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{ "item_title" : "Kyojin-Ryu", "item_author" : [" Coley Simerly", "Kyo Isurugi "], "item_description" : "KYOJIN-RYU: The Flow of the Teaching God is not a book about power.It is a book about restraint.Written as a unified system and presented here as a single complete volume, Kyojin-Ryu gathers six forms into one continuous discipline-each form examining not how to strike, dominate, or win, but when not to act at all.This work does not teach reaction.It teaches judgment.Each form moves inward before it moves outward, beginning with internal balance, identity, and perception, then extending into interaction, conflict, and presence. The structure is deliberate: nothing is added without first removing excess. Nothing is expressed unless it carries weight. Force is treated as a last resort-not because it is ineffective, but because it is costly.Kyojin-Ryu was written for readers who are tired of loud philosophies and aggressive certainty. It is for those who understand that true control is quiet, that authority does not announce itself, and that the most decisive action is often restraint. The language is measured, precise, and intentionally sparse, allowing the reader space to reflect rather than react.This is not a martial arts manual in the traditional sense, nor is it self-help. It is a philosophical discipline expressed through forms-principles that can be applied to conflict, leadership, relationships, and internal regulation alike. Each form stands on its own, yet together they describe a complete system: how to remain grounded when challenged, how to observe without absorbing chaos, and how to act only when action is unavoidable.Throughout the book, emphasis is placed on timing, silence, and containment. Power is framed not as domination over others, but as mastery over one's own impulse to intervene. The reader is never told what to think, only shown where unnecessary motion creates imbalance.Kyojin-Ryu assumes intelligence.It assumes patience.It assumes the reader understands that not every situation deserves a response.This collected edition brings all six forms together in their final, refined structure, edited for continuity and clarity in print. The result is a single volume meant to be read slowly, revisited often, and applied selectively. It is designed not to motivate, but to steady. Not to provoke action, but to sharpen discernment.For those who believe that peace is not passive, that silence can be deliberate, and that strength is proven by what is withheld rather than what is displayed, Kyojin-Ryu offers a complete and disciplined philosophy of restraint.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers4.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/824/702/9798247022831_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "16.00", "online_price" : "16.00", "our_price" : "16.00", "club_price" : "16.00", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
Kyojin-Ryu|Coley Simerly

Kyojin-Ryu : The Flow of the Teaching God

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Overview

KYOJIN-RYU: The Flow of the Teaching God is not a book about power.
It is a book about restraint.

Written as a unified system and presented here as a single complete volume, Kyojin-Ryu gathers six forms into one continuous discipline-each form examining not how to strike, dominate, or win, but when not to act at all.

This work does not teach reaction.
It teaches judgment.

Each form moves inward before it moves outward, beginning with internal balance, identity, and perception, then extending into interaction, conflict, and presence. The structure is deliberate: nothing is added without first removing excess. Nothing is expressed unless it carries weight. Force is treated as a last resort-not because it is ineffective, but because it is costly.

Kyojin-Ryu was written for readers who are tired of loud philosophies and aggressive certainty. It is for those who understand that true control is quiet, that authority does not announce itself, and that the most decisive action is often restraint. The language is measured, precise, and intentionally sparse, allowing the reader space to reflect rather than react.

This is not a martial arts manual in the traditional sense, nor is it self-help. It is a philosophical discipline expressed through forms-principles that can be applied to conflict, leadership, relationships, and internal regulation alike. Each form stands on its own, yet together they describe a complete system: how to remain grounded when challenged, how to observe without absorbing chaos, and how to act only when action is unavoidable.

Throughout the book, emphasis is placed on timing, silence, and containment. Power is framed not as domination over others, but as mastery over one's own impulse to intervene. The reader is never told what to think, only shown where unnecessary motion creates imbalance.

Kyojin-Ryu assumes intelligence.
It assumes patience.
It assumes the reader understands that not every situation deserves a response.

This collected edition brings all six forms together in their final, refined structure, edited for continuity and clarity in print. The result is a single volume meant to be read slowly, revisited often, and applied selectively. It is designed not to motivate, but to steady. Not to provoke action, but to sharpen discernment.

For those who believe that peace is not passive, that silence can be deliberate, and that strength is proven by what is withheld rather than what is displayed, Kyojin-Ryu offers a complete and disciplined philosophy of restraint.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798247022831
  • ISBN-10: 9798247022831
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: February 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.32 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.36 pounds
  • Page Count: 128

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