When is Aikido Not
Aikido
Yoshinkan Aikido
Author Antony Day
With the
large variety of martial arts, when does the aforementioned
Aikido stay Aikido and not become Jujutsu or Ninjutsu or even
Judo.
Is it when you use a throw as in
kote-gashi (outward wrist twisting) without using a leg to
break their balance?
As well as
irimi-nage (entering
throw) without putting a hip into it.
Can we easily define the line
which makes it just Aikido and not another martial
art?
Judo uses legs hips and a variety
of sweeps to take their opponent down, are we saying that we
cannot use legs to throw uke with, also they use a similar
system of balance breaking as in yoshinkan
Aikido
, they push to get uke to push back, they pull to get uke to
pull and in return they are usually given the opponents
balance.
In the Art of Ninjutsu and
Jujutsu some Throws are completed with a self sacrifice throw
(dropping their own bodyweight) to off balance the opponent, is
it wrong for us to attempt this incase we are told “its not
Aikido”
So how
does Koshi-nage (Hip throw) differ from any judo or Ninjutsu/
jujutsu hip throw?
Do we still not have to break the
opponents balance, or place our body in their path, of course
we do, but I have heard in training many times
“that’s not
Aikido” I usually
reply which part?
I was
once at an Aikido Seminar taught by an 8th Dan sensei; I was
training with a 5th kyu who was having trouble applying the
technique (I do add I was not trying to obstruct his training)
this is when the sensei came over and had to show him the finer
points of where he was going wrong! The technique consisted of
a Nikkajo, or Nikkyo into an Ikkajo or Ikkyo, the sensei then
put me down on one knee with my right arm in a Ikkajo lock he
then applied a quick kick to my ribs, at this point he said to
the 5th kyu “if you see an opportunity take it” this was never
shown to me in my training but I knew it was an obvious form of
atemi, I would not tell this sensei with over 50 years of
training “that was not Aikido” I am sure he is well aware of
what is Aikido.
In a
form of Sankkajo-nage (third teaching throw) do we not travel
uke around us to be led over the trailing leg, or is this a
case of “well that’s different”,
Also the
most famous technique, of all agreeable Aikido Schools is
Shio-nage (Four directional throw) but again which version is
correct, I have trained with many teachers and lots of the
Shio-nage techniques differ from the one I was taught in
yoshinkan but I have also trained with Aiki kai and other
styles, the Shio-nage technique is one of the most fundamental
parts of Aikido training.
When does it not become Shio-nage
? As each school has its own way of Practice.
Some
techniques even completely mimic another style of martial art
so how is that one explained, surely not by the color of the
gi, the name is the only different factor.
We have to remember that most of
the general styles of martial arts come from the same
background.
There are only so many ways to
lock a limb or throw a body, and I am sure that judo,
aikido, Ninjutsu and all the
other arts with kicking punching have covered all the angles
that are there.
The true style of any martial art
lies within the effort and consistency of the student and the
heart they apply to it; I believe that is when Aikido becomes
Aikido,
Train Hard
Train Focused Train Safe; Tony day
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