In 1979, Soke Masaaki Hatsumi, the master of nine military traditions that formed the core training of the Warrior Concept Mastery Program, wrote a book called Mono-no-Mikata, Kangae-Kata ["The Way of Seeing, Way of Thinking"]. Among them, he wrote a section called Deshi-iri, translated from Japanese, meaning "become a student" or, more precisely, "to enter the apprenticeship".
I believe many people have noticed that in my article, I wrote more about psychological aspects than anything else. The goal is to be aware of the importance of your attitude before entering martial arts training, especially the real warrior training that I focus on in my course, rather than general or regular kick/shock sports. . I have been involved for so many days.
Unlike today, the traditional means by which a person is accepted as a master student of warriors is completely different. Today, a person took part in the training. From the first day, the teacher said: "very good, step by step" or "like this technology." However, according to Hatsumi-sensei, imagine an aspiring student, a person who wants to learn martial arts, come to the dojo and hope to train. The teacher of the dojo did not immediately accept the student. He decided to observe them after repeated visits or admit him or her after accepting them, and eager to become a student and observe their attitude. So, that kind of person will be accepted.
Students in Warrior Concepts' leadership and SWAT instructor training courses should remember that before we even sit down and discuss that you are a complete student, it is necessary to make recommendations and must meet certain criteria. Still, this is different from traditional training because teachers usually don't teach Budo right away.
This "trial" period may last for months or even years. This newcomer was used to clean up the dojo, wash his advanced training suits, cook and cook, and run errands. Only when the teacher realizes that this person's character can endure these ordinary inconveniences, he is taught martial arts and often carries out ruthless training.
When I say that this training is not for everyone, I don't just talk about it in sports or in a preferential way...
...just like some basket weaving and other people's hockey.
Especially in the West, we are taught that if we are paying consumers, we can get whatever we want...
... companies must prove themselves.
No, what I am talking about is the difference between people who want to do something because it "looks neat" and some people feel so complicated that they will do something, they will do this End a desire to end everything they have. .
Budo's training ["military mode"] is difficult.
Those who lack martial arts insights are either fired or eventually disappear. This does not mean indifference or indifference, but the way it happens. Teachers can see who has potential and who does not...
... no matter what anyone says or does, try to prove that it is not the case.
Orignal From: DESHI-IRI - Become an authentic Ninpo Warrior martial arts teacher
No comments:
Post a Comment