Embracing the Pain and Hard Work of Budo Zen Real Zen training sucks. Real budo training sucks. And that’s okay. In fact, that may be the point. Another fact: If your training, in budo or in Zen or in the combination of the two, doesn’t suck—at least some of the time—then you might not be training correctly. First, both disciplines suck because they require hard work, and this is especially so if you’re combining the two. Lots of hard work! And this isn’t something that should just be “passed over.” You need to embrace the pain, and embrace the hard work if you want to succeed, which is exactly, by the way, how it should be. If you’re going to succeed at budo, at Zen, or—even better—at both, then you need to understand this early on in your training, and you need to embrace it early. If you do, then something will happen that doesn’t suck : you will, in the end, succeed at your endeavors. There are a lot of zennists, and a lot of budoka, who don’t take
Essays on Old-School Strength Training, Classic Bodybuilding, Traditional Martial Arts, and Budo Philosophy