S
SammyB57
Guest
Any info or input on the Fugukukai or Karl Geis?
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It always surprises me when I encounter instructors of other Aikido styles who have nothing but contempt for both Fugakukai and Shodokan/Tomiki. A few years ago I attended a workshop in Los Angeles with a very well known Japanese Aikidoka and he was very complimentary all weekend, until he asked what style I studied. After hearing that I'd trained under Karl Geis and Tetsuro Nariyama, I couldn't do anything right in his eyes.
There's a lot of that. I don't know where it comes from.
My sensei is a rokudan from Karl's school. While we're not part of the Fugakukai, we do teach the same non-competition Tomiki aikido. However, what we do isn't very well accepted with the greater aikido community - to the extent that I've been told by a Tomiki sensei in Japan that because of my lineage, what I'm doing isn't really aikido.
It's frustrating.
I and some others here train in Nihon Goshin Aikido and we can identify with these two points, We've heard that what we do isn't Aikdio because our style doesn't come from O'Sensei's lineage. We've heard that we shouldn't call our art Aikido, and all the rest of that crap. I don't find it frustrating and I bother trying to enlightent the other person, their ignorance is their sensei's problem to handle.
Oximoron?? You welcome other Aikidoka to train at your dojo as long as they realize they are guest, but you like to train their styles?As for finding a dojo that teaches your style or not training at all, well, my friend, if you show up at my door to train you're welcome to train. I don't care what other style of aikido you study so long as you understand that it's my dojo and you are a guest. I'm always looking to train with other aikido-ka (and really any other stylist out there) to learn other ways of doing things. Several members of this board have standing offers to visit and train at our school here in the Roanoke, Va area. Check the link in my sig line for my local school.
Oximoron?? You welcome other Aikidoka to train at your dojo as long as they realize they are guest, but you like to train their styles?
I have read before people finding uneasy because they learnt one way of doing things and then because they have to move, they go to a new dojo and have problems to adapt. I don't think that should be a problem. If you go to a dojo you learn what is taught there...in the future you will find your own Aikido when you have knowledge enough to decide.
Not an oxymoron at all. What I mean by that statement is that I don't expect someone to come to my dojo and tell me that what I am doing is wrong because his/her style doesn't do it that way. I expect them to be courteous enough to point out that there are differences between the way my style does it and the way theirs does it. At that point we can explore the differences. I would not dream of walking into another man's dojo and telling him that what he was doing was wrong...because I am his quest. It's a simple matter of respecting your host.
I think the fractionalization is based on the fact that we are drawn to arts whose focus is in line with our own preferences.