Bien que le sabre japonais fût créé pour une utilisation guerrière, il est actuellement reconnu comme une œuvre d'art à part entière. Habituellement, on considère que l'histoire du sabre japonais est divisée en cinq grandes périodes historiques : les sabres jōkotō, les sabres koto les sabres shintô, les sabres Shin-shintô et les gendaitō. Chacune de ces périodes représentent un courant de forge particulier. Deux termes sont proposés pour désigner l'enseignement des techniques de sabre depuis le fourreau : l’iaijutsu et l’iaidō. L’iaijutsu (de jutsu, technique) met l'accent sur la vitesse et le réalisme de la coupe. L’iaidō (de dō/michi, voie) insiste sur la fluidité et la justesse du mouvement. De nos jours, la plupart des enseignants admettent cette distinction tout en lui reconnaissant peu de pertinence, car jutsu implique la notion d'efficacité martiale (se débarrasser au plus vite de son ennemi).
@AikidoEnth No, there is a jo awase, kind of practice method coming from Iwama as well. Just like the boken awase, it is not present on newer Iwama footages, so I guess it has been removed from the system. That's why I am interested in it.
you prolly dont give a shit but does any of you know of a tool to log back into an instagram account?? I somehow lost my password. I would appreciate any help you can offer me
@Jesiah Nickolas thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site through google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now. Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
he meant not to raise the sword with both your shoulders equidistant from the person attacking. so by turning the hips, the left shoulder is forward while the right is back
"...analised..." should be "analysed."Just a misspelling there, which anyone might fall prey to, but an embarrassing one that should be changed. Cheers.
can anyone explain to me the third suburi when he said the hips must be fully engaged to avoid mutual kill? I don't see how just slightly twisting the hip can help you avoid an aiuchi or counter shomen from the uke. Thanks
RisingPhoenix He means that you should not have your hips square, if you opponent is the same. If your opponents hips are square, you angle off to the side so that their downwards strike misses you.
I’m doing a lot of Bokken training as a supplement in my karate training. Purely for my own study. I’m looking for the best sources to start for references and guidance. Any help? Thanks Osu.
Thank You for posting is this video available for sale. I feel a little guilty watching it for free.
للسيف كين مكانة حاصة في الايكيدو بحيث يجب استحضاره في كل التقنيات لفهم الاصل الحركي لكل التمرينات
Bien que le sabre japonais fût créé pour une utilisation guerrière, il est actuellement reconnu comme une œuvre d'art à part entière. Habituellement, on considère que l'histoire du sabre japonais est divisée en cinq grandes périodes historiques : les sabres jōkotō, les sabres koto les sabres shintô, les sabres Shin-shintô et les gendaitō. Chacune de ces périodes représentent un courant de forge particulier. Deux termes sont proposés pour désigner l'enseignement des techniques de sabre depuis le fourreau : l’iaijutsu et l’iaidō.
L’iaijutsu (de jutsu, technique) met l'accent sur la vitesse et le réalisme de la coupe. L’iaidō (de dō/michi, voie) insiste sur la fluidité et la justesse du mouvement. De nos jours, la plupart des enseignants admettent cette distinction tout en lui reconnaissant peu de pertinence, car jutsu implique la notion d'efficacité martiale (se débarrasser au plus vite de son ennemi).
Very nice
Peerless. Thank you for share.
Nice video ☘️☺️❤️🎹🙏
Thank You very much? Do you have the jo awase as well?
From 1987?
Thank you. I took particular notice of his hanmi, most effective.
@AikidoEnth
No, there is a jo awase, kind of practice method coming from Iwama as well. Just like the boken awase, it is not present on newer Iwama footages, so I guess it has been removed from the system. That's why I am interested in it.
Still such a helpful video, very grateful for this posting.
🙏🏻
Epic!!!
Merci excellente démonstration, j’ai mis pas mal de temps à maîtriser le 7 eme suburi qui semble au début facile.
you prolly dont give a shit but does any of you know of a tool to log back into an instagram account??
I somehow lost my password. I would appreciate any help you can offer me
@Jaden Jaxson Instablaster =)
@Jesiah Nickolas thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site through google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Jesiah Nickolas it did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much you saved my account :D
@Jaden Jaxson no problem =)
he meant not to raise the sword with both your shoulders equidistant from the person attacking. so by turning the hips, the left shoulder is forward while the right is back
"Sword techniques can't be explained with words, or written, or analized with discourses" -O Sensei-
Think about it, then you have the answer.
"...analised..." should be "analysed."Just a misspelling there, which anyone might fall prey to, but an embarrassing one that should be changed. Cheers.
We do the same movements in class but I can't remember all their names since im a beginner. So this video is very helpful for me. Thank you🙏
hey,
the fifth suburi... is the kamae is hanmi handachi ?
You can buy the full video from Aikido Journal.
can anyone explain to me the third suburi when he said the hips must be fully engaged to avoid mutual kill? I don't see how just slightly twisting the hip can help you avoid an aiuchi or counter shomen from the uke. Thanks
RisingPhoenix He means that you should not have your hips square, if you opponent is the same. If your opponents hips are square, you angle off to the side so that their downwards strike misses you.
Morihiro Saito is one of the greatest aikidokas i've ever seen and heard of...
where can you get the whole video?
I’m doing a lot of Bokken training as a supplement in my karate training. Purely for my own study. I’m looking for the best sources to start for references and guidance.
Any help? Thanks Osu.
kuroda sensei knows how to use a sword