Old Deng


If you are over thirty, then you are Old Deng.
When people get old, there’s always someone who has to tell you.
It’s not something you discover on your own. It’s something others tell you.
Old Deng, Old Deng.
One cry after another, one cut after another.
No blood is seen from the blade. But you know that something on you is being pared away.
In ancient times, swordsmen used to seal their swords at forty. Because their hands slowed, their eyes blurred—by the time they drew again, they would already be losing.
He accepts his fate.
We don’t accept it.
At thirty, the mortgage has just been paid for three years; our child has just learned to call us Dad; our parents have just started hospital stays.
We can’t seal our swords.
Our sword is only just coming out of the scabbard.
But the martial world doesn’t wait for anyone.
The martial world says: you’re old. The songs you listen to, the movies you watch, the people you’ve loved—everything you’ve done should go in a museum.
The martial world gave you a name—Old Deng.
For a person, the hardest thing isn’t being defeated—it’s being stripped of your name.
If you’re defeated, you can crawl back up and fight again. If you’re stripped of your name, you don’t even have the right to stand on the ring.
But the martial world has never been a young person’s world.
The martial world is for everyone who’s still walking.
You’re thirty. You’re forty. Your lower back hurts, your hair turns white. When you work overtime until nearly midnight, get home, and see your child’s face as they sleep, your nose might sting with a sudden ache.
You’re still walking, so you’re still in the martial world.
When a swordsman gets old, it’s not that his sword stops being sharp.
It’s that he starts to understand that some people aren’t worth drawing the sword for, some words aren’t worth turning back to answer, and some labels aren’t worth tearing off.
He smiles and then puts his sword back into the scabbard, and continues on his way.
This isn’t losing. This is understanding.
So, one day, if someone calls out “Old Deng” behind your back,
no need to turn around, no need to explain.
You walk your road, love the people you love, listen to the songs you love, and protect the people you want to protect. When, late at night, you drink alone—raise a toast to yourself.
The martial world is huge; it can make room for everyone still walking.
You’re not Old Deng.
You’re a person with a sword.
It’s just been hidden away.
Not drawn doesn’t mean it isn’t there.
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