Subduction Zone
Veteran Member
That is because they drank the Kool-Aid. You are merely pedaling woo and not seeing that there can be some real life value to that woo. I think that my usage is much closer to the "true meaning" of ki since it works. Woo, not so muchha ha ha...you 'understand' nothing!
No one else in the Eastern arts seems to think of chi that way. Yours is a sterile, mechanistic reductionist's view of chi or qi, the life force. You want to eviscerate it of its true meaning, and define it only in terms of a particular application:
"The existence of electromagnetic fields around every object in the world - known as an Aura - is a scientifically proven fact. The Chinese refer to this energy as 'Chi' (pronounced Chee), the vital life force energy of the Universe, present within every living thing. "
Chi, Universal Life Force Energy, Aura, Chakras, Meridians.
It is obvious that you have seized the opportunity here to publicize your 'expertise' in the martial arts for egotistic gratification, something a real martial artist would never ever do. The original point of the discussion was only about the hara being a center of consciousness. You have taken that and run with it to suit your own agenda, which is 'look how great a martial artist I am'. Keep entertaining that myth and someday the unexpected attack from your opponent may be a devastating one, as your attention will have been misplaced in that one critical moment. The ego is an obstacle every martial artist must overcome if he is to make real progress.
Story:
A young archer in a village contest kept hitting the bullseye one after another. Afterward, an elderly archer asked if he would accompany him to a spot within a nearby forest. Reaching an area where a log traversed a very steep ravine with rapids below, the elderly man walked onto the log over the center of the ravine, and took a shot at a specified target on the other side, hitting it squarely. Returning to shore, he told the young man, 'Now you try it", at which the young archer began to step onto the log, but soon began to tremble in fear. He could not steady himself enough to get off a shot, and returned to the shore. The old man then said: "The problem with you is that you have one eye on the path and one eye on the goal, instead of both eyes on the path"
That is why that there are members of my styles of fighting that made the crossover into Mixed Martial Arts. And yet there are no practitioners from aikido that seem to have been able to make the jump.
Amusing anecdotes are not evidence. Perhaps you should try and see if there are any reliable sources that support your beliefs.