Trick wrote:wayne hansen wrote:Is there a good example of these Shinzo exercises on YouTube
I can't see the vid posted here unless they are Chinese Tubes. So I just ask, this Shiko is it the way the Sumo guys are doing or the "knee walking" done in Aikido? The knee walking I can see could be a good exercise for the lower abdomen and hips.
Ian C. Kuzushi wrote:wayne hansen wrote:Is there a good example of these Shinzo exercises on YouTube
Do you mean Shiko? Or do you mean "heart exercises?"
wayne hansen wrote:When was it adopted by ajj
Finny wrote:The founder of Aikido was known to have altered both the physical manifestation of the techniques he was taught, as well as not necessarily teaching 'aiki' to his students.. as his teacher had taught him to, and done himself ('teach only one or two the real goods..'). Where DR teaches to use the internal connections/spirals to collapse opponents in a crumpled heap at the practitioner's feet, Aikido redirects those forces and allows the recipient to be 'thrown away' from the Aikido person:
Trick wrote:Does the Shiko of Sumo have the same intention/purpose as the Shiko of Daito-ryu?........
Trick wrote:More simple Wikipedia research. Takeda probably was also trained in the Jikishinkage-ryu, one of the predecessors schools of that style was Kage-ryu whose founder was a pirate and occasionally practiced that profession along the Chinese coast and probably also stayed some time in China. Could that pirate have picked up some "Chinese excercises" that eventually transferred into the Jikishinkage school?
Trick wrote:So the Aiki in DR is a principle trained in solo exercises such as Shiko and possibly also in partner excercises, and the Aiki of Aikido is only trained in partner exercises? The very basic "Aikido" technique also found in many other MA is the Nikyu which if applied right allows the "opponent" to crumple before one's feets. With all the basic techniques of Aikido one can chose to crumple down the "opponent" or apply them more as throw away? Well the Nikyu seem more as just a crumple down technique
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