What is Iaido?
Iaido, in a nutshell, is the art of drawing and cutting in one movement with the Japanese sword, in reponse to an attack, then cleaning the blade and sheathing it. It is about winning from the sheathed sword, and is one of Japan's oldest koryu (old style) martial arts, with many different ryu (styles) surviving to this day. The lineage of Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu goes back approximately 450 years to the founder Hayashizaki Jinsuke Shigenobu. Today as then the emphasis is on control and precision of the sword, but the goal is the control and precision of the mind of the practitioner, not the death of another. Practitioners spend years whittling away unnecessary motions to achieve direct and highly efficient action. Practice developes the practitioner physicaly and mentally by developing physical strength, especially in the legs and hips, as well as enhancing awareness, posture, poise, focus, calmness, and centeredness. The forms are deceptively easy looking,-- much of this art is subtle or "hidden". To the casual observer the kata seem simple and unadorned, and in general the more skillful the exponent the more boring it seems.