There is a memorization requirement in the Cabal Fang Hermit Path Distance Learning Program. People sometimes ask me what it’s for, kind of the way kids ask their teachers why they have to learn about history when they can just google it. So I made the video below.
By the way, my Patreon supporters got it 30 days ago. If you’d like access to my stuff when it’s hot off the presses, consider sponsoring me for as little as $1/month.
We really want to the temple to be attractive to the general public. So go straight to the bottom of this page and vote in the temple paint job poll. You made time to take the “Which Jedi are you?” poll on Facebook, right? So make time for ours, willya?
Set a goal
Stop futzing around — do you want to get somewhere or not? Get yourself a planner, set some goals, and start making a plan to achieve them. Need help? Become a Patreon supporter and you’ll get access to my organizational method — a 20 -minute how-two video, a action plan worksheet, and detailed instructions. Click here. Why should you care about my method? It’s been perfected over 30 years and it’s what’s allowed me to get so much done. My resume here.
There are only so many hours in the day. Keep your martial arts training focused. The Master says, “To find water, dig one well.”
This gets even more important with age. The older you get, the shorter, more intense, and more focused your training needs to become. As recovery times slow, trade volume for intensity to maintain performance. Work harder and rest more.
As the 60+ bike riding phenom Ned Overend says, “Training with an emphasis on high-intensity intervals has been my preferred method of preparing for races throughout my career. I’ve learned that by reducing volume, I’m more rested for high-intensity sessions, and by being rested I can push myself harder during the intervals.” (read more here)
And with all this in mind…
Training Involution #111
Tune up. Remember doubling down? I still recommend that once in a while. But today, do the opposite. Instead of doubling a lackluster training session to break through a plateau or stretch a limit, pick something you crushed — something that seemed rather easy — and make it harder by removing the dead wood or increasing the intensity. Don’t lengthen it, tighten it. Put it in a pressure cooker. Example One: Let’s say this month’s constitutional is easy for you. Try this — drop the two easiest exercises and see if you can cut your time by at least 33%. Example Two: Let’s say you did Wrestling Conditioner #4 and just wasn’t that hard. Try adding a #10 weighted vest.
Update 7/2/18: A Teaching Moment Regarding Sacred Symbolism
I decided the cathedral front was a horrible idea. What would it mean symbolically for the temple to have a fake front? Wow. Catastrophically bad idea, right? So let’s talk about symbolism…
Andrew posted what he thinks are the best symbolic colors for the temple in the comments section below which I will summarize now and add some additional correspondences. He suggests red walls, yellow trim around the windows, blue trim around the doors, and purple eaves or overhangs.
Red symbolizes the planet Mars (named after the god of war), strength, Geburah, and the number 5 — as in the Five Vital Graces of Cabal Fang. Also red is a warning that dangerous things are inside. It screams to wake up and pay attention.
The yellow trim around the windows symbolizes the solar light that emerges from within. Enlightenment is sought, and realizations are apprehended, inside these walls and its light shines outward.
The blue trim around the door suggests that one must enter forthrightly being mindful of justice and mercy — blue is the color of Chesed, associated with the planet Jupiter.
And the purple eaves or overhangs suggest that psychic gifts of the higher mind overshadow all of the work that goes on within. Purple is the color of nobility, of carrying oneself in a manner others can look up to. Purple is the color of Yesod, and suggests therefore that we should be good communicators between the higher realms of the ideal and physical practical realm.
We aren’t redoing the inside at this time, but Andrew mentions that, although black and white checkerboard is the obvious flooring choice, geometric patterns can interfere with natural movement. The last thing you’d want in a temple of martial arts would be something that encourages movement to a grid instead of movement to the situation.
Symbolism matters. Even when people don’t intellectually know the planetary and Qabalistic associations they still react to colors viscerally. There is a subconscious effect. Don’t believe me? What would it mean if we painted the temple red, white and blue? What if we painted it all grey? All black? Catch my drift?
Based on the above, I’d like to do an artists rendering. But right now I have to go out to the Temple and train. More to come…
Update 6/24/18:A Cathedral Front? A friend of mine has some very insightful thoughts about which colors would be perfect for the temple, and he’ll be posting in the comments soon. In addition, I came up with this completely insane idea: what if, instead of just a coat of paint, we added a false front and a cupola to the temple and made it look like a mini-cathedral? It would one heck of a project, but the temple would be beautiful. And beautiful things are inspiring.
So I did this little before and after sketch. What do you think?
Original post from 6/20/18
The Cabal Fang Temple needs a paint job, and we’d like your input. Please vote in the poll below!
On June 13th, 2018, on behalf of Cabal Fang Temple, I presented a 1 hour talk entitled, “The Perennial Wisdom: Sacred Truths of the Ages.” The lecture was held at Tuckahoe Public Library in Henrico, VA at 7 PM.
Follow the link below to watch the video in two parts.
June’s martial focus is Wrestling and the spiritual focus is the Hourglass. I hope you’re ready, because I think this week’s involution is going to push you past your perceived limits — inside and out!
Bagged: Training Involution #110
Heavy Bag Wrestling Half Pyramid (video below). Put a heavy bag on your mat (or on a tarp out on the grass if you have no mat). Get underneath your bag and and complete 1 of each: Shrimp, Buck, Reverse, Circle, and pop up into Shin Ride. Then do 2 of each, 3 of each, 4, etc. up to 10 of each — that’s a total of 55 each. Take as few 12-count breaks as you need to finish as fast as you can. Finishing this with proper form is admirable. In under 20 mins is solid, under 15 is good, and anybody who gets it done in under 10 mins is a beast.
CR20E — Object Run. Run for 20 minutes while carrying an object in one hand, such as a water bottle, walking stick, dumbbell, etc.
Draw and explore the hourglass. Sit down with your training journal and a pen. Draw an hourglass — nothing fancy, just a quick sketch. Then, as you sit and look at your drawing, list the first ten words that come to mind. When you’re done, have an honest conversation with yourself regarding the drawing and the words you wrote. Psychoanalyze yourself. What did you learn about yourself from this exercise? What did you learn about the hourglass symbol? Record everything in your training journal of course.
This is a play on the famous sub shop chain logo. Get it?
I’m celebrating my 20th wedding anniversary, so this week’s T.I. is going to be a call-back to a year ago today.
But first, here’s a medley of miscellany and whatnots.
I just had a birthday. On the right is a picture of the hilarious t-shirt my wife gave me (right).
We managed to accumulate a busted washing machine, a busted generator, 35 gals of crushed aluminum cans and some scrap steel to recycle — all to benefit the temple. Can you believe all we got was $20.20? It looks like they coded everything as misc ferrous scrap. But you know that generator core had 5 or 10 lbs of copper wire in it, and the washer motor almost as much. Didn’t think of that until after we left. Next time I’ll rip out the motors and demand separate weights. Should’ve gotten $75 at least.
And now for your 12-month-old flashback…
Cabal Fang Workout of the Week #60 Training Involution #109
Boxing HIIT for Accuracy: Setup a slip ball and a heavy bag so that you can switch between the two. Set timer for 1:00 rounds and complete 20 of them, alternating between ball and bag. On the heavy bag rounds, focus on hitting precise targets on the bag. Put a few “Xs” on the bag with medical tape if your bag doesn’t have dots or targets. On the slip ball rounds, focus on executing perfect and crisp pops and slips. Muddy movements are easy for opponents to read! When done, cool down by walking it off for 3 minutes.
Writing exercise. Get out your training journal and write 100 words minimum about quality. What does quality mean to you? Have there been times in your life when you have and have not done quality work? Compare, contrast and explore.
“Lightning hits! Quality! Virtue! Dharma! That is what the Sophists were teaching! Not ethical relativism. Not pristine “virtue.” But aretê. Excellence. Dharma! Before the Church of Reason. Before substance. Before form. Before mind and matter. Before dialectic itself. Quality had been absolute. Those first teachers of the Western world were teaching Quality, and the medium they had chosen was that of rhetoric.”
~Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
After roughly 3 weeks and four weigh-ins, here are my digits and a little graph. As I said before, it defies logic and science that a human being could add this much muscle and shed this much fat in so short a time. I can only assume that body fat calipers are really inaccurate and/or that my carb-starved muscles are pumping up, tightening skin, and skewing the fat calipers.
If you want to try the IIFYM thing, check out their website and my first post here.
May’s Cabal Fang concentrations were Wrestling and the Hourglass. But since we gave over one session to a member trial and were several times forced by rain into doing stand-up work inside the park shelter, we decided to carry over both concentrations for another month.
It’s really difficult to wrestle in the pouring rain. We did it once and it was actually really fun. It’s the wet gear and drive home that stinks.
So it’s still Wrestling Month and we’re still focusing on the Hourglass symbol (see Chapter 9 in Cabal Fang: Complete Martial Arts Study Course from Querent to Elder). But just because our martial focus is the same, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t keep your non-wrestling skills sharp. So…
Hermetic Warrior: Training Involution #108
As many kicks as you can in 20 minutes. Count them, log them in your training journal, and next time you work the drill beat your number. If it’s not in your training journal it didn’t happen.
Weapon half pyramid to failure. I used my cane but you work with a non-lethal version of your chosen EDC (wooden knife or training folder, rubber gun, flashlight, tactical pen, etc.). Perform 1 of each exercise, then 2 of each, then 3, etc. See how high you can “climb” before you have to take a break longer than a 12-count. Jackknifes, Get-ups, Side Lunges and Push-ups. Attack while you move whenever possible and don’t drop or put down your weapon for the duration. Better figure out those Push-ups during training — do them with one hand in a fist, wrist bent, etc. — or risk getting stuck with no answer in a self-defense situation.
Learn a little about Hermeticism. Watch the video below. My Patreon supporters got it last month by the way.
I teach free of charge through Heritage Arts , a 501(c)(3) educational charity offering free or donation-only classes related to martial arts, fitness, outdoor skills, and spiritual development. Distance learning programs available. Visit the Heritage Arts website to find out more, or click here to join the Heritage Self-Defense group on Facebook.
What is Heritage Rough ‘n’ Tumble? It’s mind-body-spirit form of American Rough ‘n’ Tumble, which began as a manner of no-holds-barred fighting in the Southern Virginia backcountry during the Colonial Era and has since grown, evolved, and adapted to the realities of modern self-defense. An amalgam of the varying techniques brought to America by colonists from all over the world, blended with the fighting methods of the over 900 distinct indigenous tribes, American Rough ‘n’ Tumble is perhaps the world’s most fearsome martial art.
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