Posted on April 24, 2020 by Andreas Quast
In bōjutsu, depending on the teacher, various
methods of how to hold the bō are taught. In the Taira lineage of Okinawa,
students are supposed to basically adhere to a 3/3 division of the bō and keep
both hands fixed in position all the time. I was instructed to close the front
hand starting from thumb and index finger. In this way, the front hand is
supposed to be tightly fixed, like as if you would use a hammer with one hand.
Of course, a bō is held with both hands, so
it cannot be used like a hammer. Due to the wide distance between the hands,
when striking, the bō can only penetrate to a certain extent. Often it barely
reaches the point of contact, for example the head. This is due to the
positions of the back hand, the front shoulder, and the front hand,
respectively, as well as the distance between the front and back hands. It is
geometry.
Inoue 1981: 170
Taira Shinken 1964: 5.
Karate-dō Taikan 1938
Karate-dō Taikan 1938
Miki 1930: 170.
Well, you might say, “This is the prescribed
form of the kata.” In that case, it is ok
.
What about practical application? Of course,
you would adapt to the situation as necessary. However, the same method as
described above is also used in applications, which are mostly prearranged
sets. And because of that, this method of holding the bō has been criticized as
being stiff and impractical. While it is safe in prearranged sets of kumibō,
you just don’t strike through, even if putting on a show.
There are two basic ways to perform a front
strike like that, but they do not address the actual problem itself and are
either “clinging to formality” or “workarounds”:
In the position shown on the left, it is easy and fast to backswing because you don’t need to twist the upper body much. Japanese disciples of Taira lineage bōjutsu prefer this method, but it is also seen on Okinawa. It is fast but weak.
The position shown on the right is often used by Okinawan disciples of the
Taira lineage bōjutsu. In this position, while the strike reaches deeper down,
the backswing is more difficult to accomplish — or almost impossible unless
you’re a yogi or something. Therefore, you have to actively switch to Neko-ashi
for the backswing, and then actively move into Kokutsu again to strike. This
results in the almost robotic habits often seen among practitioners of this
group.
By the way, in kenjutsu there’s a specialized
term called “tea cloth squeeze” (chakin shibori). Because the tea cloth
is small, the “tea cloth squeeze” is done in a specific way. In a nutshell,
when cleaning the wet tea cloth, it is folded three times, and you squeeze the
water out of it. You squeeze the fingers from the pinky side, and the index
finger is straightened. This is the same as the front hand in kenjutsu: You
squeeze the pinky, ring, and middle finger while thumb and index finger are
relaxed.
The “tea cloth squeeze”
But in kenjutsu, the back hand is also
assigned a task. Basically, there is a push-pull action done by both hands. It
allows a full downward strike while at the same time allow to stop a downward
in an instant. Different from many bōjutsu, it is not the geometry and the
front hand that stop the strike, but a push of the back hand in combination
with a pull of the front hand.
This is what my sword sensei, Hamamoto Hisao
Sensei, teaches and refers to as “Te no Uchi”.
BTW, when used in bōjutsu, the “tea cloth
squeeze” allows the front hand to glide along the bō, thus reducing the
distance between the hands, and as a result, you can strike through.
For example, we have seen the “tea cloth
squeeze” being used in many of the Yamanni-ryū bōjutsu. Most Yamanni-ryū
bōjutsu schools today came from Kishaba Chōgi. While basically all of his
students do the “tea cloth squeeze” – or at least point the index finger
somewhere – most of them do not use the full “Te no Uchi”.
Higa Seitoku sensei, who received a certificate by Chinen Masami.
Toshihiro Oshiro sensei, a bojutsu student of Kishaba Chogi.
Last year, while on Okinawa, I visited one
Yamanni-ryū bōjutsu sensei for practice. That specific sensei taught two
methods of striking:
1.) normal strike with “tea cloth squeeze”,
and
2.) the “Te no Uchi” version (including “tea
cloth squeeze” and push-stop of the rear hand). This strike version was done
like the “Te no Uchi” of kenjutsu, just adapted to the bō.
I also visited another direct student of
Kishaba Chōgi. That sensei then told me that Kishaba Chōgi never did the “sword
stop” (= “Te no Uchi”).
In other words, new methods from other
martial arts such as kenjutsu are assessed and introduced into existing schools
of bōjutsu. Or was it originally in there?
© 2020, Andreas
Quast. All rights reserved.
Victor Smith
My 2 cents,
the tea house squeeze described above is similar to the hidden sword hand
position in Chinese Straight Sword technique as I learned in the t’ai chi
sword.
There the hidden sword provides support for the
hand holding the sword, keeps the body aligned behind the sword when it is
used, and can be a hidden striking tool too if the need arises.
The
hand position for the hidden sword is exactly as Sherman Harrill showed me for
strikes into the forearm or into the neck for a KO.
No comments:
Post a Comment