Smell the flowers, elevate your soul, and get really sweaty.
When Life Gives you Lemons, Build a Cathedral
What I learned about #art from #EmbracetheShake.
The History of the CCC and a Possible Future
The CCC was awesome. Could it be again?
Let it Pass my Children, Let it Pass
Featuring breenewsome
Combo Breakdown, Hill Climb #CABALFANG #WOD
Today’s workout - and links to preorder my new calisthenics book which is currently #2 at B&N. Price goes up June 1st.
It's Time to Start Expecting More
Time to raise the bar.
Saturday Special #CABALFANG #WOD
Riffing on a Fortune Cookie
It’s more than a cookie. It’s a conversation.
Pardon me While my Head Symbolically Explodes
Welcome to the Martial Mysteries
A Tarot Meditation on VII: The Chariot
Can you find seven lower Sephiroth?
Modern Knowledge: Martial Arts for Change
SLOW KICKS, MEDITATION
SLOW KICKS (100 ea. very slowly with perfect form, 5+ seconds per kick, 20 mins.); MEDITATION (15 mins.) * #cabalfang #WOD #hagakure
* If desired, try The #Hagakure #Meditation: Imagine that you are a tree, looking out at the world, which is obscured by your own leaves. Now picture your leaves falling away, each leaf an attachment, a need, obligation, or desire. As each leaf falls away your view of the world becomes more and more clear. Finally you are looking out past bare limbs. You have no attachments, no needs, no desires, and no obligations. Your view of the world is crystal clear and unclouded.
“Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily. Every day when one’s body and mind are at peace, one should meditate upon being ripped apart by arrows, rifles, spears and swords, being carried away by surging waves, being thrown into the midst of a great fire, being struck by lightning, being shaken to death by a great earthquake, falling from thousand-foot cliffs, dying of disease or committing seppuku at the death of one’s master. And every day without fail one should consider himself as dead. There is a saying of the elders’ that goes, "Step from under the eaves and you’re a dead man. Leave the gate and the enemy is waiting.” This is not a matter of being careful. It is to consider oneself as dead beforehand.“
~Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai
by Yamamoto Tsunetomo
Karma and Advanced Metaphysics
Thad from Disinfo provides new perspective on an ancient concept.