Liam Digby said:
Hello Casper and Ben,
To Casper, I think you have made some v. good pointsÂ….but,
When you said,
" If someone would think of a system being at 100% at a given point in time then any changes after that time in the system will be perceived as degenaration."
I don't think that there is such a thing as 100%. All you get is the pinnacle of one person's achievement. If that person person's achievement produces ideas that then develop into a workable system that others can then tap into then you have the beginnings, the possibility of a transmission.
Also, I don't think that any of these systems were originally designed for mass transmission. They were meant for a small numbers of a hand-picked elite few. It was only when certain key individuals got the evangelistic bug that the idea started to develop that here was something for the world - or the health and morale of the nation. Again I find myself thinking of the history of T'ai-chi. But really it was Kano of Judo fame, who saw certain things about the Western attitude towards health, fitness and cultivation of the young that he thought would be right for the developing Japanese nation, this then snowballed and got all wrapped up in the Olympic movement. Martial Arts in Japan at that time had to adapt, diversify or die. There must have been so much intellectual hypothesising going on in Japan in those days and Ohtsuka was there in the thick of it - you only have to read his book to see the evidence.
But really, how well was it all thought out? Was it meant for mass consumption? How many of the founders of systems would have guessed that after their lifetime it would have gone global, and those who lived long enough to see it, how were they to remain in total command of the quality control department? Did they realize what would be preached in their names at the far flung corners of their new global empires, god knows, I've seen it!!
Okay so we could assume that they did have their hands firmly on the steering wheel, the only way to keep in control would be to homogenise the whole system and give the world a pulp, factory produced martial art - no more the personal touch, gone is the flexibility.
Yes Casper, we all practice our Karate as a hobby, but how many instructors stand out in front of their classes and pretend that for them that's not the case, that they are the new generation of masters? And that's where we get stuck, high graded instructors pretending to wear master Ohtsuka's clothes. That is why we see a proliferation of those willing to hook up with the latest fad to add to their Wado, I know I'm being cynical here but is it perhaps that they have an Ohtsuka shaped hole in their lives?
A Japanese Wado Sensei I trained under told us that very late in his life Ohtsuka regretted that he'd created a system that was so complex, he wished he'd made it crash, bang, kick punch, because, he said, no one around him seems to have grasped what he was getting at!. Ueshiba is reported to have said something similar at the end of his life.
Ben, you said that we were lucky to have film of Ohtsuka and students who trained with him, but really what does that film tell us, it's only exterior form. And as for the students of Ohtsuka, wellÂ….sometimes I wonder how many Ohtsukas who were Wado masters there were in Japan between the years 1939 and 1982, because I find it difficult to believe that the students of Ohtsuka I've trained under were all from the same system! On the surface I saw good pulp Wado, but the real difference was in the detail. With the best of them I think we still see Ohtsuka, but it's like looking at him through frosted glass.
I take your point about the competition thing, but it kind of fits in with what Ohtsuka said in his book, relating to young people and Tanren.
Also when you mentioned, " Because lately the leaders of Wado has decided to revisit the old Jujutsu of their art and began to teach it again." I don't think it ever went away, there were those who did the University Wado and those who were close to Ohtsuka and got the full deal.
Hello Liam!
Glad to know you have some Wado-ryu experience. So we are speaking the same language
About GM Otsuka's films. Well, like I said, at least we know how he looks like at his late 80s, how he moves at that age, and how he performs certain techniques. True, it's only a moving picture and it cannot teach us anything. But for nostalgia's sake, I am still emotionally moved to see this great person in action.
You are right, there are so many interpretations and versions of what Otsuka sensei are doing. I see Suzuki sensei (WIKF) does his thing, then Hakoishi sensei (JKF-WK) doing something that is different with what Suzuki are doing, and then I see Shiomitsu sensei (WRR) doing something that was never shown by Suzuki and Hakoishi... kind of confusing eh? Off course they all said "I learned THIS from the Grandmaster!". OK, but there are certain details that are so different, for example when executing Tedori (that's the first Jujutsu technique from Idori), Suzuki sensei simply throws his Uke, strike him and let go, while Hakoishi sensei does a (wrenchingly painful) armbar after the strike. The Grandmaster is no longer with us so we cannot clarify which one is the "right" one. So I just do what I always do: learn both approaches and take them as equally valid. And since both approaches works well in self-defense simulations, I have nothing to lose
And so...I consider what they're doing as Wado-mosaic, let's say that each of them Wado-masters learned things from the Grandmaster, interpret and modify what they saw to fit their personal liking, then transmit it to the next generation. As a third generation Wadoka, I think its more important to try to learn as much as we can, so we can collect as much Wado-mosaic as possible. All the people who has "felt the hand of Otsuka" are elder citizen now (even my own teacher is 65 yrs old) and a couple of decades from now they all will be joining Otsuka sensei in the Great Tatami in the Sky. So it is important to preserve their teachings. What they taught might not be 100% similar with what the Grandmaster were teaching, but even 60%-70% similarities is fine by me. It's better to have something that is close than not having anything at all.
BTW, you are right about Wado's Jujutsu never went away. It just getting pushed to the background for a while, to the point of being grossly de-emphasized that many of us young brats does not recognize any Jujutsu anymore within Wado. If you want to call this degeneration then go ahead, it is! That is why I try to pursue as much Wado Jujutsu as I can. Even though I am in JKF-WK camp, I'd love to go to Japan someday and train with GM Otsuka 2nd. I heard only good things about his Jujutsu skills. He has a menkyokaiden in Shindo Yoshin-ryu so that's kind of no surprise
And about Wado masters trying to be the next Otsuka sensei.. well even Otsuka sensei himself doesn't want to emulate Nakayama Tatsusaburo or Funakoshi or Mabuni or Motobu or any of his teachers.. He took the best teachings of his teachers and create something new. So he was a pioneer. There will never be another Otsuka sensei, just like there will never be another Uyeshiba sensei or another Kano sensei. For sure, we have many great Wado teachers. Hakoishi sensei has wonderful techniques, Suzuki sensei are incredible, Shiomitsu sensei moves very well, Jiro sensei moves almost like his father, and my teacher knows plenty of tricks. But none of them can be considered the next Otsuka sensei.
I also agree with you that Wado-ryu is a very complex martial arts. But it's kind of expected from a style which combines Jujutsu with Okinawan Kenpo, both are already complex arts. The answer to this depth and complexity are separate groups with their own specializations. In the future I foresee that there will be people who's doing Wado with more Jujutsu-flavor (like myself), there will be sport-Karate oriented Wado-people (like the majority of JKF guys), and also people who try to maintain balance between Karate and Jujutsu/self-defense aspects of Wado (like the WIKF guys). I think all approaches are valid, and it will give several choices for people who would like to delve deeper into certain aspects of Wado.
Och no, I am rambling again! :O Must be too much Seishan!
Take care!
Ben