ShadowKnight said:
Rin - Kyo - Toh - Sha - Kai - Jin - Retsu - Zai - Zen
....are but since thats all ive been able to find, its all I have to learn from.
Those 9 words could possibly mean different things to different people.
Do you possibly know of anything that would help get more in depth with this stuff? Perhaps books or websites that would guide me through the learning process of this.
"Kuji
KIRI" are the slashes in the air with the fingers; "Kuji
IN" are the hand positions with the fingers woven togther.
The practice originated in Buddhism, but in Japan, "
Ninpo Kuji" and
"Budo Kuji" were also developed. They're not the same as Japanese Buddhist
Kuji, but similar. Other martial arts
ryu besides
Togakure ryu have
Kuji, for example, the
Takenouchi ryu and the
Tenshin Katori Shinto ryu are said to use
kuji. But it would be useless for someone who hasn't trained in those systems to learn them as they have deep ties to the systems themselves.
If you're interested in learning more about
kuji, I would suggest you stop looking on the internet. The practice is passed on from teacher to student, and typically, a good teacher doesn't pass this stuff onto a student who'll spread it to the four winds. Your best bet would be to do some research into Shugendo and/or Japanese Buddhism, particularly the Tendai and the Shingon sects, this is what the "martial arts kuji" grew out of in Japan. If one of those seems interesting to you, follow up on it. Find a legitimate teacher and go to them. If there's no one legitimate within commuting distance to you, and it doesn't feel right for you to move someplace where they would be, maybe you don't need to learn it right now. In the old days, people would move to a temple or "coincidentaly" bump into a wandering monk and learn these kinds of things.
If the timing for you doesn't seem right at the moment, don't worry about it. If Summer suddenly came about in the middle of Winter or a 70 year old man suddenly hit puberty, there'd be problems, right?
Finally, I can't stress enough finding someone legitimate to learn from. These are methods of training the heart and mind. I think everyone would agree that if one were to go to an unlicensed and/or poorly trained psychologist, or try to treat oneself through books and the internet, there would be problems.
All the best.