i wonder what it is called in japanese. i could not find it. i know the technique but i never knew the name. i also would shift it to sankyo for the situation. so it is interesting.
We treat it as a kuzushi principle with the pain compliance as an option, and try to get students to understand the mechanics behind it so they are more aware of when each of the primary locks (ikkyo-gokyo) become available
@@AIKIDOSILVERDALE yes it's different types of kuzushi however devil comes when people start to explain how this kuzushi works. For example difference between ikkyo and gokyo.
If you really want to start understanding these dynamics even more thoroughly, try doing the technique this way while slowly walking backwards and forwards.
Nikyo can have a "giving" quality or a "taking" quality. If you come from a sword technique, you ground your opponent and finish him off cutting his head, not very AiKi but that's the technical background. This is how many apply Nikyo. You can do Nikyo in a more "giving" fashion not taking the opponent hard straight down to the ground, but absorbing, breaking balance and structure. A different feeling Nikyo, still as effective but not humiliating ;-) For practical reasons it's good to know the direct down version.
Lots to be gleaned from exploring the connections involved in the shape of this technique.
Yep its very easy to get "stuck in kata".
great class
it was
a clear explanation of the principles behind kata with pragmatism.
Thanks again for sharing your hard work
Our pleasure Alphonso, glad you are enjoying it!
i wonder what it is called in japanese. i could not find it. i know the technique but i never knew the name.
i also would shift it to sankyo for the situation. so it is interesting.
The best I heard from Aikido people this week. If nikkyo isn't wrist lock so what it is? Any thoughts?
It's a skeletal destabiliser.
@@ddturnerphd nice! It's called kuzushi in Japanese. Probably same we could say about ikkyo, sankyo, yonkyo and gokyo?
@@vano-559 i think it is to remove room to be bent. aiki won't work if the joints have room to move around or any disconnection of bones.
We treat it as a kuzushi principle with the pain compliance as an option, and try to get students to understand the mechanics behind it so they are more aware of when each of the primary locks (ikkyo-gokyo) become available
@@AIKIDOSILVERDALE yes it's different types of kuzushi however devil comes when people start to explain how this kuzushi works. For example difference between ikkyo and gokyo.
really nice to see all those variations - really enjoy the content on your channel
good to hear!
This was a great class, I hope you filmed the sankyo part too?
I think its being edited
👍👍👍
If you really want to start understanding these dynamics even more thoroughly, try doing the technique this way while slowly walking backwards and forwards.
same thing can be achieve by rotation (maki) of the hips too
Nikyo can have a "giving" quality or a "taking" quality. If you come from a sword technique, you ground your opponent and finish him off cutting his head, not very AiKi but that's the technical background. This is how many apply Nikyo. You can do Nikyo in a more "giving" fashion not taking the opponent hard straight down to the ground, but absorbing, breaking balance and structure. A different feeling Nikyo, still as effective but not humiliating ;-) For practical reasons it's good to know the direct down version.
Many different application of this particular biomechnic, dependent of course upon the uke, the situation and what your intentions are.
If you enjoyed this, watch Tony's full playlist here ua-cam.com/video/Iqb9N5U0qJs/v-deo.html
I wish more insrutors would teach liek this focusing on the principle behind the waza rather than just "how to do the thing"
that lad at the end is a big unit. how tall is he? 6' 6?
I think Craig sensei is 2.04 whatever that is in inches. maybe 6 foot 8?