THE HORRORS of Ayatollah Khomeini Mass Execution Methods *Warning REAL FOOTAGE JJ

In the summer of 1988, inside the prisons of Iran, something was happening that the outside world would not learn about for decades. Men and women were being led into rooms and groups. They were asked a single question. Based on their answer, they were taken in one direction or another. One direction led back to a cell. The other direction led to a rope. Within weeks, an estimated 4,000 to 30,000 people had been killed. No trials, no appeals, no announcements. The Islamic Republic called it justice.

Survivors called it something else entirely. This is the story of how Ayatollah Ruhola Kmeni built a system of execution and what that system looked like from the inside. To understand the methods, you must first understand the man who ordered them. Raul Kmeni was born in 1902 in a small town in central Iran. From an early age, he was immersed in Islamic theology, studying under clerics and eventually becoming one himself. For decades, he operated within the religious establishment of Iran, largely out of the political spotlight.

That changed in the 1960s when he began openly criticizing Muhammad Resa, the westernbacked ruler of Iran. Kmeni’s opposition was rooted in a specific ideology. He believed that Islamic jurists, religious scholars trained in Sharia law should hold direct political power over the state. This concept known in Persian as valate fak or the guardianship of the Islamic jurist was not traditional Islamic doctrine. It was Kmeni’s own theological innovation and it would become the foundation of the

Islamic Republic of Iran. In 1964, after a particularly sharp speech against the sha, Arakmeni was arrested and then exiled. He spent the next 15 years outside Iran. First in Turkey, then in the holy city of Najaf in Iraq, and finally in a small village outside Paris. During this time, he continued to preach, distribute cassette tapes of his sermons, and build a network of followers inside Iran. When the Iranian revolution came in 1979, Kumeni did not lead it in the streets. He was 76 years old and living abroad. But his ideology

had saturated the revolutionary movement. When the sha fled and the old government collapsed, it was Kmeni who returned to Thran on a chartered Air France flight to a crowd of millions. Within months, he had consolidated power, eliminated rivals, and established the Islamic Republic. He would rule it until his death in 1989. The execution machinery did not appear overnight. It was constructed piece by piece in the months and years following the revolution. In the spring and summer of 1979, just weeks after the Sha’s fall,

revolutionary courts began operating out of a rooftop in Thran’s Refa. The head of these [clears throat] courts was Saddali, a cleric who would earn the nickname judge blood from Iranian journalists. Kalcali conducted trials that lasted minutes. Defendants were often given no lawyer, no opportunity to present evidence, and no formal charges. Execution orders were signed the same day the verdict was delivered. Among the first to be executed were generals and officials from the Shaw’s regime. Men

accused of crimes ranging from corruption to direct involvement in the suppression of dissident. Some had genuine blood on their hands. Others were convicted on the basis of their rank alone. But the courts did not stop there. Within the first year, the executions expanded to include Kurdish political leaders, leftist organizers, and members of ethnic minority groups who had sought autonomy in the post-revolutionary chaos. Kalcali personally oversaw some of these operations, traveling to Kurdish regions

to conduct summary trials and immediate executions on location. Kmeni was aware of all of this. He did not intervene. In several recorded statements from this period, he explicitly endorsed the speed and severity of the courts, arguing that showing mercy to enemies of the revolution was itself a form of treachery against God. What made these early executions significant was not just their number, but their speed, which the revolutionary court system was built to process people faster than any legal challenge could be mounted. By the

time families had located a lawyer, by the time any appeal had been drafted, the executions had already been carried out. The system was designed to be irreversible before it could be questioned. By the early 1980s, Iran’s prisons had become a world into unto themselves. Eban prison in northern Thran was the most notorious. Originally built under the Sha to house political prisoners, it was inherited by the Islamic Republic and expanded. At its peak in the early 1980s, Evan held thousands of detainees. Many of them

members of leftist organizations like the Mojahedina Kulk known as the mek or MKO as well as the two-day party and Fidian. Conditions inside were documented by survivors who later managed to leave Iran. When a cells designed for two or three people held 10 or 15, interrogation sessions lasted for days without sleep. Prisoners were blindfolded for weeks at a time. Physical punishment was administered within a religious framework. Lashes were counted out according to specific numbers derived from religious rulings

carried out by guards who sometimes prayed between strokes. The psychological dimension was equally calculated. Prisoners were isolated from family. Information about other detainees was used to extract confessions and force denunciations of former comrades. The system was designed not simply to punish but to break down individual identity and force a public declaration of loyalty to the Islamic Republic. Survivors describe a world of complete uncertainty. You did not know when you would be called and you did not

know what you were accused of on any given day. You did not know whether the person in the next cell was still alive. Outside Tehran, similar facilities operated in cities across Iran. Mashad, Isvahan, Tabre, Avas each had its own interrogation units and its own execution schedules. The system was not improvised. It was institutional. The single largest episode of mass execution under Kmeni occurred in the summer of 1988. And for many years, it remained one of the most suppressed events in modern Iranian history. In July 1988,

the Iran Iraq war was grinding toward its end. At the same moment, the MEK launched a military operation across the Iraqi border into western Iran called Operation Eternal Light. The offensive was repelled within days by Iranian forces, but the political effect inside Iran was significant. He Kmeni used the attack as justification for what came next. He issued a fatwa, a religious decree, ordering the execution of all imprisoned MEK members who remain committed to their organization. A committee of three officials was

established in Thrron to carry out the process. Similar committees were set up in prisons across the country. The procedure was methodical. Prisoners were brought before the committee one by one or in small groups. They were asked a series of questions. MEK prisoners were asked whether they remain loyal to the organization and whether they were willing to publicly denounce it. Those who said yes that they remain loyal were taken to a separate area. Those who denounced the organization were sent

back to their cells at least temporarily. The ones taken away were executed. When they were hanged in groups, their bodies buried in mass graves at sites including Cavar Cemetery on the outskirts of Tehran. After the MEK prisoners were processed, the committees turned to prisoners from leftist organizations, Marxists, communists, atheists. These prisoners were asked a different question. Do you believe in God? Those who answered no or who identified as Marxists were categorized as apostates under Kmeni’s

interpretation of Islamic law. They were executed. The entire operation took approximately 5 months. Estimates of the total number killed range from 4,000 on the low end to 30,000 on the high end. Though most researchers and human rights organizations work with figures between 4,000 and 10,000. The Iranian government has never acknowledged the event officially. The mass graves associated with it were later partially bulldozed. One document directly connected to the order survived. In 2016, audio of a

meeting between Ayatollah Montazeri, then Kmeni’s designated successor, and members of the execution committee was made public. In the recording, Montazeri explicitly tells the committee that what they are doing will be recorded as one of the greatest crimes of the Islamic Republic. He was subsequently removed from his position as successor. Kmeni died in 1989 before he could face any consequence for the order. Execution in the Islamic Republic under Kmeni took several forms. Hanging was the most

common in Iranian practice during this period. My hanging was typically carried out by suspension rather than the long drop method. Meaning death came from slow strangulation rather than a broken neck. Cranes were sometimes used in public executions to lift multiple individuals simultaneously. In the prison context, executions were conducted on smaller gallows or from beams inside prison facilities. Firing squad was used primarily in the early post-revolutionary period and for military and political figures.

Execution by firing squad was often carried out at dawn with prisoners brought out in groups. In documented cases from the 1988 massacre specifically, the scale of the operation required adaptation. Survivors and researchers have described prisoners being hanged in groups from ropes tied to cranes or from rows of nooes strung from the rafters of rooms inside prison facilities. Guards worked in shifts. The process ran continuously through the night. The bodies of those executed during the 1988 period were not returned

to families. Families were in many cases not informed of the execution at all. Some learned only when they arrived at the prison for a scheduled visit and were told without explanation that their family member was no longer there. Others received bags of personal belongings with no further information. The location of burial was in most cases deliberately withheld, a practice that human rights organizations have documented as a form of ongoing punishment extended beyond the individual to their surviving relatives.

There was one additional element documented by survivors before the executions were carried out. Women prisoners who had not yet been married were by order of a religious ruling forcibly married to prison guards the night before their execution. The ruling was based on a theological position that a virgin could not be lawfully executed. This practice was documented in testimony to human rights investigators and is among the most widely cited elements of the 1988 operation when the events are discussed by survivors. Kmeni

never faced trial. He died on June 3rd, 1989 of heart failure, approximately 1 year after the mass executions of the previous summer. The Islamic Republic he established continues to operate. Several individuals who sat on the 1988 execution committees have held senior positions in the Iranian government in the decades since. Ibrahim Ricey, who served as a member of the Thrron Committee in 1988, went on to serve as chief justice of Iran and was elected president of Iran in 2021. We international efforts to document the

1988 massacre have been ongoing. Human rights organizations including Amnesty International have called for an independent investigation. The United Nations special raper tour on Iran has repeatedly raised the issue. The Iranian government has rejected all such calls. The mass graves at Cavar and other sites remain. Families gather there periodically, though such gatherings have at times been dispersed by authorities. The families have no official record of what happened. No death certificates were issued. No cause

of death was recorded. The state absorbed their relatives and returned nothing. What happened in Iran in 1988 fits the definition used by international legal bodies for crimes against humanity. A systematic and widespread attack on a civilian population. The man who ordered it died in his bed, mourned by millions, and is buried in a shrine that receives visitors to this day. The methods were not hidden from Kmeni. They were carried out in his name on his written order in accordance with his theological

reasoning. The fatwa existed. The committees existed. The graves exist. That is the history. What separates this from other episodes of political repression is the theological architecture beneath it. Kummeni did not order these executions as a political expedient and justify them afterward. He ordered them because his reading of Islamic law required it. The meek members were hypocrites, a category that in classical juristprudence carries the death sentence. The Marxists were apostates. The Shaw’s generals were

corruptors of the earth. Each category had a legal basis in his system. The executions were not a departure from his ideology. They were its direct expression. That is what makes the record so important to document. This was the story of the execution methods ordered by Ayatollah Kmeni. A system built over a decade ending in one of the most documented and least prosecuted mass killings of the 20th century. The records exist. The survivors exist. The graves exist. If this kind of history is what you come here for, subscribe. More

is coming.

Read more:…

The door to stage 9 opened and Chuck Norris stepped in carrying a gym bag over one shoulder. He was dressed simply in dark pants and a gray shirt, expecting nothing more than a routine conversation with Warner Brothers about a possible film role. What he did not know was that in less than 15 minutes he was going to put a 350 pound former marine on the ground twice. It was late afternoon on the Universal Studios backlot in June of 1972, and the California heat was still hanging over the concrete. Chuck wiped the sweat from

his forehead and scanned the area for building C, where his meeting was supposed to take place. Stage 9 sat between two busy soundstages surrounded by cables, light stands, camera dollies, stacked crates, and crew members moving pieces of fake walls from one set to another. Somewhere nearby, somebody was hammering. Near the entrance, a huge man sat in a director’s chair as if the place belonged to him. His name was James Stone. He was 6’4, weighed around 350 lb, and looked like he had been

carved out of reinforced concrete. His neck was thick, his arms were massive, and his black t-shirt stretched across a body built to intimidate. His face carried the record of an ugly life. Scars. a bent nose, a split through one eyebrow, another mark along his jaw. James had spent the last three years working as John Wayne’s bodyguard. Before that, he had done two tours as a marine in places he never talked about. He came home with medals, buried memories, and the kind of nights that never really let a man sleep. After the

military, he moved into private security because that was where men like him usually ended up. Over  time, he had built his entire view of violence around one idea. Bigger wins. To him, fighting was simple. More size meant more force. More force meant control. He believed that because he had lived it. He had heard of Chuck Norris. Of course, he knew about the karate championships, the full contact fights, the growing reputation in Hollywood, the stories that followed him from dojo to set. But

in James’ mind, that still did not put him in the same category as men who had survived real combat.  So when Chuck walked past him toward the stage door, James tracked him carefully and called out, “You looking for something?”  His voice was low and rough. Chuck stopped, turned, and said, “I’m trying to find building C. I’ve got a meeting with Warner Brothers.” James pointed off across the lot. Wrong direction. Building C is past the water tower. Chuck gave him a polite nod. “Thank

you.” He started to move on. “Hold up,” James said, rising from the chair. “You’re Chuck Norris, right?” “The karate guy.” Chuck turned back. That’s right. James stepped closer, heavy and deliberate until he was standing a few feet away, looking down at him with a smirk that was not friendly so much as probing. I’ve heard about you, the demonstrations, the speed, the board breaking, the tournament stuff. Chuck adjusted the strap on his gym bag. Some

of it. James gave a dry smile. Looks impressive in front of a crowd. on camera, too, I guess. But there’s a difference between that and a real fight. Between putting on a show and actually hurting somebody, between looking dangerous and being dangerous. Chuck held his gaze and answered, “There is that threw James for a second. He had expected push back, not agreement.” “So you admit it?” James asked.  that karate is mostly for show. Chuck’s expression did not change. I didn’t say

that. James folded his arms. Then what are you saying? Chuck said. I’m saying you’re right. That there’s a difference. You’re just wrong about which side of it I’m on. Before James could answer, a voice called from inside the stage asking where the coffee was. A second later, John Wayne appeared in the doorway wearing boots, jeans, and a western shirt, carrying the same weathered authority he had spent decades bringing to the screen. He moved with that familiar half swagger, half limp of

a man who had taken more wear than he let people see. The moment he spotted Chuck, recognition crossed his face, followed by real respect. “Chuck Norris,” Wayne  said, walking over. “Good to see you.” Chuck reached out  and the two men shook hands. Mr. Wayne. Wayne asked what brought him there and Chuck explained that he had a meeting with Warner Brothers but got turned around. Wayne nodded and pointed in the right direction, then glanced at James and immediately picked up the

tension in the air. “Looks like you two already met,” Wayne said. James answered, “We were just talking about martial arts, demonstrations, real fighting.” Wayne’s jaw tightened slightly. He knew the sound of trouble before it fully arrived. Chuck, still calm, said. James thinks demonstrations don’t mean much in a real fight. James pressed harder.  So, what you do works outside the gym, too? Chuck replied, “What I do works?” James looked him over and asked, “Against who? Other

karate guys? Actors?” Chuck slowly lowered his bag to the ground beside him and answered. Against anyone. James let out a short laugh with no warmth in it. Anyone? Chuck met his eyes. That’s what I said. James took another step. Wayne stepped in immediately. James,  that’s enough. Chuck remains calm, but James is just getting started. He steps closer, breath hot with cigarette smoke and sweat, voice booming now, so every crew member within 50 ft stops working. I watched you on

the screen, kid. You beat up guys smaller than you. Actors who already know the choreography. Karate clowns who only dance around in padded dojoos. Real violence. I did two tours in Vietnam. I snapped a VC’s spine with my bare hands. I choked out men twice your size just for looking at me wrong. And you? You’re a short little Hollywood pretty boy who plays pretend tough guy for the cameras. I bet you’ve never taken a real punch in your life. One swing from me and you’d be crying on the

ground like a little John Wayne appears in the doorway, face darkening. But James shoves past any attempt at control. >>  >> He jabs a thick finger straight at Chuck’s chest. Voice now a public roar. Don’t give me that. I’m a champion. There’s no referee here. No audience. No script. I’m James Stone, John Wayne’s bodyguard for 3 years. I’ve beaten men bigger, stronger, and meaner than you. You’re nothing but a overhyped whose whole reputation was built

by cheap reporters. I spit on everything you call martial arts. If you’ve got any balls at all, prove it right here,  right now. Don’t run off to your little Warner Brothers meeting like a scared girl. Today, I’m going to smash your fake legend in front of every single person on this lot. The entire back lot goes dead silent.  Hammers stop. Crew members freeze. Cables in hand, staring. Some step back, some step closer.  John Wayne pushes between them, voice sharp. James, that’s

enough. You work  for me, Chuck is a guest. James swats Wayne’s hand away like it’s nothing. Eyes bloodshot, neck veins bulging.  No, boss. I’m sick of hearing the whole town jerk off to these Hollywood myths. Every time I see Norris on a poster, I want to puke. Chuck Norris can beat the whole damn army, my ass. Today, this whole lot is going to watch the truth. This little karate clown is going to cry in front of you, in front of me, and in front of every camera guy here. No disrespect,

Duke. James said, “I’ve been through real combat. I’ve been in places where men were trying to kill me. I’m still here because I’m bigger, stronger, and tougher than the ones who aren’t. Then he looked directly at Chuck. No offense, but you’re what, maybe 170? All that speed and kicking doesn’t change the fact that I could pick you up and throw you. Chuck studied him in silence for a moment, almost like a mechanic listening to an engine before deciding what is wrong with it. Then  he said,

“You’re right about one thing. You are bigger. You are stronger. And sometimes that matters, but you’re wrong about the rest.” James’s face tightened. Chuck continued. “You think size is power. It isn’t. Not by itself. You think strength wins. It doesn’t unless it’s directed properly. and you think experience makes you complete when all it has really done is teach you one kind of fight. James’ hands tightened into fists. Wayne’s voice sharpened. James, stand down. But

Chuck raised a hand slightly. It’s fine. Better he learns now than later. James’s face reened. Crew members nearby had already stopped what they were doing. Everybody in earshot was now watching. learns what  James snapped. Chuck said that everything you believe about fighting is incomplete. James’s patience broke. You want to test that right here? Chuck glanced around at the equipment, the people, the narrow space. Not here. Too many  people, too much gear. Somebody could

get hurt. James gave a hard smile. Yeah, you, Chuck answered. I meant someone watching.  Then he pointed toward the empty stage. There’s space inside. No one’s filming. If you really want to settle it, we can do it there. James stared at him. You serious? Chuck said, “You challenged me. I’m accepting.” Wayne took off his hat, ran a hand through his hair, and put it back on. The quiet gesture of a man who already knew how this was probably going to end. “All right,” he said at last, “but keep

it clean. No serious injuries. This  is a demonstration, not a street fight,” James nodded. “Works for me,” Wayne looked to Chuck. Chuck said, “I’m not trying to hurt him. I’m trying to show him something.” The four of them along with several crew members who could not resist following entered stage 9. Inside the sound stage was dark, open and cavernous with a high ceiling disappearing into shadow and a cold concrete floor below. Equipment was lined up against the walls. Most of the

light came through the open door and narrow windows above. Every footstep echoed. James pulled off his shirt, revealing a broad torso covered in old scars. He bounced lightly on his feet, rolled his shoulders, cracked his neck, and settled into the ritual confidence of a man who trusted his body to solve problems. Chuck stood across from him with his hands relaxed at his sides. No dramatic stance, no visible tension, no hard breathing. He looked like a man waiting for a bus, not one preparing to

fight. that unsettled James more than aggression would have. Every tough man he had ever faced showed something in advance. Fear, adrenaline, hostility, ego. Chuck showed none of it. Wayne stood to the side  and silenced one of the crew members with a glance. Chuck said, “Whenever you’re ready.” James moved first. I’m going to swat you like a fly. When I’m done, you’ll be on your knees begging forgiveness for ever showing that champion face in public. Wayne tries one last time, almost shouting,

“James, I forbid this.” But James is already bellowing over his shoulder. Get in here, Hollywood. Stop hiding, you karate clown. Today, I end the Chuck Norris myth once and for all. He did not rush. He circled, measured distance, studied Chuck’s shoulders, hands, feet, and eyes. Chuck turned slightly with him, but never reset. Never lifted a conventional guard. Never gave James the kind of reaction he expected. Finally, James threw a jab, fast and heavy for a man his size. It was the kind of punch

that had dropped men in bars and parking lots. Chuck moved his head only a few inches, and the fist cut through empty air. James fired another jab, then across. Both missed. Chuck had shifted his weight and turned just enough that the punches found nothing. He had not jumped back or ducked wildly. He had simply not been where the attacks arrived. James reset.  Irritated now. He fainted left, then drove a hard right toward Chuck’s ribs and followed with a hook to the head. Chuck slipped inside the first strike.

>>  >> The punch passed over his shoulder. The hook carved through air. Before James could recover, he felt contact on his wrist. Not a grip, not a yank, just a brief, precise pressure. And then the floor was gone. His balance vanished before his mind understood why. One second he was attacking, the next he was falling. He hit the concrete hard and the sound rolled through the stage like a blast. Several people flinched. James had been knocked down before. He knew how to recover. He pushed himself up

quickly, trying to replay the exchange in his head. There had been no big throw. No obvious trick, no dramatic motion, just a touch, a disruption, and the ground when he looked up. Chuck was still standing almost where he had started, breathing the same, posture unchanged. That hurt James’ pride more than the fall itself. With people watching, he could not leave it there. He came again, more aggressively now, less technical, more committed to raw power. He launched a huge right hand with everything behind it. The kind that

could break a jaw or switch off consciousness. Chuck stepped forward, not backward, entering the attack instead of yielding to it. His left hand rose and redirected James’s arm by just enough to spoil the line. Then his right palm settled against James’s chest almost gently. No wind up, no show. Then came a compact burst of motion from the floor upward through Chuck’s legs, hips, core, shoulder, and hand all at once. The sound was deep and solid. James’ eyes widened. His mouth opened, but no

breath came. The air had been driven out of him. He stumbled backward. One step, then another, then a third. His legs stopped cooperating. He dropped down hard onto the concrete. Not knocked unconscious, not crushed, but unable to remain standing. One hand flew to his chest as he tried to inhale and could not. It was as if the connection between his body and his breath had been interrupted. Chuck stood where he was, not gloating, not celebrating, only watching and waiting. Wayne stared in silence, caught between disbelief and

fascination. He had seen more staged fights than most men would see in 10 lifetimes. He knew the difference between choreography and what had just happened. The crew said nothing.  Finally, James dragged in a ragged breath, then another. His lungs started working again.  He looked up at the smaller man in front of him and rasped, “How? How?” Chuck walked over and crouched until they were eye level. His voice was soft. Almost matterof fact. You’re strong. You’re trained. You’ve survived

things most men never will.  But you made three mistakes. First, you assumed size decides everything. It doesn’t. Understanding decides more than size ever will.  Second, you fought with anger and pride. That made you predictable. Third, you committed your whole body to each attack. Once you committed, you lost the ability to adjust. I don’t commit like that, I respond. Then Chuck stood and extended his hand. James looked at it for a long moment at the same hand that had just

put him on the floor twice and broken apart his certainty in under a minute. Then he took it. Chuck pulled him up with ease. The size difference between them looked almost absurd now. James outweighed him by well over 200 lb. Yet the imbalance in understanding made that difference meaningless. Quietly,  James said. I don’t get it. I’ve been in combat. I know how to fight. Chuck answered. You know one kind of fighting. The kind your body, your training, and your experience taught you. That’s not

the only kind, and it’s not always the best one. James rubbed his chest.  Then what is? Chuck said. Fighting isn’t about forcing the other man into your world. It’s about not stepping into his. You wanted strength against strength because that’s your language. I didn’t accept that fight. I chose one where your size became a problem for you. where your force worked against you, where your commitment gave me what I needed.” James asked about the strike to the chest. And Chuck explained

that most men try to create force by tensing up, but tension makes the body rigid, and rigid can be powerful, but it is also slow. Relaxation, he said, keeps the body alive, fast,  and adaptable. He told James he had not been trying to smash into muscle and bone on the surface. >>  >> He had sent force through the structure into what sat behind it, not the armor, the systems behind the armor. Wayne stepped closer and said, “I owe you an apology.” Chuck looked at him. Wayne

continued, “James works for me. He challenged you. Disrespected you. I should have stopped it sooner.” Chuck shook his head. He didn’t disrespect me. He questioned me. That’s different. Questions deserve answers. Wayne looked over at James. You  okay? James nodded once. Body’s fine. Ego needs more time. Wayne gave a low breath and said to Chuck, “I’ve known James for years. He’s one of the toughest men I’ve ever met. I’ve seen him handle three men at

once without breaking a sweat. I’ve seen him take punishment that would put most people in the hospital. And you put him down like it was nothing. Chuck answered. It wasn’t nothing. It was timing, leverage, anatomy, position, and understanding. Nothing magical,  nothing superhuman, just correct knowledge used properly. James looked at him and asked almost reluctantly, “Can you teach that?” Chuck studied him. “Do you actually want to learn or do you just want to learn how to beat me?”

James took a moment before answering. I want to understand what just happened to me. Chuck nodded. Then yes, I can teach you, but not now. Not today. Today, you need to think about why you challenged me, what you were trying to prove, and whether it mattered.  Chuck picked up his gym bag, then paused before leaving. He turned back and said, “In combat, aggression can work against men who fight the same way you do. But what happens when the other man doesn’t give you that fight?  What

happens when he uses your aggression for his own advantage? Think about that. The strongest fighter isn’t the one who hits the hardest. It’s the one who understands the most.” Then Chuck left. The door closed behind him, and the stage seemed darker than before. For several seconds, nobody said a word. Finally, one crew member whispered, “Did that really just happen?” Wayne walked over to James and put a hand on his shoulder. “You all right?” James sat back on the concrete and answered

honestly. “No, I don’t know what that was,” Wayne said. “You got taught something by a man you underestimated.” James looked up at him. “I’m supposed to keep you safe. How do I do that if a guy half my size can put me on the floor twice in under a minute? Wayne answered. Chuck Norris isn’t just some actor. I’ve heard the stories. The championships, the training, the respect serious fighters have for him. I guess most of us only hear those things. You just experience them. The crew slowly

drifted away, returning to work. But everybody there knew they would be talking about this later over drinks, over dinner, over phone calls to friends. Each version growing more dramatic with time while keeping the same core truth. Chuck Norris  had put a 350 pound bodyguard on the floor twice, and he had done it without drama. James sat there another minute, then stood, rolled his shoulders, and pressed his fingertips to the sore spot on his chest. “It was already starting to bruise.” “I need to find him later,”

James said. Wayne nodded. He said, “He has a meeting in building C. Give him time.” They stepped back outside into the fading California light. The heat had eased. Wayne lit a cigarette and offered one to James. James took it. For a while, they smoked in silence. Then James said, “You know what bothers me most?” Wayne asked. “What?” James stared ahead. “He didn’t really hurt me. He could have. He had the chance. He could have broken something, damaged something, done real

harm.” But he didn’t. He taught me instead. Wayne said nothing. James kept staring. And if that was just him demonstrating, I don’t know what the other version looks like. Wayne had no answer for that. 3 hours later, James stood outside Chuck’s hotel room and knocked. He had showered and changed clothes, but the bruise on his chest had spread dark and ugly, almost the size of a fist. Chuck opened the door barefoot, wearing a white t-shirt and dark pants. He looked mildly surprised.  Mr.

stone. James said, “Can I talk to you just for a minute?” Chuck stepped aside and let him in. The room was simple. Bed, desk, television, bathroom. Chuck’s gym bag rested on a chair. An open notebook sat on the desk with neat writing across the pages. Chuck glanced at James’ chest and asked, “How’s it feel?”  James touched the bruise. “Hurts. Going to look worse tomorrow.” Chuck said, “I’m sorry about that.” James shook his head. “Don’t be.” I

asked for it. For a moment, they stood in awkward silence. James was used to owning a room with his size. Now, he felt smaller in a way that had nothing to do with height or weight. I came to apologize, he said at last for what I said back there, about demonstrations about karate being for show. I was wrong. And I was disrespectful, Chuck replied.  You were skeptical. That’s not the same thing. Skepticism can be healthy, James exhaled. Maybe, but I acted like an ass about it. Chuck almost smiled. James went on. I spent

years in the Marines, then private security. My whole identity got built around being the toughest guy in the room. Today, you showed me that doesn’t mean what I thought it did. Chuck said, “Being tough isn’t about being the strongest body in the room. It’s about being able to adapt, to learn, to recognize when you’re wrong and change.” James took a breath. You said you could teach me. Did you mean it? Chuck answered. Yes, James asked. When?  Chuck replied. That depends on

why you want to learn. James thought carefully before answering. Because what happened today? I’ve never seen anything like it. I thought I understood fighting. I thought I understood violence. Turns out I only understood one narrow piece of it. If I’m going to keep protecting people and doing my job right, then I need to understand more than I do. Chuck walked to the window and looked down at the parking lot outside where the last light of the day had turned everything gold. Most people come to

martial arts because they want techniques. He said, “A strike for this, a counter for that. They collect them like tools. They think if they memorize enough moves, they’ll understand fighting. But that’s not how it works. You have to understand movement, your movement, his movement, distance, timing, rhythm, pressure. You have to understand what another person is trying to do before he fully does it. Once you understand those things, technique stops being the point. James listened in silence. That sounds

impossible, he said.  Chuck turned back toward him. It sounds impossible because you’re thinking about fighting as something separate from yourself. It isn’t. Fighting is movement. Movement is natural. You don’t think about walking every time you walk. At your best, fighting should become the same way. Honest, efficient, direct. James sat down on the edge of the bed. His chest still achd every time he moved wrong. How long does it take to learn that? Chuck answered. The rest of your

life. James let out a dry breath. Chuck continued. You never finish learning, but you can start understanding the basics sooner than you think if you’re willing to work and willing to let go of what you think you know. James said, “I don’t have months to disappear into training. I work for Duke. I travel. I don’t have that kind of schedule.” Chuck said, “Then you learn when you can. An hour here, an hour there. It’s not just about how much time you have.  It’s about what you do with it.” James

stood again and offered his hand. Thank you  for not seriously hurting me and for still being willing to teach me. Chuck shook his hand and said,  “Start with this. for the next week. Every time you get angry, stop and ask yourself why. James frowned slightly. Why I got angry? Chuck said, “No, not what triggered it. Why you chose it?” Anger feels automatic to most people, but it usually isn’t. Most of the time, we choose it before we realize we’ve chosen it. Learn to catch that. If you

can control that, you’ve started. James  blinked. That’s the first lesson. Chuck nodded. That’s the first lesson. Fighting starts in the mind. If the mind isn’t under control, the body never really will be either. James left the room, rode the elevator down, and stepped into the cool evening air. He got into his car, but for a long time, he did not start it. He just sat there thinking about what Chuck had said, about anger being a choice, about fighting beginning in the mind, about

how a bruise could sometimes feel less like damage and more like instruction. When he finally drove back to finish his shift, something inside him had already begun to change. Two weeks later, Chuck was back in Los Angeles, teaching at his school in Chinatown, a modest place with mats on the floor and mirrors on one wall. He was working with a student, guiding him through sensitivity drills, teaching him how to feel intention through contact rather than waiting to see it too late. Then the front door

opened. James Stone walked in wearing training clothes and carrying a small bag. Chuck looked up. James said, “I’m here to learn if the offer still stands.” Chuck smiled. It stands, but we start at the beginning. Everything you think you know about fighting, we’re going to take apart and rebuild properly. James answered. Good, because what I thought I knew nearly got me destroyed by a man half my size. They trained for an hour. Chuck taught. James learned. Or more accurately, James

unlearned. He had to rethink stance, movement, structure, balance, and the very way he used force. He had spent most of his life trusting more. Chuck was teaching him better. His chest still hurt sometimes, and the bruise had already started fading from dark purple to yellow green. But every time he felt it, he remembered the same lesson. Size is not power. Understanding is. Months later, John Wayne gave an interview and was asked about security. About James, Wayne said James was still the best bodyguard he had ever had.

tough as rawhide and loyal to the bone, but then added that recently James had become even better. He said James had started training with Chuck Norris, and though he himself had been skeptical at first, he had seen the results. James moved differently now,” Wayne said. Less wasted motion, better decisions, smarter pressure. When the reporter asked what changed, Wayne thought back to that afternoon in stage 9 to the sight of James going down twice to the moment he realized that size by itself meant far

less than most men wanted to believe. Then he answered he learned that being the biggest man in the room doesn’t make you the best one. And once a man learns that, he can finally start learning everything else. The story did not end there. James kept training with Chuck whenever their schedules lined up. He learned principles, not just techniques. He learned economy, sensitivity, rhythm, structure, and the mental side of violence. He stayed with Wayne until Wayne retired and later opened his own

security company. He trained his men differently than most others in the field. less emphasis on bulk and intimidation, more emphasis on awareness, judgment, adaptability, and control. He never told the stage 9 story publicly. He did not think it belonged to him as entertainment. To him, it was not a tale to perform. It was a private turning point. The day a smaller man broke apart a worldview he had trusted for years and gave him something better to build on. And in the years that followed, that lesson stayed

with him far more deeply than the bruise ever did. The bruise faded. The mark on his pride did not. But that was not a bad thing. It reminded him that being wrong is often the first step toward becoming better. That was why every student James ever trained eventually heard the same words Chuck had given him. Fighting starts in the mind and the body follows whatever the mind has already chosen. Most men did not understand that right away. James had not either. But the few who finally did became truly dangerous. Not because they

were stronger or louder or more violent, but because they understood. And James had learned that on a hot afternoon in 1972 was the only weapon that ever really mattered.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *