Mats Hjelm – Gyaku-gi Seminar @ Bujinkan Haburamu Dojo (Istanbul, March 2011)
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This video in its whole 75 minutes is available for instant download at budoshop.se On this video GYAKU-GI, nine reversal techniques from CHI RYAKU NO MAKI in the Bujinkan system is taught. First the basic technique is shown and explained, then the jissen feeling and variations. This video is from a seminar in Istanbul, Turkey in March 19-20th 2011. Instant download link... www.payloadz.com |
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| Time: 01:07 | More in Sports |
From Bujinkan Santa Monica by Bujinkan Santa Monica
Kinkyu jishin 緊急地震 (earthquake emergency). This is a new phrase I learned just one week ago. I had just finished our Thursday night training (Friday afternoon in Japan) where we practiced mawashi dori along with tachi kumiuchi. I had a quick dinner and was just settling into bed when I received the alarm."lightning, storms and earthquakes are naturally violent and sudden. All you can do is ride them out"So here I am wide awake trying to understand nai no kami ないのかみ / なゐの神【地震神】or jishin no kami 地震の神 the deity of earthquakes

Hatsumi Sensei once explained to us how old Japanese architecture was designed without fasteners, rather it had joints that were lashed together with rope so they could flex and give."Jishin mushi 地震虫 (じしんむし) earthquake bug

"Just as you distrust us, so we distrust others as well. It's wrong. We're all human. As humans we are responsible for each other. We are related. Refuse us and you abandon your brothers. We must learn to help each other."
--Ichiro Sakai
“Nature has a way somehow of reminding Man of just how small he is. She occasionally throws up terrifying offspring of our pride or carelessness, to remind us how puny we really are, in the face of a tornado, an earthquake, or a Godzilla.”Some old wisdom tells us that the best place to be during an earthquake is a bamboo grove. Because bamboo is flexible yet very strong. It will bend and sway without breaking.
From Shiro Kuma's Weblog by kumablog
What happened in Japan a few days ago is a terrible thing but I am sad to see the way things are covered in the media and at the political level.
Japan has suffered one of the biggest earthquakes in the last 140 years and after the destruction caused by the tsunami they expect at least 10000 casualties. But our media in Europe are only speaking about the possible nuclear catastrophe and rarely speak about the people in Japan who lost everything: a parent, a friend, their house, car etc. Some countries are even checking already the level of radioactivity of the Japanese products imported (sent before the earthquake because the Japanese industry is down), others are checking the air pollution even if they are located 3000 km away from Japan and not in the direction of the winds!
This treatment of information is revolting as it only emphasizes the human appetite for cataastrophe.
I am not trying to minimize the nuclear accident but I think that we have to focus primarily on what is important: the people in difficulty trying to survive after the tsunami.
Can we individually do anything about the nuclear problem? Can we seriously howl with the politicians and the media and use this accident as an excuse to stop our own nuclear plants?
We are behaving like a drunk driver blaming a tree for destroying his car after a crash. The nuclear problem is not the cause of the problem but a negative consequence of the tsunami so we must first do whatever we can to help the Japanese people.
Be logical:
So we must redefine our priorities:
In the last days I have seen many Bujinkan groups organizing seminars to collect money for Japan and one dôjô is going to give the benefits to the Japanese red cross. This is the Bujinkan I like.
We often have the feeling that our governments are not always telling us the truth, but there is nothing we can do about it. But as Bujinkan members we should listen to Sensei when he stresses the importance of being happy. So let’s recenter our lives to be happy and stop howling with the crowd.
We are responsible. Accept that and move on as the Japanese did, do and will always do. Sensei was still teaching on Sunday (not on Tuesday as the Budôkan was closed) and I guess he will teach on Friday, so keep going!
As far as I am concerned, I will continue to support the Japanese as much as I can and I am still planning to train with Sôke next April.
If you want to actively help Japan, the best support you can give is to continue to travel to Japan as long as:
The Bujinkan is teaching us to be ourselves and not to behave as a flock of sheeps. It is time to show the world that you didn’t train for nothing during all these years.
And remember that “tsunami” 津浪 is a Japanese word!
See you soon on the mats in Noda.
From blogurl:henka.wordpress.com inpostauthor:ariesbudo - Google Blog Search by ariesbudo
I have just returned to Japan from a perceived safe place. Funny feeling that returning to a place of danger and experiencing the danger almost every minute of the day, without the desire to flee. Is this a desire to find that of bushido or an act of ...…From blogurl:henka.wordpress.com inpostauthor:ariesbudo - Google Blog Search by ariesbudo
I have just returned to Japan from a perceived safe place. Funny feeling that returning to a place of danger and experiencing the danger almost every minute of the day, without the desire to flee. Is this a desire to find that of bushido or an act of ...…From Uploads by YouTube Help by budoshop
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On this video Juttejutsu and the six basic baton techniques we study in the Bujinkan system is taught. First the basic technique is shown and explained, then the jissen feeling and variations. This video is from a seminar in Riga, Latvia in February 27th 2011. This is day two of two. The first day the theme was Sanshin no kata and the second day Juttejutsu. Buy and download it here... www.payloadz.com For more information click here... budoshop.se |
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| Time: 00:49 | More in Education |
From Shiro Kuma's Weblog by kumablog
As for many of you I have been watching extensively the frenzy around the nuclear problem in Japan. Journalists are speaking without knowing and they are “honestly” transforming the news (I think it is hopeless) to get more viewers. At the same time our politicians see here a good way to cash easy votes. Do not believe everything on the news, make you own inquiry. I do not want to minimize the nuclear accident that happened but the attitude of the media is just not correct.
For those interested and concerning the nuclear problem, I received this link today and I thought that it would help many to understand what is a nucelar plant and what has happened in Japan after the earthquake and the Tsunami: http://theenergycollective.com/barrybrook/53461/fukushima-nuclear-accident-simple-and-accurate-explanation
As far as I know, the main problems that our Japanese friends are facing are the repeated earthquakes and the consequences of the Tsunami. Relatively (so far) the nuclear problem seems to me as not being so important. Thousands of people have died because of the tsunami and the country will have difficulties with food, gas, and elctricity.
I hope that all our friends there will get over these bad times and that Japan will recover fast from this nightmare.
Also I invite you to read Duncan’s last post with the possible interpretations of the theme of the year: kihon happô at http://tazziedevil.wordpress.com/ it is excellent!
I am still going to Noda mid April (unless our politicians forbide it and/or the situation evolves in an unexpected dramatic manner).