Like I said before, I never understood how disparaging other styles makes one's own better.
If you were to read more of the website with an open and questioning mind you’d likely notice that the guardian warrior stuff is not a martial art. This has nothing to do with “disparaging other styles” or becoming a “god” at combat through some “special technique”. In that article Tamarack Song is comparing apples and oranges. He’s not saying “my style is better than all those others”, he’s saying “this is fundamentally different than that, and here’s why”. The guardian warrior website is not about martial arts (though there is some crossover with a few aspects of what one might find in the more outside-the-box arts such as Ninjutsu). The essay by Song on martial arts is explaining a big part of why they’re different.
I still think it is a valid question though....where exactly did he see a non-human do a wrist strike?
It would be a valid question if it was posed in an open and honestly curious spirit (rather than an argumentative one), and if it addressed what Song actually wrote. As you yourself quoted him, Song wrote:
“When I observe the basic stances and movements being taught in martial arts classes, I see what is learned naturally by moving through natural environments.”
He doesn’t say anything about the movements of non-humans here, he’s talking about what we learn by moving through natural environments ourselves. He’s also talking about basic or core movements, not the details of specific and minute technical ones.
Respect is earned, and I don't know/haven't read/never really heard of this dude Song, so I have very little respect for him.
So you disrespect those you don’t know? You say you don’t disparage styles, but you disparage people? What martial tradition teaches that? All the martial artists and native teachers I ever studied with have taught honor and respect always (even for enemies, and especially for the unknown).
I'm not trying to be a dick, but my time is too important tome to waste it on mincing words.
Respect does not take more words than disrespect. And in my experience, disrespect often gets one embroiled in all kinds of messiness and conflict that tends to waste quite a lot of time.
no, but i don't go train for a year straight either. I don't really see how the two go together, but I imagine you were going with the "woods are my dojo, therefore sacred". I get you. Nothing profane about drinking ocasionally, IMO.
At the Teaching Drum, yes, training is for a year (but not in martial arts). There is no break from training, since it is one’s everyday life through all four seasons. And this involves the whole person, not just a part of him or her. That’s why the request to leave the substances behind. It actually has nothing to do with ideas about what’s “sacred” or “profane”. Those are your assumptions.
Probably am assuming I wouldn't be welcome, but don't have an interest to go anyway.
You would definitely be welcome. But yeah, not being interested kind of makes that irrelevant.