
Nico wrote:slightly off-topic, but martial arts idea got into my head a few times lately. More to practise some skills of awareness and focus than fighting off people.
Trouble is,I wear glasses and can't see who to hit without them, and my backflip salto mortale has become a bit rusty over the years also.
Do you have any advice about what a near sided middle aged druid could practise?

Corwen wrote:Nico wrote:slightly off-topic, but martial arts idea got into my head a few times lately. More to practise some skills of awareness and focus than fighting off people.
Trouble is,I wear glasses and can't see who to hit without them, and my backflip salto mortale has become a bit rusty over the years also.
Do you have any advice about what a near sided middle aged druid could practise?
running away?
Aoife wrote:Perhaps I should explain more clearly.
I am not a druid yet. I'm still researching it and it seems like this is the path I would like to follow but I admit that pacifism conflicts with my nature when it comes to danger, however rare it may be.
Aoife wrote:I know druids like to practice a reverence for all life regardless of form but I was wondering how they feel about self-defense or coming to the rescue of others? Not a desirable situation to be sure but I thought I'd ask. I practice kung-fu so I was wondering about that.
“For myself, I cannot say that I espouse Total or Absolute Pacifism (opposition to all killing and violence of any kind), because I believe that if, for example, I found my family (or anyone) being attacked by a madman with a gun, I would hope I could disable him before he did any harm. Likewise with the fight against Nazism, I believe if I had been alive at the time of that awful struggle, I would have supported the war effort, though I would have tried to be involved in a non-violent way such as analysing intelligence rather than fighting . But I do believe that violence and aggression, not used in cases of necessary self-defence or protection of others, is morally wrong, and pragmatically it rarely solves problems, and instead usually exacerbates them."
reilz81 wrote:nico you should practise blindfolded to enhance your other senses so it is unneccasary to have your glasses at all if you were in a fight and felt you were at a disadvantage you could always make it more fare by taking out the lights or the old dirt in the eyes works well
Aoife wrote:I know druids like to practice a reverence for all life regardless of form but I was wondering how they feel about self-defense or coming to the rescue of others? Not a desirable situation to be sure but I thought I'd ask. I practice kung-fu so I was wondering about that.

Seminar. September 2010: African Druids Sangomas, Inyangas http://www.druidry.org/board/dhp/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=36777
Seminar. October 2012: Druids & Bushcraft http://www.druidry.org/board/dhp/viewtopic.php?f=326&t=41256Dathi wrote:Greetings,
I thought this was very "Druidic"!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNhciE5WzaI
Dathi
Seriously.. I got violated a few times on the street and certainly alot verbally. And I strike back! Druidry for me learned how about not to be too agressive but also to stand up for my own rights. And offcourse the more spiritual side. I used to do Aikodo and Wing chun Kung Fu, now I practice Ninpo (ninjutsu form) and Wing Chun. I feel at ease, I still look fat, I am lean, and I am not that easily out of balance anymore (but it is a daily practice that eventually fails at times) I will not say that all this made me a fighter, far from it, but I know how to deal with most violence actions within a few moves. The ninpo part I do is from Genbukan , and I can honestly say that the spiritual side of this martial arts goes alot deeper then expected. Then again: it should always be like that no? Have some spiritual guidance in this traditional arts.

I08; 2010 BS, SB; 2011 IL; 2011 BS
Speakers Corner, 2011
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