Japanese culture is brilliant and fascinating! "Even if my opponents miss, my job remains the same. The only question for me is how I handle my own bow. Releasing the arrow naturally is what is best. I will keep reaching for that ideal until the day I die."
Absolutely true bro, i have finished the book call "The Way of Zen" by Alan Watts and very impressed by how Zen reflect on many aspect of Japanese culture, especially Kyudo, Kendo and Chado. It is all the way of Nature, so beautiful.
@@hungnguyen-mm6pm Unfortunately, books like 'The Way of Zen' and -- especially -- 'Zen in the Art of Archery' by Eugen Herrigel have lead to a lot of confusion among outsiders to Kyudo and Kendo. As one of my sensei said, "Zen is Zen, and Budo is Budo."
@@rickloyd8208 Some Japanese still do, and many non-Japanese now do. If you train in traditional Japanese arts such as the Kyodo seen here, and/or Iaido (one type of swordsmanship), Chado (tea ceremony), etc., there is still a lot of immersion in traditional Japanese customs and traditions.
To handle your own bow and have mental Harmony because like the last gentleman that we're all others miss the target you know you are going to get that adrenaline rush and you need to hold that back and be in that moment so when you release your physical and mental Harmony will send the Arrow home.
me to. I got my first long bow in 1957 and I still have it. Its a lemon wood and its just for show. After watching this style of shooting I think the long bow is more fun. I now shoot the 21st century reflex long bow.
Awesome approach to deal with anxiety and overthinking. I feel this method of mental preparation is the golden ticket whether it be for a major sport or skill development.
This aint poppin up on everyone's recommended anytime soon. If you're here, you're a certified nerd. Respect++ Edit: things have changed the last time I’ve been here lol.
it popped up after the Breath of the Wild Archery video lol. And imma say im totally amazed by Kyudo! the craft, physics, tradition, mental preparation, everything is fascinating
kyudo is more focused on art and self defense, most of it is about the spiritual between you and the bow. western archery is more focused on speed, efficiency, accuracy and adaptability. it is like learning to takedown your prey effectively rather than spiritual thing.
@@ThatWeirdCat Art & Zen body spirit alignment, sure. But Self Defense? I dunno about that part. Kyudo seems a bit too impractical for self defense, at least at an individual standpoint. Perhaps you could argue that as a group support role in ancient military strategic deployment though.
@@ThatWeirdCat The amount of steps and preparation that each shot requires and the belief that "arrow finds its way to the target if your mind, body and spirit align" isn't feasible for an actual predator/malicious human, since they can move in b/w the time (so arrow wouldn't magically find its way to the opponent) and do all sorts of stuff b/w the preparation stage.
This is similar to the principles of rifle marksmanship. I shot expert (highest rank) on the rifle range when I was in the marine corps. Marksmanship is 95% mental, 5% physical. My technique is to put my body into a position of relaxed rest. Then you shoot from that position of rest. If your shot misses the mark, adjust your position, not your rifle. If you use your muscles to push the rifle to where you want it to aim, your shots will be inconsistent. After your body is in position, then it's all about doing a slow, steady trigger pull without wobbling the barrel. The harder part is timing your shot to fire on an exhale breath. Breathing movement will put your shot off the mark. A bit more subtle (and noticeable) is that heart beats will also slightly wiggle the barrel slightly. So, if you're totally relaxed, it mitigates the effects of breathing and heart beats on the shot accuracy. I'm able to hit a target, in the black, from 500 meters away with iron sights, ten out of ten times. Marksmanship is fun!
when doing archery, and teaching archery, i tell my students that it's about 90% form consistency, 9% range finding, and 1% aiming. once you have your form down, and you figured out your distance from the target, you just look at the target, and let your body do the rest. if you overthink, you will miss, or hold the bow drawn too long and start to wobble from fatigue. i agree, marksmanship is fun
As lame as this may sound it is the same with pro-level videogames where at some point to be the best everything in your life has to align, has to all come together, in every way... and then you perform perfectly.
Most bows will do that even at 40 lb. and a 50 lb will go through a moose if the arrow is heavy enough . Trad bows width heavy arrows are very deadly, not a toy to play with.
@@hildtonmcconnell5626 Holy shit, now I wonder what a warbow with a razor head can do. I've seen something like a 70 pound bow penetrating a deer with the fletchings inside it's body with a stone point.
I'm Hawaiian. So I'll be cheering on for JAPAN's runners! I teaches one key to my players in try-out during college season to the Freshman students about how to handle fears. Is some are faster, some are stronger...but don't worry about other guys. Just challenge you. Try to beat your own record! Challenge you.& the students had a good laughs. Good. Now fears can be good thing if handle properly. As Jesse Owen had mental to beat his own time. Every time he races. He wasn't looking at his challengers. He saw himself to rise above all he was, am, now~ Fly high. Keen reflexes. Hope 2020 bring good fortune :) Go JAPAN Go!
@@jpsholland islam doesn't change your lifestyle. Having beard is not changing culture. In fact, some Japanese also have long beard. Usually the wise and old people. Plus, islam doesn't have special costume as long as it is polite. And Japanese normal clothes are already polite. Except for the woman. Woman need to Wear hijab. It is for their safety tho. From the pervert male. And in Japan, the perverts are a lot. Just like in every part of the world. But it removes the adultery culture and alcohol consumption and other haram thing. And also the polytheism culture. Which is good, right? No more primitive mythical way of thinking. Modern Japan also like that. They still care about God's stuff but they don't care about it. They prefer science than religion. In other Hand, it is Christianity that ruin the Japanese culture so hard especially with their Western culture. The Christmas, the Easter, etc. The west suit, etc. Edit: Plus, learn history. Islam always spread naturally. It only takes logic to accept Islam. Maybe your children someday will be a Muslim too. There is no force. While Christianity.. It brings destruction. Remember when Japan first met with the west world? USA force Japan to open the country and threat them with cannon ships. Christianity always a terror to the world.
@@DBT1007 you are spouting such bullshit it hurts. Look at how much peace your religion brings and all the sec slavery connected to it. Since when cant women choose what they want to wear ? Weird that it takes some one else to force those rules upon others.
It's exactly these sorts of disciplines in Japanese culture that make them so admirable~ There is no other culture on Earth that cultivates focus and discipline like the Japanese practices of old!
@@goprodog4304 I'm sure they had to struggle. After war became a no go, their land have little natural resource so their economy relied mainly on exporting high tech. Not many countries in the world is able to achieve that in its early history. They've dominated the car and phone industry in the 1990-2000's
I can imagine an archer going through this 8 step process in a battle against a charging enemy of Samurai swordsmen, who will be cutting him down before he has let loose his first arrow! :)
Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast. Only when a warrior can perform the techniques slowly and perfectly should they attempt to speed up, and eventually commit to combat. The same is true for modern firearms as much as it is ancient archery.
I mean... duh. All archers around the world aren't made to face against someone who wields a melee weapon all by themselves, and even if they found themselves in that scenario; I'm pretty darn sure that you are allowed to shoot an arrow quickly when an enemy is already close-by anyway, the martial arts are made for long ranged combat hence why you didn't see them shooting a target right in their face. So contrary to the comment above me; it's not smart nor is it "woke" (who unironically says that in this kind of context), if anything; the main comment is more likely a joke.
an English longbow which is meant to volley far over walls, spamming as many arrows as possible. antithesis to the marksman concept of the perfect hit. Might as well compare a mass-produced shotgun to a precision rifle.
@@drm9397 You are mistaken if you think Kyudo is centered around the bow. It's about the archer. Proper footing, proper stance, proper muscle tension, proper grip, centered raising of the bow (such that you could also fire it from horseback without shifting your weight and accidentally communicating to your horse that it should move), proper release, and proper mental state before and after release.
a lot of the philosophy can be applied to just about everything. Not just the different forms or archery and martial arts, but even to other sports, work and home.
Takeo Ishikawa , I`ve watched other videos ,I 1st went to see is He Intelligent Gifted and what is the Humbleness all about? He seen some were in His Life He could Do this . Maybe The Humbleness is worked in to Him though The Sport . When they do THe Dark Room SHot , I could see He knew He Would do it . me humbleabley commenting Joy Joy Joy Nice video, interesting archery technique
It's all based on Chinese culture. And Southeast Asians too love to connect things with mythical thing too. South Asia also. But Chinese always do the elegant thing
So many keyboard experts saying that only counting targets as "hit" or "not hit" rather than trying to hit the center is wrong. But in warfare, if you have a 2 1/2 foot long arrow sticking through you and out the other side on the center of your chest or a bit to the left, you're still dead
@@2auhsoj2 is it just with that style of bow? European and modern day bows fire on the left side, if it is better to be on the right side why do we not see modern day bows that way?
@@2auhsoj2 Lars Anderson is great, but he is an outlier. His studies did rediscovered an old way of holding spare arrows in the left hand to increase firing speed, but his rediscovery is debated against historians. If that is how it used to be across the board then I'm interested in the transition from the right to the left.
I see all current Kyudo participants use a glove. Does anyone ever fire a bow in kyudo with their raw hand? What happens to the hand if someone does kyudo with a bare hand? Has that always been traditional even back in the feudal era or is that a more modern convention in the past century or so?
very nice stuff ... when you have the time to do such acrobatics. I'n the real world well, this won't help you much, with hunting and protection. It is a very nicely coordinated show of discipline for an art that is becoming... lost. Keep the arts going!! You must also keep reality as well :)
Where can you purchase authentic Japanese equipment like this? I live in the US and would like to try something more difficult and artistic than standard recurve and compounds, which I do participate in regularly
Why is every sport or activity I come across that interests me impossible for my ageing body to cope with? Too old to go back to gymnastics, hip too stuffed to start fencing again, and hips and back too rubbish to try this! A beautiful sport.
It's all amazing and all. I'm proud of all Japanese. But a question pop in my mind and I hope someone will answer. How are the steps applicable in real world, like during battle or the likes?
Throughout history bows and other range munitions were for the most part used en masse. Formations of archers/slingers/etc would go through stages of preparing to fire. Having an 8 stage system like this is not much different from standard formation shooting
"How are the steps applicable in real world, like during battle or the likes?" Latin culture won the war and now Japanese can be rich country full of high tech tools and weponds...
@@matthewjohnson4583 Yes, basically; you don't expect any archers from any country from the past to just have a single archer facing against an entire army. An incredibly skilled musketeer can take up to 30 seconds to reload just for a single shot, let alone an unskilled ones which is what most musketeers in the past are yet they dominated the battlefield despite an incredibly slow firerate compared to any archery really, including the one in the video.
incredible - the Art of shooting the Bow ✨😊✨ Thank You so much for producing this wonderful documentary🙏 For the nutritionist at the end of the documentary: have a look into this: "Liver Rescue" by Medical Medium Anthony William -> what Kyudo is for Archery this book is for Nutritional Science ✨😊✨
Eugen Herrigel’s book, “Zen in the art of archery,” described his training in archery in Japan in the 1920s. However, the present day scholar Yamada Shoji has belittled his report, claiming that the spiritual aspect centered around the moment of release that his master taught was imaginary and fabricated. His argument boils down to a conviction that Herrigel couldn’t have learnt enough Japanese to understand his conversations with the teacher. Yet here we see essentially the same ideas being described by current Japanese experts. I think Herrigel’s spirit deserves an apology from Yamada, who to my knowledge has never undergone any kind of serious spiritual training.
Just goes to show that traditional techniques are bullshit. Modern, based on science will always be better. Just watch any competition with modern composite bows, they are crazy accurate.
@@fobusas Composite bows are also crazy high tech, and very consistent. Bamboo bows are irregular, no visual aids or stabilizers. Traditional archery removes the whole technological arms race component, leaving us with purely the human aspect.
@@drownthedays Isn't it the opposite? Regular bow has crazy amounts of luck. Modern tech being far more consistent means it's mostly down to archers skill, not the bow.
@@fobusas Quite the contrary. I wouldn't call it luck, really. With a traditional bow, the archer has to do the job of all the stabilizing tech while also knowing and accounting for any possible quirks of the bow itself. Oh, and aim without any aid as well. As we can see in the clip, it is quite difficult to give the arrow a somewhat straight trajectory, and that it takes a good amount of training and concentration to achieve this.
10:09 what do you mean unlike every sport? That is at the heart of every sport and competition.. there is ever only one true enemy and if we don't see that we are doomed
I just wounder in thoughts of arrows (Type they did use in battle) how they do to armors European types, Leather, ring mail, plate armor (on a doll) and how long away they still will go 15 cm and more.
@@sarabenfeldt Didn't people only start saying 'fire' because you need a spark to ignite gunpowder? Why would a weapon that existed before gunpowder and doesn't need a spark be 'fired'?
@@tvboxmimic7887 silly as it may be, you still use ‘fire’ to talk about releasing arrows. Although I’m not sure where it originated, in modern uses and for hundreds of years people have also used ‘fire’ to refer to arrows. But of course you can also say shoot
If you have a properly tuned bow and arrow the arrow will fly straight and hit with the other arrows if there is no or little wind. It is one of the ways to see if your bow and arrow are in tune with each other and the archer. also you can tune a bow to have little vibration by adjusting the string length by twisting or untwisting it as required. I shoot trad bows of different lengths and can get well over 180' ps. in most of them. they are made by Rodney Wright form Quebec Canada. I make my own bow strings and arrows but leave the bows to be made by Rodney as his are some of the best in the world.
Japanese culture is brilliant and fascinating!
"Even if my opponents miss, my job remains the same. The only question for me is how I handle my own bow. Releasing the arrow naturally is what is best. I will keep reaching for that ideal until the day I die."
Absolutely true bro, i have finished the book call "The Way of Zen" by Alan Watts and very impressed by how Zen reflect on many aspect of Japanese culture, especially Kyudo, Kendo and Chado. It is all the way of Nature, so beautiful.
@@hungnguyen-mm6pm Unfortunately, books like 'The Way of Zen' and -- especially -- 'Zen in the Art of Archery' by Eugen Herrigel have lead to a lot of confusion among outsiders to Kyudo and Kendo. As one of my sensei said, "Zen is Zen, and Budo is Budo."
I personally found real Japanese far from what they old traditional culture used to teach. I admire it and I wish I can follow its rules and teaching
@@rickloyd8208 Some Japanese still do, and many non-Japanese now do. If you train in traditional Japanese arts such as the Kyodo seen here, and/or Iaido (one type of swordsmanship), Chado (tea ceremony), etc., there is still a lot of immersion in traditional Japanese customs and traditions.
To handle your own bow and have mental Harmony because like the last gentleman that we're all others miss the target you know you are going to get that adrenaline rush and you need to hold that back and be in that moment so when you release your physical and mental Harmony will send the Arrow home.
Nice video, interesting archery technique. I’ve been a bowman for over 42 years and still love to learn something new.
me to. I got my first long bow in 1957 and I still have it. Its a lemon wood and its just for show. After watching this style of shooting I think the long bow is more fun. I now shoot the 21st century reflex long bow.
that ending change was a ride 😆✨
SWORD OF THE STRANGER! I recognise that piece of music anywhere.
Good ear.
yuup
I don't know it. Which part of the video?
@@BibtheChibI can hear the drums start well before but the flutes come in at 8:40.
Indeed! It brought a tear to my eye. ;)
Awesome approach to deal with anxiety and overthinking. I feel this method of mental preparation is the golden ticket whether it be for a major sport or skill development.
It is. Pretty common in sports psychology.
This aint poppin up on everyone's recommended anytime soon.
If you're here, you're a certified nerd. Respect++
Edit: things have changed the last time I’ve been here lol.
Second time watching, I just bought a Hankyu bow moments before watching it again!
it appeared after i saw some female archer fire the bow in an 11 year old video
it popped up after the Breath of the Wild Archery video lol. And imma say im totally amazed by Kyudo! the craft, physics, tradition, mental preparation, everything is fascinating
thats where ur wrong randomly just popped up on my stuff
@@eyescare7134 this video? Episode TWO? Your watch history gotta be SOMETHING for sure.
Amazing just a simple bow no weights sights or scopes true archers.
It isn't anything close to a simple bow. The constitution and shape of the bows is different, as is the way to handle them. The arrow as well.
kyudo is more focused on art and self defense, most of it is about the spiritual between you and the bow.
western archery is more focused on speed, efficiency, accuracy and adaptability. it is like learning to takedown your prey effectively rather than spiritual thing.
bs
@@ThatWeirdCat Art & Zen body spirit alignment, sure. But Self Defense? I dunno about that part. Kyudo seems a bit too impractical for self defense, at least at an individual standpoint. Perhaps you could argue that as a group support role in ancient military strategic deployment though.
@@ThatWeirdCat The amount of steps and preparation that each shot requires and the belief that "arrow finds its way to the target if your mind, body and spirit align" isn't feasible for an actual predator/malicious human, since they can move in b/w the time (so arrow wouldn't magically find its way to the opponent) and do all sorts of stuff b/w the preparation stage.
This is similar to the principles of rifle marksmanship. I shot expert (highest rank) on the rifle range when I was in the marine corps. Marksmanship is 95% mental, 5% physical. My technique is to put my body into a position of relaxed rest. Then you shoot from that position of rest. If your shot misses the mark, adjust your position, not your rifle. If you use your muscles to push the rifle to where you want it to aim, your shots will be inconsistent. After your body is in position, then it's all about doing a slow, steady trigger pull without wobbling the barrel. The harder part is timing your shot to fire on an exhale breath. Breathing movement will put your shot off the mark. A bit more subtle (and noticeable) is that heart beats will also slightly wiggle the barrel slightly. So, if you're totally relaxed, it mitigates the effects of breathing and heart beats on the shot accuracy. I'm able to hit a target, in the black, from 500 meters away with iron sights, ten out of ten times. Marksmanship is fun!
U talk too much
when doing archery, and teaching archery, i tell my students that it's about 90% form consistency, 9% range finding, and 1% aiming. once you have your form down, and you figured out your distance from the target, you just look at the target, and let your body do the rest. if you overthink, you will miss, or hold the bow drawn too long and start to wobble from fatigue.
i agree, marksmanship is fun
We love a 360 no scope
As lame as this may sound it is the same with pro-level videogames where at some point to be the best everything in your life has to align, has to all come together, in every way... and then you perform perfectly.
@@TripleTreuViet You do stupid idiot. The four stupid words you were able to produce are too much than his nine lines of analyzed experience.
You can hear the force of impact across the arena. They'd cut clear through a person. The focus they have is incredible
Most bows will do that even at 40 lb. and a 50 lb will go through a moose if the arrow is heavy enough . Trad bows width heavy arrows are very deadly, not a toy to play with.
@@hildtonmcconnell5626 Holy shit, now I wonder what a warbow with a razor head can do. I've seen something like a 70 pound bow penetrating a deer with the fletchings inside it's body with a stone point.
Just dodge. 😂 He'll have to do that stupid dance all over.
@@HardyMetalliX Damn, you must be a genius, no-one ever thought of that before.
英語苦手で弓道好きだけどこれは聞いてて何言ってるか分かるからほんとに勉強に役立つわ
I just cannot believe how fascinating and awe-inspiring Japanese culture is!!
There are good and bad in every culture...
@@eminence_ therefore, bringing that up is irrelevant
True archery, no sights, balance arms. Absolutely beautiful to watch.🙏🙏
"True archery" sure thing...
Japan is so amazing to learn about. Awesome video. 👍
Hits the target when everyone misses it, walks back as if nothing great happened. Take a bow!
"Take a bow" 😂👌🏼🎯👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I was programed to win, thank you
I'm Hawaiian. So I'll be cheering on for JAPAN's runners! I teaches one key to my players in try-out during college season to the Freshman students about how to handle fears. Is some are faster, some are stronger...but don't worry about other guys. Just challenge you. Try to beat your own record! Challenge you.& the students had a good laughs. Good. Now fears can be good thing if handle properly. As Jesse Owen had mental to beat his own time. Every time he races. He wasn't looking at his challengers. He saw himself to rise above all he was, am, now~ Fly high. Keen reflexes. Hope 2020 bring good fortune :) Go JAPAN Go!
Goddd I'm in awe. I got goosebumps several times in this video, this art is so incredible.
May the Japanese always be Japanese.
I agree, thats why i see a Japanse who convert to islam (which happen lately) or even christianity as a traitor of their heritage and their land.
They do seem to know something the rest of us don't.
They are mostly american now.
Like the rest of the world, only a bunch of nihilist consumers.
@@jpsholland islam doesn't change your lifestyle. Having beard is not changing culture. In fact, some Japanese also have long beard. Usually the wise and old people.
Plus, islam doesn't have special costume as long as it is polite. And Japanese normal clothes are already polite. Except for the woman. Woman need to Wear hijab. It is for their safety tho. From the pervert male. And in Japan, the perverts are a lot. Just like in every part of the world.
But it removes the adultery culture and alcohol consumption and other haram thing. And also the polytheism culture. Which is good, right?
No more primitive mythical way of thinking. Modern Japan also like that. They still care about God's stuff but they don't care about it. They prefer science than religion.
In other Hand, it is Christianity that ruin the Japanese culture so hard especially with their Western culture.
The Christmas, the Easter, etc. The west suit, etc.
Edit: Plus, learn history. Islam always spread naturally. It only takes logic to accept Islam. Maybe your children someday will be a Muslim too. There is no force.
While Christianity.. It brings destruction. Remember when Japan first met with the west world? USA force Japan to open the country and threat them with cannon ships.
Christianity always a terror to the world.
@@DBT1007 you are spouting such bullshit it hurts.
Look at how much peace your religion brings and all the sec slavery connected to it. Since when cant women choose what they want to wear ?
Weird that it takes some one else to force those rules upon others.
Rotation is between 3 and 10.
Thank you very much!!
👌🙏✊
Thank You for taking the efforts to share.
Loved watching & learnt many things.
I read zen in the art of archery as a young man. Changed my life.
There was a beautifully visible connection between his body, to the bow, to the target.
There's so many good and brave people Japanese and all Nations I'm grateful for that
The youtube algorithms, unprompted:
Me: Don't mind if i do.
That Sword of the Stranger music was really fitting here. ^^
Very interesting....I enjoy & respect all cultures!
Enjoyed this video very much. Learned a lot as well.
It's exactly these sorts of disciplines in Japanese culture that make them so admirable~ There is no other culture on Earth that cultivates focus and discipline like the Japanese practices of old!
That's... not really true.
I get the feeling that the arrow is an extension of your spirit. Carrying your energy throughout the entirety of its flight
Great video. Very inspiring.
There needs to be a movie about an old japanes grandpa protecting himself with this bow.
Write it then
Thank you very much for these series. Great videos!
The Japanese could make a ceremony out of anything, even, like, making tea...
So true!
oh wait, they did!
Absolutely. Useless, lame, they never really had to struggle during history. Kyudo is not even archery, it is just fooling around.
@@goprodog4304 I'm sure they had to struggle. After war became a no go, their land have little natural resource so their economy relied mainly on exporting high tech. Not many countries in the world is able to achieve that in its early history. They've dominated the car and phone industry in the 1990-2000's
It’s not all that different from golf form.
8:00 That's some Japanese Jaimusu Bondo, look at this Singeki no kyojin-style triumph walk
What a treat, thank you very much!
The soundtrack is sick
I can imagine an archer going through this 8 step process in a battle against a charging enemy of Samurai swordsmen, who will be cutting him down before he has let loose his first arrow! :)
Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast. Only when a warrior can perform the techniques slowly and perfectly should they attempt to speed up, and eventually commit to combat. The same is true for modern firearms as much as it is ancient archery.
Dumbest comment I've read this week. Congrats!
Smartest comment I've read on this video. Thanks for being woke and not a weeaboo nerd.
I mean... duh.
All archers around the world aren't made to face against someone who wields a melee weapon all by themselves, and even if they found themselves in that scenario; I'm pretty darn sure that you are allowed to shoot an arrow quickly when an enemy is already close-by anyway, the martial arts are made for long ranged combat hence why you didn't see them shooting a target right in their face.
So contrary to the comment above me; it's not smart nor is it "woke" (who unironically says that in this kind of context), if anything; the main comment is more likely a joke.
The wierdest thing in the world is when the narrator is clearly a young chap , but pretends to be an old guy when dubbing the older dude
Hebat. Tiba2 muncul di beranda 😀.
1:05 - The 8 stages of firing
lol too much unnecessary moments
@@krisdang A bunch of foo-foo bu!!sh!t centered around a bow that's a child's toy when compared to say... an English longbow.
an English longbow which is meant to volley far over walls, spamming as many arrows as possible. antithesis to the marksman concept of the perfect hit. Might as well compare a mass-produced shotgun to a precision rifle.
@@krisdang many*
@@drm9397 You are mistaken if you think Kyudo is centered around the bow. It's about the archer. Proper footing, proper stance, proper muscle tension, proper grip, centered raising of the bow (such that you could also fire it from horseback without shifting your weight and accidentally communicating to your horse that it should move), proper release, and proper mental state before and after release.
In my opinion, i'ts the same for most archery styles . Good stand, techniek and concentration is the key
a lot of the philosophy can be applied to just about everything. Not just the different forms or archery and martial arts, but even to other sports, work and home.
Very good! Thank you.
Great learning... focused mind and decipline
Takeo Ishikawa , I`ve watched other videos ,I 1st went to see is He Intelligent Gifted and what is the Humbleness all about? He seen some were in His Life He could Do this . Maybe The Humbleness is worked in to Him though The Sport . When they do THe Dark Room SHot , I could see He knew He Would do it . me humbleabley commenting Joy Joy Joy Nice video, interesting archery technique
Beautiful. Absolutely Beautiful.
True no scope kings
Around 9:00 is the main soundtrack from Sword of the Stranger.
I love bowing. Done it once and was a natural
What a beautiful art
Everything in Japan can be spiritualised
It's all based on Chinese culture.
And Southeast Asians too love to connect things with mythical thing too.
South Asia also.
But Chinese always do the elegant thing
The influence of Meiji Reformation era propaganda is still strong
So many keyboard experts saying that only counting targets as "hit" or "not hit" rather than trying to hit the center is wrong. But in warfare, if you have a 2 1/2 foot long arrow sticking through you and out the other side on the center of your chest or a bit to the left, you're still dead
i keep seeing arrows held by the pinkie in the off hand. i wonder if thats just another shot, or if theres another reason.
Japanese precision at its best
0:03 arrow rotation - 0:51 the eight stages (hassetsu) - 10:40 end
I love Japan love from india
Why is the arrow fire on the right side of the bow and not on the left side of the bow?
left side of the bow, greatly reduces efficiency, and the bow string might hit your hand too
@@2auhsoj2 is it just with that style of bow? European and modern day bows fire on the left side, if it is better to be on the right side why do we not see modern day bows that way?
@@randallgpreston lars Anderson might have the explanation for that, as far as i know, bow that meant for war fires its arrow from right side.
@@2auhsoj2 Lars Anderson is great, but he is an outlier. His studies did rediscovered an old way of holding spare arrows in the left hand to increase firing speed, but his rediscovery is debated against historians. If that is how it used to be across the board then I'm interested in the transition from the right to the left.
@@randallgpreston ua-cam.com/video/ZnRX_Cqhwb8/v-deo.html this might help
And here I thought they were like that because they looked cool.
I see all current Kyudo participants use a glove. Does anyone ever fire a bow in kyudo with their raw hand? What happens to the hand if someone does kyudo with a bare hand? Has that always been traditional even back in the feudal era or is that a more modern convention in the past century or so?
Thumbs up for Tosa's deep words from 🇵🇰.
very nice stuff ... when you have the time to do such acrobatics. I'n the real world well, this won't help you much, with hunting and protection. It is a very nicely coordinated show of discipline for an art that is becoming... lost. Keep the arts going!! You must also keep reality as well :)
How did this show of acrobatics begin? Was it a hobby or a show of discipline ?
So they did the warmup each battle?
"Even if my opponents miss, my job remains the same."
Can anyone explain to me how they use the base of the thumb in a digestible manner
....I can't hit the target reliably, but I do look GRREEEAT holding that bow! Hai!
I think they've not met cavalry in a long time. Good luck doing the 8 steps.
Where can you purchase authentic Japanese equipment like this? I live in the US and would like to try something more difficult and artistic than standard recurve and compounds, which I do participate in regularly
Why is every sport or activity I come across that interests me impossible for my ageing body to cope with? Too old to go back to gymnastics, hip too stuffed to start fencing again, and hips and back too rubbish to try this! A beautiful sport.
Strengthen the muscles protects the joints. Head to the gym. Don't give up.
If fired wrong, the bow string can take your ear off if it gets to close 👂
wow, just beautiful
i wonder why all of this programs looks like some 90s TV but is relative new
It's all amazing and all. I'm proud of all Japanese. But a question pop in my mind and I hope someone will answer. How are the steps applicable in real world, like during battle or the likes?
Throughout history bows and other range munitions were for the most part used en masse. Formations of archers/slingers/etc would go through stages of preparing to fire. Having an 8 stage system like this is not much different from standard formation shooting
"How are the steps applicable in real world, like during battle or the likes?" Latin culture won the war and now Japanese can be rich country full of high tech tools and weponds...
@@matthewjohnson4583 Yes, basically; you don't expect any archers from any country from the past to just have a single archer facing against an entire army.
An incredibly skilled musketeer can take up to 30 seconds to reload just for a single shot, let alone an unskilled ones which is what most musketeers in the past are yet they dominated the battlefield despite an incredibly slow firerate compared to any archery really, including the one in the video.
9:40
Even in complete darkness when all the elements come together the arrow will find its target.
This brings to mind the L. L. Bean company's former motto, "We sell steak not sizzle." Lotta sizzle here, IMHO.
Tosa is cool.
6:40 correct arrow and correct technique: brilliant arrow flight (0:00 problems!)
incredible - the Art of shooting the Bow ✨😊✨ Thank You so much for producing this wonderful documentary🙏
For the nutritionist at the end of the documentary: have a look into this: "Liver Rescue" by Medical Medium Anthony William -> what Kyudo is for Archery this book is for Nutritional Science ✨😊✨
Eugen Herrigel’s book, “Zen in the art of archery,” described his training in archery in Japan in the 1920s. However, the present day scholar Yamada Shoji has belittled his report, claiming that the spiritual aspect centered around the moment of release that his master taught was imaginary and fabricated. His argument boils down to a conviction that Herrigel couldn’t have learnt enough Japanese to understand his conversations with the teacher. Yet here we see essentially the same ideas being described by current Japanese experts. I think Herrigel’s spirit deserves an apology from Yamada, who to my knowledge has never undergone any kind of serious spiritual training.
a true shot never misses. 5 / 6 finalists in a tournament miss the target. xD
Just goes to show that traditional techniques are bullshit. Modern, based on science will always be better. Just watch any competition with modern composite bows, they are crazy accurate.
@@fobusas or, you could use a mix of both.
@@fobusas Composite bows are also crazy high tech, and very consistent. Bamboo bows are irregular, no visual aids or stabilizers. Traditional archery removes the whole technological arms race component, leaving us with purely the human aspect.
@@drownthedays Isn't it the opposite? Regular bow has crazy amounts of luck. Modern tech being far more consistent means it's mostly down to archers skill, not the bow.
@@fobusas Quite the contrary. I wouldn't call it luck, really. With a traditional bow, the archer has to do the job of all the stabilizing tech while also knowing and accounting for any possible quirks of the bow itself. Oh, and aim without any aid as well. As we can see in the clip, it is quite difficult to give the arrow a somewhat straight trajectory, and that it takes a good amount of training and concentration to achieve this.
First minute.
So rifeling. But for arrows
That’s a way of looking at it, indeed🤔
Kinda like being a sniper instead of being an infantryman meant for shooting as much arrow as possible (like the English Longbowmen for example).
What's your FOC?
What? Why the hell would you draw the bow so slowly and hold it for so long? That's super hard!
I started on cinemasins, why am i here. also why did i watch to the end!?
Ah! sheer poetry.
10:09 what do you mean unlike every sport? That is at the heart of every sport and competition.. there is ever only one true enemy and if we don't see that we are doomed
You are right and this applies to all of life too. It's just that in Kyudo (and Budo in general) this is explicitly taught.
0:55 im just surprised he didnt knock his glasses off with that bow string
pure poetry
Sword of the stranger music :)
Interesting...!
I just wounder in thoughts of arrows (Type they did use in battle) how they do to armors European types, Leather, ring mail, plate armor (on a doll) and how long away they still will go 15 cm and more.
I don't believe that anybody can hit a target in darkness. Can he then do it with his eyes closed?
why they doesnt win in archery in olympics if this technique are true?
When the act of drawing the bow becomes far more important than where the arrow goes. This is more like yoga with bows than archery.
Indeed. This is closer to meditation than skill, or warfare.
10:46 "Poor little tink tink" - Kat Williams
if Zanshin activates, you release another arrow right after
You don't "fire" an arrow. You shoot it.
You’re wrong
@@sarabenfeldt Didn't people only start saying 'fire' because you need a spark to ignite gunpowder?
Why would a weapon that existed before gunpowder and doesn't need a spark be 'fired'?
@@tvboxmimic7887 silly as it may be, you still use ‘fire’ to talk about releasing arrows. Although I’m not sure where it originated, in modern uses and for hundreds of years people have also used ‘fire’ to refer to arrows. But of course you can also say shoot
If you have a properly tuned bow and arrow the arrow will fly straight and hit with the other arrows if there is no or little wind. It is one of the ways to see if your bow and arrow are in tune with each other and the archer. also you can tune a bow to have little vibration by adjusting the string length by twisting or untwisting it as required. I shoot trad bows of different lengths and can get well over 180' ps. in most of them. they are made by Rodney Wright form Quebec Canada. I make my own bow strings and arrows but leave the bows to be made by Rodney as his are some of the best in the world.
Weird how they use there thumb to hold the string and we "west" use our fingers. Very interesting.
Arrows are not "fired".
Arrows are loosed.
Every fuckin 3 minutes I get a Netflix commercial - WTF!!!
8:59 se alcanza a percibir una sonrisita en ese rostro
This brings to mind the L. L. Bean company's former motto, "We sell steak not sizzle." Lotta sizzle here, IMHO.
Japan inventing rifled bows 1 thousand years too early