While at fencing, I opted to work with the epee after training primarily with foil for several months. I was looking for something different – a spur of the moment choice. Throughout the practice, I was surprised at how effective my advances were, especially for a weapon I have not trained in some time. To … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: The Importance of Kamae
Tag: A Layman's Observation
Form Over Function: A Slave to Aesthetics
Within my library recently read Noel Perrin’s Giving Up the Gun. The book itself is quite dated in writing, sources, and historiography; however, it is still cited to certain extent within the modern English scholarship of Japanese history. The book is an overview of Japan’s reasons as to why the samurai of old willingly abandoned … Continue reading Form Over Function: A Slave to Aesthetics
A Layman’s Observation: Who Really has Authority in the Martial Arts?
Part of this editorial was inspired by a chapter from my 2020 book, Aikido Comes to America, and my 2024 book, Takahiko Ishikawa, bringing two related ideas together and pairing them with a third. Authority is something people look for, whether it is to wield it or to seek those who are in similar positions. … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: Who Really has Authority in the Martial Arts?
A Layman’s Observation: Blind Loyalty Within the Martial Arts
I recently finished a biography of an instructor who may have created a training atmosphere that may have bordered on the side of toxic and abusive. Such actions were under the guise of hard training and/or attempting to push students to their limit and achieve something greater. In finishing that biography, I realized that I … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: Blind Loyalty Within the Martial Arts
Goals and Plans for 2025
Another year has arrived, perhaps too quickly from the previous year, but it is another year to take a few more steps closer to achieving our goals, milestones, and ambitions. Training, preserving the past, and analyzing it for the future consumption takes time, effort, discipline, and dedication – no matter how big or small. I … Continue reading Goals and Plans for 2025
A Layman’s Observation: Weapons, Distance, and Application
What is the point of doing weapons work, especially what some may perceive as outdated weapons work? Not many people carry swords, sticks, staves, clubs, shields, bucklers, polearms, or even daggers. Not in 2024. Not in the developed world. While the practical applications of such weapons are not the most socially acceptable (or the easiest … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: Weapons, Distance, and Application
A Layman’s Observations: The Role of Uke in Training
This is the fourth installment in an ongoing series of "A Layman's Observations" where I discuss my observations on martial arts and combat sports. Read the prior installment here. Recently, as I stepped onto the dojo’s mats, my mind began contemplating the overall role of uke in partner-based arts that I train. What is it … Continue reading A Layman’s Observations: The Role of Uke in Training
A Layman’s Observation: Aikido’s Aiki and Its Foundational Benefits
This is the third installment in an ongoing series of "A Layman's Observations" where I discuss my observations on martial arts and combat sports. Read the prior installment here. Since the early 2010s, there has been a movement that attempts to make aikido functional in a combat situation. The question of aikido’s effectiveness as a … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: Aikido’s Aiki and Its Foundational Benefits
A Layman’s Observation: Fencing and Japanese Martial Arts Principles
This is a second installment in an ongoing series of "A Layman's Observations" where I discuss my observations on martial arts and combat sports. Read the prior installment here. At the start of this year, I began learning how to fence the Olympic way and the beginning of May that I had the opportunity to … Continue reading A Layman’s Observation: Fencing and Japanese Martial Arts Principles









