I went to the Shaolin Temple.
Of course.
Yeah, a few tourists, sure. |
(Unfortunately this was during a Chinese national holiday, which means the better part of a billion and a half people were on the move, so the 1.5 hour trip from Dengfeng took more like 3 hours.)
To describe the Shaolin Temple as "cheesy" would certainly be accurate. It's kind of like a kungfu Disneyland.
But you could also use "fucking awesome" and "well worth the trip."
Some students practicing a move that would probably be about the most useless and dangerous thing you could possibly do in a fight. |
Hey, get a room you two! |
Live simply and die with a big monument; that's Zen baby. |
In addition to the Shaolin Monastary itself and the martial arts training center, there is a Pagoda forest and a handful of other temples; for your 100 yuan entry fee, you also get Mount Song and the surrounding area, which is pretty fucking cool itself. You can see the cave where Bodhidarma meditated, bringing Zen Buddhism to China. (Of course I didn't take a picture of that, you think I'm culturally insensitive?)
The authenticity of the actual temple is pretty dubious; it's been blown up and rebuilt about a half-dozen times, and most of the stories about its founding and history are more likely legend than reality. (Shaolin Temple wikipedia entry.)
But, tourist attraction though it is, it is still a working center where martial arts is taught and studied.
Now probably a lot of you alpha-man-osphere doofs out there are going to chime in that the Gracie Family or Conor MacGregor could kill every living soul in the Shaolin Monastary in about a minute; but I would have to ask, could Conor MacGregor put his leg perpendicular to the ground next to his head, and then do a split onto his testicles?
I thought not!
Shaolin Kungfu, according to the legend, was developed by the Bodhidharma after meditating for 9 years; understandably feeling a bit stiff and achy, he began imitating the animals around him (tigers, cranes, mantises, monkeys, etc) for the sake of his fitness.
The reality of course is probably nothing even close to that, but there are so many legends and stories about it all it doesn't much matter anymore.
And of course, you watch a video like that, you think: Oh, man that's the perfect sport for a middle aged dude.
I have been doing Shaolin Kung Fu workouts off of YouTube videos since I was a young man of 40 back in 2009; one of my bucket list desires was to actually study kungfu in China. For the last 8 years I have been trying to arrange it. Even with the abundance of money and free time I've had since 2009, I hadn't managed to get it worked out.
Until now.
Mission accomplished, baby.
(And yes I am aware that kung-fu is not really the correct word for Chinese martial arts, but even the schools tend to use it that way, so step off.)
Plaque near the training center warning against factionalism within schools of kungfu |
I stayed there for a total of 4 nights, at one of the small guest houses connected to the various schools in an area to the side of the main tourist area. There seemed to be about a half-dozen small schools and I was absolutely fucking delighted to see groups of young men in different uniforms jogging around, running and jumping and practicing forms, and even standing on their heads on the concrete.
So the training started the next day. Typical day for a Shaolin student consists of: a morning run at 5:00am; 2 hours of training in the morning, 8:00 to 10:00 am; 2 hours of training in the afternoon, 1:00 - 3:00pm, and 1.5 hours of training after dinner, 6:00 - 7:30pm.
Once he established I was familiar with some of the exercises, he took me to train with his main group of students, in one of the many practice fields nearby.
There were about 20 of them. The oldest one was probably 17. Most of them were ripped-to-shreds little extreme athletes, but within the class, there was some streaming of students, and I ended up with the basic class, one of whom seemed to be autistic, several of whom were overweight, and one of whom had some kind of gimpy leg where he could barely walk. Oh, and there was a 5-year-old also.
I ran, I kicked, I punched the air, I leapt and crouched and did the horse-stance. The kids ran rings around me, alhtough I probably did outperform the retarded one and the overweight ones. The kids really got a kick (pun intended) out of me studying with them and were very supportive and helpful with all the moves.
I had a fucking blast.
By the end of the day, of course, both my knees were swollen up like cannonballs, and I could barely walk. The kungfu shoes they had provided were too small, and both of my big toenails turned black, to fall off a few weeks later.
But I did that shit, baby.
I studied kungfu at the Shaolin Monastary.
17 comments:
Never mind this bollocks, when are you going to tell us about the poontang? Are there Chinese groupies like you found in South Korea? I get they had that chaste old-fashioned commie thing going on, but are girls now more liberated and ready to explore? Is it that wonderful time after society's shackles are released, but before they get jaded and cynical? #goldenage
I haven't written about fucking around for years, why are you still reading? Chinese girls that would be barking mad to have sex with a 47 year old English teacher are no girls I'd want to sleep with.
Foreigner groupies, in these globally nationalistic times? They're dying out faster than the bees and the frogs.
Quite a few of my male colleagues are married to Chinese women, but in general it seems like in Beijing foreigners don't get any special attention. I actually had a few people -- men and women -- want to take pictures of me while i was playing tourist at the Shaolin temple, so there's that.
You haven't written about YOU fucking around, but you often write about other people fucking around. Get with the program, X.
Two posts ago you wrote about your female colleagues fucking Peruvian guys.
Most of my colleagues said China was wild enough between 2000 - 2012 or so, but seems to have calmed down a lot in the last 5 years. Man I live outside the city, anyway, I've only spent a few weekends in Beijing. Clearly not enough!
So where is the next new place with bright-eyed, naïve young babes emerging blinking into the new dawn of freedom, self-discovery and erotic awakening, starry-eyed and dazzled by white guys who look (kinda) like the actors in those amazing new Hollywood movies that make them all tingly inside? Burma?
Tell you what, when North Korea finally goes down I'm committing balls-deep into the re-education effort.
So did the kung fu master who trained you turn out to be the guy who killed your father? The Shaw brothers would have us believe it usually works out that way.
How are your colleagues with Chinese wives getting on in the current global climate of rising ethno-nationalism? Do they have kids in school there?
Burma might be a good one, and I have hard that Ethiopian babes are pretty foreigner-crazy.
I'll query my colleagues about rising nationalism during this weekend, we're scheduled to have a drinking binge.
In Japan there are bars that white guys can go to which are known for English/white guy groupies. Heard of such places in China?
My overwhelming impression so far is that Beijing is a very nice place, but that it's also very family-friendly, serious, and conservative. The only place I've seen like that are the rip-off "lady" bars in Sanlitun.
Forget Myanmar/Burma. I went there last month and, while I wasn't actively looking for action outside of a few lazy Tinder swipes that went nowhere, I didn't get the vibe that the locals (a couple working girls notwithstanding) were particularly eager for messing around. Outside of Yangon was utterly beautiful though.
Anyways, Southeast Asia has pretty much already undergone their sexual revolution, so if you're seeking the 60s reborn, you're pretty much SOL.
How are you liking China?
I've gotten some offers at low-tier international schools in Shanghai and Beijing and might be moving there next year. Part of me wants to go somewhere more exciting, but there is more money in China, and its better to save early.
I hear lots of mixed reviews with regards to the pollution and culture, but it was the same thing for Korea. I think a lot of people are just big complainers.
Apart from the pollution i'm finding it a nice place to live. It is a bit far from nearly everyplace else, also.
You mean your school is isolated? I've interviewed at some schools on the outskirts of bigger cities, not sure if thats what I want. I guess you spend less but seems a bit boring.
I meant that, yes, but also Beijing is kind of far from everywhere. 6 - 11 hour flight to get just about anywhere, except more China.
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