Meiyo is one of the cornerstones of
Bushido, which is the code by which Japanese warriors lived. As of late I have been
looking at the 8 tenants of Bushido and really seeing the connection to Karate
and the practice of the fighting arts, and more so how modern training and
traditions (I am looking at you MMA) is devoid of these tenants and actually how
many modern Martial artist are not taught these, or don’t exhibit them in their
daily lives.
Funakoshi
Sensei is famous for saying “Dojo nomino Karate to Omou na” or “Karate goes
beyond the Dojo> This means that Karate and the behavior of the artists that
train in the Dojo must go outside of the dojo. The honor, respect and
traditions must seep into your daily lives. This is why we get upset when
students misbehave outside of the Dojo as much as we do when they act poorly
inside the club.
It
is equally as disgusting when you see instructors use their “powers” or “position”
to do things that they should not be, or act ways that they should not be
acting. I hate when people don’t own their misbehavior and or have excuses
built in for their poor behavior. Some will look at the behavior and say “well that’s
just Don” or “that’s just his way”. No, its not….Don is a jerk (not all Dons, just that done…you know
the one acting like a jerk).
The
laws of Bushido were the “unwritten” kind for many years. The Nobility sort of
knew what was expected of them and they behaved as nobility would, to extremes
sometimes mind you but hey that’s nobility for you (See built in excuses). When Bushi finally started to write out the virtues
and discuss them in training they came up with several “Ideals” of what they
needed use to affect how the powerful were acting to both keep the peace and
also bring a certain responsibility to the noble warriors.
The
virtues that were put forwards in the end all of them were geared towards behavior
and how a warrior must conduct themselves. All of them are still pertinent and
should be adheared to by Martial arts students and instructors and used as a
guide for selecting Uchi Deshi and general students. Some are harder to gage in
others, but things you have to think about in yourself.
Meiyo
or Honor is a very personal thing and reflects directly on the individual but
also their club and instructors. How one carries themselves, reacts and
interacts with others are all reflections of the persons character. Honor is
one of those things that is judged by many
who interact with you but true honor is only owing to one judge, the
self. How you do things, how you treat others, how you behave are all part of
Meiyo and reflect your true inner character.
Webster’s
Dictionary defines Honor as “A keen sense of ethical conduct: Integrity”. Honor
and integrity are closely connected. Honor is one of those things that can be
faked. I have met a lot of people that laced integrity or Honor as they told
lies or found excuses for their actions and hid behind them not wanting to tell
the truth. They lacked honor and were cowardly.
Personally I have had to apologize for my actions in the past, but I own
them. I feel that this is my way of expressing my honor. I have made big
mistakes, honest mistakes and when I found out about them….if I felt that I was
wrong…I issued an immediate apology. Others will push past mistakes, blame
others, lie and deceive themselves to avoid taking ownership of their issues.
This is a total lack of honor!
As
a martial artist I have accidently hurt other people, or inadvertently done
something that harmed someone, like trying a Shiho nage on a friends kid as a “Funny
thing” and hurt their shoulder. I was showing off a bit and hurt him. I immediately
felt bad and apologized a for the injury (it was minor but I was very upset with
myself). However I also use the Shinai and sometimes a Bokken to correct people
and on occasion I will swat someone’s butt with it if they are not fast enough,
or inadvertently nick them with the stick. I have never hit anyone hard enough
to leave a mark as that is not the point of correcting with these. The one time
someone complained about it to me (through someone else) I apologized that they
felt that way, explained my thinking and then said to the person I will
continue to do this however as it is part of teaching Karate! I have the
integrity to admit that it may have shocked or upset someone, but equally I
have the integrity to let them know its not about to change.
Meiyo
is personal to an extent. Only you should internally judge yourself, when
others judge your honor it is false for the majority of the time. They are
judging your actions externally and most of the time they don’t know what is
going on in your head, why you reacted that way on that specific occasion, they
are judging the act not you and confusing the two.
Honor
is one of those things that you should strive to correct, forge, polish and reinforce
as often as you can. Its about learning how to treat others, how to react
properly and how to live your life morally and with integrity both inside and
outside of the Dojo.
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