The Warrior Within

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The Five Laws of Sun Tzu

“The Art of War,” written by Sun Tzu in 490 A.C., speaks of the five laws of combat, which are as follows:

Faith: before entering a battle, it is necessary to believe in the reason for the fight.

The Companion: choose your allies and learn to fight while accompanied by others, because nobody wins a war alone.

Time: a fight in winter is different from a fight in summer; a bad warrior pays no attention to the problem when he is young. And when he grows up, he feels unable to overcome it.

Space: you do not fight on a precipice the same way as you fight on a plain. Always consider what is most favorable around you.

Strategy: the best warrior is the one who plans his combat.

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The Warrior of Light

“The warrior has lived each and every day of the year that has gone by, and even though he has lost some great battles, he has survived and here he is. This is a victory. This victory has cost many difficult moments, nights of doubts, endless days of waiting. Since ancient times, celebrating a triumph has been part of the ritual of life itself.

Commemorating is a rite of passage.

His companions look at the happiness of the Warrior of Light and think to themselves: “why does he do this? He could be beaten in his next combat. He may provoke the enemy’s fury.”

But the warrior knows the reason for his gesture. He gains strength from the best present that victory can offer: confidence.

The warrior celebrates the year that has come to an end so he can be stronger for tomorrow’s battles.”

~ Paulo Coelho

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