New Amazon Service Eliminates Need for Authors

New Amazon Service Eliminates the Need for Authors – http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Smashwords/~3/3fiqnUmefFw/kindle-author-eliminates-need-for.html

“Each man must look to himself to teach

“Each man must look to himself to teach him the meaning of life. It is not something discovered: it is something molded.”#Exupery #quotes

The Golden Buddha

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A young monk in a Zen monastery, after many months of study and practice, is sitting in meditation when suddenly there appears before him a miraculous image: the Buddha, enshrined in golden light, hovers in the air and smiles down at him in silent blessing.

Overcome by the beauty of the image, and feeling blessed beyond measure, the student jumps up and runs to his master.

“Master, master! In a vision I have seen the golden Buddha!”

“There, there,” the master replied sympathetically. “Keep meditating. It will go away eventually.”

JUMP ROPE, WEAPONS #CABALFANG #WOD

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JUMP ROPE (5 rounds of 2:00/1:00, fast for 2:00, double jumps for 1:00); SECONDARY WEAPON (5 rounds of 2:00/1:00,  speed for 2:00, max power shots for 1:00) 30 mins total.

SATURDAY SPECIAL #WOD #CABALFANG

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*KNIFE POWER DRILL (Slash AHAYC for :30 standing, kneeling, prone, then rest. Repeat stabbing. Switch hands and cycle again. 8 min. total)
*SLOW KICKS (50 kicks each leg, very slowly, with your best form. Approx. 10 min.)
*HIIT (5 rounds of :30 each Fingertip Push-ups, Prisoner Squats, Full Stop Push-ups, Jump Squats, and rest. 10 min. total)
*ESCAPE PLAN HIIT (5 rounds of 1:00 each Shadowbox AHAYC, Sprint AFAYC, and Walk. 15 min. total)

SPEED & EXPLOSION #CABALFANG #WOD

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WEIGHTS (AMRAYC in 10 mins of 12 each Mil. Press, Hindu Squats, Curl-ups); SPIN KICK COMBOS (Set timer for 10 rounds of :30/:30. Spin kick combos; AFAYC for :30, rest :30, repeat, 10 mins total)

Learning from Fitness Standards circa 1941

Here are the physical fitness standards for U.S. soldiers circa 1941.  These are from the FM21-20 (which I’ve blogged about before).  Let’s look at these from the standpoint of a martial artist and see if we can perhaps learn a thing or two.

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From the FM21-20 Field Manual circa 1941

I realize this may look easy nowadays — during what I like to call ‘the age of Crossfit’ — but it’s important to keep a few things in mind.

Time and Expense: In 1941 we had 1.8 million soldiers in service.  By 1945 we had 12.2 million.  When you are trying to get 10.4 million soldiers in fighting shape, you have to do it quickly and cheaply.  Iron is for tanks, not barbells and dumbbells, there couldn’t be a personal trainer for every soldier, and so on.  This is a time and expense equation.  The goal was to achieve fighting fitness quickly and cheaply.

All is not what it seems: Lots of people can do twenty sloppy Push-ups.  But 20 Push-ups to cadence — which is down, hold, one, two, up, hold, one, two, etc.  — feels more like forty.  If you don’t believe me, give it a shot.

Attire matters: Sure, lots of people can cover 12 feet in a running Broad Jump.  But can you do it in stiff leather combat boots with hard rubber heels and leather soles with very little tread?

Safety: If you read the entire manual, there are no extreme exercises that entail more than minimal injury risk.  You can’t afford to lose soldiers to injuries.

The fitness standards address the absolute basics.  They ensure that soldiers have the ability to charge quickly into battle and speedily avoid danger (100 yard dash), the mobility to leap over battlefield obstacles (High Jump, Broad Jump), and the coordinated strength to manage body weight and complete basic tasks (Push-ups).

With all this in mind, take a moment to ask yourself a few questions:

  • Does your physical fitness regimen directly prepare you for what are actually trying to get done?
  • Are you ‘keeping it real’ in terms of both your monetary budget and your risk/reward investment?
  • Are you taking unnecessary risks in your training by doing extreme exercises that aren’t directly relevant to your activities?
  • Do you seem to be spending ever-increasing sums of money on training equipment that provide ever-diminishing returns?

Looking at this only makes me feel even better about what we are doing in Cabal Fang.  We practice outdoors and we wear street clothes.  We do calisthenics and other exercises that build functional strength for self-defense and real-world activities. And we do it cheap.

We’re not soldiers, and we don’t pretend to be.  But that doesn’t mean we can’t learn a thing or two from a martial arts manual that, if this world keeps on turning for another thousand years or so, may someday be on a par with other martial arts manuals like the Book of Han or The Zettel.

ANIMAL HIIT, SPLAY DRILL #CABALFANG #WOD

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ANIMAL HIIT (30 secs each of Alligator Walk, Mule Kicks, Octopus Walk, and rest. 6 rnds = 12 mins); SPLAY DRILL (Splay, pop up, hit Heavy Bag once, splay, up, hit twice, etc. up to ten punches. 7 full sets AFAYC, as few breaks as possible)

A Tarot Meditation on VII: The Chariot

VII_150320At the beginning of March I began working through Donald Kraig’s book Modern Magick: Twelve Lessons in the High Magickal Arts.  Part of the program is completing a daily Tarot Meditation.

As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve been a student of the Tarot since the 70s, and I’ve been meditating almost as long.  And I’ve meditated on Tarot cards before.  But it’s simply amazing the things you can find — even in terrain you think you’ve explored pretty darned well.

Last Friday I sat down to meditate on VII The Chariot.  I settled into meditation, taking note of the solar imagery and connecting that to the Solar Chariot myths found everywhere from Ancient Egypt to Denmark.  I relaxed and “sank into” the card.  Then, although I’ve looked at this card a million times in the last forty or so years, I noticed that the natural focal points of the image are seven in number.  That seemed curious and probably not coincidental.  Then, in my mind’s eye, I connected them with lines.

VII_Rev_150320The natural focal points on the card are the seven lowest Sephiroth, the ones just below the level of the Abyss.

The glowing square on the figure’s chest equates to the Sephira of Yesod, which is the vehicle through which all of the powers from the Sephiroth above are conveyed into the material world of Malkuth, which is the eight-pointed star on the figure’s forehead.  Note that the winged sun on the chariot itself equates to Tiphareth, the Christ point.  The figure can go nowhere without this power.

If you are familiar with the Qliphoth, the spheres are different.  And yet, to me at least, the overall message is strangely similar.

To me this card  symbolizes the maximum human attainment, the highest degree of achievement, the greatest victory short of attaining personal godhood.  But being upside down, it is also a warning.  It says that victory has its costs, difficulties and dangers.

 

“The modern hero-deed must be that of q

“The modern hero-deed must be that of questing to bring to light again the lost Atlantis of the co-ordinated soul.” #Campbell #quotes