Thursday, August 8, 2024

My martial arts career?(4)

 Some 27 years since I last set on the tatami at Dun Hong and my short career in aikido came to a sudden end, I began to feel something itching again. For a long time I had the idea that I once more wanted to do something like aikido and when I turned 60, it felt it had to be now if ever, because if I would wait till 75, I might be just a tiny bit too late to adapt to rolling on that mat again. So 5 years before my retirement I once again started training aikido in Hoorn with Heike Funk, student of Wilko Vriesman in the Tissier line.

I have always cherished a certain fascination for the spiritual side of religion(s) and now I started to delve into and read some more about the Eastern Wisdom traditions of Buddhism and Taoism. With that (or because of it?) the Chinese tradition and the Chinese martial arts also came more into the picture for me.

In the meantime, the internet took off as an open source of information with blogs, e-books, online courses and what have you not. Then the smartphone made its appearance on the scene and the so-called social media took off. (aren’t we lucky?)

I started following people like Peter Ralston, Bruce Frantzis and Adam Mizner online and subscribed to the Energy Arts site for some time.

In this manner I killed much of my sparetime as a pensioner. The Chinese side of the game gradually became more prominent for me as a source of knowledge and inspiration than the Japanese narratives. Although they sort of intertwined, the principles and the backgrounds of the game made more sense to me through the Chinese sources, while the aikido training seemed to be more focused on specific aspects of the techniques.

 In my hometown I started taking qigong/tai chi classes with Rina Kappelhof until the time corona struck and then with Natalie Bosscher.

 Miles Kessler, an aikido and meditation teacher from Tel Aviv, had also discovered the internet with his Integral Dojo and organized a so-called tele-summit in 2017 titled Aikido at the Leading Edge. Through that I came into contact with Martijn van Hemmen, while I was in France for a seminar with Hiroshi Ikeda, and continued my aikido practice from spring/summer 2018 at Yuishinkai aikido in Alkmaar. That is still the case today. Many of these training sessions may be followed on Youtube.

To complete my martial CV: within the aikido association where I currently train I attended a number of seminars by Martijn van Hemmen and John Peter Kelly. In addition, I also attended seminars/workshops by Hiroshi Ikeda, Corky Quakenbush, Dirk Müller, Dan Harden and Stephane Bendetti.

Since I had also turned my attention to the Chinese sources, I also attended a workshop with Adam Mizner and in March 2020 I had signed up for a seminar with Howard Wang in Volendam. Then a virus just hit and blew through this world, corona measures were announced and Howard was barely able to get home to Taiwan via London. Seminar cancelled. What Huai Hsiang (Howard) Wang does is called Prana Dynamics. After that I did follow Howard online and visited Bram and Kris' group in Antwerp twice, the second time under the guidance of Howard himself.

When that damned virus, or rather the reactions to it, made many meetings impossible and closed off so many avenues, it also opened up new possibilities of meeting and doing things together, namely online; and Zoom became big and a household item. That's how I came into contact with Howard Wang and later with Paul Linden. Paul Linden is an American aikido teacher, bodyworker, and inspirer of Mark Walsh's Embodiment movement.  I will undoubtedly have some more to say about Paul Linden and his BIM at a later time, if only because I translated his book "It's all the same – except for the differences" into Dutch.

So, before and during the corona time, I snoop around the internet searching for information and/or people who can help me or have something to offer in my search for ..., yes for what...? Then through, if I'm not mistaken, videos of the Martial Man, I come across the name of Lyndon Oudsten who actually gives Kung Fu lessons at a place just around the corner. And things just went like my earlier introduction to aikido in 1981, I came round to see what that was about and I was a member of the club. Since that time I have also been taking Kung Fu lessons. If that conjures up images of Bruce Lee; What I'm doing here certainly doesn't look anything like that. Through Lyndon I was furthermore  introduced to Master Yap Boh Heong, Dennis Wang and Ortwin Lüers. All of whom can be found online through the site of the Martial Man. Within this group the following disciplines are practiced: 5 Ancestors, Wumei, Yan Shou Gong, medical qigong and Wu Ji Quan

And online I also got acquainted with Jaro Wanders, who switched from aikido to systema and gives his trainings and workshops in Sneek.

In the past decade I have found and chosen myself quite a number of first class teachers from various martial arts.  Which means that I view them all as my teachers, hold them in high esteem and rate them to be of outstanding class.

If you would ask me now whether I see myself as a martial artist or someone who aspires to earn his spurs in a martial art, which the title of these blogs somehow seems to suggest, I would say: no definitely not. I guess I’ll have some more to say about that in a next blog post.

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