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2026-02-05 12:22:49, Jamal

Concept of an extended internal force practice / bio-sensory martial art / resonance kinetics

Not the strength of your opponent defeats you—but your wrong reaction to the direction of their force.

Western thinking is dualistic. To truly grasp Qi, a shift in perspective is necessary—toward a non-dual experience that unites change and unity, form and emptiness, self and non-self.

When, through inner practice and insight, we change the way our brain processes information and expand our perception, empathy, and body awareness, this is a form of evolutionary development—a conscious neural reprogramming.

Turn the opponent’s attack into a resource for yourself. In nature, energy transformation is a fundamental mechanism. Nothing is lost; energy merely changes form. This principle is mirrored in combat behavior. Our ancestors, as hunters, warriors, and survivors, had to handle their power efficiently. An attack was not simply met with counterforce but transformed into energy-efficient strategies.

Stone Age High Tech

“Stone Age High Tech” is a metaphor for how our ancestors mastered biomechanical and energetic principles that we have largely forgotten today.

Body efficiency and sensitivity: Our ancestors likely had a highly developed body awareness, intimately connected to breathing, posture, and internal energy.

Natural training: Everyday survival provided skills that modern societies, through specialization and mechanization, have largely lost.

Biomechanical principles: Techniques that allowed maximum effect with minimal effort.

Why did we forget this?

Cultural shift: With settled life, work specialization, and fewer life-threatening physical confrontations, much was lost.

Technologization: Tools and machines replaced natural movement and combat skills.

Educational and training systems: Often fragmented, formalized, and disconnected from holistic body awareness.


Core Principles

Direct resistance against your body structure is dangerous because it threatens balance or causes injury. Lateral or oblique pressure, on the other hand, can be redirected, absorbed, and utilized more easily. Redirect rather than resist.

Principle of the Angle (Angle of Attack/Defense):

Whether pressure or resistance is dangerous depends largely on the direction from which it comes—and how you position yourself relative to it.

Direction determines effect

In martial arts: controlling direction is controlling the game. Even tremendous force is ineffective if it misses its target or slides off a stable structure. Precise, well-directed pressure can unbalance an opponent once their center is exposed.

Alignment and forward tension: The art is not in standing “strong” but in being aligned so cleverly that the opponent’s energy runs into empty space or “disappears” within you.

Directionless readiness:

Consider a comment criticizing a master:

If a practitioner at an allegedly advanced level still has to adjust whenever unexpected force arises, then the whole concept of an invisible force field that works in all directions seems unconvincing. If it only works when the attack’s direction can be anticipated, it is hardly a real force field.

The core argument:

If a practitioner must readjust whenever unexpected force hits, then there is no invisible shield automatically protecting in all directions. What doesn’t work automatically when surprised is, by definition, not useful.

What is true:

No one can absorb unexpected, explosive force without reacting. Even internal masters must realign, compensate, and restructure. There is no magical shield independent of attention and body alignment.

What the critic overlooks:

Internal force is not a static state but an intelligent adaptive process via ultrafast fascial orientation, optimized tension transfer, and full-body sensory presence. Once an internal fighter is rooted, they can achieve directionless readiness. This is not a force field but body intelligence reacting at lightning speed to subtle forces. To outsiders, it may seem superhuman. It is, in reality, heightened sensitivity plus structural precision.

The truth lies in between:

There is no magical force dome. But there are systems in which the body learns to transform impulse energy through trained body awareness. The best practitioners do not meet the opponent’s impulse head-on—they redirect, deflect, and return it without tensing.

The critic underestimates trainable biomechanical intelligence. Force emerges from pre-stretch, pressure lines, breath structure, attention, and reactive fascial control.

And this is so real that we speak of Magic Force.

Tomorrow we will ask: How could a synthesis of internal force development with natural technologies—turtle magnetic navigation, electric eel electricity, bat sonar, whale echolocation, and elephant infrasound—look like?

The question leads to a synthesis of biological sensitivity, energetic training, and body awareness.