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Shoshinsha (Beginner’s Mind)

Kannon
I was reading a story about a Japanese Martial Arts Master Teacher who was 90 old. He was giving a lecture about his teacher’s ‘teachings’. He started to talk and said “I would like us students to find inspiration from our teachers.” Never did he speak of himself as being a Teacher or Master of martial arts, even at 90 years old, but rather he referred to himself as a student. A Master Teacher is one who has completed his life and therefore there is no time left to learn. The path of Martial Arts is an ongoing process of self introspection and physical training. I still train and talk to my teacher Mr.
Stephen K. Hayes and sometimes I visit his teacher in Japan Dr. Hatsumi. I have been studying with Mr. Hayes for a better part of 27 years. Mr. Hayes will still make adjustments to my Taijutsu and give pointers to direct my learning. Sometime in the last year I was training with Mr. Hayes in Kenjutsu and I was moving to try and gain a position to enter and cut. I started my attack and was cut before I was able to move, all I could think of was “how did he know I was going to cut?” Mr. Hayes then went on to explain the position of the mind kamae in relation to what was going on. He then made some small changes to my technique based on what I was doing wrong and we went on from there. I have to remind myself all the time of Shoshinsha – the beginner’s mind.
A thought:
The beginners mind represents a stage of innocence with respect to learning. It does not mean that a person is not skilled in martial arts but rather that a person accepts teachings and observes from the environment without preconceptions. When very young children explore the world they do not have ideas of what is wrong, right, stronger, weaker. They are simply learning without overriding reality. When we stray from this our thoughts can lead to significant misconceptions about reality as well as delusions about ourselves and our knowledge. In a true martial confrontation clarity of thought would have made the simple difference between life and death.
Hello all,
Mark thank you for reminding me of this important lesson.
Be well and Gassho,
Ken Savage
Mark,
Thank you for this insight. As a neuroscientist and university professor, I have always considered myself to be a perpetual student and life-long learner — never an expert. As a novice martial arts practitioner (first with Mr. Davis; now with Mr. Poliquin in Maine), I similarly embrace my role as a student and feel privileged to be able to pursue this tremendously comprehensive and dynamic martial art.
Hope all is well in Boston.
-Glenn Stevenson
Glenn,
Thank You for the post. Keep going ! See you soon.
Mark Davis