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Meditations on God

  • Robert Van Valkenburgh

  • Digital Projections of Real People

    You never know what it takes for a person to show the world one, single smile.

    There is a digital world at our fingertips wherein we can present to others a simulated version of who we imagine ourselves to be, living the life we fantasize about, while receiving the praise, acknowledgement, and appreciation we only wish that we received in real life. If we are dissatisfied with our lives, we can dive into our digital world where we are who we want to be, where we have innumerable ‘friends’ and ‘followers,’ and where we are never sad, alone, or depressed. Even as our lives feel like they falling apart around us, we can post, engage, and simulate a life wherein we are popular, loved, and surrounded by the community of support and appreciation.

    This digital life is really not that much different from the training simulator in ‘The Matrix,’ as Morpheus describes it to Neo: ”Your clothes are different, the plugs in your arms and head are gone, your hair has changed. Your appearance now is what we call ‘residual self-image’. It is the mental projection of your digital self.” While social media is more like the digital projections of our mental selves than the mental projections of our digital selves, the problem is that the lines between what is real and what is projected are blurring. We are losing track of who we are, who and what is in front of us, and who we really want to be in our real lives.

    When we engage each other online, it is important to remember that, behind every digital projection,* there is a real person, with a real life, and real feelings. Another person’s projected self may seem confident, happy, self-assured, and fulfilled, but the reality is that we never truly know what a person is going through in his or her personal or internal life based simply by what he or she posts online. None of us in is exempted from loneliness, pain, fear, or struggle in this life, so we must treat each other accordingly, regardless of whether we meet in the digital world or in the flesh.

    *Trolls, bots, and AI notwithstanding


    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, as well as a founding member of the Severna Park and Baltimore Holistic Chamber of Commerce.

    Artwork by Ana, except where otherwise noted.

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    January 5, 2020
    community, connection, digital projections, fears, feelings, love, social media, the matrix

  • Now Or New

    “If you want to be ‘now,’ you’re finished. That’s when you become the past.”
    —Tricky, aka Adrian Thaws, from ‘Hell is Round the Corner’

    Wabisabi Street Art photo by Robert Van Valkenburgh (artist unknown)

    There is a saying in poker, or so I have heard, that goes something like, “If you cannot spot the sucker at the table, it’s you.” This is also true of innovators and followers in any aspect of human activity. If we are not sure that we are the ones innovating, breaking new ground, or creating new trends, someone else is and we are merely followers.

    Followers rarely catch up. They are always going to be a bit behind because not only do innovators not wait for others to catch up, but they are often too busy shifting, pivoting, and moving forward to even notice or care. Innovators do not watch the shifting tides, they are the waves themselves.

    Unlike the follower, who is constantly chasing that which is popular, the goal of an innovator has nothing to do with what the crowd thinks they want. Innovation, if it is to be useful, is about creating that which is needed or wanted for people who do not yet even know that they need or want it. Popular opinion and popular trends may inspire an innovator, not as something to catch up to, however, but as something to break away from, to overcome, and to abandon on the path away from now to new.


    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

    Street art photo taken by Robert (artist unknown)

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    January 4, 2020
    adrian thaws, followers, hell is round the corner, innovation, leadership, new, now, popular culture, trends, tricky

  • The Fate of Intention

    That which is never tried is guaranteed to be impossible.

    It is much less difficult, in the short term at least, to merely do what is in front of us, to take what is handed to us, and to accept the results of that as our fate. Fate excuses us from responsibility and from action. Fate excuses us from pushing our boundaries and the boundaries of previously existing possibilities.

    The problem with fate, however, is that, when we excuse ourselves from participating in and shaping our own destinies, other forces take on that role for us. Something or someone will mold and shape our lives and the world we inhabit if we do not. By abdicating responsibility to fate, we put our free will and our futures in the hands of others who do not, who can not, care about our well-beings, our wishes, and our dreams as much as we do.

    As creative beings, our true fate is to be something, to do something, to make something with intention. Our destiny is to make our intentions manifest, to bring them life, to put our vision into the world, and to challenge impossibility by trying something new, by being something new, and by creating something new. Our fate is to live, actively, intentionally, and impossibly.


    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, as well as a founding member of the Severna Park and Baltimore Holistic Chamber of Commerce.

    Artwork by Ana, except where otherwise noted.

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    January 3, 2020
    creation, destiny, fatalism, fate, intention

  • Unleash Yourself From Distraction

    Procrastination is nothing more than resistance to improvement.

    Wabisabi Street Art photo by Robert Van Valkenburgh (artist unknown)

    There are more reasons to be distracted than ever. There are also more ways than ever to do creative work that we can be proud of. In every moment of every day, we get to decide which path we take between distraction and creation, between acquiescence and responsibility, between restraint and freedom.

    There is a razor’s edge between choosing distraction, procrastination, and avoidance, and doing our best work. This edge, like a sword, can either be wielded with intention or it can cut us down where we stand. Creation is the choice to take hold of our lives, our attentions, and our actions, and to do work we are proud of instead of doing merely that which is put in front of us.

    Every distraction we choose over creation is a manifestation of procrastination rooted in fear, the fear of facing, taking responsibility for, and becoming all that we are capable of. Procrastination is a means of withdrawing from our own power and potential and abdicating our freedom for the sake of someone else’s agenda. Our greatest work is waiting for us to turn away from distraction, to remember who we are, to discover what we are capable of, and to unleash ourselves from the things we do, or do not do, that hold us back.


    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

    Street art photo taken by Robert (artist unknown)

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    January 2, 2020
    distraction, potential, procrastination, purpose, resistance

  • New Year + New Habits = New You

    We need habits, not resolutions.

    Much more than our decisions, our actions determine who we become. The more that we do something new, the more we change. The easiest way to change who we are and who we become is not to resolve to do so, but to actually do so.

    Usually, this is a gradual process. We change, transform, and evolve slowly, over time, not all at once. We change in increments.

    These incremental changes are the result of accumulated actions and behaviors in a chosen direction. Self-improvement is best thought about like a developed skill, than an innate talent. If we want to improve in some aspect of our life or character, we must practice.

    Practice, repeated over a long period of time becomes a habit. Habits, formed and maintained over long periods of time, become transformative. We become what we do repeatedly, repeatedly.*

    *This is not a typo.


    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, as well as a founding member of the Severna Park and Baltimore Holistic Chamber of Commerce.

    Artwork by Ana, except where otherwise noted.

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

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    January 1, 2020
    habits, new year, new you, practice, repetiton, resolutions, self improvement

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