Return to Subscribers Only Area from Opportunities to Strike
Oikomi is a training method in order to increase your speed, balance and strength. Motodachi runs back fast so that kakarite can keep striking.
Some points that I want you to pay attention to when exercising this method.
So please make sure that every single strike should be valid. If you have a long dojo such as a basketball court, you may want to give it a try.
Again, make sure that there are no obstacles behind motodachi.
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The reason why I am sharing this with you is that I believe that you care about kendo enough to subscribe to Kendo-Guide.Com Newsletter. Not a lot even do not make a bit of effort to subscribe to our Newsletter. So please
keep this between you and Kendo-Guide.Com. I think this kind of knowledge should be passed onto the next generation.
If I find something suspicious activities, this video will be removed for good. So please do not tell this URL anyone who is not a subscriber. Murayama sensei is one of my senseis. He won an 8th Dan Championship.
I distinctively remember my first jigeiko with him, when I was about 14 years old.
He was not very tall. Way shorter than I was. However, the pressure I felt from the kensaki of his shinai was unbelievable. The kensaki of his shinai looked so huge that I could not even move forwards. It looked like a huge shield.
I will talk about my memories with him more in the future, so let me tell you something about tenouchi that I did not mention in an article.
In the video, Murayama sensei is using a tenugui to show his tenouchi. When I was a kid, I learned to have tenouchi as drying a chakin, cloth used in the tea ceremony. chakin is made out of linen or cotton according to my friend who is a master of Urasenke (a school of tea ceremony). It is very soft and you do not need to squeeze it much to dry it. Grab a chakin with both hands and twist the wrists a little bit very lightly, you can dry it. That is how we should have our tenouchi.
Tenugui is soft enough to practice tenouchi so if have a tenugui, go and practice your tenouchi in your bathroom. If you do not have a tenugui, get a sock. Not the one made of 100% cotton. Well, it is ok but it is sometimes
hard to dry. Wet a sock and feel your tenouchi as Murayama sensei demonstrates in the video. I think you will notice that you do not need to squeeze hard to dry a sock. That is tenouchi. Hope this helps your kendo.
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Return to Subscribers Only Area from Tenouchi: Grip of an 8-dan
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