Thursday, February 26, 2026

A bit of what I have learned.

 


 
 
 
Just a small point, I realize how little about the martial arts
I really know.
 
I have been fortunate to have associated with so many superior instructors over my years.
 
Each of them far exceeding whatever I had, I have just tried to keep my mind open and keep learning, that is the truth to this day.
 
I also have been fortunate to have had students who also exceeded my own poor abilities.
 
I am forever walking in the shadow all of them cast.

The Bushi No Te Isshinryu Gojushiho Source

 


This is a study in individual derivation of a kata.
 
The Gojushiho kata which our instructors practice

came from the Gojushiho of Tristan Sutrisno.

He taught it to them, then never ending practice begins.

                                                                                         

Tristan Sutrisno Gojushiho
 

 

 

 

His student Dave Piehota

 


 

 

 

Young Lee (Bushi No Te Isshinryu)

 





Just a touch of Tjimande in the Air



 



Among my various studies was I received some instruction on the Sutrisno Family version of the art of Tjimande. Not that I know much, but everything I was shown was extremely effective. As a result of that I saved many of the Indonesian martial arts articles I encountered.

 

I was looking through an old notebook holding hard copy of articles I had saved on the various Indonesian Martial Arts.  A number of those articles were  showing the Tjimande of RUDY TER LINDEN . What struck me this morning was how one of those articles applications could also be applied to a section of my Chinto kata.

 

I believe those articles were from a time before YouTube, I don’t ever recall looking into whatever YouTube video’s he had available.

 

My search found a variety of short videos showing him teach his students some Tjimande applications. They are each short but the material is well presented.

 

I am just showing one of those videos and prepared a series of screen prints showing one of the applications presented on those videos.

 
 





My screen prints of one technique series.
 






















 


 
Among the available videos of Rudy Ter Linden are:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Hyakujo




A monk asked Hyakujo, 'What is the most wonderful thing in life?
Hyakujo replied, "Sitting alone on top of the great Taiyu mountain."
As the monk bowed, Hyakujo... struck him.

This is a zen kohan, and the answers aren't necessarily anything you can logic out. I believe the classical understanding would be why are you bowing you should be booking for that mountain top, if you were enlightened.

A long, long time ago, in a distant land….. All good stories should start that way.




 



 The other day I was reading Mark Tankosich’s paper “Karate Ni Sente Nashi” and was entranced by the story about Choki Motobu. Reading that story triggered a long lost thought of mine about me in another time.

 

When I studied Isshinryu we did not get lessons about Okinawan karate past. There was never enough time for our studies for that. Our karate studies were very focused on using our karate  with the opponent standing in front of us.

 

Then several years went by, I had been reading karate magazines (the internet of that day) and had picked up some information about Okinawan martial history.


Of course I did not know then what I know better today. And in those tender years, I tended to believe everything written in those magazines. (o’ those days of lost innocence.)

 

So what I understood has little to do with the actual Okinawan history, with a huge boost from my imagination.

 

I knew there were the current practices of karate, and a foggy idea that there was a karate before that time. I had no idea what the actual history was.

 

I knew Okinawa was conquered by Japan, and some idea karate was preserved for self defense. My imagination supplied the rest. I imagined that the conquerors were hanging around everywhere.

 

What I worked out is that the best way to make karate work was to look like everyone else. Give out no tells of what you were capable of. Then you could walk past your oppressor not appearing you were going to do anything.

 

This would allow you to strike where they weren’t looking, towards their back. For I had worked out the best answer was to strike from behind where they were not looking.

 

This is not far different from what Motobu Choki had done.

 

As time passed and I learned ever so much more about matters martial I never forgot that thought.
 

So strikes hardened on the makiwara accompanied with correct alignment, with all the possible force enhancers are among the ways such a strike to the rear could do even more damage. (I have only suggested one answer where there a whole infinity of possible answers.

 

Of course I did not teach this, for I wasn’t interested at creating individuals who would study methods of attack. And what an individual is shown as an answer how a technique should be used, it normally takes great effort so see any other answer for their studies.


 

Striking below the opponent event horizon.






Those Okinawan's without karate were not defenseless

 


It might be that Okinawan's

without karate did not miss what they did not have.
 


 

 

 

Monday, February 23, 2026

I said here boy is my saifa posture correct


 
I said here boy is my saifa posture correct
boy listen when i speaking to you boy!