Sei Ryu Dojo

Sei Ryu Dojo

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Organizzazione per la promozione e la diffusione di koryu dedite alle armi giapponesi con particolare attenzione alla katana.

Split practice and full practice (Kaisyo-Syu and Sosyo-Ri)
楷書と草書

One of the principles of Tenshinryu is to maintain as much distance as possible between you and your opponent. For this reason, when performing Kesahazushi, you will want to extend your arms and begin the cutting motion before twisting your body to the left. This is not powerful enough and the cutting line will be unstable. Therefore, wait before straightening your right elbow, and then twist your body to the left while keeping your elbow bent. It is best to do this with the awareness that your right elbow joint is touching your right rib cage (although in reality there will be a little space). Then twist your torso to the left and at the same time extend your right elbow.

Basically, in actual combat, it is ideal to complete all movements in one go. However, in gradual learning, it is very important to deliberately divide the movements into parts and learn and hone them. Learning at Kaisyo(Syu) is like collecting parts. It includes acquiring bodily functions and techniques that are important for that technique (and other techniques as well). If you ignore this stage and aim for quick and easy results, the technique will become dysfunctional and meaningless. In reality, all Japanese martial arts have these stages, but few people understand them clearly. That is why, when people look at Kata, there has been a long-standing debate about whether it is practical or meaningless. This debate is itself meaningless. Of course, balance is important when it comes to training. Training only in splits over a long period of time will not help you in a real fight.

This is easy to understand with a music analogy. It is very important to repeatedly practice parts of a score. However, repeatedly practicing only parts will not improve your skills in playing the whole piece. Practicing the whole piece is essential. And repeatedly practicing the whole piece will not improve the quality of the piece.

Now, let's go back to the topic of Kesahazushi. At the Sosyo(Ri) stage, you don't need to twist your body to the right when drawing the sword. So you don't need to wait that long for your right elbow to extend. Even with the same technique, Kaisyo and Sosyo often feel like completely different techniques. It's troublesome. But let's understand the difference between Kaisyo and Sosyo and understand the correct Kaisyo function. Even if Sosyo reaches a certain level, if Kaisyo is insufficient, it will cause a deadlock. The reason why many people stop improving is often due to a lack of lesson balance.

Thank you

 Kuwami Masakumo 29/08/2024

Spesso ci si ferma all’allenamento di base di una tecnica o si cerca subito di eseguirne l’applicazione pratica senza averne praticato le basi. In realtà ogni tecnica è un percorso dalla tecnica di base alla sua applicazione pratica. In questo video il maestro Kuwami ne spiega il concetto.

Split practice and full practice (Kaisyo-Syu and Sosyo-Ri) 楷書と草書 One of the principles of Tenshinryu is to maintain as much distance as possible between you and your opponent. For this reason, when performing Kesahazushi, you will want to extend your arms and begin the cutting motion before twisting your body to the left. This is not powerful enough and the cutting line will be unstable. Therefore, wait before straightening your right elbow, and then twist your body to the left while keeping your elbow bent. It is best to do this with the awareness that your right elbow joint is touching your right rib cage (although in reality there will be a little space). Then twist your torso to the left and at the same time extend your right elbow. Basically, in actual combat, it is ideal to complete all movements in one go. However, in gradual learning, it is very important to deliberately divide the movements into parts and learn and hone them. Learning at Kaisyo(Syu) is like collecting parts. It includes acquiring bodily functions and techniques that are important for that technique (and other techniques as well). If you ignore this stage and aim for quick and easy results, the technique will become dysfunctional and meaningless. In reality, all Japanese martial arts have these stages, but few people understand them clearly. That is why, when people look at Kata, there has been a long-standing debate about whether it is practical or meaningless. This debate is itself meaningless. Of course, balance is important when it comes to training. Training only in splits over a long period of time will not help you in a real fight. This is easy to understand with a music analogy. It is very important to repeatedly practice parts of a score. However, repeatedly practicing only parts will not improve your skills in playing the whole piece. Practicing the whole piece is essential. And repeatedly practicing the whole piece will not improve the quality of the piece. Now, let's go back to the topic of Kesahazushi. At the Sosyo(Ri) stage, you don't need to twist your body to the right when drawing the sword. So you don't need to wait that long for your right elbow to extend. Even with the same technique, Kaisyo and Sosyo often feel like completely different techniques. It's troublesome. But let's understand the difference between Kaisyo and Sosyo and understand the correct Kaisyo function. Even if Sosyo reaches a certain level, if Kaisyo is insufficient, it will cause a deadlock. The reason why many people stop improving is often due to a lack of lesson balance. Thank you  Kuwami Masakumo

31/07/2024
Sei Ryu Dojo Promo Video 06/03/2024

Sei Ryu Dojo Promo Video Sei Ryu Dojo Promo Video for Youtube and socials

31/05/2023

⛩️ KIRYOKU 23 – Festival della cultura giapponese⛩️

🗡️SPADA GIAPPONESE

DIMOSTRAZIONE ENBU
LABORATORI GRATUITI

Quest’anno Kiryoku avrà l’onore di ospitare il 10° Gran Maestro, Kuwami Masakumo, impegnato in Italia con un importante Seminario Internazionale assieme all’associazione Sei Ryu Dojo.
Il Maestro salirà sul palco centrale per una spettacolare dimostrazione Enbu.
Nel pomeriggio l’Associazione Sei Ryu Dojo presenterà attività didattiche e dimostrative aventi come tema centrale: Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto Ryu e Tenshin-Ryu Hyoho.

🐉Il Sei Ryu Dojo (a seconda dei kanji usati Sei Ryu significa "Drago Azzurro o Fiume dalle acque tranquille") è una associazione che nasce nel 1990 dall'idea del maestro Alessio Guarnieri diiffondere tutto ciò che lui ha imparato negli anni sul Giappone riguardo ai samurai e alle armi da loro utilizzate. Per buona parte della sua vita, infatti, si dedica all'apprendimento di tutto ciò che gravita attorno a queste figure tra lo storico e leggendario, spaziando dalle scuole di spada, all'arco giapponese, fino alla pulitura ed al restauro delle lame giapponesi ed alla cultura. Negli anni di pratica consegue il 5° dan della scuola di spada Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto Ryu, il 4° dan di batto-do Muso Shinden Ryu, il 4° dan di Seitei Iai, il 2° dan di Kyudo (la via dell'arco giapponese) ed il 1° dan di Hoki Ryu. A metà degli anni 90 crea attorno a sé un gruppo di praticanti che, come lui, desiderano studiare ed apprendere le arti dei samurai. Nel 2001 diventa suo allievo Giovanni Nalesso che, negli anni, ha appreso da lui tutto quanto gli è stato trasmesso, ed oggi ha l'onore di portare avanti l'associazione con tutti gli insegnamenti trasmessi per passarli alla generazione successiva.

🎌SPADA GIAPPONESE
Dimostrazione ENBU | 15:00 - 15:30
*Laboratori | 16:00 - 18:30

*Per le persone interessate che si presenteranno allo stand, si terranno dei laboratori di 30 minuti sull'introduzione al maneggio delle armi tradizionali del samurai (richiesto abbigliamento comodo).

Per saperne di più sull’associazione Sei Ryu Dojo
https://www.facebook.com/seiryudojopd
https://www.facebook.com/JIN.DOJO.ASD https://www.jindojo.it/

https://www.facebook.com/seiryudojopd

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Martedì 20:30 - 22:30
Giovedì 21:00 - 23:00