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Shomen-uchi. Disrupt balance. (Finland 2010)_Seishiro Endo Shihan 遠藤征四郎師範

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Uploaded by on Oct 20, 2010

http://www.way-mastery.com/

出合いの後、捌いて、相手を崩す。
After the initial meeting, move, and disrupt partner's balance.

出来るだけ、相手のバランスを崩す。
Disrupt partner's balance as much as possible.

動いてくるのを崩すのは簡単。
It is easy to disrupt a person who is moving toward you.

相手は打つために動いてる。
Partner is moving in order to strike.

それを捕えたら楽に出来る。
If you can catch that, it can be accomplished easily.

もし、相手が止まってしまったら...
However, if partner stops...

止まっている相手を崩すのは難しいと皆思う。
Everyone finds that it's difficult to disrupt the balance of a person who is stopped.

私はそう思わない。
I don't find that true.

ここで、一度崩すのをやめる。
Here, I stop trying to disrupt the balance for a moment.

皆、ここでもっと崩そうとする。
Everyone tries to disrupt the balance more, here.

崩すのをやめるためには、
In order to stop trying to disrupt the balance,

その気持ちがなければ出来ない。
one must have that corresponding feeling.

止まったら、ゆるめればいい。
If partner stops, just ease up.

これが心の問題で一番難しいところ。
This is the most difficult point, a matter of the mind/heart.

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  • Great video.

    @cryodragoon

    Endo sensei gives you the answer (4:18-4:33 in the video).

    "It's possible that, if the partner tries to escape, there may be a need to grab. But there's no need to do anything to a person who want's to go away.".

    You won't be able to "do all that cool stuff with the person", but then you don't need to do anything.

  • @cryodragoon In the words of O-Sensei:

    "When an opponent comes forward, move in and greet him; if he wants to pull back, send him on his way."

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All Comments (17)

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  • The uke isn't attacking his center just trying to stay connected to his hand. Very affected and weird. 

  • @shiifu He was merely a couple years there in sum. And also he was working as a bodyguard and was helping with the revolution. Him knowing of and studying Chinese culture was not strange, since that was quite normal in Japan.

    But you are right, no one knows what he did in his free time. Perhaps he watched some Chinese martial artists and exchanged experiences with them (no martial artist would let that chance pass, especially not Ueshiba).

  • @HomunculusProject Actully what we know is that he studied the samurai way of fighting thats why we have the sword in aikido and jiujutsu and judo and other budo arts, but he has actully been in china and mongolia and pracitising something secret in the mountains, nobody til this days knows what it was, we just know that he has been there, and there is one picture when he holds in hands in meditation like a daoist, we dont know, some say this some that, but only him and God knows now

  • @shiifu Is there any proof that Ueshiba studied any of that? And rather than daoism, he was profoundly influenced by his sect.

  • @HomunculusProject It has influence of Daoism and chinese arts as tai chi. But you are right, its not like kung fu as we know it. // Shifu

  • @shiifu It is true that the Chinese martial arts were the main root of Budo and perhaps one could say, that Aikido of all Japanese martial arts embodies the essence of what one can find in Wundangshan... But up to this date I have never found any evidence of a direct influence of Gongfu on Ueshibas Aikido.

  • @HomunculusProject Actully everything from Daotiruyo and Aikijutsu, and many many other styles and shintoism and other philospfy made a huge influence. But all martial art has there roots in china, Specialy Aikido. I have been training with endo, tiser, and my old old sensei 70 yers old who lived in japan, and this is what they told me. // Shifu.

  • @shiifu I wouldn't say "huge influence". I would say he enjoyed the similarities. Once he even referenced YinYang. Apart from that, he hasn't really in China long enough to say that he trained gongfu extensively.

    There are similar theories, talking about an influence of Baguazhang. But personally, I have never found more than similarities in the techniques. Aikijujutsu itself was the main factor.

    I would say that Aiki and "the highest principle" are simply two ways of looking at the same thing.

  • @HomunculusProject Very similar to Tai chi, actully Tai chi and daoism was a huge influence of osensei 

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