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What is
Aikido?
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Pronounced: eye-key-dough Literally translated, AIKIDO means the way to harmonize energy. In practice, this means that we use techniques that use the attackers energy against them by redirecting it into a throw or a pin. In this way a much smaller person can easily defend themselves against even the biggest of attackers.
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What Exactly is Yoshinkan Aikido? In a nutshell, Aikido is a very powerful Japanese martial art that is defensive in nature. It is non-competitive and non-agressive. It does not meet force with resistance or brute strength; instead it redirects an aggressor's force with well-timed, flowing, circular movements that lead an attacker off their centre of balance. Rather than relying on our strength to protect us, the attacker's own motions and momentum are utilized to compromise their balance and stability. Once they are off-balance they are subdued or dispensed with by using any of a large variety of joint locks, pins or throws. ![]()
The Origins of Yoshinkan Aikido
Modern Aikido evolved from Daito Aikijutsu which is said to have
originated around 900 AD. It was passed down through the generations,
though only to direct descendants of the Japanese royal family, until Sokaku Takeda began to teach the art outside of the family in the
mid-19th century. Takeda's most outstanding student was a small man
named Morihei Ueshiba . Ueshiba augmented Daito Aikijutsu with the
essentials of other traditional martial arts he had mastered, and with
techniques of his own, thereby founding 'Aikido' in the early 20th
century. One of Ueshiba's most talented students was Gozo Shioda, who
went on to begin the Yoshinkan style of Aikido. Gozo Shioda, born in
1915, studied and earned a 3rd Dan in Judo while still a teenager. He
then discovered Morihei Ueshiba's school and immersed himself in an
eight year full-time, intense study of this new martial art. He readily
mastered Ueshiba's teachings and was eventually awarded Aikido's first
9th Dan.
The Yoshinkan Style of Aikido
Yoshinkan Aikido is occasionally called the "hard" style because the
strict and sometimes gruelling training methods are a product of the
pre-war military period Gozo Shioda spent as a student of
Ueshiba. Yoshinkan Aikido uses six fundamental training movements and
about 150 common defensive techniques which are practiced repeatedly.
Mastering these basics conditions students to be able to execute the
remaining techniques, which are thought to total about 3000 in
all.Yoshinkan Aikido is not a sport. It is the cooperative development
of both physical and mental dexterity. But there is also an incredibly
powerful and practical self-defense side of Aikido that is available to
all, irrespective of size, age, gender, race or culture.
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| İDurham Region Aikido 2010 | |||