"maxwell ainley wrote:
Here's a very old wise statement etc, " The beginning is the end ,the end is the beginning ".
Its at the end of the statement when real new things emerge that push both the practioner and the system onwards .
Good thoughts Max. I can see that "purity" in tradition is a self delusion, and I like the concept of continual renewal. I think it is the understanding of principles behind what we are learning that help us develop true skill, but that certainly will change over time, for each confrontation, and through individual interpretation. We are not the same people as our teachers, so we cannot learn exactly as they did....at least not until cloning happens.
Bill Glasheen wrote:
You are looking at a snapshot in time of three different individuals, Shana. Do you think each of these teachers were the same way from the first day they started teaching to present day?
an excellent point! I don't think any of them are the same as they were when they started teaching, and I also don' think they are what they will be in a year or so. What I will say is that all are excellent teachers with thier own value to add, and I find thier diffrences interesting and exciting.
Bill Glasheen wrote:
Here's something else to consider. If any of these schools evolved to be larger entities, would the assistant instructors be clones of the head instructor, or would the head instructor tolerate (or perhaps even encourage) individual expression, emphasis, and approaches? (FWIW, I've seen both.)
I would hope the latter. As you've said in class, you learn a great deal from the experience of teaching and from the students. It's that constant challenge and interchange that keeps it interesting for the teacher as well as fresh for all.
I think there is a point where you need to be true to your art or accept that what you have is something new and different...with it's origins in art A, but it is no longer the same.
Now, where that line is......

I couldn't say.
Bill Glasheen wrote:
We wouldn't have Meyers-Briggs personality testing if everyone was "balanced" on all their personality tendencies.
agreed, but just becuase balance as an ideal is unlikely...does that mean we shouldn't strive for it? I'm not being flip, I'm truly curious. Should a teacher and a student focus on working to thier strengths, and just be aware of the ideal of balance. Or ...should they continually strive to reach that ideal...and challenge thier boundaries?
Bill Glasheen wrote:
Quote:
Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the men of old; seek what they sought.
-
Matsuo Basho
I like this. Very much.
Thank you all for your comments and thoughts!