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World Focus
Life on the Cutting Edge
The fastest-growing exercise in America, Tai Chi can help relieve everyday stress
and strain, whatever your age.
By Frank Shatz,
July 2007
No doubt,
the late Ernest "Papa" Hemingway would have found a kindred
spirit Arthur Rosenfeld. Like Hemingway, Rosenfeld lives a life
of adventure and courts danger. And both turned what they experienced
into raw material for their fiction.
Rosenfeld is a martial arts expert, a lecturer on the subject
and the author of nine books and countless articles published
in such prestigious magazines as Vanity Fair and Vogue.
He is also a motorcycle aficionado, a student of Asian culture
and philosophy, and his latest book "The Cutting Season," a
martial arts thriller, makes him a pioneer in a new literary
fiction category.
On his news/blog, Rosenfeld notes that "the principles underlying
the sublime martial art of tai chi are powerful and transformative.
These days, those principles are most relevant as life lessons
rather than as a fighting system."
The motivating force for Rosenfeld, to become an expert in martial
arts was precisely to learn how to defend himself effectively.
"I had an unfortunate experience in South America the summer
I graduated from Yale College," he said in a recent interview
with the Gazette. "Defending a woman from a drunken cop on the
street in Quito, Ecuador, I was pursued by military police,
apprehended by men with swagger sticks in shiny boots, and dragged
off to a mountain prison."
During that fateful ride, Rosenfeld made a bargain with himself.
"Should I get out of the situation alive, I would learn how
to hit a man so he stayed down. My thinking was that if I had
known what I was doing, the drunk would not have awakened so
quickly and gone for help."
In the years that followed, his training in martial arts, learning
how to fight, evolved into a process of learning how to live.
"My inquiry into the hows and whys of life grew deeper, and
I found that Eastern thoughts, with their non-dual flavor, their
sense of a great oneness in the world, spoke to me from a true
place," he said.
He pointed out that the underlying principles that govern Eastern
religions seem "linked to the mystical and transcendent traditions
of Judeo-Christian lore. I am driven greatly by the desire to
communicate the ideas I love to others, and to help them use
them, as I have done, to improve their lives."
Rosenfeld's writings and lifestyle are characterized by a "unifying
theory."
"The unifying theory is the quest for deeper knowledge," he
said. "Ever since childhood, I have felt we are all only staring
at the surface of the lake… I feel we only use a tiny portion
of our brains, that we are grievously limited by our senses,
and that what we are told to believe limits or blocks true understanding
of the world. Riding motorcycles, shooting guns, nurturing tortoises,
slicing with swords, swimming, kayaking, traveling to exotic
locales, raising pythons, and most of all reading and writing
books, all of these have been attempts to reach out, touch,
and understand the world, and the laws that govern it, more
deeply."
It's no wonder that Rosenfeld was searching for new paths. His
father, Dr. Isadore Rosenfeld, is a world-renowned medical doctor,
a professor of medicine at New York Hospital Weill Cornel Medical
Center, and the personal physician to such personalities as
the late Averill and Pamela Harriman, Aristotle Onassis, and
scores of others.
"I wanted to be a writer from the age of nine," said Arthur
Rosenfeld. "Anything else, whether medicine, law, business,
academics, seemed limited and constrained to me. My father supported
my years of casting about with some worry and much good nature.
He applauded my perseverance in trying to make a living as a
novelist while at the same time looking keenly to see me on
the bestseller list."
His father had turned "his enthusiasm for medicine into a passport
to the world and a way to engage and assist others." Rosenfeld
credits him and his mother, "a compassionate woman with a thirsty
intellect," as his role models.
But he credits his teacher, Master Max Gao Fei Yan, with showing
him the way to achieving that elusive inner peace. "He does
a finer job of walking his talk than anyone I know, of keeping
his physical and emotional equilibrium, of actually living the
Eastern teachings in the context of the speed and greed culture
we call the Western world
All that he learned from his master and experienced himself
finds its way into Rosenfeld's books.
"I have been working for some years now to bring authentic,
literary, martial arts fiction to American shores for what may
be the first time" he wrote in a press release. "This is a challenging
and ambitious project that draws on decades of martial arts
study, a deep involvement with Asian culture, history, and perhaps
most importantly, philosophy."
In "The Cutting Season," Rosenfeld managed to fuse an action-filled
thriller with an expert's knowledge of martial art techniques,
philosophical musing, and the description of the double-life
of Dr. Xenon Pearl, a brilliant brain surgeon.
Dr. Pearl, at a moment of self-reflection is quoted saying:
"I am a doctor. And the way things look now, I'm a schizophrenic
doctor." Realizing that he is both a doctor and a martial warrior,
he follows the rules ascribed by his two professions, "Do no
harm…Honor your teacher… Cut without mercy…."
A reading by Arthur Rosenfeld, in the framework of William &
Mary's Patrick Hayes Writer's Festival, would provide students
with an opportunity to learn about a new literary genre. Rosenfeld
also inspires audiences to look at life from a different angle.
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