Skip to content

Recent Posts

  • Complete GIKAN-RYU KOPPO TAIJUTSU With TORYU
  • Nagase and Furuta 先生方 Japan Report Four 令和6年
  • Ninja and Sake
  • The Last Ninja: Fujita Seiko ninjutsu history
  • History of Ninjutsu: Seven Scabbard Cord Techniques

Most Used Categories

  • Contributors (1,948)
    • SuperfeedEN (1)
  • budoshop (151)
  • YouTube (57)
  • Seminars (49)
  • Kesshi (43)
  • Podcast (15)
  • kaigozan (15)
  • Uncategorized (14)
  • web site update (4)
Skip to content
  • Affiliated to NinZine →
  • Mats Hjelm
  • Kaigozan Dojo
  • Budoshop
  • Seminars
  • Bujinkan TV
Subscribe

NinZine 3.0

Unofficial Bujinkan Dojo Budo Taijutsu E-Zine / Blog

Subscribe
  • NinZine
    • About
    • Articles
      • Archive from 1995
      • Archive from 2005-
        • Archive from 2005
        • Archive from 2006
        • Archive from 2007
        • Archive from 2008
        • Archive from 2009
      • Archive from 2010-
        • Archive from 2010
        • Archive from 2011
        • Archive from 2012
        • Archive from 2013
        • Archive from 2014
        • Archive from 2015
        • Archive from 2016
        • Archive from 2017
        • Archive from 2018
        • Archive from 2019
      • Archive from 2020-
        • Archive from 2020
        • Archive from 2021
        • Archive from 2022
        • Archive from 2023
        • Archive from 2024
    • Main Authors
      • Arnaud Cousergue
      • Budoshop
      • Doug Wilson
      • Duncan Stewart
      • Mats Hjelm
      • Michael Glenn
      • Paul Masse
      • Pedro Fleitas
      • Pertti Ruha
      • Sean Askew
      • Shawn Gray
      • Sheila Haddad
  •   ★  
  • Dojo Locator
  • Honbu Dojo
  • Seminars
  • Twitter
  • Budo Shop
    • Budoshop.SE
    • Paart Budo Buki
    • Soft Hanbo
    • T’s – Shut Up and Train
    • Yudansha Book
  • Home
  • 2012
  • April

Month: April 2012

Hankyou 2008 – Kaigozan Christmas Seminar

budoshopApril 30, 2012

From Budoshop by budoshop

Reflections of this years Bujinkan theme, Togakure-ryu ninpo taijutsu. Many people went to Japan this year and they all came together to share on this seminar.

The instructors was Paul Waserbrot, Mats Hjelm, Steven Helling, Daniel Bodin, Fredrik Markgren, Arvid Karlsson, Jens Lindstrand, Richard Maier, William Ustav.

Most of the instructions is in Swedish!

Recorded in Stockholm, Sweden December 2008

Note: Some of the instructors spoke Swedish, and others English.

This movie is available on DVD (click here!) or available as download, click button below.


100 minutes, 707 Mb for $11.99

Instructions are in SWEDISH!…

Read More

Joukenhansha 条件反射: Reflex Conditioning or a Trap?

Michael GlennApril 27, 2012April 27, 2012

From Bujinkan Santa Monica by Michael Glenn

正拳 photo by  *嘟嘟嘟*
I love it when I get to spar with a martial artist who has great conditioning. Not only is it a great test for me and what I think I know about martial arts, but I have a secret weapon in our Bujinkan taijutsu that allows me to defeat them even if they have superior conditioning. This weapon is the conditioning itself. I can use it to trap them.

In martial arts, sports, or combat training people strive to develop fast reflexes. Reflexes don't require conscious thought. In fact the action of a true reflex follows the reflex arc to create a near instantaneous response to stimuli.

This is an advantage in dangerous situations where there isn't time to think about your choices. You just pull your hand out of the fire. In our training we are not usually studying true hard-wired reflexes. Instead we are conditioning our muscles and bodies to develop responses that have proved effective in our training and in combat.

Some people call this muscle memory. Or another term is procedural memory. This is where you commit a specific action to memory by training it over and over. This repetition strengthens neural pathways allowing the brain to access these patterns more efficiently. A medical definition for this might be more like the word reflexive as opposed to reflex.

For the most part, this conditioning is useful and good. Unless you are facing a devious and thinking opponent who can turn it against you. Soke calls this 条件反射 joukenhansha which is a conditioned response. He spoke of this while talking about how you should not take ukemi. Which I wrote about here: Why Do You Take Ukemi? So How can this conditioning be turned against you?

Well a reflexive action is a habitual and unthinking behavior; or relating to or consisting of a reflex. It's the habitual and unthinking part that gets you. When I recognize these reflexive actions in your movements, whether they are offensive or defensive, I will seek to trigger them to set a trap.

It's easy to see this in action no matter the style. Test it out on any person (choose someone who will not seek revenge). Stand facing each other, but don't tell them what you are testing. No reach as fast as you can for their ear.

How do they react? People with no training at all act with pure reflex in a startle-flinch response. People who train in a specific style will reveal their training, which is reflexive. In the 1980s the US Army conducted experiments to discover that people can be startled into their favored, trained fighting stances, no matter what those stances were.

Then set a trap so that when they react with their reflexive conditioning again, you will defeat them. All you have to do is trigger that reaction by reaching for their ear. Or you can make some other feint, kyojitsu, or threatening motion.

Hatsumi Sensei says this is like Pavlov's dogs. And he says we all know how easily dogs are controlled by people. So we should not train ourselves to be conditioned like dogs. Don't design reflexive traps into your training program.
… Read More

Hankyou 2007 – Kaigozan Christmas Seminar

budoshopApril 24, 2012

From Budoshop by budoshop

Reflections of this years Bujinkan theme, Kukishin-ryu daken-taijutsu. Many people went to Japan this year and they all came together to share on this seminar.

The instructors was Mats Hjelm, Christian Spicker, Petter Swedin, Daniel Åberg, Daniel Neiberg.

Most of the instructions is in Swedish!

Recorded in Stockholm, Sweden December 2007

Note: Some of the instructors spoke Swedish, and others English.

This movie is available on DVD (click here!) or available as download, click button below.


92 minutes, 648 Mb for $11.99

Instructions are in SWEDISH!…

Read More

Japan Trip April 2012 – Diary

kumafrApril 24, 2012

From Shiro Kuma's Weblog by kumafr

I came back yesterday from a fantastic trip and I hope you have been able to share with me the things I trained in Noda.

I have been asked in Japan why I was writing so much*. It is to share with the community some of the knowledge we get in Japan with Sôke and the shihan. I hope it will help you to wait for your next trip.

These texts* and these pictures are my attempt to give a fair image of what is happening in Japan. This is why I have added many pictures to these texts.

 

I took many pictures and not all are good but please see them as a training documentary. Pictures being forbidden during training, you will mainly have pictures taken before and after the class. As today someone asked me to put a link here to access the pictures uploaded on facebook during my trip you will find them below:

The first album contains the first 10 days (over 500 pict):

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.3395318174028.144619.1601937800&type=3

and the second one only the last day (around 100 pict):

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.3464131334314.145724.1601937800&type=3

Enjoy and comment them if you feel like it.

*All the texts in this blog were uploaded in April. If you want to read them again, click on “April 2012″ in the home page and they will appear.

 


… Read More

Kunai shinken

buki stolarApril 23, 2012April 23, 2012

From Paart Budo Buki by buki stolar

My dear Buyu's I have some time to finally finish my "live" kunai,  so here is some pictures for start,
later I will write something more about him, mainly blade is made ​​of steel and the handle of an ordinary iron welded to the blade, thereby prevent cracking handle when I throw kunai or when is use as leverage for breaking.
 
 



 
… Read More

Posts pagination

1 2 … 7 Next

Shut-up and Train T-Shirts

RSS Bujinkan Seminars

  • 2025-12-05 NAGATO TAIKAI (Paris, France)
  • 2025-03-21 PEDRO FLEITAS (Celbridge, Ireland)
  • 2025-06-27 SHIRAISHI TAIKAI (Helsinki, Finland)

武神館無段者の案内所
MUDANSHA - BEGINNERS GUIDE TO BUJINKAN

Price: $14.99
Prints in 3-5 business days

English, Perfect-bound Paperback, 96 pages richly illustrated with pictures and illustrations.

武神館有段者の案内所
YUDANSHA - BUJINKAN BLACK BELT GUIDE

Price: $27.77
Prints in 3-5 business days

English, Perfect-bound Paperback, richly illustrated with pictures and illustrations. Available in two sizes
- 184 pages (8.26" x 11.69") Paperback
- 184 pages (8.26" x 11.69") Coilbound
- 244 pages (6.14" x 9.21") Paperback

Recent Posts

  • Complete GIKAN-RYU KOPPO TAIJUTSU With TORYU
  • Nagase and Furuta 先生方 Japan Report Four 令和6年
  • Ninja and Sake
  • The Last Ninja: Fujita Seiko ninjutsu history
  • History of Ninjutsu: Seven Scabbard Cord Techniques
Budoshop Downloads Budoshop Downloads

Archives

Categories

Tags

Basics budoshop Budoshop.se bujinkan bujinkan.me Doug Wilson Download Download movie Duncan Stewart essay General thoughts Henka History iPad iphone ipod Japan training Japan Trip kaigozan keiko Kesshi Kihon Kihon Happo Kukishin-ryu Mats Hjelm News ninjutsu Rob Renner Ryuha Seminar shugyo Sveneric Bogsäter Sweden tabi Taijutsu Taikai Thoughts on Budo togakure-ryu training Uncategorized update videos weapons YouTube Zeropoint
Copyright All Rights Reserved Kaigozan Dojo | Theme: BlockWP by Candid Themes.