Saturday, November 12, 2016

Inertia

One of the fundamental ideas in taijutsu practice is to take it slowly and build the muscle memory, and only speed up later. However, there is an area where it's not practical to slow down as far as we do elsewhere: ukemi, or rolling and falling. At some point, when you roll, you have to do two things at once while moving. That is because your own inertia is part of the technique.

Still, you can break it down to elements, and practice that way. Also, some rolls are simpler than others.

We went out to the park today and rolled to our heart's content on the grass. Usually at this time of year, Fudou Myou migrates indoor. But the weather was great, the grass was dry (mostly).

Monday, January 25, 2016

New Dojo

Very nice. Fudo Myou relocated and it's shiny.

Friday, January 8, 2016

Exciting changes are coming

I thought to try and spring a surprise, but Shihan posted an update to our Facebook page, so the cat is out of the bag: Fudo Myou dojo is moving to a new location. Hours and contact information remains the same (find them on the website). We remain in town, and with Albuquerque being a sizeable city, the new place still a leased office. It would be cool to have a plot of land with a training hall and area for outdoor activities, such as sword practice. In a typical training room, I'm liable to hit the ceiling with a bo. Our old place had exposed day light tubes along the ceiling and bofuri required unyielding vigilance there.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

5th Kyu!

This one came somewhat unexpectedly. It's a rule in the Yamaneko system, or in the whole Bujinkan actually, that tests are not announced. It makes sense: one has to be ready at all times. But usually one can tell that it's coming, even if not the exact date.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

In the park

One feature of classes in Fudo Myou was new for me that we have regular classes in a park. Before, I only got outside for "special training" that black belt candidates did in Ernie Reyes' system.

Typically we take a break from the park over the winter. Not so much because of the cold, but because ground gets icy and that is conductive to injuries. Of course as ninja, we are equipped to use kamae properly and will not slip and tear up ligaments unless we make a mistake, but we do it according to the maxim of "training in most ideal circumstances for most un-ideal circumstances". This winter, however, was very mild in Albuequerque and we did not take the usual break. So, the image above is of Mr.R. (tori) working with Mr.G. (uke) on the bleak winter grass.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

7th kyu!

Barely made it, honestly, but I'm 7th kyu now.

Also, I was helping out testing Chris-sempai for shodan (1st degree). In our school it includes things like 2 mile run and 2 minutes of push-ups. I need to step it up.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Albuquerque recruitment drive is coming

Sensei started talking about staging a more focused recruitment effort recently. Although Fudo Myou was a fixture of Albuquerque for years, it does not seem to be very well known.

Sensei's idea is to put up posters around town, but I'm starting to think that we really should be getting on various electronic lists for ninjutsu schools, such as winjutsu.com, ninjutsu.com (neither currently lists our dojo).

One practical question is how to have any kind of listing labeled. In general, we do not talk about "ninjutsu" much, since the term have become loaded in the popular culture. The dojo is a place where you study Bujinkan Taijutsu (武神館の忍術). But I suspect that most people looking for a school would start searching for "ninjutsu". I know I did.