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Originally posted by Wshmaster0
Hey Greg,
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Hi Lloyd,
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Thanks for the quick and very informative response. However, at this point I'm still very confused as to how I am really suppose to get started. When I mean beginner I mean totally clueless.
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I'm sorry. I'd thought you'd already started aikido at the FSU Aikido club.
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Could you tell me a little bit more about Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu (MJER) Iaijutsu? Like I mentioned before, the sword mastery is what I am interested in.
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I'm really not the person to tell you about it.
Here are three sites:
http://www.shindai.com/
http://www.aikidowestflorida.com/
http://www.nfa.asu.org/
The former is co-run by Dennis Hooker Sensei. He's a fairly high-ranking practitioner of MJER in addition to being a high-ranking aikido-ist.
The second is near you and has affiliate dojo even closer. The instructor there is a senior student of Hooker Sensei (in addition to being a friend and mentor of mine). They are really nice people.
The third is in Tallahassee. I don't know anything about their sword work, however.
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Should I take aikido as a martial arts form and then MJER in the sword technique?
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That depends on what you.
I practice the Iwama aiki-ken and aiki-jo entirely to aid my aikido. Many of the people in aikido feel the same way.
Are you in it for the art or is self defense a goal of yours, even if secondary.
For me, it's all the same. All about self improvement. I really like aikido, which has a lot to do with my instructor, but iai, jo, or whatever whould serve the same end.
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Sorry if I sound stupid hahah I truly am very new at this but I am willing to learn, so I'm not sure exactly what I should take.
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1. Make a list of dojo that you'd consider studing at that are within a practical commute. Preferably three or more times per week.
2. Go visit each dojo. Train if you can, observe if you can't. Talk to the instructor and/or the senior students. Get a feel for them. Be yourself, but be polite.
3. Winnow that down to a short list. Go visit them again.
4. Pick a dojo/instructor that you think you can hang with for the long haul.
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From what I've seen the Chinese sword style is by far the most elegant and powerful however,
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I'm not an expert in either style, much less both. I'm not qualified to answer.
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but like I said again im 19 and most of the men and women that I have seen have started when they were young and learning the philosophy should be something acquired early in life right?
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I seriously doubt anyone is able to absorb either the spiritual or martial philosophy/strategy/etc. at a very young age.
In short, you're, like,
so not too old. Get thee to a dojo before you are old, fat, bald and wishing you'd done it when you were a young whipper-snapper.
Best,