
by MASTERSEGARRA
After Chapter Eight teaches us to move like water, Chapter Nine offers a crucial warning:
Even what flows well can overflow.
This chapter addresses a timeless problem in martial arts—not lack of effort, but excess. Too much force. Too much ambition. Too much attachment to success.
Grandmaster Hwang Kee often emphasized that Tang Soo Do was not just about gaining skill—but about knowing how to hold it responsibly.
持而盈之
不如其已
揣而锐之
不可长保
金玉满堂
莫之能守
富贵而骄
自遗其咎
功成身退
天之道
Holding and filling something to excess
Is not as good as stopping in time.
Sharpening a blade too much
Will cause it to dull.
A hall filled with gold and jade
Cannot be protected forever.
Wealth and pride together
Invite misfortune.
When success is achieved, withdraw.
This is the Way of Heaven.
This chapter teaches restraint after success.
The Tao does not condemn achievement—but it warns against:
What rises must be managed wisely—or it collapses under its own weight.
Martial arts often fail after success, not before it.
Common pitfalls:
Chapter Nine reminds us:
Sustainability matters more than scale.
I remember the first time I shook hands with Grandmaster Hwang Kee. I expected a rough, big knuckled weapon of a hand since he emphasized hand conditioning with hundreds of strikes a day as ‘homework’ on punching boards. To my surprise his hands were normal. This impressed me because it reminded me to train intelligently long term, not rush for fast results. It is easy to over train and damage your body, but you only get one body. Strengthening over time like he did. Long term results not dangerous short term gains.
“Holding and filling something to excess is not as good as stopping.”
In training:
Progress happens in digestion, not accumulation.
“Sharpening a blade too much will cause it to dull.”
Physically:
Mentally:
True sharpness is maintained, not forced.
“Wealth and pride together invite misfortune.”
In martial arts:
Humility protects what skill alone cannot.
“When success is achieved, withdraw.”
This does not mean quitting.
It means releasing attachment.
For instructors:
This is how arts survive generations.
Growth is not the enemy.
Unmanaged growth is.
Wise leadership asks:
Sometimes the most powerful move is not adding more before developing what you have.
The Tao teaches balance not only in struggle—but in success.
Fill the cup, drink it’s contents, then set it down and reflect.
Sharpen the blade, then sheath it.
Build the art, then serve it humbly.
This is the Way of Heaven.
This is the Way of Tang Soo Do.
Continue your study of Tang Soo Do philosophy, history, and living practice:
👉 http://tangsoodoresource.com/