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A Basic Guide to Aikido martial art. Japanese martial arts.

March 16th, 2011 Aikido master No comments
Title:

A Basic Guide to Aikido martial art. Japanese martial arts.




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A Basic Guide to Aikido martial art. Japanese martial arts.

Aikido is a unique of martial . Its emphasis lies on the harmonious fusion of mind and body with the natural laws of Nature. Aikido focuses on accepting and respecting the energy of life and nature and channeling this harmony onto techniques that expresses this energy in physical forms.

Aikido is often viewed as more of a defensive martial since its techniques and teachings are designed for you to avoid or get out of trouble. On the contrary, Aikido’s techniques are very powerful and effective.

Basically, there are four levels of technique in Aikido . These are the katai which refers to the basic and is intended to build the foundation of body movements and breathing; the yawarakai trains the defendant to deflect attacks and fuse movements to take control of the attacker or situation; the ki-no-nagare which involves the defendant to defend or counter attack by merging his movement with the attacker even before the latter makes contact; and the ki which is the absolute Aikido technique and involves establishing a link of ki or spirit from the defender to the attacker.

When for Aikido, you need a sparring partner. The uke and the . The Uke is the initiator of the attack and receives the Aikido techniques, while the is the defender and the one that neutralizes the attack.

Aikido basic techniques include ikky which involves control an attacker by placing one hand on the elbow and one on near the wrist giving an opportunity to throw the attacker to the ground; the niky which draws in the uke using a wristlock and twists the arm while applying painful nerve pressure; sanky which is a rotating technique aimed at applying a spiraling tension on the whole arm including the elbow and shoulder; yonky a shoulder control technique with both hands gripping the forearm; goky is another variant of ikky

wherein the hand gripping the wrist is inverted and is quite useful in weapon take-aways; shihnage or the four-direction throw; kotegaeshi or wrist return which involves a wristlock-throw that stretches the extensor digitorum; kokynage also known as breath throws or timing throws; iriminage or entering-body throws which resembles a "clothesline" technique; tenchinage or heaven-and-earth throw; koshinage or the Aikido’s version of the hip throw; jinage or the shaped-like-’ten’-throw; and kaitennage or rotation throw wherein the sweeps the arm of the uke back until it locks the shoulder joint after which the applies forward pressure to throw the attacker.

These are just basic techniques and from the list thousands of possible implementations or combinations can be drawn by the aikidokas. In Aikido, the strikes employed during the implementation of the Aikido technique


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Categories: The Art of Aikido

Types of sport: Flying disc sports

March 2nd, 2011 admin No comments
Title:

Types of sport: Flying disc sports




Types of sport: Flying disc sports

Main category: Flying disc games

* Disc dog

* Disc golf

* Dodge disc

* Durango boot

* Double disc

* Flutterguts

* Freestyle

* Fricket, (AKA disc cricket, cups, suzy sticks or crispy wickets)

* Friskee

* Goaltimate

* Guts (sport)

* Hot box

* Ringo

* (sport)

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Categories: Types of sport