Bujinkan Tesshin ryū Dojo and or RU-vid will not be held responsible for the misuse of this information in these Videos it is for reference only
Bujinkan Tesshin ryū Dojo 鉄心龍道場 Systema Training:
武神館道場師範(十段 ) in Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu in 9 schools (from 1979) Main Teacher Peter King Dai Shihan 1st Dan Shukokai Karate (from 1977-83) (Rising Sun Karate Bury Manchester teacher Tommy Kwan) First UK Systema instructor (from 1998.to present ) Teacher Vladimir Vasiliev Russian martial art Toronto HQ 56 weeks training there 5 trips over 18 years Also trained in Boxing, Judo, Aikido.
One thing I've learned About Aikido wich i found to be very true is that Aikido's techniques are not at all effective against an attacker if they're not committed to their attacks So I've improvised my game by making it work to my benefit wich is to piss my attacker off to make him want to rush in, or chase me wich the attacker gives the right amount of force enough to the flow to throw him Its called playing the under dog & it's a smart man's game, understand through practice 🈴
It's boxing day 2023 and old Dave has solved the riddle of the sunstone! Look at the stone! The cracks within the stone function like the dots except the colours are in opposition to the dots. I have two sun stones but neither are cracked within like yours. I only noticed after watching this video! Look at the cracks!!!!!!!! All videos I've seen use tape, dots, lines eff but they are additions to the stone. Look at the cracks!!!!!!!
Hi, thanks for posting this excellent video! Can you please share where it is from, maybe a bigger documentary about martial arts? It would be interesting to see the other points about body movement of old day samurai. Also, I would like to point out the amazing way in which Kono sensei walks/runs seen at 0:42 of this clip. His upper body is straight and there is no swinging and twisting - notice how his spin and head are completely straight. This is very difficult for modern people to do, especially in the relaxed manner that he shows it. I have trained with Kuroda sensei and he also explains this very well, but it would be nice to find a video to show to people at the aikido dojo because they don't seem to get it...
I feel like I should add a tiny bit of information regarding the ancient blade, Futsu-no-mitama no Tsurugi, because it's not just any old sword... that sword is connected to the Kami of Kashima Shrine - Takemikazuchi-no-o no kami. Yes, that Takemikazuchi, the war god that pacified the land. And when Emperor Jimmu was trying to unite Japan, the gods tried to send Takemikazuchi down to help out pacifying the land a second time. Takemikazuchi told Amaterasu and Takamusubi that just sending down his sword should be enough. So that's what they went with, because that made sense! They literally yeeted that thing straight into some poor bastard's storage shed, straight through the roof and impaled into the ground. Mind you, this sword is massive... So anyways, that sword was the Futsu-no-mitama, and I guess... Takemikazuchi didn't want it back? So Jimmu kept it and passed it down and now there it sits.
Northern Atlantic waters can have twilight for 5 hours, so can you tell me how long you can track the sun after sunset and prox were you live/time of recording ? I have retired in Spain, and could only use it 40-45 min after sunset mid summer. I have tried to look for data on latitude vs how long it can be seen, but nobody seem to have collected the data yet..
This is cool as far as keeping alive the knowledge and traditions handed down, but some of this is purely dojo stuff. I don't know many people that walk the street carrying a katana, wakizashi, tanto, or naginata. I think that type of practice/training must be good but just to develop good muscle reflexes, quick thinking in the midst of combat, and overall strength but not because you're actually going to slice someone open one day.
look up Koryu Bujutsu.These schools date back to the Sengoku Jidai.Until then you will not realize how you miss the point and your comments are like comparing apples and oranges.
its amazing what you can do to someone when they lunge a fist at you without retracting or having any decent form of striking or follow up attacks. Its almost like fighting a dummy.
Katas are exaggerated examples that show principles, not what you have to do to win a fight. I am relatively new, but i found several important principles in it. The main principle is to put the opponent into a void (Koku). Train that kata and then play with it. You will find a lot of things then. For example: Avoid a kick to the outside and dodge it just before your opponent puts his foot on the ground. He feels like stepping into a void - Koku. That is the perfect time for a counterstrike.
@@Ki_Hon what kind of kick, a lunge kick like a spartan kick? There are a ton of kick variations. To think you know what you opponent is going to do is tough. When things are telegraphed like in unrealistic lunging katas i feel it develops bad habits and a false sense of what you think you can do effectively in live sparring.
@@BaranNCTMB I agree and disagree. If you go to a mc dojo (those who sell you ninjutsu) that only shows you to do what is written in the densho, i agree. If someone only sees some youtube videos i can understand why a lot of people have that expression. There are good dojos with good training partners. Our sensei shows us fragments of different situations and suddenly you end up in a kata. That is always very interesting and makes a lot of fun. We never repeat a kata until we are used to it. We try to go with the flow. These ryuha (schools) where most likely visited by battle proven warriors that can fight very well. These principles are designed to bring them to the next level. These principles work with weapons. Before you start with weapons learn the taijutsu. That enabels you to handle every weapon; only the distance and your hands change. The rest is the same movement.
@@Ki_Hon i trained over 5 years with a bujinkan teacher who traveled to japan to train frequently. Im pretty sure that what im saying comes down to this, you really should open up your eyes and cross train. Take a bjj class and a kickboxing class. Then spar and try the techniques against unwilling and resisting partners. I have 3 years of bjj now and its way harder than ninjutsu and imo way more effective.
@@BaranNCTMB I did not want to offend you or show you a ominous "path to entlightenment". Thank you for the advice, because some people actually tend to gain "magic powers" xD Please do the same and consider that the reasons for this kind of training differ. For me the main reason is the art of movement (Ukemi, Nagare, etc). That saved my ass on many occasions (motorcycle accidents, skiing accident, moshpits). What surprised me is the improvement of my body structure (i have a bad back, hips and feet). That improved my quality of live without boring exercises. These priciples are valuable for me because i have the profit every day. I think it would be a shame to loose gyokku ryu just because it became old.
Oh wow! I'm not worthy O Sensei as im no àikidoka. Thanks sooo much for the video, im gonna watch it till lessons learnt. 1. To access the spiritual world one has to train in the physical world
O SENSEI esta do MESMO JEITO DESDE O DIA DO RITUAL DA DESPEDIDA , QUANDO O ARCANJO LEVOU ELE PARA JERUSALEM , mas OS ALUNOS NEM RELEMBRA MAS DO FUNDADOR do AÏKIDO dos YAKUZA . uma PENA .