1.Masakatsu Agatsu (True Victory is Self-Victory) "True victory is victory over
oneself." — Morihei Ueshiba In Aikido, your ultimate opponent is not the person
attacking you; it is your own fear, anger, ego, and insecurity. Winning a fight
means nothing if you haven't mastered your own internal impulses.
2. Ai-Ki (The Blending of Energy) Instead of meeting force with force, Aikido teaches you to
join with an attacker's movement. If someone pushes, you turn; if they pull, you
enter. By blending (ai) with their energy (ki), you gain control of the
situation without a collision.
3. The Concept of Irimi (Entering) Irimi is the act of stepping directly into the heart of an attack just as it happens.
Philosophically, this means facing your problems head-on rather than running
away or avoiding them. True safety is often found right at the center of the
storm.
4. Ukemi (The Art of Falling and Rising) Often translated as "receiving
body," ukemi is the art of taking a fall safely. In the dojo, you learn how to
roll and absorb impact so you can get back up instantly. In life, failure is
inevitable—ukemi is the practice of resilience, learning to fall without
breaking.
5. Zanshin (Lingering Awareness) Zanshin is a state of relaxed, total
awareness before, during, and after a technique. It means never dropping your
guard or losing focus just because a specific task or conflict seems to be over.
It is present-moment mindfulness.
6. The Sphere and the Center (Seika Tanden)
Aikido movements are almost entirely circular and spherical. Power does not come
from the shoulders or arms, but from the seika tanden—the physical and energetic
center of gravity just below the navel. When you operate from your center, you
remain stable while easily moving others.
7. Takemusu Aiki (Creative Martial
Art) O-Sensei believed that at its highest level, Aikido becomes spontaneous and
infinitely creative. Techniques shouldn't be rigid, memorized scripts. Instead,
they flow naturally based on the exact time, space, and nature of the energy
presented to you.
8. Fudo-shin (The Immovable Mind) This is the calm,
unshakeable state of mind that remains peaceful even in the midst of chaos. It isn't a rigid stiffness, but rather a suppleness—like a willow tree that bends
in a fierce wind but never breaks.
9. Non-Resistance (Aiki) "To injure an
opponent is to injure yourself. To control aggression without inflicting injury
is the Way of Peace." True power lies in non-resistance. By offering no solid
surface for an attacker's force to strike, their own momentum becomes their
undoing. You don't defeat them; they defeat themselves against your emptiness.
10. The Ultimate Goal is Peace. "The Way of the Warrior is to establish harmony."
Unlike arts designed for warfare or sport competition, Aikido has no
tournaments. The ultimate goal is not to prove you are better than someone else,
but to cultivate a spirit of global stewardship and peace.

No comments:
Post a Comment