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Rules and Etiquette |
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When you train in Aikido, you are entering into a contract with your partners to train for your mutual benefit. When you enter the training hall, you are to devote yourself to the study & practice of Aikido. |
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There are other aspects of etiquette that are not addressed here. Be alert and observant and try to pick them up quickly. Aikido is not an entirely risk-free practice. Regular Aikido practice is dangerous enough without adding unnecessary risks. Initially, for beginners, the purpose of the etiquette is to minimize injury and to ensure that the time to study and practice Aikido is used efficiently. Aikido is a "Do"; a Way, or Path.
In Japanese culture there are numerous Do; there is Chado, the Way of
Tea, Shodo, the Way of the Brush, Kendo, the Way of the Sword. Aikido
is the Way of Harmony, of blending your energy with the energy of an
attack or other challenge. By bowing to our partners, we are offering
the gift of a challenge, and we are thanking them for the gift they
have bestowed on us. Aikido can be a lifetime path, and over time the
continual reaffirmation of respect and gratitude can spill over into
our lives off the mat, on the job, for instance, or in our commute.
If one is sincerely grateful every waking minute of their day, frustration,
anger and worry can find no place to enter and take root in his or her
life. |
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