Książka Seeking That Which Was Lost S Y Kelake BSc

Seeking That Which Was Lost

The Peaceful Warrior: Mastering the Art of Fighting Without Fighting

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Dostępna u dostawcy
Wysyłamy za 9-15 dni
90.55
Most people who begin martial arts come for the wrong reason.Fitness. Self-defence. Confidence. A we...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
182
EAN
9798252339658
Enbook ID
51519965
Waga
253
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 10

Pełny opis

Most people who begin martial arts come for the wrong reason.

Fitness. Self-defence. Confidence. A wedding on the horizon and a gym membership that wasn't working. These are the stated reasons. The real reason - the one beneath the surface, the one that keeps a person returning to the dojo long after the original motivation has been satisfied - is something harder to name. It is the sense that something has gone missing. That who they are and who they were always capable of being are not quite the same person.

The Peaceful Warrior is about finding what was lost.

After thirty years of martial practice, a terminal cancer diagnosis that reframed everything, and formal studies in Forensic Psychology, S Y Kelake has come to understand that the deepest teaching of the martial path is not about fighting at all. It is about what happens inside a person when they commit to something genuinely demanding - when they place themselves in an environment that does not lie to them, that reflects their actual capabilities back at them honestly, and that requires, over time, the slow and difficult work of becoming genuinely themselves.

The art of fighting without fighting. The middle way. Upright and level. These are not vague spiritual concepts. They are practical descriptions of a way of inhabiting your own life - with restraint rather than reaction, with presence rather than performance, with the quiet confidence of someone who has nothing left to prove.

This is the sixth book in the Seeking That Which Was Lost series - a collection that views the full range of human experience through the lens of what has gone missing and what becomes possible when we begin to recover it. Earlier books in the series explore forensic psychology, moral drift, the forgotten self, the development of young people in crisis. This volume is different. It is personal. It is the voice of the man before the scholar - the martial artist, the father, the seeker - whose lived experience became the foundation upon which everything else rests.

Inside these pages you will find:

A thirty-year journey from a first martial arts class taken for vanity, to the deepest questions of identity, resilience, and what it means to be truly centred - written with honesty, warmth, and the occasional willingness to be the fool in the story.

A philosophy of conflict that applies far beyond the dojo - to relationships, to professional life, to the difficult art of letting go, to the challenge of respecting other people's choices even when those choices are wrong.

The Seven Principles of the Peaceful Warrior - not commandments, but hard-won observations about what it takes to remain upright and level when everything around you is moving.

A bridge between ancient wisdom and contemporary psychology - drawing on Jesus Christ, Hermes, the Buddha, and PTAH alongside the neuroscience of embodied cognition, the psychology of self-regulation, and the forensic understanding of what happens when people lose their centre entirely.

And threaded through all of it: the conviction that what was lost is never truly gone. That the person you were capable of being has been waiting, patiently, beneath the accumulated weight of everything you became in order to survive.

The Peaceful Warrior is for martial artists who want to understand why the practice matters beyond the mat. It is for anyone who has ever felt the pull of something they cannot quite name - the sense that a more grounded, more genuine, more fully inhabited version of themselves is available, if only they can find the path back.

For those who see.