by
Taky Kimura
Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute of
Seattle
Bruce Lee was a
multi-talented person even at the age of eighteen
as he brightened the horizons of Seattle. His
five-foot-seven-inch frame would explode upon any
given stage with the awesomeness of a comet and
you were immediately captivated by his lovable
personality. Bruce once shared with me the
sentiment that he was relaxed and comfortable
with people from all strata of society. He
attributed this to the ultimate essence of the
physicality and spirituality of the highest level
of martial art. In my opinion, this was imbued in
him, and Bruce lived and died the life of a true
warrior.
I
have often said that my first introduction to
Bruce was an awesome experience. However, I was
also fortunate in being able to experience the
many other aspects of his personality, such as
the teenage comedian and the mature philosopher.
I felt particularly enchanted by this Iast
characteristic and somehow knew that I had to
follow him.
For
those unfamiliar with the background of Bruce Lee
it may help if I take a moment to share with you
how he came to introduce gung fu, a uniquely
Chinese art, to North America. Bruce arrived in
Seattle in 1959 at the age of eighteen, after a
brief sojourn in San Francisco. With the help of
several local television appearances and public
demonstrations, Bruce began to give instruction
to all Americans - regardless of race, creed, or
national origin.
Even
while growing up in Hong Kong, Bruce had
experienced his fair share of prejudice and
discrimination. This led him to become involved
in the martial arts for both mental and physical
self-preservation. He often spoke to me of the
way the British officers looked down upon and
mistreated the Chinese. From this background,
Bruce swore to use the martial arts as a tool to
express his ultimate desire: to create equality
among the peoples of the world.
Even
in Seattle during this early stage of his life's
journey, Bruce denounced the "classical
mess" and promoted the art of simplicity and
harmony. In time, Bruce would modify his vast
knowledge of the many arts to arrive at the
ultimate stage of realistic simplicity: Jeet Kune
Do. However, whether he was instructing his
students in the Jun Fan method of gung fu or in
Jeet Kune Do, Bruce understood that in either
case, simplicity, honesty, and desire comes only
from deep within your heart, and he incorporated
this precious characteristic into all of his
teachings.
Bruce
was uniquely possessed with natural-born
attributes: speed, coordination, gracefulness,
high mentality, and charm. All of these factors
contributed to his keen sense of separating
reality from fantasy. Rather than condemn any
particular system of martial art, Bruce absorbed
what was useful and discarded what was useless,
and he taught us what he considered the "reality" of
martial art - simplicity, harmony, and integrity.
This
is in many ways comparable to the ultimate beauty
that resides in the way young children expresses
themselves in the most simple, spontaneous,
flowing manner. Their sincerity of emotion just
comes forth naturally. Bruce preached to us about
the cold facts of life: for example, if you want
to become a swimmer, you cannot do so on dry
land, you must enter the water. He shared with me
and all who studied with him the absolutes:
honesty, respect to all, humility, confidence,
and the cultivating of an insatiable desire to
reach your goal!
When
Bruce was alive, he always pushed me in a
direction that I believe he would wish all of us
to follow: to fulfill to the utmost your physical
capabilities which enable you to identify who you
really are with humility and pride. Once this is
accomplished, the door will open and you will
enter the kingdom of philosophical spirituality.
The
Seattle curriculum that Bruce entrusted me to
teach began with this unique and simple concept
of truth and reality.
Even now, my blood
becomes feverish when I reflect upon the bygone
days when Bruce and I were together. He
ingeniously helped me to recapture the days I lost
having been interned for five years in an
American concentration camp for simply having
been born of Japanese descent. I had just
graduated from high school and Bruce provided me
with a therapy of sorts - just being able to "hang out" and
do some of the light-hearted, crazy things that I had missed
out
on and been deprived of during my internment. The
bitterness, negativeness, and the feeling of
complete inferiority that plagued me in the days
before Bruce Lee came into my life, are- as a
direct result of his teachings and my own
willingness to apply them - now just water that
has passed under the bridge. I realize now that
there was a concealed, hidden enrichment that I
gleaned from my experiences, both positive and
negative, that has served to make me a better
person today.
Bruce
used to say "He who knows but knows not he
knows, he is asleep - awaken him." Although
I would not come to appreciate this statement
until many years later, I am thankful that he
"filled my cup" without my even
realizing it, somehow knowing that I "knew
not that I knew." I
have many cherished memories of Bruce. We trained
together, ate together, went to movies together,
and talked about every topic under the sun. I
vividly remember appearing with Bruce when he
gave martial art demonstrations in Seattle and
California, where I experienced the hair-raising
effect of facing his punches and kicks, which
would explode toward me with the power and speed
of a hurricane, only to stop a fraction of an
inch from my face. The force of the breeze caused
by his blows would literally "part" my
hair! Bruce
was my mentor, my sifu, my advisor, and, most
importantly, my friend. He embodied the highest
principles of the true martial artist.

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