We know little about the origins of the Ninja, the ‘children of darkness’: mysterious shadow warriors who kept their eerie secret in the mist-shrouded mountains of Japan’s Iga and Koga provinces around 900 AD, practicing the arts of stealth and invisibility. . Legends, however, speak of the Ninja warrior’s supposed descent from the tengu, wild demons that were half-raven, half-man and could bend the laws of nature and control the human mind.

Probably closer to the truth, according to Stephen Hayes (the first American to be accepted as a personal student of Masaaki Hatsumi, the thirty-fourth master of Togakure-ryu Ninjutsu) is that these warriors were former military men who fled China after the collapse of China. the T’ang dynasty and settled in Japan. Here they became masters of martial arts, philosophy and mysticism adapted from the esoteric knowledge of India and Tibet and the spiritual practices of Chinese monks and shamans.

“They exposed integrated systems of mind-body awareness, based on personal understanding of the order of the universe. [and an] unconventional way of looking at situations and accomplishing things… The original Ninja were mystical, in touch with powers that today we would describe as psychic. His ability to tune into the scheme of the whole and thereby become receptive to subtle input from beyond the usual five senses was strange and terrifying…”

However, their spirituality or mysticism was not based on empty and impractical religious teachings, but rather on highly advanced combat skills and practical arts of deception and warfare, where warriorship was linked to natural law. Spirituality was not seen as an external projection onto distant deities, as our religions are in the West, but as a path to inner knowledge, self-mastery and personal power.

To come to their understanding, Ninja developed a comprehensive and holistic map of the human psyche and life cycle, linking the inner and outer worlds, the world of creativity and imagination, and the world of time, space, and nature. to give a complete picture. of life and the challenges that every warrior faces on his way to liberation and happiness, as well as the means to overcome these tests. This map revolved around the elements Fire, Water, Air, and Earth, and the qualities of Fear, Power, Clarity, and Fatigue. The map can be seen as offering four doors that all of us must pass through if we want a spiritual life that is authentic and has meaning for who we really are.

In the modern world we are still at war, seeking peace, and our personal freedoms are still restricted by people and institutions that tell us who we are, how to behave, how much power and freedom we can have: job demands, tax demands. , commuter schedules, celebrity fashion…the list is endless. Spiritual warriors know these things as ‘tyrants’. They are not that different from the demands and dictates of the power-crazed emperors that led to the formation of the remote mountain communities of the Ninja rebels.

INNER TYRANTS

In these turbulent modern times, we are at risk from both internal tyrants (ways of being and seeing that we have internalized as we have grown and socialized into our culture’s world view) and external tyrants in the form of terrorists and nations at war using military force to impose their worldview on ordinary citizens (us) who get caught in the middle of their petty ideological skirmishes.

Our inner tyrants are fixed patterns of behavior that get in the way of our quest for freedom and divert our attention from the true work of the sacred human being: living fully the beautiful and finite lives that we are given. They inevitably lead us to an external tyranny since, if we have not taken care of our own problems, we end up projecting them into the world where we see monsters and chaos all around us that, in our fear, we must oppose and destroy before they destroy. U.S; or we feel too weak to oppose such madness because this system and habit of war is so much bigger than us.

However, magically, if we deal with the internal tyrants, the external ones vanish like mist. In this sense, the path of the four-door warrior is as relevant today as ever and probably more important than ever.

The warrior’s quest has always been to overcome the impositions of tyranny and find a unique code for living so that he can harness wisdom and power and find happiness in the material world. In doing so, warriors from many different traditions and cultures have realized that we all face four ‘enemies’ of personal freedom. These enemies can be seen as our beliefs about the world, which have been passed on to us by the tyrants around us: the leaders, the power elite, and the self-proclaimed experts in our societies who have set up systems and institutions to enforce their worldview. U.S. We have internalized these worldviews and as long as we believe that the world works in a particular way, we can never be free because we never see an alternative.
However, if we confront these enemies, we find that they naturally and easily transform into allies that can help us achieve the happiness we seek. Therefore, these ‘enemies’ – Fear, Power, Clarity, Fatigue – are not just the challenges we face, they are the means to their resolution, as well as the doors we walk through to resolve them. We are then empowered, clearer about who we are and able to see the truth of our lives. That, in itself, is freedom, and more freedom always equals more happiness.

THE FOUR DOORS

According to the four gates model, we are born in the east of the circle that represents our self and our life’s journey. In childhood, we are not even aware of a separate self, so intimately are we still connected to the flow of all things and so deeply are we part of the primal and universal consciousness. This stage represents a time of no-self in the sense of a socialized conception of who we are with a unique identity distinct from everything else in the world or any expectation of us to act or be anything but what we are. Although our socialization will begin at this time, we are less aware of these “mental things” and more aware of our bodies and their physical demands, as anyone who has heard a newborn scream to meet its needs will know. This physicality and passion of the young child is represented by the element of Fire.

As we grow up, the world moves to ‘hook’ us into its worldview and so we progress South, becoming teenagers and young adults, with more and more socialization taking place in the ways of our culture. Although there is no firm age structure or timeline for this journey (and, in fact, some people do not naturally reach all of these stages, but instead get stuck in one or more of them as they go through life), this aspect of ourselves is the best. represented as an age period of perhaps 15 to 40 years, with the main action taking place between the ages of 15 and 25. It is at this time that we begin to express ourselves as unique individuals in the world, to make a place for ourselves and leave our mark. It is a time of ambition and emotions, when we first fall in love, have our first sexual experiences, get our hearts broken, find partners and ‘settle down’ to focus on home and career. Spiritual work becomes unconscious, bubbling up within us while our minds and bodies are busy with the physical world. Due to the emotional content of this period, it is identified with the Water element, whose ups and downs correspond to the ups and downs and the emotional ups and downs of this time.

Arriving in the West, we realize that we have entered what we in the Western world call the Middle Ages. This is a time for a full-scale recapitulation of the self, a time when many people reexamine their lives up to this point, the assumptions they have made about the world and the agreements they have made with it. It is a time when, in the words of the philosopher Noam Chomsky, many of us will realize that “The average man does not follow reason but faith, and this naive faith [has been founded upon] necessary illusions and emotionally potent simplification on the part of the mythmaker to keep it on course.” We have been living a lie, in other words, one that has been based on our culture’s mythology and its definitions of what makes a ‘real’ acceptable) male or female, success or failure. This myth, most likely, has never been us, but still we have lived it without having seen it before. Now, from the perspective of greater life experience, we begin to question who we are. and, even if we are successful, settled, and wealthy in social terms, if this is enough to satisfy us on a personal and spiritual level. We have been hooked for perhaps 20 years by a vision of success defined in consensus or corporate terms, but now we are beginning to reevaluate who we have been and, with death beginning to breathe down our necks, to reconsider our lives and ask ‘Is that all?’ as we look at who we could have been and how we might better spend our remaining days (more ‘face time’ at the office or watching our kids grow up? Climbing the corporate ladder under an angry and ungrateful boss or surfing the Rocky Mountains? for fun?This is a time of consideration and reflection on who we really are and what we want from our lives, offering us the potential for adaptation, reinvention, rejuvenation, and resurgence into someone new.In reflecting on the past and revisiting the future.Because of this , is characterized by the element of Air, which has the ability to make our past lives disappear and lead us towards a new and deeper sense of a more authentic self.

Finally, we come to the North, and if we have done the necessary work throughout our journey around the wheel, we can experience a true understanding of ourselves, which leads us to a deep peace and harmony, where we can look back on life and see our true place in the world, the meaning of our life’s path and, perhaps, the flow of all things, from a perspective of wisdom and good humor. We are able to take a more spiritual and reflective look at things and experience maturity and rootedness, where we can be at the service of our community and happy with ourselves. This fundamental quality of the North is represented by the Earth element, which is appropriate because this is also the place of death, where we return to Earth before being reborn in the East as the cycle continues into new lives to come.

Once again, it is worth emphasizing that these four are only enemies when you have not faced them; As soon as you enter into battle with them, you automatically transform them into allies that can help you in your search for balance and internal harmony and, once you achieve it, external success is assured since you are the great dreamer of your world.

The path of all warriors is not to hide within fantasy or seek only the ‘light’ (as is the path of many modern ‘new age’ practices), but also to embrace the darkness, for it is only in our shadows ( when the light is behind us) that we see ourselves truly reflected, and only then can we direct ourselves and heal our pains so that the world itself is healed.

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