Hello Everyone,
Like the title says I'd like to know how aikido calms the mind. Right now I'm having a little trouble with anxiety, including panic attacks and the like. I'm seeing a doc for it and even taking some meds. I'm also trying yoga. They help but I've read that some martial arts help develop a calm mind and I'm interesting in practicing one. I can see how something like tai chi can help calm you, with the slow rhythmic movements and breathing. But aikido, with its throw and joint locks seems counter-intuitive, to this non-practitioner, to a calm mind.
Sorry for the long preface but I wanted to put the question in context.
Thanks.
I don't do Aikido, I've seen it. But I am not a person who does it. So I really can't answer your question and I don't want to come off pretentious or want "am an expert" kudos for pulling info off Wikipedia.
I practice an old traditional Japanese jujutsu. I don't want to confuse that with modern jujutsu like BJJ - a fine art, I just don't do it, and can't speak for it, or on it's behalf. I don't want to mislead people to think am an expert in something I am not.
From my training and experience it is my understanding what you need, in Zen training. That is if your preference is to keep it all Japanese. Aikido, and I will let someone in Aikido answer this better, is focused on a unique philosophy a blend of a Japanese religion and martial arts philosophy that is about non-violence as to not kill or maim the other person. I don't know if is about reducing anxiety unless a particular sensei has studied zen or psychology and incorporates it into his dojo. It is my belief that, such a thing is acceptable and is still considered Aikido. There is a margin for that as long as the main founding principals are upheld of Aikido.
My Jujutsu practice doesn't offer me that peace of mind Taichi (which I do) or yoga does (which I have taken a class), or even doing a Karate kata, or what am told offered by Kyudo, or evening running. Based on the similarities between my jujutsu and Aikido in practice I don't think you are going to get a peace of mind your looking for. Taking ukemi (falls) isn't a peaceful mediative experience, now is having your joints manipulated. The other side of things when practicing a jujutsu waza or possibly as I am assuming, an Aikido waza like the common and universal kote gaeshi requires a level of engagement that requires a type of full concentration and precision, not to injure your uke (training partner). If don't want to go around hurting people, they will not train with you.
After a good practice, yes like any activity of physical exertion at the end there is a euphoria after practice, you have those endorphins and adrenaline flowing. You feel happy, without mental worries etc. But that isn't the practice of, it is the result of. Taichi I find after a few minutes I feel at peace that stays with me the whole class, I call it a moving mediation. I don't call jujutsu that, I would think it the same for Aikido. I could be wrong, as I am not a person who does Aikido. I am just basing that off similarities between the arts I recognize they share.
You ultimately have to find what works for you and Aikido might. It might not be the art as a whole rather a specific dojo or instructor that offers or fits your needs.