One of my friends is thinking of starting Kendo and I said I might go with him, sounds like it could be fun and its quite an unusual hobby... any thoughts? Ive never studied any kind of weapons art before.
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Does Kendo make a good hobby?
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personally, i think it's very cool. being able to learn to handle a weapon with some much history attached to it like that, very cool. not many people can say they are experienced with a katana. i would do it. but that's just me
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Hmmm... thing is Ive just some some internet research and it sounds very strict and rigid... I'd probably piss people off by not sticking to the correct forms etc.
Well I guess I'd have to try a lesson before making any real descision, schools vary... Is it true that with a katana you should slash rather than chop? Chopping is more fun.
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ya that's true. that's what katana's were made to do. that's why they are bent like that. it's better for slashing. and to me, slashing is more cooler, it's clean, and looks really cool. check it out
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most of the time you won't be handling a real weapon but a shinai
If you wan't to know how to handle a sword try Iaido instead, it is just the swordpulling but will teach you how to handle it
If you really want to learn japanese swordplay, Katori Shinto ryu is the way but there are almost no teachers in that
Find a kenJitsu school instead of Kendo, kendo is a sportsgame and an expensive one at that ( the gear)
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Originally posted by Toudiyama[NL]most of the time you won't be handling a real weapon but a shinai
If you wan't to know how to handle a sword try Iaido instead, it is just the swordpulling but will teach you how to handle it
If you really want to learn japanese swordplay, Katori Shinto ryu is the way but there are almost no teachers in that
Find a kenJitsu school instead of Kendo, kendo is a sportsgame and an expensive one at that ( the gear)
I am pleased to hear that you would offend them by not sticking to what they want you to do. Good. There's no need to move like a robot and if the instructor wanted to see someone move just like him he should record himself on tape and watch it over and over and over and over until he gets his lovely little ego fix taken care of.
The idea with weapons is that they should be an extension of what you already know. I.E., the angles are the same as your punches, the steps should be indentical to those when you are empty handed, the list goes on. Everything you do empty handed you should be able to do with a weapon, any weapon.
In order to most fully compliment what you already know, I would choose a style that is atleast of the same divination as your art. Forexample, if you do a japanse jarate, perhaps you'd like kenjitsu (assuming you can find a school.) If you do kung fu, do Wushu and so forth. That way you wouldn't need to re-learn all your stances and you'd be reinforcing that which you already know. Don't re-invent the wheel, it's good enough.
-Hikage
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Originally posted by HikageI am pleased to hear that you would offend them by not sticking to what they want you to do. Good. There's no need to move like a robot and if the instructor wanted to see someone move just like him he should record himself on tape and watch it over and over and over and over until he gets his lovely little ego fix taken care of.
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Originally posted by jubajiYou really, truly understand nothing.....
Do you honestly feel that it is practical to have an entire dojo of students who move in the same exact manner? Evidently I do understand nothing because I can't see what your getting at. Learn me, please.
-Hikage
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Originally posted by jubajiYou really, truly understand nothing.....
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