If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
I don't get it! Really...gah!
Okay, so it seems like the higher up in rank your conversation partner is, the more they're saying that all the techniques are the same. At first they all looked the same to me, just someone would end up flat on the ground after starting. Now they're separating a bit better for me to figure them out. So then they're supposed to mesh together again further down the track?? Please, for the love of ______, someone enlighten me! Am mightily lost. |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
There are very different stairs you have to go up in your life.
Steep or more flate, narrow or wide, some have very high steps, some have smaller ones, they may lead you up in spirals or straight. In a cave or medivial castle the may be slippery and "irregular". So every stair you hav to go up in your life is different. But once you have learned going up a stair, it is all the same. |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
Don't get me started! I used to write poetry :D
It's like the waves of the sea, the same thing, but each time a little different.... (Selin, I really hope we are still friends after this comment of mine) I'll try to do a better reply later today, or tomorrow:) |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
"Before I studied the art, a punch to me was just like a punch, a kick just like a kick. After I learned the art, a punch was no longer a punch, a kick no longer a kick. Now that I've understood the art, a punch is just like a punch, a kick just like a kick. The height of cultivation is really nothing special. It is merely simplicity; the ability to express the utmost with the minimum." - Bruce Lee
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
The external form of a technique may be different. The underlying principles are the same. The more experience I get, the less the differences matter.
Katherine |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
The comments above already describe it quite well.
When you start out you tend to look at the outer appearance of the individual techniques. You need to categorise and study the techniques and after a while you have learned to see the similarity within the techniques. Then everything is the same again, but now you understand why. Your viewing glasses have changed.... |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
Techniques are learned to be unlearned. First you learn the alphabet, then you may start to string together letters to make words and sentences without thinking of the letters. It's the same thing.
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
Thanks all.
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A strike to the stomach (chudan ski), knife attack to the stomach and attack with jo to the stomach are all the same. The only thing that really changes is distance (ma ai). Once you realise this there are no longer three different techniques, but only one that is slightly adapted to distance. The outer form is off course very different, but what you do remains the same. |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
when you start, you look at specialties in a given technique just in order to mimic it. You cant find the connections yet. A technique is different from another because from the outside it looks different.
Going up in level, you slowly start generalizing (in my case) and start understanding these general principles underlying different techniques. You combine/apply these principles no matter what technique you do. A technique (any technique) therefore is an amalgamation of a lot of different but common general principles. The more principles applied to a technique, the more refined it is. These are demonstrated in the tiniest details of the movement. You also begin to understand the connections between different principles. Understand the principles to understand the technique. |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
They are like snowflakes...none are the same....
Mickey |
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
Funny thing... all techniques are based on the same principles and are therefore - in a way - the same. On the other hand no two techniques are alike, not even if you do the same technique twice, since there will always be small thanges in posture, energy in the attack, the contact between your feet and the ground, the slipperyness of your wrist and many many other factors.
It's like playing sheet music. A note is a note is a note, but every time you play it small variations will give the music different expresions, but when you get to a high enough level, musik boils down to a few basic principles that you must understand and live by in order to create music from the inkdots on the paper. Rythm, intonation, pauses etc. In the end it is all about not trying to understand. Just do and enjoy - then there is a slight chance that understanding will occur at some point.. at least that's what I'm hoping for ;) JJ |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
IMHO, enlightenment and understand is sequential and only comes after the work, not before it. And then its one of those Oh-Yea Ah-Ha things before you go back into confusion working on the next step.
I didn't see the sameness either. |
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JJ that is a lovely analogy! Lynn, maybe it'll be like a Hollywood film where time slows down and the stars start shining and JJ's music comes wafting through the dojo...? :p |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
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So yeah.... techniques kinda are like snowflakes. :) Anyway to the OP. Just train. A time will come when it will start to make sense on it's own. You can't make it make sense you have to allow it to make sense if you get my meaning. I've only recently, in the past few months, begun getting glimpses of how they all relate and connect and have a sameness about them. |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
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Mark |
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Have fun JJ |
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
Maybe it's worth looking at what you mean by "understanding". There's the understanding where, out of a breadth of experience, things start to fall into place. Then there's the understanding where you come upon a new thing and immediately try to wrestle it into place in some conceptual framework. The former is pretty cool when it happens, but...it happens. It's not something you do, it's something that happens in its own good time, and as Seiser sensei said, after you've done the work and got the mileage. The latter is a useful mode of thought for certain kinds of things, but IMO aikido is not one of them. Trying to enforce that kind of "understanding" on aikido is like wrestling with a giant squid: even if you think you're getting it, you're not.
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
In trying to show something about Aikido to someone from another martial art (who became shodan in that art at his next test visiting a gasshuku at his old college) I thought our own first kyu test requirements at the time provided a good overview although I wasn't qualified to give out "instant ranks" :D
The concept of showing five techniques to be done in response to each of the classic attacks was so useful that when I later called it the "tinker toy" approach (the predecessor to Lego of sorts from my own childhood several decades ago ;)) I came to Aikido from college women's judo class, where all the throws were done from the same collar and sleeve grab, and it took a while to get used to the fact that the technique names were usually four words instead of just two ;) By the way, the example was a martial arts cultural exchange from the YMCA, Chuck and I studied each other's martial art. He learned some Aikido, I learned some Shotokan, and I ended up working for him and we later got married...:) |
Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
P.S. Chuck still talks about Tinker Toys years later, as a way of categorizing Aikido's many techniques and their interrelationships.
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
That is the fun,Diane...finding the fit with each uke in a given technique. But you know that. :)
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Re: If I hear 'It's all the same' one more time...!
I would ask my instructors to provide guidance in a more concrete way in which I could learn at my current level. Its easy for someone who's been training for awhile to think and respond to questions from their own point of view, vice that of the person asking the question. An honest reply such as "I'm not really sure what that means, could you please explain why/how this works?" should be acceptable etiquette in most dojo.
Hope your training is going well! |
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