speeded up if one learns the proper science.
Interestingly, the old religious classics of such arts as Tai Chi and other Wudang arts, speak of being child like in your approach to the world. I also saw mention of this concept in Buddhist works of Zen. The problem, of course, is that by the time one resurrects this ability one has become old.
Nevertheless, the old stories are true, the martial arts really do work, and in ways heightened far above fighting. Indeed, though the martial arts teach people how to defend themselves against attackers, abilities like reading minds are the real start. And the beginning of the start, for most people, is simply walking through the doors of that neighborhood training hall and learning a little Tae Kwon do or Hapkido or Shaolin.
About the Author
Al Case, 4O plus years studying martial arts, has written a free ebook which explains the Martial Technology for fixing the martial arts. It is available at his website, Monster Martial Arts.
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