View Full Version : Poll: Do you currently care what your aikido looks like?
AikiWeb System
01-30-2005, 01:30 AM
AikiWeb Poll for the week of January 30, 2005:
Do you currently care what your aikido looks like?
I don't do aikido
Yes
No
Here are the current results (http://www.aikiweb.com/polls/results.html?poll_id=258).
Tim Griffiths
01-30-2005, 03:38 AM
There's a saying in Russian: "Ugly birds don't fly".
If your (or my) aikido looks bad, it probably is. Relaxed, flowing movement, clean changes of power and direction, good posture and a lack of wasted motion - these are all things that make aikido look nice, as well as being hallmarks of good aikido.
Tim
stuartjvnorton
01-30-2005, 05:43 AM
Tim nailed it.
Couldn't have said it better.
Pauliina Lievonen
01-30-2005, 07:27 AM
I have to confess that I also care what my aikido looks like purely for the sake of, well, it's nice to look good if possible... :p But i agree with the above as well.
kvaak
Pauliina
Qatana
01-30-2005, 11:30 AM
Well as a lifelong dancer and professional model, Sometimes I get a little to obsessive with how my movement looks. My dojo is shared with a ballet school and one of what I consider my greatest aikido successes is that while I am in the dojo, the mirrored wall Does Not Exist.
If I try to control how my aikido looks, I will easily get my neck broken from trying to split my attention between uke and the mirror. If I concentrate on how it Feels, and do the technique without struggling or putting my foot up somebody's hakama, I'm willing to bet I look just fine.
Except of course looking dorky cuz I'm still in gi pants.
Janet Rosen
01-30-2005, 12:49 PM
Gee, I'm one of the minority who doesn't care what it looks like!
Maybe its being short round a tad overweight and now over 50.
Maybe its wearing the knee brace and spending half my aikido training doing non-standard ukemi.
Maybe its that I focus on how it FEELS.
The only thing I'm trying to do in terms of how it looks is, smile and be inviting to my partner.
...and this from a woman who cannot leave the house without exhaustive self examination in the mirror!
Anders Bjonback
01-30-2005, 04:38 PM
Honestly, I don't think it has to look good to work, but I guess I'm vain and don't want to look like a retard.
Don_Modesto
01-30-2005, 05:06 PM
If your (or my) aikido looks bad, it probably is. Relaxed, flowing movement, clean changes of power and direction, good posture and a lack of wasted motion - these are all things that make aikido look nice, as well as being hallmarks of good aikido.
Agreed.
I recall one teacher, though, who carried this concern into vanity. Not only would his head be off in the wrong direction when throwing so he could see himself in the mirror, he would sweep his hair into the proper place, too!
He was a pretty scary fellow, very powerful. I was training with him alone once when some passerby stopped to watch. The change in him was palpable and I worried that I would get hurt, not through intention but through distraction. He was so determined to show his strength that he lept ambitiously forward, stepped IN his HAKAMA, and face-planted. The observers tactfully departed.
SeiserL
01-30-2005, 05:11 PM
I want to care, but it still looks like too-old too-big too-much-mileage Aikido.
maikerus
01-30-2005, 08:43 PM
I care. I don't care what *I* look like, but my Aikido reflects my teachers and I want to do the best I can by them.
--Michael
xuzen
01-30-2005, 11:47 PM
I care. I don't care what *I* look like, but my Aikido reflects my teachers and I want to do the best I can by them.
--Michael
Ditto Maikerusan,
Well said. Must not let sensei loose face.
Boon.
Rupert Atkinson
01-31-2005, 01:45 AM
Whether you care or not, it is not easy to control what it looks like.
Pauliina Lievonen
01-31-2005, 04:55 AM
Gee, I'm one of the minority who doesn't care what it looks like!
Maybe its being short round a tad overweight and now over 50.
That has nothing to do with how your aikido looks like! :cool: I'm short, round and more than a tad overweight myself... not trying to say that you should care, entirely up to you. :)
kvaak
Pauliina
bogglefreak20
01-31-2005, 05:03 AM
I agree that good Aikido also looks good. But during training I do anot worry about what my Aikido looks like, nor could I asses that in any way - there are no mirrors in the dojo.
I do distinctly remember our sensei telling us in the beginners class that when we practice at home, we shouldn't practice in front of a mirror. We should remain focus on sensing the movement and postures of our body rather than looking in the mirror and relying on it's judgement.
Karen Wolek
01-31-2005, 06:30 AM
I care how my aikido looks....because 9 times out of 10, that's how sensei can tell what I'm doing wrong. (Unless he is uke for me, then he sure doesn't need to see much) A lot of times now, I know exactly what he is going to correct right after I do it....because I know it probably didn't look very good, even from across the room. <grin>
Maybe this will all change one day, but I'm only 3rd kyu and only training for a little over 2 years.
Roger C. Marks
01-31-2005, 06:41 AM
Hopefully, form should follow function - if technique is good, it should look good. Conversely, the perceived idealisation of form may not necessarily ensure alpha plus function. There is also the little point about subjugation of your biggest enemy - ego.
I'd agree that aikido doesn't have to look good to be effective, but using Tim's analogy, you could get a dead bird to fly by firing it from a cannon. i.e. I think we aim to make it look good (in training) because it shows efficiency and blending.
Maybe some people have different ideas of what 'looks good' though? In a weird circular argument, I think aikido looks good when there is blending and efficiency.
Mary Eastland
01-31-2005, 05:34 PM
When Aikido feels good it looks good.
Mary Eastland
Jim Simons
01-31-2005, 07:46 PM
I once heard a sensei in our dojo talking about a seminar that was coming to our region, close enough that some of us might like to attend; the teacher giving the seminar is a fairly well-known and highly ranked teacher. My sensei's remark was "Usually good aikido looks beautiful. [Seminar teacher]'s aikido is amazing but it looks...weird!"
Amendes
02-02-2005, 12:30 PM
I wouldn't care, but I do. I show others how to do Aikido. What sort of confidence do I convey if my techniques look like doodie.
charron
02-02-2005, 01:13 PM
I think that focusing on looking good, is more like feeding your ego. I prefer to focus on what I'm feeling from uke, and how I can take advantage of his recovery, to perform a technique. Looking good will take care of itself, when the other aspects of aikido are in sync.
Alfonso
02-02-2005, 05:07 PM
I voted no, because I don't know what to look at
a few years ago I thought I could judge my aikido by watching it. Since then I have learned that many of the assumptions on form I had were wrong, things that I thought were bad were good and vice versa.
so no, I can't really tell. I'm more worried on how it feels to me.
Aikiscott
02-02-2005, 05:14 PM
I'm 183cm tall & 128kg I have never felt that my Aikido was graceful (though one of the new students in my Dojo did describe my Aikido as Floppy ) & have never really cared that much about how it looks.
If you survive, Its good technique. If it looks good in the process all well and good, but there is no point in looking graceful whilst you are being broken in two. Which is probably a little Thuggish, but it works for me.
Now if I can only make that work in my Shodan grading then I might stand a chance in passing.
Jeanne Shepard
02-02-2005, 07:44 PM
When I start thinking about "looking good" I start doing "Swan Lake ballet arms" and that drives my teacher crazy.
Jeanne
Janet Rosen
02-02-2005, 10:39 PM
When I start thinking about "looking good" I start doing "Swan Lake ballet arms" and that drives my teacher crazy.
I LOVE that image!!!! Can you imagine a group of us doing it simultaneously?!
CNYMike
02-03-2005, 12:14 AM
I voted "no" but I didn't quite get the question. I resumed Aikido 10 months ago, having first looked at it in the mid-'80s. But even if I hadn't forgot much of what I learned then, I ma doign a different style from then, too, so I am pretty much back at zero.
My forward ukemi are a work in progress that's progressing slowly. As far as my nage waza, I get yelled at often enough for missing this or that detail, so I guess it looks, if not pretty BLEEPing horrible, less than perfect.
So best not to lose sleep over it and keep training.
bryce_montgomery
02-03-2005, 11:56 AM
I care. I don't care what *I* look like, but my Aikido reflects my teachers and I want to do the best I can by them.
--Michael
Agreed.
Bryce
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