Some lessons cannot be learned from a book. They have to be walked.
The Peaceful Warrior is the story of thirty years of martial practice - and what that practice built in a man long before he had the academic language to name it. It is about the art of fighting without fighting: the centred self, the measured response, the inner architecture of a person who does not lose themselves when life pushes hard.
S Y Kelake BSc (Hons) came to Tang Sou Dao, as most people come to the things that will change them, for reasons that were real but not quite the whole truth. The stated reason was simple enough. Underneath it was something older - a hunger for authenticity, a search for the quality of complete self-possession he had first glimpsed watching Bruce Lee move and wondered whether it was possible to find in himself.
Thirty years later, he knows the answer.
This book traces that journey - through gradings and teaching, through failure and correction, through the humour and the sweat and the unexpected grace of a well-run dojo - and through something harder still: a terminal cancer diagnosis that arrived mid-practice and demanded that everything the training had built be tested against the sharpest possible circumstance.
Written for his children, and for anyone who has stood at the door of something transformative and wondered whether they were too old, too late, or too far from their best self to begin - The Peaceful Warrior draws on Chinese Gong Fu philosophy, the teachings of Grandmaster Meng Kwong Loke, and the frameworks of forensic psychology to ask a question that belongs to all of us:
What would it mean to stop fighting yourself - and start becoming who you actually are?
Part of the Seeking That Which Was Lost series by S Y Kelake BSc (Hons). Each book stands alone. Together, they form a map back to the centred self.
Related Subjects
Philosophy