Saturday, November 28, 2009
Indonesia/Malaysia in the house...!
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Buddha Rocks!
Thursday, July 30, 2009
A stroll to Kanda Shrine...
...that Gyokufu-kai's kaicho Sakaguchi-san carried for the Kanda festival:
On either side of the entrance were these statues of Samurai with a full complement of weapons; bow, arrows, and swords, oh my!
It is never a god idea to piss off the Gods, so I made sure to stop by the fountain thingy (Gotta learn the proper name of this) to purify my dirty Gaijin hands and heart (via sipping a bit of it to rinse out one's heathen mouth) with the finest flowing tap water Tokyo has to offer. This is a dragon(!), by the way! I was eye ballin' homeboy up close and personal to try to find a good angle fore the shot, when some oji-san blurted out behind me, "It's dragon!" I'm glad he clarified that for me...I thought I was looking at a life-size statue of Barbara Boxer/Nancy Pelosi.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Training at Aikikai Hombu Dojo...
(image borrowed from the interwebs)
I started training actively with the Aikido club at IUPUI, but my training was infrequent due to part-time jobs, school, or just plain laziness. After getting selected for the JET Program, I was fortunate to be placed in Ota-shi (太田市群馬県), where I had the opportunity to train with Teruo Tsuhiji-sensei.
There are significant differences in the way Aikikai and "Iwama-ryu" (Students of Morihiro Saito-sensei and his students) people train, and I think they both have merits. What I appreciate about my time with Tsuhiji-sensei was a solid grounding in the basics of Hanmi, and training partners that grabbed you like they meant it, and the importance of blending to successfully escape a real grab. I have had far too many partners at Aikikai that grab so wimpy I can (and probably *should* to help expose their openings) pull my hand out of their "grab" and back fist them. I also notice far too many Aikikai people pulling their hand toward themselves when doing basic Tenkan practice. If Aikikai taught the basics better, they would know that the grabbed hand needs (and WILL if the attacker is much stronger) to stay in the spot it is grabbed, and the Tori needs to blend with/at the point of the attacker's grab.
Having said that, Iwama-style Aikido tends to be too static, and rarely did I ever practice at realistic speeds, everything was done super slow to get a good grounding in the basic movements. A solid foundation in basics is a good thing, but can make for some frozen toes when training at this slow pace in the dead of winter in the unheated dojo. The flowing style of Aikikai makes for a hell of a workout, as can be seen by how red my face was after last Saturday's class taught by Watanabe-sensei:
(Not a sunburn, and I wasn't drunk, just well done from training on a hot afternoon at the Aikikai Hombu Dojo/Sauna.)
...and the faster pace is better for getting used to things coming at closer to realistic speed. Different strokes for different folks. Saw this ad for the Hombu dojo in Higashi-Shinjuku station for the recently opened Fukutoshin-line. Its all about the marketing...
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Action pics from the 2009 Mugai-ryu Kokusai Taikai...
In the meantime...
Seiza...the calm before the storm...
Batto. Cutting gyaku kesagiri; the first cut for the kata Shin (真).
Chiburi...flicking the enemy's blood, guts, snot, and brains from my blade...
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Extend....
Monday, July 13, 2009
Back on the mat...
Where I was greeted by this rare-for-Tokyo sunset on the Shinjuku skyline:
I can tell already that it is going to take some time before my ankles are used to the stress/pain placed on them from sitting in Seiza for prolonged periods. It sucks getting old....but it feels good to be back in to train. Now if my right shoulder will just hold up, or better yet, get *better* from the 'therapeutic' effects of "knocking the dust off of the joints" that comes from Aikido as O-Sensei used to say.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Kokusai Taikai
Gyokufu-kai group grope... >;-)
Friday, July 10, 2009
Bitch love me...
...to make him think I am his best buddy.
(Pics from Golden-Gai, Akasaka 2x, Shinjuku)
Ninja night in Akasaka
(sake and ninja...meat???)
(the sake in the bamboo cups was quite nice)
(this is a salad, not a dessert...more Ninja deception!)
...was decent enough. But the cheese....
... a chocolate and macha thing made to look like Bonsai tree. It looked almost too cool to eat, but eat it we did! Delicious!
Overall, it is a place to take folks that haven't been yet, but there are better theme restaurants in Tokyo. this could be one of them if they just put more thought into how to make a visit there more interactive, educational, and thus interesting.
Engrish the Part 2
After enjoying...
You will probably need to take a...
...or several thousand, as the case may be.
Not Engrish, but I hear this item is very popular in Kabuki-cho's 2-chome: