AikiWeb: We Don't Fight - Mindset is the Key
- by George Simcox kimas@erols.com, August 1997
While driving a group of students on one of my trips
this summer the subject of fighting came up and I
commented that "Aikidoists don't fight." Some of you may now be asking, "If
this won't help me in fighting,
why am I studying it?"
That is a fair question. Let's explore the answer.
While Aikido is indeed a martial art, that does not
automatically make it a fighting art. We are an art of
peace, not fighting. Our object is not to fight, but rather to restore peace
where it is absent. This is not done
by reducing your antagonist to a bloody hulk. Our techniques are developed to
a place of calm rather than
one of agitated tension. We work on harmonious relationships rather than contentious
ones. We espouse
relaxation in the face of tension. None of our behaviors support the concept
of fighting.
Now, what is fighting? Fighting is "To struggle against
in battle or physical combat."
(Britannica World Language Dictionary).
In my view it takes two or more to have a fight. An antagonist may try to fight
us but his efforts are ineffective because his perspective is flawed. While
he is fighting or struggling against us, we are simply trying to find a resolving
action to bring the individual into harmony with us and the nature around us.
If we elect to fight we
have changed our mind set to one which is not consistent with Aikido philosophy
and so have departed from
the practice of aikido.
This "attitude adjustment" is what takes so long
for most of us who study aikido. The techniques can be
learned in a relatively short period of time but it can be years before they
become as effective as they can be because of the time it takes to learn and
internalize the spirit of aikido. Until that time, most of us are simply
using aikido techniques to fight more effectively but we are not truly practicing
aikido as the founder, O Sensei,
and Master Tohei envision it.
Eto Sensei, during his seminars in Virginia and Maryland,
stressed the absence of "fighting mind." When he
learned to throw away fighting mind, he was able to truly find the power of
aikido.
Should we do any less in our lives?
When you study aikido to become a better fighter,
you will learn some good techniques to help you in your
quest but you will never find the path to true aikido. Only by setting aside
the goal of becoming a better fighter
and adopting the goal of developing a non-fighting mind will you find the true
path to aikido and its message
for the world.
During daily training you will find this path by
seeking the flow associated with a technique:
Where is the power of the opponent and how can it help me in creating harmony
of movement?
How can I lead this power during a technique? If I have mis-read the power or
it has changed, how can I find
the path to achieve a state of harmony? These are the real questions, not how
quickly can I throw or trash an opponent. These latter questions are those of
fighting while the more complex questions asked earlier are those
of the questor for aikido truth.
George Simcox Reprinted with permission from Virginia
Ki Society's "Ki Notes" Newsletter.
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