Hi Austin,
Hello, I'm a self taught martial artist. I have used instructional videos to learn tonfa
My sparring partner is trained in tanto-jutsu.
Okay… personally, I wouldn't go so far as to say you're trained in anything, from the indications found here… "self taught" is, well, not really possible… especially from things such as videos.
Without an instructor, you might be able to swing tonfa around, you might be able to hit something, but that's actually incredibly removed from actually learning the weapon (and even further from learning a method of using the weapon).
I want to learn the Jo to help 1. get a better exercise than I currently get with tonga and
Why do you think Jo would be better exercise?
2. Learn a new weapon that may actually be useful to me in the future.
How so? Are you in the habit of carrying four foot staffs around with you? Most forms of Jodo and Jojutsu deal with sword attacks… are you thinking that you're going to need to understand sword evasion and defence?
I also want to help keep my opponent on his toes with his tanto-jutsu, because he can never get the correct strikes while I am using my tonga.
I'll revisit the "tanto-jutsu" aspect in a bit… but what are the "correct strikes"? And how would using a longer weapon make it easier for them to get them?
Is the Jo just for aikido?
Nope. One of the most famous of Japanese Koryu (old school systems) is Shinto Muso Ryu… an art designed pretty much entirely around the use of the Jo. It also gave rise to modern Jodo (Seitei Jodo) in the early 20th Century. Then you have a number of other ryu-ha (classical schools) that use the Jo… Muhi Muteki Ryu… Jikishinkage Ryu… Kukishinden Ryu… and this is well and truly before we get to other cultures (of course, if it's a Jo, it's a Japanese tradition, as it's a Japanese word), who, as Blindside indicated, have various stick and staff methods from all around the world.
Or can it be learned by its self?
Well, yeah… but not by yourself.
Let me know
Thanks a lot guys
Austin
Sure.
I agree that my tonfa skills aren't very good, and they are something that needs work, and I don't have anyone who is actually trained in koboudo around to help me.
Hmm. Look, I kinda hate to say this, but this is the reality for you.
If you don't have an instructor, you can't learn the skill. That, very simply, is the end of the story. If there's no instructor around for you to learn from, you can't learn it. That might sound harsh, and you might want to protest (common ones are "But who taught the first guys? They had to figure it out for themselves, didn't they?" Uh… no, actually, they didn't. They developed it from real experience, and from learning from others. None of these things developed as an independent invention in the way that question implies), but it's the reality. I really want to learn Takenouchi Ryu… but there's no-one in Australia to teach it. So, I have two choices… move where there is a teacher, or accept that I can't learn it (currently). And, with everything else I do, I have had to accept that I can't learn it right now. That might change later, but for now, I'm kinda stuck with the way the world works. And, honestly, so are you.
What I'm saying is that, bluntly, you're not training, you're not teaching yourself, you're not really developing any skills or understanding… realistically, you're playing. And that's it. And the last thing I ever want to encourage anyone to do is to play with weapons without having any real clue about them… they're weapons, after all… you're just asking for an accident to happen. Put them down until you can get some actual guidance.
As for the Jo, I can get diagrams etc, and work them out with my partner, who has actually been trained in tanto jutsu, or knife fighting..
No, the diagrams won't help you. Working them out with a partner, who also has no clue of the weapon, will not help.
But I'm also going to second Lamont's question here… where did your friend learn tanto? What ryu-ha? From who? The reason I ask is that, well, tantojutsu is simply so uncommon as to be practically impossible to find, especially by itself (removed from other skill sets, such as jujutsu, ken, etc). Additionally, I am aware of exactly no systems that even use the term "tantojutsu"… as tanto isn't specific, but refers to a range of forms of weaponry, more commonly referred to as kogusoku...
He has a pretty solid grasp on stances, and can help with the Jo.
Er… no. If he has no experience in Jo, he has no experience in Jo. While certain aspects can be transferable, it isn't that simple… there needs to be more than just the weapon altered… and, for the transference to be really applicable, you also need a more coherent link between the ri-ai of a more composite and complete systems disparate factions.
In other words, while I get what you think is potentially helpful, it simply isn't.
I understand that collaboration from a base is a good way to actually learn something.
Not really, no. There's a lot more that's needed.
That is how pankration and HEMA etc have been revived.
Well, pankration hasn't been "revived"… there's a modern system using the name, but that's really about the only connection between the ancient form and the modern… so no on that one. As far as HEMA, as mentioned, there's a lot more involved there as well… for one thing, they don't simply go from diagrams… there are a range of additional texts, a lot of study, much interpretation, and a fair bit of experimentation with (typically) very experienced practitioners of other systems to figure out what they think that maybe, possibly, could have been meant by the old folios and texts… hopefully.
But the real important difference is that there is no extant form of old European arts, as depicted and described in texts such as I.33, Fiore, Tallhoffer etc that has survived… the skills you're talking about (Ryukyu Kobudo, Jo) are still in existence… you can find teachers who know what they're doing. You don't have to make it up, and bluntly, pretty much certainly get it completely wrong. You have actual information and skill available to you. If it's simply not in your ability to take advantage of that right now, fine… but don't expect people who do put in what it takes to do this to take what you do seriously.