We live in a relatively peaceful world. In first world countries like Australia, it is unlikely for the average person to experience violence on a daily basis. In fact many people go without experiencing any kind of violence for years. This is a good thing, but a society that lacks violence also loses the ability to deal with it once it happens.
The World Health Organisation defines violence as "the intentional use of physical force or power, threatened or actual, against oneself, another person, or against a group or community, which either results in or has a high likelihood of resulting in injury, death, psychological harm, maldevelopment, or deprivation."
People are often exposed to violence in the media, such as movies, video games or the news, but there is a psychological distance between the audience and the violence that is happening on screen. Also, the violence depicted in movies is dramatized to such an extent that it becomes a parody of real violence. This is especially true for the martial arts. Many films and video games depict characters fighting or duking it out in hand to hand combat, getting up or continuing to fight after taking hits that would render a normal person unconscious. This is artistic licence, but because most people don't experience real violence, they tend to equate this dramatized violence as the real thing because they don't have personal experience to compare it with.
I have found quite often that prospective students who attend martial arts dojo are under the illusion that what is being trained is the same as the dramatized violence they see in the media, then suffer a rude shock when the reality of true violence is displayed or experienced. The result of this experience is often leaving and never coming back after the first class.
In my classes I go to great lengths to ease new members into training, but it is difficult to alter a curriculum to such an extent as to shield participants completely from the reality of what they are training.
Martial arts are violent. They are supposed to be. They stem from a time when the world was more chaotic and less civilised than it is today. But, martial arts didn't promote an uncontrolled violence, it sought to focus violence into a surgical tool to be used at the right time, in the right place, in the right way.
To prospective students of the martial arts I encourage you not to give up after the first class, even if you encounter activities or philosophies outside your comfort zone. Violence is a natural part of society and should be understood and controlled, rather then suppressed. A society that understands violence is resistant to it, a society that represses violence is prone to succumb to it when systems break down.
Violence, given or received, helps people grow and tempers the psyche. It is safer to rely on a notched blade that has withstood a battle, than to rely on a new blade that has never been drawn.
Wednesday 14 September 2016
Wednesday 17 August 2016
The Purpose of Martial Arts in the Modern World
I haven't been in a fight since high school. I have been in altercations, but they were over so quickly and I had to do so little to solve them, that they hardly even count.
So, if the chances of getting into a fight are so low, why should anyone even consider training in martial arts in the first place?
I've asked myself this question many times in the 22 years I've been training. As a child I hated martial arts. I hated getting pummeled or thrown on the mat. For years I begged my mother to let me quit, but she always refused. I didn't really understand why she was so adamant about my training, but as I got a little older the answer came to me.
Martial Arts are about Survival.
Every exercise, every kata, every drill found in martial arts is designed to increase a practitioners survival. This is most evident with the very foundation of martial arts, break falling. Break falling is a method of decreasing or mitigating damage taken from falling. This comes in the form of rolling, tucking in the chin or using limbs in such a way as to absorb shock and protect the head or chest.
Break falling has saved my life more than once and I have had to use it many more times than any combat applications I have studied. It is a core skill, but also a survival skill. Many people who do not train in the martial arts take falling for granted. Anyone can fall at any time. Although people spend their entire lives trying to stay on balance, a twist of the ankle or a soap in the shower or slick surface can easily cause a fall that could cause death. Statistically few people die from standing height falls, but very many people without training injure themselves severely.
This is one of the great benefits of the martial arts. Learning how to fall and turning it into an instinctual action that becomes muscle memory. I have taken a great many falls that should have killed me, but walked away unscathed. I believe this is a valuable survival skill for any human being.
Break falling also conditions the body. Science shows that repeated impacts to bone and muscle cause the body to harden to protect itself over time. A new student of the martial arts can learn to break fall in a few weeks, however their body can take up to seven years to be conditioned enough to take bad falls with limited damage.
The mind can learn martial arts quickly, but it takes the body many years to internalise what the mind has learned in hours.
This body conditioning doesn't only come from break falling. Many drills and techniques in the martial arts make contact with the body. Repeated strikes from fists, elbows and legs, over time, condition the body to take a hit and continue to function with limited disruption. There are limits to this training, such as strikes to the head which cannot be conditioned. In fact repeated strikes to the head decrease the ability of the body to take those hits the future. Knowing which parts of the body can be conditioned and which parts can't is an important part of training, but also shows the limits and weaknesses of the body.
Another type of body conditioning is physical training. Martial arts has a unique way of moving the body and relies on a holistic physical training regimen to achieve efficient movement. This physical training is also a form of body maintenance. A human body needs to move, joints need to work through their full range of motion and bones need pressure to maintain strength. Isolated exercises do not help in this regard, the body needs to move as a whole unit and has to experience certain stresses to maintain healthy function. This is another benefit of martial arts training and increases the long term of the practitioners survival by granting a healthier lifestyle.
Martial arts also trains a practitioner's perception. Perception is a human's ability to perceive the world around them with their senses. Perception is split into the gathering of sensory data (sight, sound, touch, smell, taste) and the processing of that data. Martial arts rely heavily on sensory perception and each exercise or drill strengthens the parts of the brain that process this sensory information. Whether it be practicing break falls in a room full of people or using peripheral vision to scan for danger when practicing drills when everyone is armed with long weapons, these activities put pressure on perception and strengthen them gradually over time.
Martial arts is more than just fighting, martial arts is about living and surviving. The ability to fight, wield weapons and disarm attackers is just a bonus. The strengthening of the body, the honing of the mind and the social bonds are the true benefit to training martial arts.
So, if the chances of getting into a fight are so low, why should anyone even consider training in martial arts in the first place?
I've asked myself this question many times in the 22 years I've been training. As a child I hated martial arts. I hated getting pummeled or thrown on the mat. For years I begged my mother to let me quit, but she always refused. I didn't really understand why she was so adamant about my training, but as I got a little older the answer came to me.
Martial Arts are about Survival.
Every exercise, every kata, every drill found in martial arts is designed to increase a practitioners survival. This is most evident with the very foundation of martial arts, break falling. Break falling is a method of decreasing or mitigating damage taken from falling. This comes in the form of rolling, tucking in the chin or using limbs in such a way as to absorb shock and protect the head or chest.
Break falling has saved my life more than once and I have had to use it many more times than any combat applications I have studied. It is a core skill, but also a survival skill. Many people who do not train in the martial arts take falling for granted. Anyone can fall at any time. Although people spend their entire lives trying to stay on balance, a twist of the ankle or a soap in the shower or slick surface can easily cause a fall that could cause death. Statistically few people die from standing height falls, but very many people without training injure themselves severely.
This is one of the great benefits of the martial arts. Learning how to fall and turning it into an instinctual action that becomes muscle memory. I have taken a great many falls that should have killed me, but walked away unscathed. I believe this is a valuable survival skill for any human being.
Break falling also conditions the body. Science shows that repeated impacts to bone and muscle cause the body to harden to protect itself over time. A new student of the martial arts can learn to break fall in a few weeks, however their body can take up to seven years to be conditioned enough to take bad falls with limited damage.
The mind can learn martial arts quickly, but it takes the body many years to internalise what the mind has learned in hours.
This body conditioning doesn't only come from break falling. Many drills and techniques in the martial arts make contact with the body. Repeated strikes from fists, elbows and legs, over time, condition the body to take a hit and continue to function with limited disruption. There are limits to this training, such as strikes to the head which cannot be conditioned. In fact repeated strikes to the head decrease the ability of the body to take those hits the future. Knowing which parts of the body can be conditioned and which parts can't is an important part of training, but also shows the limits and weaknesses of the body.
Another type of body conditioning is physical training. Martial arts has a unique way of moving the body and relies on a holistic physical training regimen to achieve efficient movement. This physical training is also a form of body maintenance. A human body needs to move, joints need to work through their full range of motion and bones need pressure to maintain strength. Isolated exercises do not help in this regard, the body needs to move as a whole unit and has to experience certain stresses to maintain healthy function. This is another benefit of martial arts training and increases the long term of the practitioners survival by granting a healthier lifestyle.
Martial arts also trains a practitioner's perception. Perception is a human's ability to perceive the world around them with their senses. Perception is split into the gathering of sensory data (sight, sound, touch, smell, taste) and the processing of that data. Martial arts rely heavily on sensory perception and each exercise or drill strengthens the parts of the brain that process this sensory information. Whether it be practicing break falls in a room full of people or using peripheral vision to scan for danger when practicing drills when everyone is armed with long weapons, these activities put pressure on perception and strengthen them gradually over time.
Martial arts is more than just fighting, martial arts is about living and surviving. The ability to fight, wield weapons and disarm attackers is just a bonus. The strengthening of the body, the honing of the mind and the social bonds are the true benefit to training martial arts.
Saturday 30 July 2016
First training session - 05 August 2016
The opening class was a great success. We explored the specifics of the schools, styles and organization of the Bujinkan to give prospective members an idea of what to expect from training.
At the next session we will begin training proper. New members can expect a physical training portion, which focuses on body weight exercises and conditioning including break falling; basics, including the 'kihon happo' or basic eight techniques, basic throwing techniques and striking methods; and finally, variations based on traditional Japanese kata of the samurai, shinobi and sohei.
If you are interested in having a look or joining in, please rsvp via the contact form.
The first training session will be at Paddington dojo at 1900h on the 5th of August.
At the next session we will begin training proper. New members can expect a physical training portion, which focuses on body weight exercises and conditioning including break falling; basics, including the 'kihon happo' or basic eight techniques, basic throwing techniques and striking methods; and finally, variations based on traditional Japanese kata of the samurai, shinobi and sohei.
If you are interested in having a look or joining in, please rsvp via the contact form.
The first training session will be at Paddington dojo at 1900h on the 5th of August.
Friday 15 July 2016
Opening Class
The opening class of Ninkokuo dojo is scheduled for the 29th of July 2016. This will be a special class for new members and interested individuals and will include a one hour presentation of Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu.
This event will be open to the public.
If you are interested in having a look, please RSVP using the contact form.
The presentation will take place at Paddington Hall at 7:00pm.
This event will be open to the public.
If you are interested in having a look, please RSVP using the contact form.
The presentation will take place at Paddington Hall at 7:00pm.
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