Monday, January 19, 2026

One Moment in Time




One evening I went to a nearby town outside of Scranton, to train with friends in a Japanese style most of you have never heard of (Synko Ryu). The instructor ran two programs in the area, one at Marywood College and this other program.

I attended for the sweat workout with friends, not to really learn that system.

 The evening I recall he called for everyone to work in pairs. Then one person got atop the other person’s shoulders and the individual on the bottom was to work across the gym floor throwing front kicks. Then reaching the other side the people were to change places and the other person was to kick back across the store.

 I am not a small man (and never was), I drew the other large individual to sit on my shoulders to start then I began to throw front kicks across the floor.

Next we changed places and I was now on his shoulders, Sitting there I rode him as he did his front kicks.

As I remember it, it was very trying to kick down the floor with someone on my shoulders.

But it was more trying to sit atop him as he kicked himself. The entire time I was sure I was going to fall as I made him work to do it.

That was a one time experience. Never did it again anyplace else.

I guess it was the season.

The past mirrored my Boys and Girls Club Isshinryu program

 



I had not seen this photo in the past. However it closely mirrored the youth karate program I taught at the Scranton Boys Club and the Derry Boys and Girls Club.


Isshin: Writings on Martial Arts and Life" by Victor Smith - contents



When Jim Keenan created the book “Isshin” as a surprise for me, he took the time to select some of the over a thousand posts I had made, to represent my thoughts on many martial matters that I wrote on.

This is what he selected for the contents of the book:

 

Foreword by Tom Lewis

Foreword by Charles Murray

Foreword by Ernest Rothrock

Foreword by Joe Swift

Preface by Jim Keenan

 

Isshin definition

Isshinryu Karate Classic vs. Traditional Bushi No Te Isshinryu no Kobudo

Viewing Rank Thoughts on Old Style Karate Isshinryu

Standards On Being a Black Belt

Passion Being a Black Belt - Knowing When to Fold

 Lessons on the Road to Mastery Student

A Saturday Morning in New Hampshire

Some of the Underlying Principles Forging the Black Belt Is Karate Really About Testing?

Your First Time The Art of Conclusion

When a memory occurs what you may remember is a gift

The Value of a Karate Lesson

The Salisbury Years - part one

The Salisbury Tales - part two

The Salisbury Tales - part three

The Salisbury Tales - part four

The Salisbury Tales - part five

The Salisbury Tales - part six

The Salisbury Tales - part seven

Walking Karate Breaking a Memory in Three Pieces – Section One, t

he Salisbury Years Section Two - Tang Soo Do Moo Duk Kwan training

Section Three - Youth Conclusion

Veni, Vidi, Vici Pleasant Isshinryu

Happy New Year 2014 Repetition Should Children be Black Belts...or more interestingly should anyone? T

he Art of Correction

The Art of Communicating Teaching Children –

the role of Bushi No Te Isshinryu For Friends Long Gone

An Instructor Thoughts on training the young Texture

The Instructor's Burden Structure of a program

Why I did not go commercial with my karate

Conversations with a Ghost

The Ghost Departs

The friendly Ghost!

Some thoughts on Ghost Techniques

Just a step back - the simplest of Ghost Techniques

If you don't write it down it didn't happen

Kotekitae an art to Isshinryu Body Pounding

My Isshinryu and Weapons Study Attending a martial clinic - the student's options

Brown Belt-itis

On Power

The Applications Unlimited Toolbox

The theories behind blocks Kata a Lifetime Study Forearm Strikes etc.

The Fluid Movement of Kata

The Value of Keeping Notes on Training

On the uses of PAIN

Bushi No Te and the Knee Strike

What ever happened to Mae Geri?

The Art of Kata Beyond Technique

Environmental Karate Training

Notes on Close Range Combat Before it was called Cross-training

Breathing to Slow Down

The Sai's of It

Breathing Patterns Time

Kata Study for Life, a personal journey

Sanchin Boogie

Secrecy

How many forms are enough?

The Wheel Turns On Chinto Memories

Karate and Tai Chi - Part One

Tai Chi and Karate - Part Two

Hidden Moves

The Place of Training

One Step at a Time How

To Learn as a Black Belt seeing things one time

The Weakest Possible Technique

A Descent into Darkness Injuries, Illness, Disability and Aging Considerations

Diabetes, Cancer, Paraneoplastic Neuromyopathy & Neuropathy,

Falling and More Beep...Beep

I am disable but I still train

Extremes Kata Study for Life, a personal journey

Intent The Journey

First you have to want to get better, they you have to make the effort

Lessons from a Life Martial The Body, the Minds and the Spirit

Obsolesence

The Worst Thing

When in the Desert

 

These were so many things from my private martial study. Most of then I never had time to share in class but I wanted preserved for my students. Of course it shows I was interested in many things.

 

It is for sale on Amazon if you are interested.

 

"Isshin: Writings on Martial Arts and Life" by Victor Smith

 

Chia Fa my story





Every post in time seems to become another post about the rest of the story.  IN 2012 when I posted https://isshin-concentration.blogspot.com/2012/12/the-kobudo-of-shimabuku-tatsuo-tonfa-of.html
 

 I was sharing this with my students as a source comparing some historical videos with the Isshinryu of Shimabuku Tatsuo.

 

About 1977 I was a brown belt studying with Charles Murray. One day he approached me and said Victor, I borrowed, from Mr. Lewis, the Armstrong movie to work with my own bo kata studies.  But he told me “I have an idea I want you to take my movie film editor and teach yourself the form Chia Fa on that movie, then when you learn it you can teach it to me.”

 

In those days the Isshinryu taught by Tom Lewis did not contain the tonfa form. It was not taught in Agena when Sensei trained there. When in 1971-72 when Charles, a new Shodan, trained in Agena himself, tonfa was not something he studied there either. (in fact the sai was what he was taught there ‘Chantan Yara No Sai’. Along with many other things.Often training with the Okinawan students who trained there, I cannot recall him mentioning he ever saw them performing tonfa.

 

Minor note, in those days there was a real lack of information about Isshinryu. No public review for the Armstrong Shimabuku movie. So what you saw was what you saw.

 

So I took that film editor and the movie home. The film editor allowed you to view the movie frame by frame. So I began to view it and attempt to work out what Shimabuku Tatsuo was doing with the tonfa for that form. Over and over, frame by frame until I went ‘blind’ trying to work out what was being done.

 

Then attempting to do the same with my own set of tonfa I had previously purchased. It was a most difficult time, but somehow I worked out something. I got to the point I could not view the movie again. What I had was what I had. (another note I from that time forward was unable to bring myself to view that form again. Lasting for decades. Later when I saw the  Uzeu Angi tonfa form video, outside of that one time viewing I could not view it in detail either, I just noted it was similar to what I was doing and then moved on.

 

Then I ‘taught’ Charles the form I had worked out and of course in a week he was doing it better  than I.

 

As the movie labeled the form as “Chia Fa” that was what I referred it to ever after. There was no credible Isshinryu source I had access to that would suggest otherwise. In any case I made no difference to my practice.

 

On the day of my black belt test, Mitchum Sensei held two clinics at Mr. Lewis’ dojo. Between the brown belt clinic and the black belt clinic. Charles had me perform my Chia Fa for Mitchum Sensei and Lewis Sensei and the rest of the group. I did so and afterwards Mitchum Sensei remarked that the tonfa form was not part of his studies on Okinawa. My form was not part of my black belt test.

 

Then for decades the form was just part of my practice. Again and again. Much later I taught it so my senior students. At no time did I face attackers armed or  otherwise and needed those tonfa skills for personal defense.

 

Again in time, having seen more than a few versions of the Isshinryu tonfa form over the years, not studying with any other Isshinryu I kept to what I worked out. While I observed those versions, I had no context as to whether one was right as compared to the others.

 

In fact having seen different tonfa forms, to me what I saw did not seem the best way to use the form. Gathering my thoughts on Tonfa I created my own Wansu NO Tonfa 


 
 
Not for performance as I had no interest in that, just to work on my own thoughts.

 

After about 20 years at the time I was newer training with Sherman Harrill he asked to see my tonfa form. I showed him what I did with my ChiaFa form. After watching it he remarked what he did was somewhat different and then he showed me his form. He just observed my different form but just to understand where I was , not to comment. My time with Sherman was mostly in those clinics. It never was to study his versions of the forms.

 

Many years later I came to a different understanding of the value of Isshinryu kobudo. Not for performance rather as a force enhancer to strengthen our karate. The variety of the forms, even my Chia Fa, was to each form work on a different variety of skills to then strengthen our karate, especially as a way to fight against aging. The correctness of any version was much less than any version being used. The key fact was that it was being used.

 

Then the internet happened and with the Isshinryu discussion groups. I was informed I was all wrong. The form I had studied was wrong, it was named wrong, etc.

 

None of that made a difference to me. I had no reason to accept anyone elses answer as correct. I was not associated with anyone but Mr. Lewis (then mostly retired from Isshinryu) and Charles Murray (then in the USAF), meaning effectively on my own. I accepted them might be correct, but that it made no difference to me. I had my own years of experience and as the form I learned was labled Chia Fa, that is what it would remain to be called by I. (all of which I explained to my students and they were content with that.) My Isshinryu is first and foremost the Isshinryu I was taught by my instructors and what I practiced.

 

 

Never filmed our tonfa Chia Fa form as such. Then I discovered this on one of my saved videos which has a walk though demo version some of my students did for a visit from my friend, tai chi and northern Chinese forms instructor, Ernest Rothrock. It has many demo and what he shared at that clinic for them. At the end of the clinic we shared some of what we were doing.

 

Here is another valuable video


 

 This video was taken at a clinic with Ernest Rothrock demonstrating some of his Chinese Arts for us.

To give him a break we performed a number of our forms for him.

On this tape at 18:46 minutes Young Kusanku

 At 25:10 Mike and I do opposing Sho twice

 At 21:08 the team does Chia Fa tonfa

 And at 22:10 I do Chosen No Kama Dai

 I even show a brief piece of the opening to my Mantis form “Slip In and Hit

The remainder of the tape is Ernie doing a variety of his forms.

Ending with a very nice eagle claw form.

 

Things are what they are.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

For those trying to understand the concept of 'sen' a little better..


Liberally "borrowed" from the internet.
However it is worth thinking about.
 


Mefutode a most personal understanding






When I was training with Tristan Sutrisno one day he showed me something different I had not seen before. He started doing his kata applications without using chambers. Just leading with both hands out in front he would explode into an attack and use his answers to blow through those attacks.

 

He explained while chambering was used up to 2nd dan, beginning at 3rd dan there were many changes to how his family karate was practiced from that point in time. An instructor would be the exception. Where use of chambering was extremely important up to that level of training, working to build the bodies capabilities. There came a time where that was set aside for increased reaction time. Not to be done earlier so as not to stop the proper internal development of a student (beginner through 2nd dan). Not to be attempted as a short cut (for there are none in proper development) but something to begin at the right level of training.

 

Then the use of chambering in bunkai or kumite would be left behind, instead the hands would from into position from where ever they were at that time. This created faster and faster response.

 

He shared some of this with me, I was made to understand overall the changes that occurred at 3rd dan. But of course understanding is one thing, receiving that training in detail is something else altogether, And  I did not receive that. But seeing it in action was extremely impressive. I don’t know all the answers but was well aware of what that did mean.

 

 

While personally I understood what he was sharing, I also recognized there were systems with completely divergent answers that could also work to completion. That was one of the mysteries in my studies.

 

For myself I chose different answers. Yet I could not deny what he had shared worked very well for him.

 

Several decades later I read Motobu Choki on Mefutode.

 


 

While interesting just reading several short paragraphs did not mean I understood what I was reading.

 

As I had discovered reading anything often took at least 5 or more years before a glimmer of understanding would be gained. In this case it was considerably longer.

 

I remember discussing a related concept with a friend in Goju, not the same thing but in similarities.

 

Then today I had a flash and drew the connection between Sutrisno Tristan’s training and Motobu Choiki’s words.

 

I may be that some understanding arrives late, yet one is grateful it arrives at all.

There is a story in how I came to understand what Bunkai meant and then I went beyond the accepted definition.

 

 

 


Bunkai


“Bunkai (分解), literally meaning "analysis"[1] or "disassembly",[2] is a term used in Japanese martial arts referring to process of analysing kata and extracting fighting techniques from the movements of a "form" (kata). The extracted fighting techniques are called Oyo.
Bunkai is usually performed with a partner or a group of partners which execute predefined attacks, and the student performing the kata responds with defenses, counterattacks, or other actions, based on a part of the kata. This allows the student in the middle to understand what the movements in kata are meant to accomplish. It also illustrates how to improve the technique by adjusting distances (Maai), timing, rhythm (Ritsudo) and fluidity (Nagare) in combat properly, in order to adapt and adjust any technique depending on the size of an opponent.
Some kata have another layer of application that is taught using an Oyo Bunkai, an "application of the kata in ways other than the standard bunkai."[3] Different practitioners will learn or discover alternative applications, but the bunkai, like the kata, varies based on the style and the teacher.”



 

Back in the mid 1970's when I was a student bunkai was never mentioned.  Except for occasional basic explanations of kata moves, the application of kata was not part of my studies.  Then when I made black belt and was on my own, even training many places in many systems mention of bunkai was not mentioned, nor at the many tournaments I attended. Likely the first reference to form movement explanations was from Ernest Rothrock in than the many forms I studied had but one application for the movements.  Of course those systems had many times many forms, so they had a great deal of applications to learn. My studies were not in applications.

 

When I met Tristan Sutrisno as a competitor and became friends over a year competing together, only when I started visiting and training with him did I hear him about bunkai. Most often remarking he did not believe the masters he met did not know what bunkai was as he studied it.

 

To be completely honest, it could be that those I visited just never showed those studies when I was there, as I was a  guest. I have no idea, just that I never heard the term uttered. But I had noticed all the magazine articles on Okinawan instructors always had them demonstrating uses of kata technique. That did get me wondering. There was no definition of bunkai in those articles.

 

After a while training with Tristan I learned how bunkai was defined for his system. I have gone on about that before on this blog, suffice it to say it was a unique paradigm, explosive and effective, and was dan study. Kyu did not study bunkai having many more important stills to acquire.  The simplest explanation of that paradigm was no one observing a kata performance could ever intuit what the bunkai was. And at each of his family’s system there was an entirely different bunkai for each movement point in their kata.

 

I was shown some, but nothing like the full thing. Just enough to make me aware of what was there.

 

Time reference, it was about that time Seryu Oyata became known with is arts, and shortly George Dillman began his own path. Just about that time all the magazines had articles defining bunkai (similar to the above description) and showing examples from Japan.

 

Bunkai was becoming the buzz word for Katate. I remember articles about Americans hearing of Bunkai from the Japanese systems, began to return to Okinawa and ask their original instructors about why they were not shown bunkai.  The article said at first the instructors didn’t recognize the use of the word, but quickly began to show bunkai. A I have read more out of politeness, they began to use that term.

 

Historical note – When Mabuni Kenwa  began to write in Japan about karate, he first explained uses of the movements from Seiunchin kata as bunkai.  I have translated that book from the French edition.  It is plausible that his descriptions later influenced other Japanese systems to use that term.

 

Now back to me. So I was being instructed in ‘bunkai Sutrisno, which had little relationship to what others were calling bunkai.  As Tris defined the word first to me, his definition was the only ‘bunkai’ definition for me.

 

But I also realized while he shared much with me, I was really not a student of his way. Especially after I moved to NH I began to have a different thought. I realized how incredible what he had was, but I also had great faith in my own Isshinryu. So slowly I began to take all the skills in many systems I had acquired and work on what the applications for Isshinryu could be. I started easy, then deeper and deeper study on just one movement, the opening of Seisan kata, and before long I had over 100 ways to use it to disrupt any attack.

 

So  step by step I took my understanding that was growing of what kata technique application could be and worked and worked. About 5 or so years later one who would become a friend that I had met at a local tournament came to visit my school. He participated in our adult training and observed that what I was doing was much like his current instructor Sherman Harrill was doing. He then demonstrated several examples and later invited me to attend a clinic that he was having with Sherman on Isshinryu kata applications that he was having.

 

The first thing I discovered was my instructor Tom Lewis had been friends with Sherman back in Agena when they trained with Shimabuku Tatsuo.  Then I was blown away by the clinic Sherman held, countless kata application studies. Really amazing, it did resemble what I was doing but 40 years advanced from where I was. After that Garry and I co hosted a series of annual seminars with Sherman for many years, and I attended whatever clinics with him across New England that I could travel to.

 

My students and I became friends with Sherman. For the next few years I probably spent 50 or 60 hours at his clinics learning whatever I could from him. I was permitted to film the clinics at mu school I hosted, and made copious notes from the others. He definitely influenced what I saw kata applications could become.

 

Over the next 9 years I attended and helped hold as many clinics with him as possible. Always realizing as he told me they were not the same as being trained by him. I learned so much, and it definitely influenced my own studies, which had never ceased. But even great clinics come with a price. There was so much shared but I very strongly believed in my adult program and much that I saw never had the time to enter my program.

 

Then the unfortunate reality struck and Sherman died. I was filled with grief and as a result spent 3 months collecting and typing up my notes and viewing every scrap of video I had of Sherman and transcribing those tapes by kata. I ended up with a literal encyclopedia of Sherman clinics. Discussions, over 800 different kata applications, principles Sherman used to find those techniques, and much more. While I had never met his senior student, John Kerker, I sent him a copy of what I had written. His reply was thank you and that was most likely correct, but not containing maybe 500 additional techniques from his classes.

 

It was so much yet only a small part of what Sherman meant to me.

 

So I continued on my own. I participated in various internet discussions which often got around to bunkai. I came to feel what I had seen to date was nothing like the use of the term bunkai that people were discussing.

 

5 years later I finally met John Kerker at a clinic in Chicopee, Mass. What I saw was so different from Sherman at his clinics. The uke John was using was struck repeatedly harder than anyone I had ever seen anyone strike another and each time his uke rose to attack and be struck again. I really saw what it was to be a true student of Sherman.

 

As the years passed I attended annual clinics John held in Chicopee. And learn so much Sherman hinted at about the training of his students. John filled in so many gaps. And I continued to learn so much more. That first clinic I attended later that night I wrote up my notes and sent them to John.

 

In many ways my understanding changed. I began not to use the term Bunkai as I was not doing the Sutrisno version I had first been shown. And I was not really doing what others were doing. So I derived my own description of what I was doing.

 

I considered the first step to understanding kata application potential to look at every possible use a techniques could be used for. But this was just the first step.

 

The next step was working  towards kata application realization. The more difficult study to actually apply that to any attack and conclude that attack.


In a very real sense that kata application became almost an infinite study..

 

Starting at Sho Dan the student would focus on say 50 applications for the first movement of Seisan kata and of course developing skill to use all of them. After that there was no set order, it just moved forward, focusing on the underlying principles behind the applications.

 

Movement after movement, kata after kata. A very long range study.

 

Not to know a thousand applications, but to gain experience so that the first movement could be used to stop any attack, then more and more an open ended study.

 

The goal was to be eventually able to take any movement at all to conclude any attack. Which was of course also maximum unpredictibality.

 

Did I succeed?

 

The goal was never to finish rather to keep moving forward and learning, never stopping.