assuming I am correct from this point forward. 
Well, if you assume and no one knows you're assuming and you turn out to be right, only you know you weren't sure if you knew, right? 
A monk is a fantastic creature. When they begin, they're a young fawn learning to run for the first time. They keep getting tangled in their stances, tripping over their own feet, and generally flailing at their enemies as fast as they can.
As a matter of fact, they're so busy flailing and focusing on staying a stance, they don't realize they're flailing! It's a child playing patty cake with giants. However, as the monk focuses less on their stances and their flailing becomes fluid grace, they begin to see the anatomy of their opponent. No longer is a knee simply a body part. It's a joint that when struck properly with a leg sweep, knocks them down harder than a normal trip. Thus, a leg sweep as the opponent leaves their feet. Chakra points on the body begin to glow as they recognize more body parts as integral to the physical world. Soon the monk reaches into the realm of the spiritual and does damage to the spirit of the creature, causing horrific pain to the creature it fights as it learns to harm Chakras.
And this, Brother D, is how monks differentiate between anatomy and anatomies.
:eek: