From Bujinkan Zeropoint Dojo by RobRenner
要 “Kaname” This year, 2012, Hatsumi Sensei, the grand master of the Bujinkan, has chosen as his theme the idea of Kaname (要). In English, this translates to the ‘crux‘, ‘essence’, ‘pivot’, or the “vital point”. A simple example of…… Read MoreMonth: May 2012
Tessen-gunsen gata style
From Paart Budo Buki by buki stolar
Here is basic version of tesssen, or Tenarashi-gata tessen, made of solid iron, in shape of closed fan,
weight of this tessen is 540 gram, very powerful tool.Also I make tool for engrave metal, so take a look and if you like to engrave you something else I could now
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Bujinkan Nidan 弐段: Discovering the Footprints
From Bujinkan Santa Monica by Michael Glenn
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Discovering the Footprints, digital c-print photograph by Andrew Binkley |
So what does it mean to be 弐段 Nidan?
Discovering Footprints 见迹:
This stage of training is very interesting because your eyes become open to signs everywhere. You spend as much effort in observing as you do training. You are developing the eyes to see the traces, or footprints of our art.
Woodblock print by 德力富吉郎 Tokuriki Tomikichirō Along the riverbank under the trees,
I discover footprints.
Even under the fragrant grass,
I see his prints.
Deep in remote mountains they are found.
These traces can no more be hidden
than one's nose, looking heavenward.
You begin to recognize these traces in all sorts of people and situations. You will see many previously hidden connections between kata. One technique naturally suggests another leading to 変化 henka. These kata or forms all contain the same traces.
"form is emptiness, emptiness is form."Depending on your personality, there are two dangers: One is getting lost in the enjoyment of these 変化 henka. Another is becoming what Hatsumi Sensei calls a "technique collector."
If you are thoughtful, you notice that all of these footprints were here all along but you never noticed them before. You might wonder what else is also lying around beneath your feet that you are yet unable to see. As Hatsumi Sensei often says, "enlightenment is beneath your feet."
All of the kata begin to blend together until they seem the same. You start to connect intellectually to the idea that form is emptiness. Even though your own taijutsu rarely shows that.
Because you are finally seeing these things, and with every class you see more, you begin to feel that training more and training harder will certainly pay off. You train with new conviction that with more effort will come more results.
But this stage is also marked by an overwhelming realization that there is so much material to learn. The more you discover, the more there is. While this discovery is fun, it can also be intimidating.
And more than that, the harder you search, the more you pursue the Ox, the further away it runs. The harder you train the more the essence of the Bujinkan may elude you.
The poem above says that the "traces can no more be hidden than one's nose, looking heavenward." This suggests that the footprints if followed to their source will lead back to yourself. The 極意 gokui or essence of training can be discovered here.
Being a Nidan you will sense this, but not yet experience the 極意 Gokui directly.
In the next post we will look at Bujinkan Sandan参段: Perceiving the Bull
Tekken or knuckles
From Paart Budo Buki by buki stolar
Dear Budo friends,her is one more shinken tool of Ningu, or if you like one of kobudo weapon.
also made for the collection of the tools for my Dojo, the plan is make the largest collection of replica ninja tools and equipment in this part of the world.
I always try to make things better, so I make more pieces, best goes to Dojo armory, and rest you will be able to purchase if you are interested.
This kind of Tekken (some say Kaiken) because of its geometry and shapes, can be used in many ways, not only striking, but also to assist in climbing, or for something more which I will try to explain in next post.
if you think that I'm forget my wooden work here is also one wooden version of Tekken
as was shown in the Encyclopedia of Japanese Kobudo Weapons
the same but with a little patina, painted to look older
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Bujinkan Shodan 初段: Searching for the Bull
From Bujinkan Santa Monica by Michael Glenn
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The Search for the Ox, digital c-print photograph by Andrew Binkley |
The Ten Ox Herding pictures illustrate the stages of a Zen life in the quest toward enlightenment. In Zen the ox represents the mind which is at first wild and untamed, running from one thing to another. It is said that these stories are trying to express the inexpressible.
Hatsumi Sensei has a favorite teacup with these ten illustrations on it. As he sips his tea, he says he likes to reminisce about the "old days," and he tells us how we have the same ten stages in our journey through Budo: First dan through Tenth Dan.
This will be the first in a series of 10 posts.
Just as a man would tie to a postWhat does it mean to be a Shodan 初段 in the Bujinkan? Let's look at this first stage from the Oxherding perspective:
A calf that should be tamed,
Even so here should one tie one's own mind
Tight to the object of mindfulness.
Somehow you find inspiration to start training in the Bujinkan. This may come from a feeling that you are missing something or a need to better yourself. Or maybe that your current training is lacking in some way.
Woodblock print by 德力富吉郎 Tokuriki Tomikichirō 寻牛 The Search for the Bull
In the pasture of the world,
I endlessly push aside the tall
grasses in search of the bull.
Following unnamed rivers,
lost upon the interpenetrating
paths of distant mountains,
My strength failing and my vitality
exhausted, I cannot find the bull.
I only hear the locusts chirping
through the forest at night.
This is known as 初発心 sho-hosshin or the first stirring of the heart.
This goes from first hearing about the Bujinkan all the way through learning your basics so that you start to glimpse that there is an essence to this art that lies beyond technique. These are the footprints you look for while training on the basics. You may not know where they lead, and they remain elusive.
You will be distracted by other styles and many things that are not even related to training. There is so much to absorb that your senses will be confused.
Traps at this stage are thinking you know what is good or bad training, striving to gain rank or prove something, fear that you cannot do things, and giving up the search before you know what you are searching for.
This stage is critical for finding an authentic teacher. You will find the teacher you deserve. If your mind is clouded by what you think is right, you will get a teacher who will only confirm and magnify your ill chosen path.
All of your training will be energetic and have a feeling of really going for it. You get bloody, bruised and sweaty but love the process.
You start to notice that no matter how much you train, there is always more. The Bujinkan seems to expand the more you learn. You never reach the place where you can say, "I've got this." This can lead to a time of doubt where other paths become tempting. You want to find training that you can master and the Bujinkan rarely supplies this feeling.
After your strength and spirit are drained, you wonder, what now? Where can I go from here? How can I keep training and persevere? Can I even do this?
Every visit to the dojo feels like another wasted effort to learn anything. Frustration will rule your mind.
This is a very important passage in training. Reaching this place means you are ready to begin learning. That is why Shodan is beginner's level. You may recognize you are caught in your own conditioning and seek a way out through taijutsu.
You will feel you are nearing the end of this level when you sense that the ego's efforts to capture the essence of training are not enough.
Next we look at Bujinkan Nidan 弐段: Discovering the Footprints