Osu!

Remember we were going meet up when you visited the U.K.? It turns out I’m busy that week…washing my hair 👨🏽‍🦲
I completely understand, but i am not a criminal, I’m a health care professional who is a law abiding citizen despite appearances to the contrary. I am ill mannered and uncouth by British standards I’m sure. You could always tell people you were just giving charitable advice to a needy individual. We could also find a dark corner of a low end pub to meet if that would make you more comfortable. My wife certainly uses both of the aforementioned tactics to avoid admitting her relationship to me. 😁
 
My first Taiji teacher was one of the pioneers of karate in Sweden, one of Blumings original students. He traveled to Japan to study with Oyama, as he told me he couldn’t stand the atmosphered at Oyamas dojo that was full of yakuza folks
Attila Meszaros? I think he was supposedly the one that started the first kyokushing club in sweden, in gothenburg sometime in the 60's, and if I don't remember incorrectly was a student of Bluming in Holland, after he had came back from Japan. This is all as per our history that is part of the gradings.
 
In Shotokan karate it’s sometimes pointed out its connection to traditions of the Jigen-ryu sword school, interesting is that jigen-ryu fencers only bow when entering the dojo floor then when in the dojo everyone are considered enemies and only sounds leaving the mouths on the floor are very prolonged and terrifying kiais, no room for cozy oss breaks.
Not in my Shotokan experience. You bow in like most other styles, and we bowed out as well, but never was your school mates considered enemies, even when hard sparring. Now the Kiai sounds I fully agree with.
More of a traditional Shotokan school I suppose.
 
In Shotokan karate it’s sometimes pointed out its connection to traditions of the Jigen-ryu sword school, interesting is that jigen-ryu fencers only bow when entering the dojo floor then when in the dojo everyone are considered enemies and only sounds leaving the mouths on the floor are very prolonged and terrifying kiais, no room for cozy oss breaks.
Jigen-ryu was the sword style of the Satsuma Samurai. Very aggressive. (BTW, they were known for their kiai.)
Three of their teachings are:

Do not draw lightly.
Have faith in the 1st attack - if you need a 2nd, you've already lost.
The sword is a tool to defeat the enemy, not a tool to protect oneself with.

The "Grandfather of Karate," Matsumura, was versed in this style.

Matsumura's student, Itosu Anko, taught Chibana Chosin who named his art "shorin ryu. Chibana inherited the same no-nonsense attitude: "...you have to think that if you kick, you try to kick the enemy to death. If you punch, you must thrust to kill. If you strike, then you strike to kill the enemy." He deserves an "osu!"
 
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Not in my Shotokan experience. You bow in like most other styles, and we bowed out as well, but never was your school mates considered enemies, even when hard sparring. Now the Kiai sounds I fully agree with.
More of a traditional Shotokan school I suppose.
No it’s the Jigen ryu sword school that hold the “everyone an enemy in the dojo”, I meant that Shotokan that hold an relation to Jigen ryu didn’t adopt that attitude, they only took to them the “one cut, one kill” remodeled it a little into “one punch, one kill”
 
Attila Meszaros? I think he was supposedly the one that started the first kyokushing club in sweden, in gothenburg sometime in the 60's, and if I don't remember incorrectly was a student of Bluming in Holland, after he had came back from Japan. This is all as per our history that is part of the gradings.
Hannes Maass, around with Attila Meszaros and Marshal McDonagh in those early days of Swedish karate history
 
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