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Greetings and Salutations!
In your opinion what constitutes a good Uke?
A partner that fully commits to the action?
Someone that lets you do the technique on them?
What do you do to help your partner?
How can we become a better Uke for others?
In Nihon Goshin Aikido Our attacks are more than the shomen, yokomen and tsuki that you see in most aikido dojo's so my criteria may not actually be helpful, but here it is anyway.
We learn our techniques from a static position first, we call these our classical techniques and for the purposes of learning these my criteria for a good uke are:
He doesn't move unless I move him.
He doesn't fall unless I make him.
He doesn't tap until he feels pain.
When we move on our dynamic techniques or applications the criteria is:
He actually attempts to hit me, so if I don't move or I move incorrectly I get nailed.
He attacks realistically and follows through, if I am unsucessful with one technique he continues his attack, or changes it to compensate.
He has good ukemi, but doesn't fall unless I throw him.
If I try a joint lock and don't do it properly he escapes and continues the attack.
Damn that high to low chop to the ribs
-Gary
Yes, it's always important that uke customize his attacks and resistance to nage's knowledge of a technique and the art overall.Not an aikidoka here, but I like an uke who is somewhat compliant the first few times when working a new technique, then becomes less so after I have the basic mechanics down.