They were uttered by Bruce Lee; still the most famous martial artist in the world, more than 50 years after he died.
Image courtesy of ESPN
They’re hard words to wrap your mind around, because they represent simplicity dotted with unlimited profundity.
Water is fluid. It always finds a way.
Water is as gentle as a soft, summer ocean breeze, yet summons the power of a Tsunami at will.
An unstoppable force with the calm, Zen power of the infinite.
Who hasn’t stared at a horizon-line, lost in wonder?
Pacific Ocean, looking West, July 2024
Water is also tumultuous.
(Surfing is a hard freaking sport.)
To be malleable, flexible, strong, determined, but also soft and patient?
A very hard skill-set to develop.
I’m trying to Be Water.
And I’ve inadvertently modeled my life after Bruce Lee. (Minus the global fame and insane good looks.)
Completely by happenstance, the small Wing Chun Kung Fu program I stumbled upon in 2013, here in Taos, came from the Hawkins Cheung lineage.
Hawkins is mentioned at the beginning of “Be Water,” the excellent 2020 ESPN documentary, because he was Bruce Lee’s training partner and best friend, growing up in Hong Kong.
Courtesy of ESPN
Hawkins brought his Kung Fu to LA in the 70’s, and taught a bunch of roughnecks, including Phil Romero, who brought it to New Mexico.
Hawkins Cheung. Image courtesy of Chinese Martial Studies.com
Hawkins stuck to Wing Chun, but Bruce Lee evolved beyond the limits of his Kung Fu.
Because traditional styles restrain how a body can move.
It’s more-or-less a precursor to modern MMA, including explosive movements from many arts.
I never planned to evolve beyond Wing Chun, but my former mentor and training partner, Dave Duran, asked me to do some Western Boxing one day, to expand our exercises.
Dave in Kit Carson Park, 2021
He was the lead bouncer at the Alley Cantina, a rough bar on Taos Plaza, and had gotten hit in the head by a boxer during a skirmish.
(Which he quickly won. Dave was a beast.)
As much as he preferred to stick to the Wing Chun script, he also understood reality.
Limiting movement, and ideas, limiting creative flow, doesn’t work.
Water always finds a way.
When Dave died of Covid in 2022, I inherited his martial arts belongings, including a library.
There was a Jeet Kune Do book, by one of Dan Inosanto’s senior students: Paul Vunak.
I loved what he wrote.
It made sense to me, and was a model for how I’d trained with Dave. For how I’d like to train going forward.
I googled Paul Vunak, and his program at the time, Progressive Fighting Systems.
Contemporary Jeet Kune Do. (Which includes full grappling arts.)
There was a Senior Instructor listed in Northern New Mexico: Lawrence Garcia.
I looked him up.
Now my Sifu, Lawrence Garcia is the second most dangerous man in New Mexico.
(After Jon Jones.)
Sifu Lawrence with UFC GOAT Jon Jones, January 2025
Sifu has trained since childhood, and is also a black belt in Japanese, Korean, and Brazilian martial arts.
He’s an expert with knifes, swords, bow & arrows and firearms, in addition to less-well-known Japanese weapons like the Tonfa.
Sunshine and Olly is evolving, and hopes to inspire community. So if you have thoughts, feel free to reach out at jonathanblaustein@gmail.com
One response to “Be Water”
stanco55b
Whenever I pass a crowded dojo, I still get the insane (and thankfully brief) desire to enter and proclaim Bruce Lee’s immortal line when he entered an opponent’s crowded dojo…
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