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#bujinkan
juan-reca · 7 months
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Bufu Ikkan 武風 一貫
“No sólo en la música, ni siquiera especialmente en el mundo del Budo, creo que en cualquier aspecto de la vida, cuando alguien quiere desarrollar su actividad con éxito, es completamente necesario hacer que el arte, el alma y el cuerpo estén en perfecta armonía. Los profesionales que tanto admiramos saben bien lo difícil que resulta mantener este complicado equilibrio. Su práctica debe empezar con los hecho cotidianos de la vida diaria e intentar, lograr nuestro objetivo con el paso del tiempo”.
Soke Masaaki Hatsumi (Texto extraído del blog del Shihan Christian Petroccello -aquí-)
Una ilustración que realicé concentrándome en los conceptos de Bufu Ikkan 武風 一貫 y Yugen 幽玄. Pienso que es importante unir todas las prácticas en una sola práctica, el viento como algo fluido, móvil, natural y nunca estático, encausado en un único y poderoso camino recto. Reca
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zanygardenherowobbler · 7 months
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A Day Of Training at the Toronto Bujinkan Koroku Dojo
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ninjajustice · 8 months
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Watch "Bujinkan - Shinden Fudo Ryu Daken Taijutsu" on YouTube
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In the old days they trained outside and used nature
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sokeanshu · 9 months
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IS NINJUTSU STEALTH TRAINING NEEDED? The Truth about Ninja Martial Arts: Ninpo, Budo, Taijutsu
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martialartsgreenbay · 4 months
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Green bay martial arts Bujinkan dojo
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raygami · 5 months
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oni-gami-ryu · 5 months
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CLASE KUNOICHIS
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wisdomquesting · 1 year
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Ninpo
My encounters with the concept of Ninpo have led me to understand its basis in Shinto, Japan's indigenous religion that emphasizes perseverance and living in harmony with nature. The Kojiki, Japan's ancient chronicles, mention Ninpo for the first time in the 8th century AD. Here, Ninpo is presented as a source of strength and endurance, and a way to access the spiritual realm. Through my studies, I have learned that this concept is also present in Hinduism, where it is called Tapas, referring to a spiritual practice of self-discipline and devotion to spiritual practices. Buddhism has its own concept of Ninpo, called bodhicitta, which is described as the mind of enlightenment. Additionally, in Chinese Daoism, this concept is referred to as jingxing and is seen as a way to cultivate and balance the body, mind, and spirit. Tibetan Buddhism refers to Ninpo as Lojong, and views it as a way to cultivate and maintain a compassionate attitude towards all living beings. In my experience, Ninpo is a core element of many Eastern spiritual traditions and is focused on the idea of dedication, living in harmony with nature, and achieving a fully realized state of being.
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wciblackbeltacademy · 2 years
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Check out this article I wrote on 3 aspects of the Ninja's kamae and find out how you can get a free ninjutsu training eBook I wrote!
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lvpercalia · 2 months
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Hoy en clase de kung fu se me cayeron los anteojos y cuando los saqué de atrás de la mesita parecía un algodón de azúcar por la cantidad de telas de araña enredada con pelos humanos que tenía <3 amo que a pesar de sus no esfuerzos en limpiar igual tienen una mesita decorativa con mantel y una teterita, se aprecia jajajaja 😋
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khakilike · 3 months
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This video is a little goofy, maybe,* but I find it mesmerizing. Long-handled swords make a lot of intuitive sense to me (not that I know anything about sword fighting) and it's nice to see some proof of concept.
*Trust me, it could be goofier.
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zanygardenherowobbler · 6 months
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Learning The Concept of " Bufu Ikkan"
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ninjajustice · 13 days
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Watch "Surprise Attack Waza, Heihe (Devestating Jump), Koto Ryu" on YouTube
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" Tiger Knock Down School "
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sokeanshu · 11 months
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Uncover the SECRETS of NINJUTSU for the Modern World 🥷🏻 Adapting NINJA TRAINING to Today's Threats!
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martialartsgreenbay · 6 months
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Green bay martial arts Bujinkan dojo
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demonateher · 3 months
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Shit post? Personal post? I don’t know, but it's gonna be KnY related, so here it goes.
I have been a fan of martial arts for longer than I've been practicing them. It's the nerd-drive. I'm not especially good at any of them, but I've done something or other relatively consistently for the last fifteen-ish years, depending on what has been available to me wherever I was living. That means moving far away every few years or so has made a good excuse to quit the ones I did with any consistency, but it's much harder to quit for other reasons. It's easy to feel guilted into sticking around, especially after you've been there a while.
I did Bujinkan a year or so, and it made me feel very cool for all the different skills it covered and all the nerdery that came with it and I was proud of the badass bruises I got, but I also felt like the porcelain doll in a dojo of giant gym bros and I knew I was both keeping them from practicing at their level and that I was bound to get a serious injury sooner or later. Quitting that one was difficult because the gym bros were sad and the sensei was finding every workaround he could for my polite excuses.
And I felt exactly like Zenitsu trying to run away from Gramps, and I was like, "whoa, life imitates art."
Fast-forward to now, I just feel it's time to move on from--or at least take a long, formal break from--naginata, the martial art I started almost twelve years ago and have progressed the most in. I hadn't been going to practice much since starting a new job anyway, and I was already kind of wanting to quit before then, but I kept going because I felt pressure to, whether real or imagined. Today I finally signed the paperwork to exit for a while, and now I am officially not practicing any martial arts.
And it fell on a day I happen to be writing Senjuro fic.
What.
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