Friday 9 December 2011

Let Aikido Happen


A lot is written about spirituality and aikido, more so than most martial forms I suspect, but it is not inherently more spiritual than any of the rest of them.  We can make it a spiritual practise, or we can practise on the level of form alone.  It’s all good.

We practise Japanese martial arts in a dojo, which translates I understand as, the place of training in the Way.  The Way is a term used in Japanese culture to describe a practise in which we totally immerse ourselves, and use it to enter a state of flow, mushin or ‘no mind’.  It is this state that allows complete creativity and responsiveness without the conscious mind processing everything first and slowing it all down.

Anything can be practised like this.  Thich Nhat Hahn speaks of washing the dishes.  When we wash the dishes are we complaining to ourselves about having to do this, or looking forward to the cup of tea afterwards?  Are we thinking about work or recalling a past event?  We could try placing our entire attention on the act we are engaged in, feeling the warmth of the water, the smell of the soap, the glint of sunlight on the clean glass.  Washing the dishes this way we pay less attention to thoughts of future and past and more to the present moment and perhaps discover that the act of washing the dishes is an enjoyable one.

Obviously the same applies to martial arts.  So we pay close attention to the connection between ourselves and our partner. See everything in the moment, as it is, not anticipating, not thinking ‘I will move this foot next, then this hand’ but being in the moment.  Practising aikido one realises that the more we pay attention to the moment, to our partner, to our surroundings as they currently are at any moment, the better we act as martial artists, the freer and more creative we become, the less likely to be hit in the face.  Zanshin is used to describe this state of mind.  Know where everyone is in the dojo at all times.  Know where you are placing your attention.  Is it here?  Now? Fully?

We can practise alone like this. We can practise walking meditation alone. We can sit in meditation alone.  In aikido we practise meditation in a group. We move from person to person throughout the practise and attempt to put aside our egos to let aikido happen.