Im currently reading The Book Of Five Rings by Miyamoto Mushashi..
Just wanna let ya know.. No Knights, Spartan Warrior, nor Achilles himself can fuck with Musashi in a one on one duel.. none
I finally got through that Hitch book, but it was really long and obviously a lot to talk about in a career like that. It got really sad towards the final decade. Time was running out, his health was failing and he wanted to make his 'realistic' Bond 'The Short Night'. However his wife had a series of strokes, Hitchcock himself was failing and falling over in the bathroom. Still he clung to the dream that he could win over the fans again, but it was never going to happen. He seemed to have given up on life in the end. Even if the script were finished, he wouldn't be able to shoot it himself. His wife now declining with dementia and Hitchcock seeming to have lost the will to live. And apparently that is what he did. We willed himself to death by refusing meals, drinking only water and talking to nobody. Eventually it happened. His wife lived on for 2 more years seemingly not noticing the death. 'Oh Hitch is out at the studio. Back later'. Very odd.
Anyway, a great, exhaustive book, excellently researched. Imo the most important director of them all. A talented, talented filmmaker.
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Charles Bukowski - Notes of a Dirty Old Man.
It's a collection of his newspaper columns. Just started reading it today.
Saddo Fantasy Premier League
2011/12 - 2nd
2012/13 -1st Hidden Content
2013/14 - 3rd (Master won)
Saddo World Cup Dream Team
2014 - 1st Hidden Content
Watch out UK crowd I'm on the cusp of becoming a learned scholar on your empire
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Most bad government has grown out of too much government. Thomas Jefferson
"If there's a better chin in the world than Pryor's, it has to be on Mount Rushmore." -Pat Putnam.
Cool as.
The Book of Five Rings (五輪書 Go Rin No Sho?) is a text on kenjutsu and the martial arts in general, written by the swordsman Miyamoto Musashi circa 1645. There have been various translations made over the years, and it enjoys an audience considerably broader than only that of martial artists: for instance, some business leaders find its discussion of conflict and taking the advantage to be relevant to their work. The modern-day Hyōhō Niten Ichi-ryū employs it as a manual of technique and philosophy.
Musashi establishes a "no-nonsense" theme throughout the text. For instance, he repeatedly remarks that technical flourishes are excessive, and contrasts worrying about such things with the principle that all technique is simply a method of cutting down one's opponent. He also continually makes the point that the understandings expressed in the book are important for combat on any scale, whether a one-on-one duel or a massive battle. Descriptions of principles are often followed by admonitions to "investigate this thoroughly" through practice rather than trying to learn them by merely reading.
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Miyamoto Musashi in his prime, wielding two bokken.
Musashi describes and advocates a two-sword style (nitōjutsu): that is, wielding both katana and wakizashi, contrary to the more traditional method of wielding the katana two-handed. However, he only explicitly describes wielding two swords in a section on fighting against many adversaries. The stories of his many duels rarely reference Musashi himself wielding two swords, although, since they are mostly oral traditions, their details may be rather inaccurate. Some suggest that Musashi's meaning was not so much wielding two swords "simultaneously", but rather acquiring the proficiency to (singly) wield either sword in either hand as the need arose.[citation needed] However, Musashi states within the volume that one should train with a long sword in each hand, thereby training the body and improving one's ability to use two blades simultaneously, though the aim of this was only for training purposes and wasn't meant to be a viable fighting style.
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