Japanese Aikido T-shirt, with an original hand-brushed calligraphy of the Zen saying Jiki Shin Kore Dojo, meaning The Straightforward Mind Is The Dojo, also translated as The Straightforward Mind Is The Place Of Practice, The Direct Mind Is The Place Of Enlightenment. The free flowing calligraphy is available in the cursive or semi-cursive style of Japanese calligraphy. This distinctive Zen calligraphy T-shirt makes a rare creative gift for Zen followers, Buddhists, meditation, Yoga and Martial Arts and Aikido practitioners, a great gift for a birthday or any special occasion|celebration.
The Genesis of Aikido and Morihei Ueshiba Sensei Morihei Ueshiba
Aikido is known as the Art of Peacefulness. Not only Aikido but true martial arts are based on a philosophy of harmony and reconciliation. To a layman this statement can be difficult to accept when you see how Aikido practitioners strike at each other at high speed. However it is true, the fundamental principles of aikido and numerous martial arts are harmony and tranquility.
Aikido was created by Morihei Ueshiba, born in Japan in 1883 to a family of farmers. Strangely, he was quite weak as a kid and youngster and he spend numerous hours reading and on quiet activities. It is said that he even considered becoming a Buddhist monk. It is quite remarkable that he later developed a series of Japanese martial arts. It isn’t how you would envisage the founder of the popular Aikido martial arts.
Despite everything, Morihei Ueshiba came from a lineage of samurais and his father would tell him all the time about the adventures and audacity of his grandfather. Ueshiba's father was involved in politics and one day he saw how the followers of a rival political group attacked his father. It was that day that he resolved to work on his physical shape .
He explored jujitsu and judo, among other martial arts, but he didn't really make them his own for several years. At the time, the early 1900s, he was an infantryman in the Japanese military and he displayed such promise that he was recommended for the Military Academy. Nevertheless, he left the army and went back to the family farm. In 1912 he relocated with his wife to Hokkaido, an island in the north of Japan.
Morihei Ueshiba's aikido has many influences of older martial arts practices from Japan. One of them was Daito-ryu Aiki Jutsu, which he practiced seriously with master Takeda Sokaku in Hokkaido. It was at this point and with Takeda as his teacher that Ueshiba began taking the study and training of martial arts seriously.
After Morihei Ueshiba departed from Hokkaido, he met Onisaburo Deguchi who taught him the Omoto-kyo religious practice based on traditional Shinto. Deguchi's pacifism and his spirituality made a crucial effect on Ueshiba. This would contribute considerably to the spiritual tenets of Aikido.
Uesiba developed the Aikido martial arts between 1925 and 1942 and gave it several names. During these years, he had a number of spiritual experiences and understood that the true intention of a real warrior wasn't to defeat the enemy but to ward off slaughter.
In 1942, he moved to Iwama from Tokyo and opened a dojo and the Aiki Shrine. He started calling his practice Aikido for the first time. Aikido is usually rendered as The Way of the Harmonious Spirit, The Way of Unifying with Life Energy or Ki.
He taught the Aikido martial art for about twenty years and he became known as O Sensei, meaning Great Teacher or Great Master.
Despitehis pacifism the Japanese government decorated him a few times. Before his death in 1969 Aikido had already spread to several European countries, Australia and the USA. Nowadays Morihei Ueshiba's Aikido, or the Art of Peace, is practiced across the world.
Ueshiba created a practice that has assisted countless people throughout the world. Some decades after his death, Aikido practitioners still regard him as their supreme teacher, their Sensei, their master.
Karatbars videos for creating spillover, networking and team building for our Texas team.
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
The Straightforward Mind Is The Dojo: Aikido T-Shirt
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment