I'm headed off to Japan in few days to spend a week and a half with my sword teacher, Kiyama Hiroshi. Kiyama Sensei is 88 years old, had been doing budo for all but 5 of those years. He has more ranks than I can wrap my mind around. He is 7th dan Kyoshi in iaido, kendo and jodo. He holds ranks in Shito Ryu karate and judo. Those are just the arts I know about. He is an absolute budo treasure. I am looking forward to this trip, and I'm spending a lot of time thinking about what sort of questions I want to ask him and the things I would like to hear him talk about.
I know from experience that anything he wants to talk about will be fascinating and give me food for thought for months and years to come. He's very much a traditional Meiji man though, which means he tends to be reticent and reserved and not much for light conversation. Getting him talking sometimes requires a bit of prompting. That's why I like to go in with a bunch of questions ready to help get the conversation going.
I've got a few. I'm still asking him about various points in his budo career. Lately I'm really interested in what it was like training kendo, iaido, jukendo and judo in the 1930s during the war. I'm also curious about what the postwar training environment was like. The common myth that martial arts were banned by the Allies after the war is just that, a myth. (See Joseph Svinth's article at ejmas.com). That doesn't mean that the training environment was incredibly difficult. Food was scarce, the country was in ruins, and through efforts of the militarist government budo has been used and manipulated for the war effort. People were working hard to find enough to eat and rebuild the country from literal ruins. I want to know how he and others found the energy to train in these conditions and what motivated them.
I'm really interested in how he managed to train to an advanced level in so many arts, both from a matter of time, and how he kept them all straight in his body. I constantly find aspects of one art showing up where it shouldn't when I am training in something else. I really want to know how he kept, and keeps, them straight. At 88, he is still in the dojo
Which is another topic I want to ask him about. What is he working on in the dojo now? Does he have any goals for his daily training? Are there particular aspects of his budo that he is still trying to polish. I look at how my training goals and motivations have changed over the comparatively short time I've been training and I wonder how Kiyama Sensei's have changed (next to someone with 83 years of training, my 27 years feels like I'm still at the elementary school level).
Kiyama Sensei was trained during a pivotal time in the development of modern Kendo, Judo and Iaido. I wonder what his thoughts are on the changes they have undergone in his lifetime. Kendo and Judo seem to have become more and more about competition every year. How does he feel about that? On the other side, he has also delved deep into koryu bugei. He has been doing Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu for at least 60 years, and he did Shinto Muso Ryu for I don't know how many decades. He knows both the koryu and gendai budo worlds intimately. Does he prefer one to the other? How well does he think each is adapting to the 21st century?
These are the lines of thinking I'm following, but if anyone has good suggestions, I will try to bring them up with Kiyama Sensei and see what he says.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Interviewing My Teacher
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Wednesday, September 11, 2013
What Is A Good Uke, and Why Is One Important?
I’ve run across some discussions within gendai budo arts with people talking about the varying qualities of the uke they encounter as they train in different dojo. The quality of ukes and the training people do with them is thoroughly inconsistent. All of this brought two questions to the fore for me. First, what is a good uke? Second, just how important for training iis it to have a good uke to work with?
When we train in most martial arts, we have to have a partner to train with. It is difficult to practice solo, whether you are training in an unarmed or armed art. In arts like judo and aikido, many people seem to view uke’s role as simply being able to take the fall when we throw them. While I agree that uke must be able to handle being thrown, I believe this is the smallest portion of an uke’s skills. I was witness to a recent discussion of people from one art complaining about the quality of attacks their uke were performing. The poor attacks were making good practice difficult.
When we go to the dojo to train, we need partners to train with. Our training partner, our uke, actually determines just about everything that happens in each training encounter. Our uke sets the spacing and speed of the encounter, as well as the determining how much energy will go into it. This is true for judo, aikido practice, kenjutsu kata, jo kata, kendo training or any other practice with a partner.
To be a good uke is not just to be able take the fall for however hard your partner thows, or to be able to absorb the attack with the sword, jo, or naginata. To me, being able to survive the technique is the basic prerequisite for learning how to be a good uke.
A good uke
- understands the appropriate distances for various attacks
- knows how to make the different attacks effectively
- can adjust the speed and power of their attacks so tori can practice whatever element of the technique or kata they need to focus on
- understands spacing and timing intimately so they can teach us when we are too early or too close, too late or too far.
- can handle what tori is doing without trouble.
- can present new problems for tori to learn from
Being a good uke takes a lot of skill. In places where only people who are skilled at the role act as uke the training environment is far more intense, exciting, and most importantly, effective . The skill of the uke means that there is never any question of them not understanding their role in the technique or kata being practiced. They provide the optimal learning and training experience for their partner.
Getting to the point where you can be a good uke takes time, something a lot of modern dojo don’t seem to want to give students. The first step in becoming a good uke is learning the fundamentals on the tori side. You really have to know the techniques and the kata from that side before you can do an adequate job as uke for someone. Learning the tori side is where you lay a foundation of good technique, timing, maai and reading your partner.
A good uke understands the technique you are doing and can offer the right feedback to help you improve. This feedback won’t always be verbal. A lot of it is just not letting you get away with sloppiness in posture and positioning and energy application (some people say “force” but that is a crude an inaccurate description of what we are doing). This level of understanding is critical.
Once someone has a solid understanding of the technical side they can start learning the uke role. I have vivid memories of the first few times Matsuda Sensei called on me to act as uke for someone he was teaching. I was really honored, but it didn’t take long to realize that I was there to be taught every bit as much as I was to help the other guy. Sensei offered as many corrections and advice to me about how to make the learning experience better for my partner as he did to my partner.
That was my first lesson in being an uke. It was not my last. I’m still getting lessons. And everything I learn about being uke also informs my understanding of being tori. It all cycles around. On the foundation of techniques you learned as tori, you then build an understanding of the various attacks and how they need to be done for each of the techniques or kata your partner is learning. Not every attack is so hard and deep it blows through tori if they miss, nor are they all so light that there are no consequences for tori if the fail the technique. A good uke controls that intensity and can pull the attack if they see tori isn’t going to be able to handle it. Uke can dial the intensity up and down as needed.
One of the things that a good uke can do is push you outside of your comfort zone. Whether you are doing kata training or randori, a good uke can push you by making you practice what you are weakest at, and by moving things a little faster than you are accustomed to, by changing up the timing and spacing. All of these are critical lessons.
It is very easy to get comfortable and not venture out of safe, known territory. If you are always in a neighborhood you know well, you aren’t likely to learn anything or to improve. You have to go out where you aren’t comfortable and where you aren’t sure your technique will work. In fact, you need to go out where your technique will fail so you can learn what is necessary there, and grow enough so that your technique will work. Taking you to where your technique can fail safely and you can make your next steps forward is the responsibility of a good uke.
Uke controls what we learn. Uke has to be able to take us outside our comfort zone to work on aspects of technique that need practice, whether it is timing, spacing, speed, power or a combination of all of them.
So just how important is a good uke to learning budo? As important as having a good teacher. The teacher leads and points the way, and your uke provides the grinding stone you shape your early technique upon, and the fine grit polishing powder that you polish it with when you understand the general shape of the art.
You can see then why I cringe when I see beginners working together so much of the time in many judo and aikido dojo. A beginner training with other beginners will have a difficult time trying to learn anything useful. The attacks they receive won’t help them learn distancing or timing. They may even learn the wrong lessons. If they learn to react to attacks that would never reach them they are learning bad distancing and timing. The same if they think someone has to stand very close to initiate an attack. Attacks that are too weak don’t give tori experience with appropriate energy levels, while attacks the are too energetic too early can easily injury tori, or cause them to react with energy they can’t control yet, which can injury uke.
When a beginner acts as uke for a beginner, tori can’t practice good technique. Tori needs attacks geared to their level, and feedback from how she deals with those attacks. That feedback is critical to making good growth and progress in the art. If the beginner uke’s attacks aren’t teaching a good understanding of timing and spacing, the feedback they give to tori’s techniques is worse than useless. They don’t know what a good technique is yet, so they can’t guide tori’s technique in the right direction. They are more likely to guide their fellow beginner in the wrong direction without realizing it. These are, lessons that may take years to undo.
Good uke provide the framework within which a good teacher can work. The teacher can’t practice with everyone all the time. Senior students who are good uke do that. The good uke gives their partner the chance to assimilate what the teacher shows and explains. They provide the correct feedback immediately, and there are never 2 students staring at each other because neither one knows what they are doing. The good uke provides a great training experience, even if the teacher isn’t around. They can train well and help tori raise her level every time they work together.
I would also say that good uke speed the learning curve immensely. I believe a student who has ample time training with good uke will develop several times faster than one who does a lot of training with other beginners. I’m not saying never train with other beginners. In many dojo, especially outside Japan, there just aren’t enough seniors to go around. But I will say that you should try to train with skilled uke as much as possible. One of my favorite dojo in Japan doesn’t allow juniors to act as uke until they are at least 4th dan. I was shocked by this the first few times I trained there. Practice starts with everyone doing solo kihon, and then the seniors line up and all the juniors do paired kihon with the seniors. Then the juniors are paired with seniors and they practice for 45 minutes together. The final 45 minutes the juniors watch the seniors practice. This works even more effectively than it sounds, because the juniors get the opportunity to carefully watch the kata being done at a high level of skill, so they can see how the corrections and lessons they have just received are applied. From this watching and thinking they can get a deeper understanding of the kata for their next practice.
As dojo develop sufficient depth, I think they should switch to the older practice of junior students training with senior students. That is the way it works in the mature dojo I have seen in Japan, both koryu and gendai. This is not just because it’s traditional. It’s traditional because it works best.
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Wednesday, September 4, 2013
The Only Things I Really Teach Are How to Breathe And How To Walk
I spend a lot of time writing about the more philosophical aspects of budo, but there is a concrete area that I believe is close to universal in the martial arts.
So you’ve decided to learn a martial art, and by some cosmic mischance you end up in my dojo. You’ll probably be disappointed when I tell tell you that the only things I really teach are how to walk and how to breath. This is ridiculous, since everyone over the age of 18 months can do both, and by the time you wander into my dojo you’ve probably got 20+ years of experience doing them, right?
You probably think you’re pretty good at both. I beg to differ. You’re probably lousy at them. Breathing and walking are the foundations of all movement in the martial arts, but almost nobody spends enough time practicing them. The only people I know who spend time practicing breathing correctly are wind musicians and vocalists. I don’t know anybody who practices walking properly. Everyone just assumes that they walk and breathe properly because they do both all day long.
The truth is that most of us have no clue how to breathe properly, and we walk like gorillas with leg cramps. Good breathing is fundamental to everything we do, and yet most of us have no idea how to do it. Ask a tuba player or flautist how to breath and you will get a simple but valuable education. Breath comes from moving the diaphragm but I can’t tell you how many martial artists I see breathing by moving their shoulders up and down or flexing their chests. That’s bad technique, and if you can’t breathe properly you wind up out of breath and unable to do much of anything. You certainly won’t be able to coordinate and integrate your body into a single unit. It will stay a disparate bunch of parts until you learn to breath.
You can’t really be balanced if you’re not breathing properly. And if you’re not balanced, you’re not walking and moving properly. And if you you’re not walking and moving properly, you won’t be able to do anything that is taught in the dojo.
Musicians spend a lot of time working on proper breathing. I teach students to understand what proper breathing feels like by having them lie on the floor on their backs. In this position you cannot breathe with your shoulders or your chest. You have to breathe with your diaphragm. Lying on their backs, students can put their hands on the stomachs and really know what it feels like to breath properly from the diaphragm. Then they can get up and practice replicating the experience while standing. At first they have to feel with their hands if they are using their diaphragm and stomach properly, and after awhile they will know the feeling well enough to recognize it without sticking their hands on their bellies. To check for shoulder breathing they can look in a mirror. If they see their shoulders move when they breathe, they know they are doing it wrong.
It takes quite a while for this method of breathing to become habitual. After decades of bad breathing habits, proper breathing does not come naturally. The body will default to whatever habits it has developed over the years, so it will take conscious intervention to correct and ultimately change the habits. Initially someone learning to breathe won’t notice they are breathing wrong except in class when it is consciously called to their attention. Over time, as they become more familiar with the exercise and comfortable with the feeling, they will start to notice outside of practice when they aren’t breathing properly and self-correct. Eventually proper breathing will become their default breathing method.
That’s a lot of work just to learn a different way of breathing than the one that has served just fine since you were born. So why bother? First, diaphragmatic breathing is more efficient than chest breathing or shoulder breathing. Your lungs expand more so you can take in more oxygen with each breath. Second, diaphragmatic breathing keeps the body together in a single unit. To breathe from your shoulders or chest you have to loosen the connections between your shoulders and chest to the muscles in your back and abdomen so they can float up and out to let your lungs expand and take in oxygen. In doing so you are shifting your balance up and out. Breathing from your diaphragm doesn’t involve shifting chunks of your body around. Your stomach is built to expand and contract without changing your balance or rearranging big pieces of you around.
Once you can breathe properly, you’ll be able to relax into your body more effectively. When you stop throwing your chest and shoulders around with each breath you can learn to connect with the ground through your legs and feet. As I said above, you can’t really be balanced if you’re not breathing properly. And if you’re not balanced, you’re not walking and moving properly. And if you you’re not walking and moving properly, you won’t be able to do anything else that is taught in the dojo.
So now you’ve learned to breathe properly, and hopefully we’ve got you standing still in a nice, relaxed, stable posture. Now it’s time for the tough part: learning to walk. Just because you can get from place to place without falling over every third step does not mean you are good at walking. Breathing can be done while lying down and standing still. Walking requires coordinating everything you’ve learned about breathing while actually moving your whole body. This is tougher than it sounds, and since even the Mayo Clinic has a page about it, I’ve discovered I’m not the only one concerned about this.
The basic walking method for naked house apes like us is to extend a foot and then fall forward onto it. Watch a toddler who has just learned how to walk and this becomes very clear. They really are falling forward and catching themselves with every step. This is fine if you are 18 months old and just figuring out how to get around on 2 legs, but if you want to do anything more than that you’ll need to refine the technique a bit.
The two basic walking movements in the arts I do are ayumiashi and suriashi (roughly walking feet and sliding feet). Both of them require moving as a connected whole without throwing your balance into the air with each step. Start with the balanced, relaxed posture you have when breathing properly. Your head is up (the Tai Chi guys describe it as feeling like it is hanging from a thread, which is such a good description that I’m stealing it).Your back is straight and relaxed, your shoulders are not slumped forward and your back isn’t pulled into an excessive arch. Everything sits naturally above your hips and your hips sit comfortably atop your legs without any tension required to stay there.
Now move your leg forward driving it from the hips and without swinging your hips forward. You’re hips should stay under your shoulders. Shoulders and hips should stay square and not rock from side to side or swing forward from right to left with each step. Your foot should not be so far forward that your weight comes crashing down on it. The transfer of weight should be smooth as the foot rolls from heel to toe. This is ayumiashi, regular walking, and just like breathing, it can take a bit of practice to make consistent even when you’re not thinking about it.
Suriashi is a sliding foot movement where the ball of the foot never comes more than a hair’s breadth off the floor (I was going to talk about the thickness of a sheet of rice paper, but that’s been done). This is not normal walking. This method of walking has an important place in training and learning to move for budo though. To manage it, bend your knees slightly, sink your hips a little and extend your right foot forward a bit. This time, instead of reaching out with the front foot as in ayumiashi, drive your whole body forward as one unit by pushing with the left leg and the ball and toes of the left foot while keeping your body stable and balance over the right leg. Do this all the way across the room. No do it with the left foot forward.
Now, since I know you were holding your breath while you focused on doing the movements properly, try doing them while breathing. Once you can breath properly and walk correctly you’ll be ready to start learning budo. When you move and breath well your body becomes a single whole, with every part of you supporting every other part in accomplishing whatever you set out to do. If you aren’t breathing and walking well, you aren’t balanced and you don’t have a solid platform upon which to build techniques. Instead you have a base like a pile of sand. You can’t learn to do anything budo related until you have a solid foundation that doesn’t rock like a sailboat in high seas.
Now that you now longer move like a pregnant musk ox we can start doing fun stuff like swinging swords and sticks and throwing people. None of these work when you are off balance and huffing to get a breath. All of them require a body and breath that are fully integrated and working to support each other. If any part of the body or breath are out of whack it will be readily apparent to your teacher, and eventually to you to.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Trust In The Dojo
Trust is a wonderful thing. Real trust is something that is earned over time. In budo practice, trust is absolutely essential. What we do in the dojo can’t happen without it. We are practicing dangerous, potentially crippling or even fatal techniques. We have to practice them on our partners, and we have to turn our body over to them so they can practice. We have to expose ourselves to incredible physical vulnerability so our partners can practice. In a very real sense we are loaning them our bodies so they can learn. In turn, they do the same for us. Without fuss, without complaint, seemingly without concern, they turn their body over to us to practice throws, strikes, joint locks, weapons attacks and all sorts of things which at are simply dangerous and could get them seriously injured. When we’re in the dojo, it seems perfectly natural.
When I think about the amount of trust I give to my partners, and how little I even think about it at this point in my training, it’s really amazing. I don’t think twice about letting someone throw me, twist my wrists so the bones in my forearm cross, turn my arm so my elbow is taken in an unnatural direction, or assault me with large sticks. It’s what I do now. I can’t believe I trusted training partners so much or so easily back when I started out on this path.
Trust, real trust, the deep down kind, the “here’s my body, go ahead and throw it around a room” kind, the “hit me with that stick” kind, isn’t something you you give naturally. I have to remember back a long way to when I started Kodokan Judo, and letting people throw me and armbar me and choke me. I was stiff for a while. Absolute trust in my partners did not come right away. I had to work at it with them. The first people I trusted were my teachers. They could pick me up and put me down and it felt even safer than diving into my own bed.
Trusting my peers, especially my fellow beginners was different, and took a lot longer. We had to work hard together, and go through more than a few bumps and bangs as we learned to throw and to be thrown. It’s scary when someone who knows as much as you do, which is nothing at all, picks you up and then hurls you at the ground. No wonder beginners are stiff. They are trusting some stranger to not break break them horribly. Over time students learn to trust their partners not to hurt them, and they learn to trust their own skills to receive the techniques safely.
I know that I trust the people I train with regularly a lot. A lot more than I trust people that I spend significantly more time with. Based on the amount of time we spend together, and that fact that we do what we do as much for the enjoyment it gives us as anything else, it’s surprising how much I trust these people. I freely hand them my body to do with pretty much as they please, without any worry at all. In many ways, I trust them vastly more than I trust most of the people in my life.
This level of trust has been earned. I train with these people often, and the training environment is one where people’s fundamental nature becomes remarkably clear remarkably quickly. As I train with people, the vast majority of them are fundamentally good. You quickly realize who is a little careless or a bit thoughtless when they are training, because these people hurt their partners more often and don’t realize that they are doing it. There are all sorts of personality quirks that show up quickly when you’re handling people and doing dangerous things with them. The ones who are careless or thoughtless get extra instruction about that in the dojo, and they are genuinely upset and apologetic when they do something wrong.
There are some real diamonds in the dojo too, people who go out of their way to be helpful and willingly absorb extra pain while you work on a technique that is giving you problems. They are also the folks who are quick to work with beginners who have no control, which makes beginners dangerous regardless of how wonderful a person they are. They are also wonderful to let work on you because of their care and the honesty of their technique. They aren’t hiding anything, there is no hidden agenda and no secret desires.
The folks who aren’t nice but usually cover themselves with at least a civilized veneer in conversation and outside the dojo though don’t seem to be able to hide anything in the dojo. The guys who get a kick out of hurting people or who like to prove how powerful they are show their true colors when training and they get a reputation pretty quickly. There are the guys who always crank an armbar harder than it needs to be, and they always seem to hold the technique for a while even after their partner has tapped to signify that the technique is effective. Nobody likes these people, and nobody trusts them. They show who they are very quickly. They muscle their techniques and they throw extra hard so their partners hurt when they get up.
This is why I trust the people I train with so much. We are operating at such a raw level that peoples true natures are nearly impossible to hide. We give our training partners immense power over ourselves. We routinely give them the power to hurt and injure us. We know who will be petty and mean enough to hurt us more than absolutely necessary, who might be basically good but a little careless, and who is a truly wonderful human being. In the dojo, we play with raw power to harm people, and the ones who enjoy hurting others can’t hide this from us. And they lose the trust that everyone else in the dojo has for each other.
I’ve seen a few of these guys over the years, and they happily trade the trust and community of the dojo for the feeling of power they get when they abuse a partner or when people are afraid to work with them. They seem to think this makes them strong and powerful. They are always on the outside of the dojo community because no one really trusts them, regardless of how good their technique becomes.
I trust the people I train with so much because it is so easy to spot the rotten apples and avoid them. Better yet, the best dojos I’ve been in simply don’t tolerate their behavior. They either shape up and play nice, or they are encouraged to leave. I just don’t tolerate them in my dojo. I love the people I train with because time and time again they have proven that I can give them my body to do with as they please and they will give it back to me whole and healthy. In fact, I often have to tell them to be a little bit stronger, to hit me a little bit harder because they really don’t want to hurt anyone, and they do the technique less than completely because they don’t want to cause me the little bit of pain that goes with it. We trust each other because know each other at the fundamental level where we have the power to harm and we know what the others heart looks like there.
It’s amazing how true this is even when you visit a new dojo. After working with a person for just a few minutes you will know more about their personality than you would in days of working with them outside the dojo. There are so many opportunities for someone of ill will to take advantage of during budo training that in under 15 minutes I can tell if someone should be avoided.
What is wonderful about going to a new dojo to visit is that the vast majority of people are very good, and they show it clearly when we train. After an evening of training with a group of people at a new dojo, I have a new group of trusted friends, because we have shared ourselves with each other, and shown that we care about each other’s well being. Training means operating at a fundamental level where we offer ourselves to our partners and they show who they really are by how they treat us while they train. It’s hard to find an activity outside the dojo where you do something with such a powerful exchange on a regular basis.
The trust that this builds is a wonderful thing.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Is it still Aikido (Iaido/Jodo?whatever) if you take away the Japanese clothes, the bowing and the etiquette?
Someone asked on a discussion board “How important (or unimportant) do folks here feel Japanese customs are important to learning Aikido? It stuck me recently that a lot of the behaviours carried out during training have nothing to do with learning Aikido, but more to do with Japanese culture. Bowing on entering the hall, learning the names of the techniques in Japanese, folding a hakama in specific way, bowing when picking up a bokken, I'd even add shiko/knee walking to this list or even wearing a gi for practice. None of these, to my mind have anything to do with learning aikido, its like thinking you have to wear a beret to learn how to speak French properly. Most of us don't train in Japan and are not Japanese, so I don't know why we do these things any more. “
My short answer is, “If you strip all that away from Aikido, it’s not Aikido anymore.”
A Way, an artform, is more than just the discrete techniques that are taught. If Aikido is reduced to just the techniques, and the expressions of etiquette and tradition are removed, you’re making something else. A Way is all the parts that come together to make it a whole system. The aspects of Japanese culture inform the techniques and the values of the system. They are as important to learning Aikido as learning ikkyo is. This is true not only of Aikido, but of all of the Japanese ways.
A Way, a DO 道、is so much more than just the individual techniques. The etiquette teaches us how what we study relates to other people, and how we should treat them when we interact with them. I’ll stick with Aikido because that’s the example I started with. Aikido is about complex interactions between people. The etiquette that permeates training is all about how we interact with people. The techniques of Aikido are not Aikido. They are a means for learning the path and the way of thinking and acting that express Aikido. To paraphrase the old Taoist saying yet again, the techniques of Aikido are like the finger pointing at the moon. They aren’t the moon, we look where they point to be able to see the moon. If we get stuck on the techniques of Aikido, we will never learn Aikido. This is true of any budo, of any Way. The techniques are tools for learning the Way, but the Way is far more than the techniques.
In the dojo, pretty much everything is a lesson about the Way you are studying. The etiquette teaches lessons, the techniques teach lessons, the kata teach lessons, learning the names in their original language teaches lessons. If a person wants to jettison all of these parts of an art, they should really ask themselves if that Way is appropriate for them. Why should the etiquette be removed from Aikido? The etiquette regulates action in the dojo and makes it a safer place to train. It teaches respect and a different way of thinking about human interactions. The bowing and respect are critical to the ideas of Aikido and the way they are expressed during training is essential to the Way of Aikido.
Aikido comes out of Japanese culture, and the concept of DO 道 that has developed in Japan for more than 1000 years. To summarily remove all these aspects of Japanese culture would be to create a very different art, a different way that leads somewhere other than where Aikido leads. There’s nothing wrong with creating a new martial art, but you should be aware that’s what you are doing. The learning atmosphere, and the higher lessons about life, the universe and everything that are pointed to and taught by practicing a Way are very different when you change the etiquette and the clothing and the language.
All that bowing and using Japanese to describe what you are doing set a frame for your practice and establish a particular set of expectations about what you are doing, what the goals are, and how you will do it. Aikido, and other budo, are not ultimately about learning to use a particular set of techniques or how to do a particular kata. The techniques and the kata are tools for teaching students about principles of the art. The etiquette, language and clothes are also part of that.
Mastering the techniques of Aikido, or any Way (Do 道), no matter how good one is at them, does not mean that you have mastered the Way. The techniques are some of the tools by which you learn the way, but they are not the Way. It is quite common to mistake mastery of technique for mastery of a Way, regardless of whether it is a martial way or a flower arranging way or a calligraphic way or any of the other ways that abound in Japan.
The Ways teach lessons about the world and how to live in it, using ordinary activities as their foundation. Each Way is a complete package, with it’s own etiquette and language and often even clothes that are worn for various activities. Given the thought and consideration that has gone into these Ways, I would be very hesitant to monkey with one without decades of experience in that particular Way, even if it is one as young as Aikido.
Those funny clothes and funny words and weird behaviors have a lot more to them then just adding another layer of useless stuff to learn that gets in the way of learning the important stuff.
If all you want from something like Aikido is the techniques, you are missing the real treasures of what you are studying. The techniques of any Way have only very limited application in daily life, but the Way of thinking, of moving, of being, that is something that can be used every moment of every day.
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道、development
Thursday, August 15, 2013
What is Self-Defense? A Reality Check.
Some genius named Sam Harris got together Steven Graff Levine (former California DA and now a defense attorny), Rory Miller (former National Guard, 14 year prison guard, 18 months in Iraq advising the prison system, modern and classical martial arts), Matt Thorton (BJJ and MMA coach), to talk about what really qualifies as self-defense under the law, when it is legal to defend yourself, and when it is not.
One of the big take-aways should be that if you are in a situation that escalates into a fight, and then you do something causing serious damage or death, it wasn't self-defense, it was a crime.
This is really should be required reading for anyone who carries a weapon (knife, club or firearm) or who trains in martial arts. Don't fool yourself about what qualifies as self-defense. You might just fool yourself into prison.
http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/self-defense-and-the-law/
One of the big take-aways should be that if you are in a situation that escalates into a fight, and then you do something causing serious damage or death, it wasn't self-defense, it was a crime.
This is really should be required reading for anyone who carries a weapon (knife, club or firearm) or who trains in martial arts. Don't fool yourself about what qualifies as self-defense. You might just fool yourself into prison.
http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/self-defense-and-the-law/
Monday, August 12, 2013
Is Martial Arts Training For Self-defense Really A Good Idea?
It has occurred to me that practicing martial arts for self-defense is not that sensible an idea. On the surface, it makes a lot of sense. I mean, train in the martial arts and you learn great skills for fighting and you can protect yourself if you are attacked. And yes, I have read the anecdotes of people who have used martial arts for self-defense. In addition, I’ve been training in various martial arts for over 25 years, during which time I have touted the arts I train in as wonderful forms of self-defense.
Lately though, I’ve been reconsidering the equation. I can use martial arts to defend myself if I am ever attacked. This may help me avoid injury and losing personal property. These are both laudable things. The odds of my ever being in a situation where I will need these skills however is small. It is even smaller if I take very sound and excellent advice of Marc MacYoung at No Nonsense Self Defense and simply avoid areas where violence is likely. Since the vast majority of violent crime happens in very concentrated areas this shouldn’t be difficult.
Basically, the odds of being injured and/or losing property in an attack are really small if I avoid dangerous areas. OK, but I still think self-defense training might be a good idea.
Let’s see, martial arts classes run anywhere from $50 to $150 per month. That’s $600 to $1800 a year in most cases. Since, in my experience, you need to practice techniques regularly for them to be effective when you need them, basically you are going to be paying this as long as you want your skills to be effective. So over 10 years you will pay $6,000 to $18,000 just for the training. That doesn’t include the cost of any uniforms and equipment you might need. If you go on for 20 years you’re at $12,000 to $36,000. Now you are way over what you can expect to lose in some sort of robbery of your person. I know never carry anything close to that in cash and valuables. About the only way you could steal anything close to that much from me is to take my car, and that’s insured, so fighting for it would be a stupid risk.. Besides, in 2002 the rate of carjackings in the US was 2.1 per 10,000 people. That’s 0.02% chance of being carjacked. Add to that that carjackings are most common in particular, known and generally lousy neighborhoods where I don’t go and the odds get even less likely.
Ok, so maybe martial arts training isn’t a cost effective way to protect my property. What about protecting myself?
I can guarantee one thing that will happen if you practice martial arts. You’re going to get injured. It will happen. It’s the nature of what you’re doing. Just like football, in martial arts practice people bang into each other and the ground, so from time to time people get hurt. It’s going to happen, and just like in football, it’s a known and accepted part of what goes on. Every person, EVERY PERSON, I know who has trained martial arts such as Judo, Karate, Tae Kwon Do, Aikido, Jujutsu, Hapkido or any other vigorous, useful martial art, has been injured. The longer we train, the more injuries we accumulate. In my more than 25 years in Judo I have broken a collar bone, cracked several ribs, sprained my ankles a few times, hyperextended my elbow, torn my ACL completely, and accumulated more bumps, bruises, strained and pulled muscles, torqued joints and other assorted injuries than can possibly be remembered. This list, or something like it, some with worse injuries, some not quite so severe, can be rattled off by anyone who practices a martial art for any length of time. If you insist on a practicing an activity that has lots of hard contact you will be injured. Not a question of if, just when.
So wait a minute. If I study martial arts for self-defense, but I keep getting injured studying martial arts, have I really gained anything? Lets see. Someday I might be violently attacked and injured. OK. That’s bad. If I train in martial arts, I am certain to be injured repeatedly. Um, let me think about that. I might be a victim of a violent crime someday, but if I train in martial arts to defend myself I am certain to be injured repeatedly as long as I continue to train.
Somehow this doesn’t make training in martial arts seem very sensible. There is a small chance I will be a victim of crime at some point in my lifetime. During such a crime I could lose personal property and may be seriously injured or even killed. If I train in martial arts, the cost will be tens of thousands of dollars over my lifetime (far more than could ever be stolen from me by anyone other than a banker or a hacker), and I am guaranteed to get injured over and over.
Dang. It’s a good thing I don’t do this stuff for self-defense. The cost-to-benefit ratio for training in the martial arts for self-defense is so bad I’d have to quit. Fortunately I train in the martial arts because I love the training and the arts for what the teach about all sorts of things that have little to do with self-defense.
I didn’t write this to knock martial arts for self-defense. I believe they can have immense value, but this value is not easily quantifiable in dollars and cents. How do you quantify the feeling of security and confidence that training can impart? That’s a tough one, especially when it is so different for everyone.
I do know that with a little discretion about where you go, what you do and how you behave, most men don’t really need self-defense training. Stay away from places known for fights and violence, and your odds of needing to defend yourself go way down. Detroit is known as an incredibly dangerous place, but even there most of the violence is concentrated in a few really awful neighborhoods. I love going to Detroit for shows and food and cultural activities, but I know enough to avoid areas of the city where violence is not uncommon. This strategy works great for men.
Women have a whole different paradigm to deal with. Women have to deal with men, and the do so from a position of being smaller and weaker. The statistics for violence against women are much higher than those for men. In one subset, 5 times as high. For women, martial arts training can be exceptionally valuable. Not that there is any particular style of system, but that they learn that it’s ok to fight, they should fight, and that they can do so effectively. Any reasonable martial arts system can do these things, and the effect on their lives can be far wider than just knowing how to fight back if assaulted. it can translate into being treated with greater respect everywhere in their life, because they don’t accept intimidation from anyone. That alone might be worth the monetary and physical costs of training.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Never Practice Anything More Than Once
I saw someone comment that :
“my Sa Bom Nim says, "You can't learn something until you are ready to learn it." That's why repetition is so important in the martial arts, because you never know when that "learning moment" will arrive. Doing that technique thousands of times was what made you ready to learn the new setup. “
I used to do thousands of repetitions of individual techniques and movements. I thought it was essential to mastering the techniques. I would set my mind on autopilot and do the same technique over and over, thinking I was building speed and consistency.
I can’t say about speed for sure, but I can speak to the consistency part of that. I was building consistency. I was teaching myself to always do the technique a the same level of skill. I wasn’t improving myself, I was nailing my skills to the ground where I was at. My father is a music teacher, and he has always said “Practice doesn’t make perfect. Practice makes permanent.” However you practice something is how you will do it. A thousand repetitions of a technique done one way, make it a thousand times harder to do it another way. You will always do it the way you practice it. Any errors in the technique you are repeating will be reinforced and that much tougher to correct.
One of the few things I know about my technique is that it’s not perfect. I don’t want to be doing things tomorrow the way I am doing them today. I want to be doing them better. So I don’t do lots of repetitions of my techniques any more. I try to do every technique one time only.
This is a pretty radical sounding statement for someone who trains classical Japanese martial arts, with a teaching methodology built upon the continued practice of a small set of techniques and kata. It’s true though.
Each each time I do a technique or kata it is a unique event, never to be repeated. Now one of my goals is for my mind to never go on autopilot. I try to always be fully present when I practice. I want to be completely mindful of what I am doing. By being aware of what I’m doing with each cut and in each kata that I do, I can make every cut and every kata unique. I can sense that I am using my hips one way or another, how I’m gripping the sword, what sort of rhythm I’m moving with, how I’m breathing.
If my practice of the kata is a unique event where the combination of all these factors and many more come together to create a single, unique, expression of the kata, then with this awareness of the kata, I can change elements of my action to make my next expression of the kata both unique and, hopefully, better. To do this though, I have to be mindful.
The best practice is mindful, aware and always looking for ways to improve what you are doing. SImple repetition means that you are just programing yourself to do the kata at whatever level you’re currently at. It ingrains your current mistakes into your body and makes them permanent. Mindful practice never does the same kata twice. Mindful practice seeks to improve with every action. If I’m not really aware of what I’m doing, I can’t change it. To change things, we have to be aware. When you do a kata, be aware of your hands, your feet, you tanden, your hips, the location of your head, the rhythm of your breath. All of these are important. If you are aware, you can experiment with how you use all these elements of your body to improve the kata. And even if a particular mix of elements isn’t an improvement, you’ll be learning. You’ll know about another combination that you want to avoid.
I try never to do the same kata twice. If I’m repeating the kata, I’m stagnating. It’s only when I mindfully do new things that I can really improve.
(How I balance this with mushin is fodder for another essay)
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