




In Balance: A Series of Thoughts (Part
Two)
Soft and Hard, the Spirit of Aikido in Irimi-Tenkan
2004 by Sensei Gene Martinelli
If IRIMI is the yang of the movement, then TENKAN must be
the yin. Hard and soft bring/is balance. IRIMI-TENKAN brings/is
balance. Exploring further into the point made in the first
part of this series; we continue to look at how our understanding
and interpretation of a word or words may have a profound
effect in our ability to do the AIKIDO technique correctly.
Our choices in accepting certain definitions color not only
how we approach those techniques, but also limit our options
and our growth in AIKIDO.
In part one of this series I wrote regarding IRIMI-TENKAN:
You have counteracted the effect of the force attacking using
IRIMI and gained balance. TENKAN directs the force to its
harmonious conclusion.
Blends/directs/leads/controls/ all are words used to describe
the action of TENKAN. It is so easy to take the hardness of
your spirit and the power of your force in IRIMI and drive
right through UKE (remember IRIMI is also blending). In some
situations and position of NAGE and UKE relative to their
environment, driving through UKE would be the correct choice.
Why then in certain situations do we as AIKIDOKA appear to
choose to soften our spirit and blending with UKE, we turn
ourselves?
In entering UKE”S attack with a calm acceptance of death,
either UKE’s life or yours, the mind and spirit become
open to other possibilities. NAGE has taken control of the
moment. But in this moment NAGE has done more than those few
words seem to imply with the completion of IRIMI-TENKAN. MUSUBI,
true martial harmony, must occur to actively choose TENKAN
and complete the movement. Through MUSUBI (or in other words
blending) we are given the opportunity to create life or perhaps
a better choice of words might be an opportunity to spare
lives, UKE’s life and your life. Your life however will
be quickly over, if you think you will succeed by just having
the proper mindset or a strong spirit without correct positioning
and movement of your body. Nor will you be successful without
correct distance, MA-AI, and timing, DE-AI. What seems the
simplest of moves and the most basic of AIKIDO’s techniques
contains all that is “AIKI.” IRIMI-TENKAN is often
(if not always) the first move practiced. Why? All eight powers
of the heavens are there in that movement: stillness and motion,
powerful and relaxed, contraction and extension, hard and
soft. So the simplest, easiest, and most basic move in AIKIDO
encompasses everything that makes this an incredible art.
Yet, in my opinion many of us as AIKIDO students tend to skip
past the concept and principles in the IRIMI part of the movement
and not quite grasp that the TENKAN part can be or is a strategy
and a tactic in movement.
I once heard TENKAN (shortened on purpose) described as AIKIDO’s
version of retreating or back stepping. I really like that
description and wish I could claim it as mine. In any conflict
we must not only be able to react, but our mind and spirit
had better, in that instant, have created and developed a
strategy for defeating our opponent or UKE, too. Whether you
are facing one opponent or many there is or should be a purpose
to your response in your movement and choices. In having “Hard
and Soft” in the title of this article I chose to focus
or pay particular attention to these two aspects. When I was
in the Army, back farther in time than I care to admit too.
Retreating was never taught or described as retreating; it
was called “Advancing to the rear” and the reasoning
behind this was, it demoralized the troops’ psyche and
put them in a defeated mind set calling the action “retreat.”
This defeated mind set does not occur when we use TENKAN.
Quite the opposite, what may have appeared overwhelming is
now controlled by your center and your choice of action (technique).
You had entered hard of spirit, not hard, tensed, and stiff
of body. The force coming at you is strong and so you choose
a soft response, TENKAN. Soft here does not mean or imply
weak, limp, or non-martial. Rather it is a solid martial response
and by choosing TENKAN we have redirected the force attacking
us and thus negated the attack and taken control of this force.
In that moment your choice becomes either life giving or life
ending, for example you begin to flow into SHIHO-NAGE and
by deciding in very small degrees of angles in your body position,
UKE”S arm position, and the direction and force behind
that throw the difference quite literally becomes life and
death. One can see that the soft movement not only gave us
multiple choices within the throw, but it also is a devastating
power. Again, because it bears repeating soft here does not
imply weak, limp, or non-martial. Choosing a soft response
to a hard action you are able to control the balance and the
moment! In addition, the technique happens because of the
hard and soft choices you make in IRIMI-TENKAN? It is an amazing
strategy that Aikido has in its ability to redirect rather
than to always meet a hard force with a hard force. Softness
means flexible, relaxed, and breathing and seeing with a clear
mind. Your mind, body, and spirit can together or separately
be hard or soft and not all in the same choices at the same
time. It is in this state of relaxed clarity that one realizes
that from the moment of contact and as you turn in TENKAN
you are controlling and directing both yourself and UKE. Balance.
So in certain situations as AIKIDOKA, we do indeed turn soft
and turn ourselves blending and redirecting the force from
UKE and therefore controlling and reaching balance. Ever notice
that within the Yin and Yang symbol in the Yin or soft side
there is a perfect circle of Yang or hardness, and within
the Yang or hard side there is a perfect circle of Yin or
soft side within. That is how balance is achieved. A hard
exterior force is matched by a soft internal force and balance
is restored. Water is often used in describing techniques
or principles in martial arts. A favorite of mine is KOSHI-NAGE
described as a wave crashing on a rock. In my mind, IRIMI-TENKAN
is like a falling rock meeting the ocean. Unlike when a rock
falls on land it leaves a mark to show where the rock impacted.
When a rock hits the ocean, it is simply swallowed up by the
water no matter how great the force of the falling rock. What
really is the hard object and soft object in this analogy
of the rock hitting the ocean? Because we have learned in
science or more personally if you’ve ever taken a belly
flop diving into a pool, that the soft surface of water actually
causes a harder impact. Soft may well be the harder force,
or the more correct frame of mind and spirit when doing IRIMI-TENKAN.
You are seamlessly shifting from feeling like a hard driving
force in that moment of IRIMI. Into a soft flexible redirecting
force and like the overwhelming wave of water finding the
weaknesses in UKE’s attack and exploit it.
In order to move fluidly and be flexible in your timing and
movement your body must stay soft to respond to an attack.
In the core of that softness lies the crystal hard knowledge
and strength of spirit to succeed and restore balance. IRIMI-TENKAN,
the most basic of AIKIDO techniques contains a seemingly unlimited
number of choices and incredible power. This becomes open
to you if you do not limit how you understand and interpret
the words used in describing AIKIDO and AIKIDO technique.
Harmony and balance occurs from beginning to end in the technique
called IRIMI-TENKAN.
Credit & Thanks: I can claim to be the author
of these series of articles, but without the editorial assistance,
guidance, and down right straight-up and often heard saying,
“Is that really what you meant?” help of Don Modesto.
The two pieces of this series would not have been written.
Don, thank you.
Gene Martinelli. Copyright © 2005 Jihonjuku Academy
of Warrior Spirit.
|