THE BOOK

Analogies of

Shorinjiryu Karate-do,

Golf, and Baseball

By Emanuel Hawthorne · Available in print and digital

DESCRIPTION

Analogies of Shorinjiryu Karate-do, Golf, and Baseball is an unusual and quietly radical book. Drawing on a lifetime of practice and observation, Emanuel Hawthorne reveals that three apparently unrelated disciplines share a common architecture: the same use of the ground, the same chain of forces, the same requirement of a composed and observing mind.

From the karateka’s reverse punch, to the golfer’s drive, to the pitcher’s release, Hawthorne dismantles the surface differences and exposes the underlying mechanics. He shows how torque is generated, how structure transmits power, and how the smallest collapse in alignment dissolves the entire effort.

Yet this is not only a technical book. Threaded throughout is a philosophy drawn from Taoist thought, the conviction that the body, properly arranged, expresses something larger than itself. Hawthorne invites the reader to see practice as inquiry, and discipline as a form of attention.

KEY THEMES

What you will discover

01

Torque

The rotational power born from a grounded base, the secret of every strike, swing, and pitch.

03

Movement

Connected motion, the kinetic chain that makes the whole body speak with a single voice.

02

Structure

Skeletal alignment as the architecture through which intention becomes force.

04

Taoist Philosophy

Stillness in action. The yielding, observing mind that allows form to flow without effort.

"From the dojo floor to the fairway, the same earth, the same breath."

One does not learn karate, or golf, or baseball.

One learns to move.

Begin your reading

Available now in paperback and Kindle edition.

Emanuel Hawthorne

Exploring the universal principles of movement across martial arts, golf, and baseball.

INQUIRIES

For interviews, seminars, and correspondence, please use the contact form.

© 2026 Emanuel Hawthorne. All rights reserved.

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