Shin Gi Tai: Karate Training for Body, Mind, and Spirit
By (Author) Michael Clarke
YMAA Publication Center
YMAA Publication Center
9th December 2011
New edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
Philosophy of mind
613.7148
Paperback
296
Width 184mm, Height 238mm
549g
Honorable Mention Winner - Eric Hoffer Award Book of the Year Award Finalist - Foreword Magazine Winner - International Book AwardsWithin these pages, you will discover traditional karate; along the way, perhaps many of your own beliefs about karate will be confronted. You might have a body capable of mastering karate s physical techniques, but do you have a mind with a level of awareness that is able to grasp the true spirit of karateFor adults only. Regardless of how many people you can defeat in combat, the deeper aim of karate has always been to conquer your own ego, and by doing so, you increase the likelihood of avoiding conflict. When you can control your ego, you have a chance to establish peace in your life: this is the tradition of budo karate. Shin Gi Tai has a literal translation: mind technique body. A karate-ka s mind (shin) must be developed ahead of his technique (gi) if he is to discover a sense of balance within his body (tai). While the mental and physical aspects of karate are daunting and causes many to stop training, if you can just endure the early years, say - the first decade - then there is opportunity for real and lasting benefits. Budo is a concept more often discussed than put into practice, and yet, as part of traditional karate training, it has the capacity to dramatically change lives for the better, but only if you are prepared to move past the obvious and strive to understand the philosophy and the morality of budo. Your life is yours, your karate is yours, accept ownership of both and reap countless rewards.
"The spirit of karate is alive and well in Shin Gi Tai" -- Dr. Damon Young, from his forward "Aim high and train hard, go to the source of your karate, and seek its essence." -- Stan Schmidt, 8th dan, from his foreword "Michael Clarke re-introduces the traditional approach to karate training in a way that can be well understood." -- John Porta, Hanshi, 9th dan, from his forward
Michael Clarke, Kyoshi 7th dan, Okinawan Goju-ryu, has trained in karate since 1974. He has written over three hundred articles for international martial arts magazines and authored four books. A young 'street fighter' in England who became a disciplined student of budo in Okinawa, Clarke enthusiastically teaches traditional Goju-ryu Karate in his dojo in Launceston, Tasmania, Australia.