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Meditations on God

  • Robert Van Valkenburgh

  • Positional Perspective (Change Your Point Of View)

    The only way to change our perspective is to change our position.

    If we want to see the world from a different angle, a different point of view, or a different perspective, we are going to have to change the way we look at it. This is not a mental exercise. It is impossible to see the whole picture while standing in one place.

    If we truly want to gain a new perspective on the world, we need to physically move ourselves to new places. We need to change where we stand. We need to change the way we stand and we need to at least be willing to change what we stand for and why.

    There is simply no way to see the whole picture, to see things from all angles, perspectives, and focal points without changing where we are and the way we look at things. The world we are trying to see will not move for us. If we want to see a new, better world, we must be the movers and the change seekers.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

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    June 3, 2020
    action, angle, belief, change, community, empathy, lens, perpsective, photography, point of view, position, progress, stance, worldview

  • Passion Makes Us Porous

    “I gotcha back, but you best to watch your front ‘cause it’s the people that front, they be pulling stunts.”
    —Gary E. Grice, aka GZA

    Proximity does not imply connection. Just because someone stands next to us does not mean that they share our moral, philosophical, or spiritual beliefs, and it certainly does not mean that they want or will do what is best for us or our tribe. In fact, the best place for our enemies to hide is right next to us, protected by the shadows that are created by the light we are trying to put into the world.

    It is when we are at our most sensitive, at our most open-hearted, and our most raw with emotion that we are also the most porous and susceptible to negative influence. When we feel the most deeply about some issue, event, or cause, we are also at our most vulnerable to psychological, emotional, and spiritual hijacking. When our hearts and minds are flooded with emotion, we often lose the ability to filter the good from the bad and are temporarily blinded to the truth around us.

    It is in moments like these, when we are at our happiest, our saddest, our angriest, or our most hurt, that we are in most desperate need our family and trusted friends by our side. We need them not only to share in our joy, our sorrow, our rage, or our pain, but also to act as a buffer between our open hearts and the malignant forces that want to creep into them. It only takes a little bit of evil to corrupt, distort, and manipulate the truth and the light, and the hope they bring.

    While we need those we love, respect, and trust to watch our backs for us, we must also watch our fronts, being careful to maintain our focus and our bearing as we move forward because a lie looks and sounds a lot like the truth when it is masked by passion.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    June 2, 2020
    anger, bearing, cause, community, compassion, emotion, family, fear, focus, friends, gza, hope, influence, joy, justice, love, pain, passion, reason, rightousness, tribe, trust, wu tang clan

  • The Brightest Cloud

    “When the sun hides, it hides behind the brightest cloud.”
    —My Daughter

    Some days, it is difficult to see beyond the ugliness and the darkness in this world. Conflict, fear, anger, and pain are right in our faces with no obvious solution or hope of relief on the horizon. On days like these, it can be a struggle to see how things can or will get better.

    On days like these, we need each other more than ever. We need to look each other in the eye, share a smile, share a handshake, a high five, or a hug, and let each other know that we are not divided, that we are truly in this together. On days like these, we need community, we need family, and we need connection.

    Even on the darkest, stormiest day, the sun is still shining above it all. We just need to know where to look for it. As my daughter says, “When the sun hides, it hides behind the brightest cloud.” On days like these, we all need a brightest cloud. Let us try to be that for one another. Together, maybe we can part the skies to allow the sun to shine down on us all.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    June 1, 2020
    anger, community, compassion, connection, empathy, family, fear, hope, kindness, love, pain, understanding, unity, unrest

  • Managing Space (A Jiu-Jitsu Lesson)

    Sometimes the best input is silence and the best proximity is distance.

    There are more people than ever who want to tell us how to feel, what to believe, and how to act, but there are very few who are actually concerned with how we feel, what we believe, and what we want to do with and for our lives. With input coming at us from all directions, it becomes increasingly difficult to discern what in our lives is the result of our needs and desires and what is the result of outside influence. The more we engage with these forces of influence acting on us, the blurrier the lines become between who we are and who others want us to be.

    The reality is that there is simply no feasible way to focus on our own lives, needs, and desires while also giving our attention to what everyone else is doing and saying, especially with regards to how we should feel, think, and act. Our capacity for attention is limited and there are only so many hours in the day, so we must spend our time, the only truly nonrenewable resource, wisely. Because of this, it is imperative, for our own health, wellness, and progress, that we make time and space in our lives for quiet reflection and creation, whether alone or with those who matter most.

    Jiu-jitsu teaches us that when we find ourselves in a bad position, overwhelmed by forces we simply cannot overcome head on, the best strategy is to create space and disengage until we can find a new, safer angle from which to more effectively move forward. The best jiu-jitsu practitioners are, not coincidentally, also the most difficult to hold in disadvantageous positions and the least likely to put themselves into those positions on purpose, except perhaps as a way of practicing survival, escapes, and reversals under duress. Over time, we come to find that success demands that we give ourselves room to breathe, to see the big picture, and to move forward intelligently in the direction that benefits us and not our opponent, that we become masters of controlling space.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    May 31, 2020
    bjj, brazilian jiu-jitsu, creativity, desires, distance management, feedback, goals, input, jiu-jitsu, meditation, needs, position, positioning, priorities, prioritizing, quiet, space, wants

  • A Change Of Heart

    A lot of time is spent trying to change each other’s minds when what we really need is a change of heart.

    Modern technology gives us the ability to exchange ideas, opinions, and beliefs with almost anyone in the world in an instant. While we may hope that this free exchange of information would give humanity the ability to come together more easily around the things that truly matter, that has not necessarily proven to be the case. In fact, it could be argued that the world, the continents, and even individual countries, cities, and towns are more divided than ever.

    While ideas, opinions, and beliefs do have the power to induce or incite some forms of unified action, whether positive or negative, they do not tend to change people to the degree that is necessary for true connectedness. The problem is that, quite often, the ideas, opinions, and beliefs we express are the most superficial representations of our deeper truths. Without digging down into and addressing the causes and conditions that led us to these ideas, opinions, and beliefs, the change they create in others tends to be superficial as well.

    More often than not, what we see is that the views we express publicly only tend to connect us with those who already agree with what was expressed while also further distancing us from, or even putting us in direct conflict with, those who hold different views. If we truly seek to change the world for the better, we must be willing and able to reach those who do not yet agree with us, but this is nearly impossible if we approach them superficially by trying to change their minds. Deep, meaningful, long-lasting change begins in our hearts where empathy, compassion, and understanding join us together in spite of our ideas, opinions, and beliefs.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

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    May 30, 2020
    belief, beliefs, change, community, compassion, empathy, ideas, leadership, opinions, progress, relationships, service, truth, understanding

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