When
I was a student and my first kata was Seisan as taught by my Senior Dennis
Lockwood. However in time, Dennis
changed the kata progressed after each 180 degree turn the line of the kata
shifted slightly over and the centerline of the kata shifted as a result.
Here is Sensei
Lewis performing a version very similar to what I was originally shown. I never
saw this until many years later
Then
one day when I knew the kata as I had been shown my senior Dennis Lockwood
showed me how to adjust my stance when I did Seisan to keep the kata on the
same N-W line when I performed it. That became my kata from that point.
Then
I learned Seiunchin kata from Dennis Lockwood.
However almost immediately after I learned it, I was on a Yellow Belt team to
perform the kata working with Sensei Lewis. He made changes to our execution
and drilled us very rigorously. This became the standard I followed for the
rest of my life.
Many
years later I saw this video of Sensei Lewis performing Seiunchin back in the
60s. It was not the version I was drilled on.
Seiunchin
This is me and my son Victor Michael performing Seiunchin as I was taught the form by Lewis Sensei.
Nihanchi
and Wansu kata were taught to me by Seneri Lockwood.
At
that time I also began traveling to the Princess Anne Dojo, the Laurel Dojo and
the Dover Dojo. I found they were doing slightly different variation of the
kata I knew.
When
visiting Dover, Riggy sensei always had me perform the kata I know. Explaining
that over the years many of the instructors had learned different versions of
the same kata. He wanted to stay aware of what Lewis Sensei was teaching at
that time. He also explained Lewis Sensei never criticized that their version
was not the same as he was teaching at that time, he only wanted excellent
execution of what they were doing.
My
last night in the dojo before I had to leave for work, I was promoted to Green
Belt by Lewis Sensei. He also taught me the opening section for Chinto kata.
Then
living far away, having to study Tang Soo Do Mood Dun Kwan as that was all that was availabie.
I continued to work on the section of Chinto I was shows. A year later I returned to Salisbury for my vacation and
learnt a little more Chinto from Lewis Sensei. As a bank employee in Pa. had to
take a mandatory 2 week vacation. I also visited the Princess Anne Dojo and the
Dover Dojo, run by other instructors under Lewis Sensei. Each of those instructors
gave me more and more of the kata, till I finally had the whole thing. That
Thursday I returned to Salisbury and Lewis Sensei worked with me further. The form I had used various versions of
Chinto, each of those instructors had been taught their version by Lewis
Sensei.
Years later I
saw this version of Lewis Sensei, closest to what I was shown. Chinto
This is Young Lee performing Chinto as I taught it in 1988.
One of his very
close friends was Karl Hover of Virginia. Here is his version. Karl Hovey Chinto
Then to just throw this in the mix here is the version Charles was doing in 1982 when in West Germany. It was slightly different from what he taught me in 1977.
Then
when I began training in Isshinryu again, with Charles Murray. The first thing
he did was have me perform the kata I knew. Once I finished Charles did the
same kata that I had performed.
They
were much the same, but each of them was different too.
Charles told me that I would continue to perform Seisan, Seiunchin, Naifanchi,
Wansu and Chinto as I had learned them in Salisbury. But from that point on I
would learn the other kata as he did them, and that is what happened.
Sometime
later I asked Charles why there were different versions.He said that is how
sensei taught his students. He worked
out part of the answer 1.) Shimabuku
Tatsuo was known for teaching different individuals the same kata in different
ways/ (This is of course oral history but
one time Sherman Harrill remarked the same to me.)
And
I was trained by Charles one on one. He would rapidly teach me a kata, Then ½
of our classes were each of us doing kata after kata,, over and over. (aside-
the other ½ of our classes involved constant kumite, meaning he would work me
over and over)
The
other this was Charles observed when he was a student every time his friend Don
Bohan met returning Marines who had trained on Okinawa he arranged to have them
demonstrate what they were learning form Shimabuku on Okinawa. Tom was present
for many of those performances. So Charles observed Lewis Sensei would teach
those versions to those students at that time. He felt Sensei was attempting to
follow Shimabuku Tausuo current teachings.
Thus
at different times different versions of the kata were taught. Again what Lewis
Sensei cared about was not the ‘correct’ version rather how much you could put
into the performance you did.
Now
in those days there was no internet, few videos, etc. So what Isshinryu was or
could be depended on what your instructor taught you. There was no other clear
cut reference. Some Isshinryu did meet at some tournaments and others at other
tournaments,still others did not go to tournaments.
Training
with Charles I was rapidly put through Kusanku,Sunsu, Sanchin the Tokumine no
Kon.
Many
years later I saw this video of Lewis Sensei. Tokumine No Kon
It
was very, very close to how I learned the form.
On reflection this was way before my time, probably about 15 years into his own study. I would see this as consistent for 15 years of study. When I saw Sensei compete with this form in the 80's his performance was magical, the bo seemed to float in his hands. I will never forger how magical his Tokumini was, way beyond me. IMO he was the best bo technician I have ever seen.
Before
long Charles taught me Urashie No Bo.
Then
one day he returned from a visit to his parents in Deleware.. He also had
trained in Salisbury with Lewis Sensei. There he was shown Shi Shi No Kon No
Dai. Mr. Lewis also permitted Charles to borrow his copy of the 1966 Shimabku
Super 8 movies. At that time those movies were kept close, (Long before the
advent of YouTube)
Charles
worked on Shi Shi… then one day he gave me the films and a movie editor where I
could view the movie frame by frame, by turning the editor crank, He challenged
me to learn the form Chia Fa on the movie.
And then when I had it I was going to teach it to him.
At
that time on one else in Lewis Sensei’s group knew that form, as it was not
part of Lewis Sensei’s studies in Agena.
In
those days few of my seniors in Mr Lewis’s group studies all of the weapons.
Charles was very interested as when he trained with Shimabuku Sensei in Agena
for a year in 1972 he had learned Urashie No Bo there.
So
I began my appointed task of learning the form on the movie called Chia Fa on
the movie. Over and over I advanced the movie editor. At times cell by cell, at
times faster viewing. I went crazy watching the movie cell by cell and
attempting to learn that form. .
Eventually
I got something and was at the point that for decades I could not watch that
form.
Several
weeks later after much effort I did teach the form to Charles, And before long
he was doing it better than I. Part of the key is that it is the grip of the
palm that controls the spins of the tonfa.
When
I underwent my black belt examination at a clinic that was also being held with
Mitchum Sensei, Charles had me demonstrate the form for all present. Mitchum
Sejnsei also stated that he did not know the form for it was not studied in his
time on Okinawa.
To
shortly after I received my black belt Charles was returning to the USMC for
his career. Before that he had just begun teaching me Shi Sho No Kon No Dai,
but I only had the opening section.
The day he was finishing packing up his home, I began teaching me the
rest of the form.
It
was outside in his back yard, and the day had waves of dark clouds moving over
us.
Suddenly
it began to thunderstorm with all that fury. Charles went inside and continued
to pack. I remained standing in his back yark, working on what I had been
shown. It poured, the winds howled and lighting was in the sky, but I remained
working on the form. Wet gi and wet be in that storm.
When
the storm passed Charles looked up and saw be working on what I had. He came
back out and showed me some more until the rain began again. He went back
inside to pack, I remained outside in the storm working on my form.
This
repeated for several more cycles. Somehow I got the form,
At
that point Charles and I said goodbye and I left to go home. (where of course I
continued to work on the form.
Of
course that was a sad day, for it would be a year before I saw Charles again.
There was no documentation that I had. The burden of working on the complete
Isshinryu system that I had been shown was solely on me. Technically that was
all the Isshinryu form instruction that I would receive.
About
a year after I received my black belt I was at an IKC shiai down in Deleware
and at the black belt meeting before things began, Lewis Sensei announced a
change we should make to our Wansu kata.
Apparently
after seeing an article of Angi Uzen showing Wansu Kata, one section of the
kata (before the side kick section) was different from what we were doing. In
that section was followed by stepping out with the left foot and delivering a
right hooking strike followed by a left hooking strike. (then to step back with
the before the left side kick)
What
Angi showed in that article was stepping out with the left first and then
stepping out with the right. And after
both sections were completed just throwing the left side kick.
That
section just flipped the movements to that. The change technically did not
change the potential of Wansu kata in any way.
But
I made the change, and taught it that way thereafter.
[Aside
back in 1997 one Isshinryu senior watched one of my black belts warming up for a demonstration
using Wansu as I taught it. He came rushing to me to tell me that my student
did the kata incorrectly. Now the purpose of that day was a clinic on Wansu
kata applications from Sherman Harrill. Mr. Lewis had come to Derry to be with
his friend Sherman too. After listening to that senior’s concerns, I responded “That was how my instructor Lewis Sensei
taught me to do the form. I understand your concerns, and as Sensei is sitting
over there with Sherman, please correct him and instruct him to change what I
do. For I would always do what my Sensei instructs me…..” Silence followed.”
Time
passed and about a decade after I had received my black belt I was working very
hard at how kata technique could be applied. So much so I found that when I
found a potential application I believe in and that application was slightly different from
the manner in which I was taught the kata, I started altering what I taught to
match that application.
Then
one day I realized what I was doing. I then realized I did not need to change
the kata to work that application to then slowly change what I was teaching
back to the original version. All of which took much thought. I believe it also explains why kata
changes occurred with different instructors over time.
This
is a complex issue after all.
For
me there is no problem. I have only wanted to do my kata as Tom and Charles taught
me. Theirs were to be the only standard I needed. Except of course when
I did not, I am only human after all.
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