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John Maki Evans

Page 12

by Kurikara: The Sword;the Serpent


  Suburi (): repeated swinging of the sword

  Sui (): the element Water

  Suichokugiri (): vertical downward cut

  Suriashi (): sliding step

  Suki (): gap, vulnerability, opportunity

  Sun (): unit of length approx 3 cm or 1.19 inches (10 sun = 1 shaku)

  Sunden (): small (energy) field; the third eye

  Sundome (): stopping a short distance (one inch) away from target in kumitachi

  Tachi (): the long, large curved sword hung at the side of the body, blade down, used by mounted warriors; also sometimes used to describe the katana (as in uchidachi or shidachi, terms found in kumitachi kata)

  Takuan Soho (): (1573–1645) Zen master, a contemporary and teacher/advisor to Yagyu Munenori; author of Fudochi Shinmyoroku

  Taikai (): tournament, mass meeting

  Taiko (): drum

  Tai sabaki (): movement of body, repositioning of whole body in response to attack

  Takigyo (): waterfall training

  Tamahagane (): jewel steel, the highest quality steel used in making the best Japanese swords

  Tameshigiri ( or ): test cutting

  Tanden (): red (mercury) field; alchemical or energetic vital substance area (tantien in Chinese)

  Tanren (): training

  Tanrenbo (): a heavy bat or pole used in training

  Tantra (Sanskrit): lit. loom; relating to the skillful use of human faculties and desires to achieve spiritual power and liberation; main source of Mikkyo practice

  Tare (): kendo leg and groin protector

  Tatami (): Japanese floor matting

  Tesshu () (, Yamaoka Tesshu): (1836–1888) renowned swordsman, calligrapher, and zen practitioner

  Tengu (): lit. heavenly dogs; demons or heavenly beings with avian features, skilled in martial techniques and possessing magical powers that they may teach to swordsmen in wild places

  Tenouchi (): lit. the inside of the hands; the technique for gripping the sword

  Tetsubo (): iron (steel) poles used in tanren and uchikomi

  Tokugawa (): the longest lasting Shogunate (military government) in Japanese history, continuously ruled by Tokugawa Ieyasu and his descendants (1603–1868)

  Tsuba ( or ): sword guard

  Tsubazeriai (): the locking of sword guards in close combat (a feature of kendo contests but extremely dangerous in real combat with swords)

  Tsuka (): sword handle

  Tsukagashira (): pommel, end of sword handle

  Tsuki (): thrust

  Toma (): combative distance where more than a full step is required to strike the opponent

  Toyama Ryu (): the school of swordsmanship that evolved from the system formulated at the Toyama Army Academy in Tokyo between 1925 and 1945.

  Uchikomi (): driving in, full powered striking

  Uchidachi (): initiator of attacks in kumitachi (two-man) kata

  Udenuki (): retaining cord attached to holes in the tsuba (sword guard) to prevent the loss of the drawn sword

  Uddiyana (Sanskrit): lit. flying up; drawing back of the abdominal area after exhalation, a preparation for correct and deep abdominal or diaphragmatic inhalation

  Uke nagashi (): overhead receiving and deflection of a vertical downward cut

  Ura (): internal, reverse side, hidden aspect

  Vajra (Sanskrit): a metal ritual implement and weapon with either one, two, or three prongs; represents the power of Indra to create electrical storms and, internally, the sudden triggering of the deepest energy channel (vajrini) in the spine (kongo sho in Japanese)

  Vajrayana: the vajra “vehicle” or method of attainment used by Buddhist schools that utilize tantric practices to bring about total transformation in one lifetime

  Waki gamae (): side guard position

  Wakizashi (): lit. inserted at the side; a short sword used at close quarters

  Wara (): reed or straw bundled and then soaked to form targets for test cutting

  Waza (): technique

  Yagyu Munenori (): (1571–1646) contemporary of Miyamoto Musashi and headmaster of Yagyu Shinkage Ryu

  Yari (): spear

  Yoko (): side

  Yokogiri () (also mayokogiri, ): sideways or horizontal cut

  Yoko men (): side of the helmet (target in kendo)

  Yoroi (): armor

  Yoroiodoshi (): thick-bladed dagger for piercing weak points in armor

  Yotsuwari (): lit. split in four; the construction of the modern shinai (kendo sword), unlike the solid bamboo of earlier kendo

  Zanshin (): lit. remaining mind; maintaining a state of alert responsiveness, especially after intense action

  Recommended Reading

  Sword Arts: Practice and Philosophy

  Cleary, Thomas. The Book of Five Rings (including Heiho Kaden Sho of Yagyu Munenori). Boston: Shambala, 1993.

  Draeger, Donn, and Gordon Warner. Japanese Swordsmanship: Technique and Practice. Boston: Weatherhill, 1982.

  Hirose, Nobuko. Immovable Wisdom: The Art of Zen Strategy, The Teachings of Takuan Soho. Massachusetts: Element Books, 1992.

  Nakamura, Taisaburo. Iaikendo. Tokyo: Seitousha, 1973.

  Nakamura, Taizaburo. Nihon To Tameshigiri no Shinzui (The Essence of Japanese Sword Test Cutting). Tokyo: Kodansha, 1980.1

  Otake, Ritsuke. Katori Shinto Ryu: Warrior Tradition. New Jersey: Koryu Books, 2007.

  Reinhard, Kammer. Zen and Confucius in the Art of Swordsmanship: The Tengu-geijutsu-ron of Chozan Shissai. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1978.

  Sato, Hiroaki. The Sword and the Mind (translations of Heiho Kaden Sho of Yagyu Munenori and works of Takuan Soho). New York: The Overlook Press, 1986.

  Sato, Masahide. Gorinsho: Miyamoto Musashi (Original text of Yoshida family with translation into modern Japanese). Tokyo: Chikuma Shobu, 2009.

  Shimabukuro, Masayuki. Flashing Steel. Berkeley: Blue Snake Books, 2008.

  Stevens, John. The Sword of No Sword: Life of the Master Warrior Tesshu. Boston: Shambala, 2001.

  Tokitsu, Kenji. Miyamoto Musashi: His Life and Writings. Boston: Shambala, 2004.

  Wilson, William Scott. The Demon’s Sermon on the Martial Arts (Tengu-geijutsu-ron of Chozan Shissai). Tokyo: Kodansha, 2006.

  Wilson, William Scott. The Life-Giving Sword: Secret Teachings from the House of the Shogun (Heiho Kaden Sho of Yagyu Munenori). Tokyo: Kodansha, 2003.

  Zensho-an, and Lesley Higley. Zen and Swordsmanship from the Yamaoka Tesshu Archives. Tokyo: Zensho-an, 2009.

  Mikkyo and Yoga

  Hakeda, Yoshito. S. Kukai and His Major Works. New York: Columbia University Press, 1960.

  Nagaboshi, Tomio. The Bodhisattva Warriors: The Origin, Inner Philosophy, History and Symbolism of the Buddhist Martial Art within India and China. Boston: Weiser Books, 1994.

  Remete, Shandor (Natanga Zhander). Shadow Yoga, Chaya Yoga: The Principles of Hatha Yoga. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books, 2010.

  Saunders, E. Dale. Mudra: A Study of Symbolic Gestures in Japanese Buddhist Sculpture. New York: Princeton University Press, 1972.

  Yamasaki Taiko. Shingon: Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. Boston: Shambala Publications, 1988.

  The Reality of the Battlefield

  Grossman, Dave. On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1995.

  Keenan, John. The Face of Battle: A Study of Agincourt, Waterloo and the Somme. London: Jonathan Cape, 1976.

  1. Excerpts from this text and other extracts from Nakamura Taisaburo’s writings, translated by Guy Power, are currently available at www.webdiva4hire.com/kenshinkan. A full translation of this text is currently being undertaken by members of the International Battodo Federation, including the author.

 

 

 
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