I
find myself recovering from knee surgery while spending weeks traveling
far from home and living in a hotel for for work. So for this 2 week
stint, I hauled along a jo and an iaito so I can train at the hotel.
The hotel room has enough space that if I move the furniture out of the
way I should be able to do iai kata from seiza fairly well. The jo is
not nearly as likely to cause people to panic and call the police, so
I’ll take that out in the hotel parking lot and train in a quiet, back
corner of the lot.
This
evening I tried doing iai in the hotel room. I will admit that it
worked better than I expected. My knee is still quite stiff, so just
practicing getting into and out of seiza is very good for it. At the
beginning of practice my buttocks are a good 2 inches (5 cm) from my
heels. By the end of a good practice session they touch. I still can’t
get down far enough to relax at all in seiza, but that I can get down
this far is great progress. And going down into seiza while still
holding all my weight with the muscles in my legs is great training for
my legs too. Really strengthens them and makes them much steadier.
One
problem I had not expected was how much friction the carpet would
cause. I have to exaggerate my movement a bit in order to prevent
myself from getting a rug burn. I am working at doing the forward
movements without dragging my knee at all. I have to lift it off the
carpet and move it forward. This is changing my body mechanics in a way
that I suspect will be helpful because it eliminates the possibility of
leaving my leg behind and just dragging it forward. It forces me to
lift to drive my leg forward strongly.
One
thing I hadn’t thought of that I am finding useful is that the hotel
room has two large mirrors in it for dressing. They are nice for
checking my form. It’s been 8 weeks since my surgery, and I am just
beginning to train again. I can see lots of places where my form is
weak from a combination of not training for a couple of months and
having my body messed up from knee surgery. The mirrors are great for
spotting and correcting some of these problems. Unfortunately, I got
excited about a point I was working on with my furikaburi, and stood up
to try it from that position. This is a problem because the hotel room
doesn’t have cathedral ceilings. I do hope the folks in the room above
me hadn’t gone to sleep already. I also hope the hotel staff doesn’t
mind the nice line I cut in the ceiling.
Training
in the hotel is not ideal, I will agree. But since I must be on the
road for several weeks, it is the best option I have. The drawbacks are
limited space and a concern that I will damage something in the room.
I would love to be able to move more freely and to have a nice, smooth,
dojo surface to train on, but since I don’t, this will do. The up side
is that I have more than sufficient fundamental points needing work and
polish that not being able to do a lot of full kata really won’t hold
me back. I can certainly work on moving from seiza, getting into seiza,
furikaburi and kirioroshi for quite a long time. They all need plenty
of polish.
Focusing
on the basics like this is something that can be easy to forget when
I’m healthy. I’ve reached a level where there are quite a few different
things I can work on, and the basics, the fundamental stuff, is not
always the more fascinating stuff to practice. However, they are
fundamental to everything else we do, and time spent improving the
basics is immediately reflected in everything else I do. My legs get
stronger and more steady, more capable of correct movement and
supporting good posture (even when I misstep). Furikaburi and
kirioroshi appear in almost every kata we do, so there is no way I can
imagine time spent polishing them will not be reflected in improved
performance when I do the kata. And of course, since I can’t quite get
into seiza, practice that gets me closer to getting into seiza and and
not being in extreme discomfort while I’m there can only be a good
thing.
For
all these reasons I dragged a sword and jo in a big black gun case
along on a flight across the country for a 2 week business trip. Just
picture me in my hotel room creaking into seiza and then moving across
the floor taking great care not to drag my knee on the carpet or to let
my kissaki drop below horizontal, and then trying to make the big,
fluid, powerful cuts required in Shinto Hatakage Ryu.
What unusual places do you train in, and why?
Ganbatte, Peter! I am happy to hear you are getting back in trim already.
ReplyDeleteI used to practice in my apartment when I lived alone. First with a bokuto, then an iaito, then a shinken. The bokuto was responsible for knocking a couple of pieces out of a butcher block cutting board in the kitchen, but the shinken was responsible for the nice, diagonal cut I made in my almost-brand new couch (dang - I mean, oh well). I also used to hit the glass light fixtures in both rooms with the iaito and shinken both. Made a nice ding but never cracked them.
But my favorite activity was practicing cutting sheets of newspaper by taping them in the doorway to the hall at the appropriate height. One of my friends fondly remembers me answering her call on the phone, then saying, "I'm cutting newspapers; I'll call you back."
My cat (at the time) Alex, used to sit just out of cutting range to watch me practice. It used to make me really nervous, until I realized her ma-ai was better than mine.
What a great article. Yes iai kata is good to increase leg strength and solve the knee stiffness problem. Nice info and keep posting.back and neck pain bergen county , low back pain bergen county
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