Notes on Practise — with Shkar Sharif
Why is it that martial arts training and spiritual practice so often lead into each other? On the surface, they seem completely opposed. One is physical, confrontational, rooted in pressure. The other is often associated with stillness, reflection, and inner work. But if you’ve spent any real time in either, you start to notice the same patterns emerging. In this episode, I explore the deeper connection between the two — not at the level of discipline or mindset, but at the level of perception, identity, and how we relate to reality itself. Martial arts training, when approached properly, exposes how you actually respond under pressure. It strips away the stories you tell about yourself and shows you what holds up when it matters. In a similar way, genuine spiritual practice works to remove distortion in how we perceive ourselves and the world. Over time, both paths begin to converge. We look at: * why the body is not just expressing understanding, but is the understanding * how perception changes through training * what happens to identity under pressure * the role of intent (Yi) and how it shapes the body * why control becomes a limitation, and responsiveness becomes the goal At a certain point, martial arts stops being about fighting, and spiritual practice stops being about ideas. Both become ways of refining perception and removing illusion — until what remains can respond directly to reality.
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