« Shintaido: The body is a message of the universe » written by Hiroyuki Aoki
A Shintaido of American Podcast Series.
Watch/Rewatch the Release Party on YouTube.
This Shintaido of America podcast series was produced by a group of volunteers. Technical support funding was generously provided through the Joe Zawielski Memorial Fund and Shintaido of America membership dues.
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EPISODES
Episode 1 : Episode 2 : Episode 3 : Episode 4 : Episode 5
Episode 6 : Episode 7 : Episode 8 : Episode 9 : Episode 10
Episode 11 : Episode 12 : Episode 13 : Episode 14
Episode 1: âThe atom bomb inspires an avant-garde martial artâ
Section of the Book:
About the Author and Book by Shintaido of America
Introduction by Michael Thompson
Translatorâs Note by H.F. Ito
Life, Burn by Hiroyuki Aoki
Episode 1 introduces us to Hiroyuki Aoki, the founder of Shintaido. Master Shintaido instructors Michael Thompson and H.F. Ito offer their perspectives, while the last essay was written by the young Mr. Aoki before Shintaido was established.
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Hiroyuki Aoki, the founder of Shintaido, has been called a âpioneer,â and the discipline he created with the Rakutenkai group in the 1960s has been called âan avant-garde martial art.â As children, Aoki and members of the group experienced the bombing of Japan during World War Two, and many lost family members to the atomic bomb. But even as the technology of war continued to increase its destructive power, these young people dove deep into the traditional fighting techniques of Japanese martial arts to transform the essence of these ancient teachings into a movement discipline for modern society.
As one of Aokiâs students, Michael Thompson, writes: âShintaido contains elements of the martial arts which appear violent and meditation which is quite calm and peaceful. They are not any more mutually exclusive than the two hemispheres of our brain.â
Another of Aokiâs students, Haruyoshi Ito, writes: âThe more violence is turned into a form of spiritual garbage through misunderstanding and suppression, the more virulent is its odor when the cap blows off and it is finally releasedâŠâ
Mr Aokiâs aim in founding the Rakutenkai group was to seek creative solutions to the psychological, interpersonal, and ecological challenges of violence. Along the way, they invented an amazing system of training for both body and mind that can benefit everyone, regardless of age, gender, or physical condition.
This is the story of the body movement discipline they created in answer to the challenges of modernity: Shintaido, the ânew body way.â
Images from the book
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Episode 2: âWhat is Shintaido?â
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 1: What is Shintaido?
In Episode 2, Aoki describes the basic character of Shintaido as a system of body movement that can be a guide to solving problems within ourselves, in our relationships with others, and even in our relationship to the cosmos, the source of our lives.
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âAs a mood or feeling, Shintaido is more religious and artistic than scientific. It is more emotional and primitive than rational,â writes Shintaidoâs founder, Hiroyuki Aoki. âIt involves cooperation more than competition in its movements. But it is cooperation that emphasizes individual expression, rather than passive group enjoyment.⊠Shintaido cannot be understood by trying to pigeon-hole it into traditional or popular categories such as martial arts, gymnastics, health fads, or religion.â
The difficulty of creating an art that overcomes barriers to mutual understanding is something Aoki understands well. Shintaido grows from the soil of Japanâs ancient traditions, but it is not necessary to âturn Japaneseâ to master it. A child of the 1960s, Shintaido speaks to an international audience and invites everyone to experience movement that is not ââŠconstrained by tense shoulders, âŠ[and] clenched fists, but rather one in which our hands and bodies are open to our partner and our neighbor in a gesture of respect, forgiveness and acceptance.â Thinking about body movement this way, it is easier to see how Shintaido, although born from the masters of the samurai tradition, may be closer in spirit to master artists such as Gauguin or William Blake.
Images from the book
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Episode 3: âMeeting karate master Egami-senseiâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Introduction to Chapter 2
– Section 1: Meeting Master Shigeru Egami
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Before Shintaido was created decades ago, its founder, Hiroyuki Aoki, was a young student of drama and visual art. It was only by accident â when his acting teacher suggested that he should study karate to improve his acting skills â that he met karate master Shigeru Egami. Aokiâs artistic approach to body movement gave impetus to the discipline that eventually became Shintaido.
âAs a lover of music and art, I also wanted Shintaido to have the same value as the works of Bach or Mozart in music, or as the works of Michelangelo, Cezanne or Picasso in the world of art, or as the great works of literature.⊠The philosophy of these artists in the modern period is as familiar to most Japanese as boiled rice and miso soup.â
Egamiâs approach to karate was already far from traditional. Aoki writes that according to Egami ââŠthe practice of karate involves competition within oneself. ⊠He completely changed the traditional and feudalistic conception of our practice.⊠Through his teaching, karate movement suddenly approached the basic thinking of the artists and philosophers I had always admiredâŠâ And yet, his artistic drive led the young Aoki to feel confused: having become the highest-ranking black belt under his teacher, he was on the certain pathway of an apprentice, poised to take over master Egamiâs Shotokai karate school. But the pathway of an artist demands constant exploration and often impels one to pursue the unexpected and the uncertain.
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Episode 4: âHow is a karate master like a symphonic conductor?â
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 2: Gorei as conducting and classical studies through kata
Read more about Episode 4
Imagine that you are watching a group of dancers, or martial artists, moving in synchronization, the group naturally breathing as one, timing synchronized to the microsecond, but not with military rigidity â they are moving with the naturalness and grace a school of fish or a flock of birds. The scene shifts to a classical orchestra, each section and each musician contributing a part, which the conductor weaves together into a spectacular whole.
Part of Aokiâs inspiration in Shintaido was gained through the perspiration as master Egamiâs disciple, leading karate training in his school. The choreographer, the orchestral conductor, and the karate master all share something in common: the ability to âorchestrateâ group activity, to give âgoreiâ (ć·ä»€). Aoki describes his experience leading classes in the Shotokai karate training hall: âOnce I started to lead the whole class using a gorei, I was never allowed to break my concentration even for a second.â
In Shintaido, the aim of the leader has shifted away from preparing the participants for combat, and has moved much closer to that of the choreographer or conductor: letting the individual talent of each person shine, while contributing positively to the life of the whole. Under Egamiâs direction, Aoki also immersed himself in the classical kata of karate, researching and documenting them in detail. But his goals lay beyond the preservation of a great tradition. âThe difficult task of collecting these karate kata continued,â writes Aoki, âas well as my study of other body movements. Eventually, this all blossomed into Tenshingoso (the Five Cosmic Breaths), âŠwhich became the first basic technique (or kata) of Shintaido.â
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Episode 5: âThe martial arts and the evolution of consciousnessâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 3: the martial arts and the history of the evolution of consciousness
Read more about Episode 5
Although Shintaido is a ânewâ body way, it exists on the foundation of an ancient samurai warrior tradition. But when guns were appeared on the battlefields of Japan in the 16th century, it changed the calculus. Imagine fighters who had trained for years integrating movement, mental focus, and breathing to attain an advantage on the battlefieldâ killed en masse in short time by a less-trained but better-equipped army, their training and armor suddenly tactically useless against this new weapon.
From the introduction of guns in mediaeval Japan and onward, technological developments in warfare branched off in one direction, leading to the atomic bomb and other advances in military hardware, a trend which continues to this day.
The musket by itself did not cause the elite samurai warriors to become interested in meditation, calligraphy, landscape painting, tea ceremony, and other art forms. But it did make clear that in the modern age, military victories are achieved largely by technological superiority. Meanwhile, the spiritual aspect of the warriorâs âcombatâ grew into the samurai philosophy of living perfectly up to the moment of death. In a sense, the atomic bomb in 1945 may have revealed a similar truth as rifles did in the 16th century: if the goal is simply winning, technology is decisive. But the ancient martial arts include a kind of âtechnologyâ of movement that works with the mind and body and connects us to nature. Much of this traditional body âtechnologyâ (or rather, systematic set of training techniques) has little to do with battles, fighting, winning and losing. These teachings are the starting point of Shintaido.
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Episode 6: âAn ancient sword master expands space-timeâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 4: The sword technique of Hariyaga Sekiun: expanding time, space, and energy
Read more about Episode 6
Imagine two samurai warriors of nearly-even status and skill, facing each other on a narrow bridge in the mountains, both wanting to cross, and both honor-bound not to back down. In a few moments, one of them will be dead, and neither knows if it will be him or his opponent. At this moment when everything becomes silent just before the battle, both are striving to sense even the smallest hint of the impulse to move, the slightest sound of the weight shifting in anticipation of an attack. They are intensely âtuned-inâ to each other. Each oneâs knows that his survival may depend on his capacity for mindfulness. The slightest gap in attention might mean instant death.
At this moment, we might say that these âopponentsâ are in a sense âunified.â This was the insight of the mediaeval swordsman Hariyaga Sekiun, and his insight was tested in practice multiple times. Sekiunâs philosophy was influenced by Zen, and his teaching aimed to strip away occult practices and pre-conceived responses to an attack. Therefore Aoki considers Sekiun to be in the same category as avant-garde artists of the modern era, who changed our way of seeing. He clarifies the relevance of a thinker like Sekiun: ââŠ[E]ven though the present time is far different than the classic age of martial arts, it offers many new directions and adversaries which must be confronted. We have the responsibility and obligation to express our opinions and beliefs to our nation and our leaders, especially in regard to social and environmental problems. Our movement, therefore, must be different from what has come before.â
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Episode 7: âPutting the art back into the martial artsâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 5: developing a modern martial art
Read more about Episode 7
If ancient movement artsâif we widen our focus beyond martial arts to include, for example, traditional Japanese Noh theater or tea ceremonyâif these ways of movement are not just âmuseum piecesâ but are still relevant for us today as contemporary, living systems of physical training; then we might ask if they should be not just revived or preserved, but somehow re-invented. Aoki explains his goals in the process of inventing Shintaido, as he writes:
âBy using body movement, we could regain a measure of the genuine communication which has almost disappeared from our lives, and at the same time, repair our bodies and minds from the damaging effects of modern civilization.âŠ
âAfter retracing the last three hundred years of martial arts history, I concluded that just as modern art had to be created in its own historical context, the martial arts could be adapted to modern conditions, and the forms and movements would be completely different from the traditional styles.
ââŠ[T]he simple study of classical methods never produces a new way of expression. One cannot be an Andy Warhol merely by practicing drawing for a prescribed amount of time. Similarly, I did not limit my study to karate and the other martial arts in this limited way.â The purpose of Shintaido, as Aoki summarizes it, is ââŠnot to preserve old classical forms and transmit them to succeeding generations,â but to use ââŠa body movement or the martial arts to examine the conditions of our own age.â
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Episode 8: âThe locus of one swing of the sword is a signâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 6: the locus described by the swing of the sword is itself a signâ stripping away spirituality
Read more about Episode 8
âWhat is cutting?â– this question, which seems simple, reminds us of a koan, the genre of seemingly nonsensical questions or proverbs used as teaching occasions in Zen. Generally there are no verbal koans in Shintaido, because it is above all a body movement discipline. But might there be such a thing as a physical koan, a quest or a question âaskedâ in the language of movement? Aokiâs answer to the question âWhat is cutting?â is mysterious: âThe locus of the swing of the sword is itself a sign,â which suggests that the answer is yes.
Aoki reveals the process by which he arrived at this formulation, which grew from an urge to strip away everything that he perceived as unnecessary, to eliminate any artificial elements or superficial âspiritualâ meanings, leaving only the essential, primordial aspects of the movements to shine through. He describes his approach: âI tried to remove all spiritual gloss until we could reach a âzero pointâ ⊠Finally the day came when the meaning of all techniques became zero for meâŠâ From this description, we might get a glimpse of the process by which Shintaido was invented, we might even say the âparadigm shiftâ that happened for Aoki in the quest to invent Shintaido.
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Episode 9: âDiscovering the world of true natural body movementâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 7: Looking for the strongest technique
Read more about Episode 9
What do a cobbler, an infant, and a Buddhist statue have in common? This may sound at first like the set-up for a joke, or simply an absurd question. But in fact, here Aoki describes how his search for principles of truly natural movement led beyond the formulaic prescriptions common in many traditional martial arts. âEven though babies have had no physical training, their expression of power is so strong and automatic that it is difficult for us to imitate,â he writes. Paradoxically, he sees a similarity in the movements of master craftsmen (who of course are highly trained): âOn close inspection, I discovered that as an artisan works, his seemingly slow movements are soft and devoid of shoulder tension.â Integrating these observations with the study of the postures and hand gestures of ancient Buddhist statues led Aoki to the signature gesture of Shintaido called âkai sho ken,â the wide-open hand with palm and fingers completely stretched and extended. Aoki describes this discovery: âI finally found that the open hand⊠was stronger than the hardest fist because when we open our hands, we can automatically express the full power of our life energy.â In combination with other hand positions such as a tight fist or a completely relaxed hand, the open hand becomes one of the fundamentals of the holistic training system that was soon to be named âShintaido.â
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Episode 10: âGiving voice to the hidden cosmic breathâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 8: Tenshingosoâ an embodiment of the hidden cosmic breath
Read more about Episode 10
Episode 10 describes the creation of the foundational kata (a sequence of movements) of Shintaido, which in the title of this section Aoki calls âan embodiment of the hidden cosmic breath.â In Aokiâs mind, this kata, like a great work of art, should be ââŠan embodiment and expression of the common Tao of many different disciplines, [which] simulates the cycle of a human life and even the rhythm of the cosmos.â He also intended that the kata should be concise and simple, take only a few minutes to practice, be accessible to wide range of people, require little space, help us focus on the infinite horizon, support a bright, well-rounded character, and function as an antidote to the routine discouragements of daily life. The sequence of movements, usually accompanied by the vocalizations, that emerged after a thorough process of testing and refinement was named Tenshingoso, the Five Breaths of Cosmic Reality.
Aoki acknowledges that he achieved these ambitious aims by âstanding on the shoulders of giants,â as Isaac Newton said, and expresses his gratitude to his former teacher Shigeru Egami of Shotokai karate-do, and to master Hoken Inoue (also called Noriako Inoue) and his art of Shinwa Taido (also called Shinâei Taido). Inoue was the nephew of Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido. In many traditional martial arts, such a kata, a nugget of essential knowledge of the discipline, would be kept as a secret, known only to the select few. But Aokiâs aim was different than that of traditional martial arts, and so Tenshingoso â the Five Breaths of Cosmic Reality â was made a central pillar of Shintaido, and anyone who practices may start learning it during the first lesson.
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Episode 11: âScream to the sky: the gyroscope of Shintaidoâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 2: How Shintaido was born
– Section 9: The birth of Eiko â the gyroscope of Shintaido
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Imagine that you are being invited to join a series of trainings or practices that are described like this:
People joining this training have to put their house in order before each practice, as if they might not return. Our purpose is to discover our physical limits and the threshold of the unknown world which begins at the end of our psychological strength.
These were the conditions for the people who invented Shintaido, the Rakutenkai group, which was formed under Hiroyuki Aokiâs leadership in 1965. In the last episode, we heard about Tenshingoso, the five breaths of cosmic reality. This episode presents the other fundamental form of Shintaido: Eiko no ken, the âsword of glory,â known now simply as Eiko or âglory,â which Aoki describes as the âgyroscopeâ of Shintaido.
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Episode 12: âPlaying with lightâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 3: What Shintaido has conceived: Hikari to tawamureru â âplaying with lightâ
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Imagine that in creating Shintaido, expert martial artists were asked to commit themselves fully to a partner exercise — in Japanese « kumite » — that was nothing like « sparring, » that was completely outside the norms and standard practices of any traditional martial art. Aoki describes Hikari to Tawamureru, meaning « playing with light » like this: « All that is required is that we express ourselves as simply and sincerely as possible, regardless of our physical strength. It is not even necessary to move. It is enough simply to play or just be present. This kumite is a revival of the childhood expression that we lost by growing up
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Episode 13: âTo overcome the barriers to mutual understandingâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 4: To overcome the barriers to mutual understanding
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Teaching and learning â sharing knowledge as opposed to mere information â is a profound process that changes the lives of the individuals involved. The types of social relationships that exist in Japan â Shintaidoâs country of origin â are different than those in the USA or Europe. Logically, this has a powerful impact on how we understand the teaching and learning process. In this episode of the podcast, Aoki shares his insights into this question from the perspective of an author of an entire body of knowledge â a body of knowledge that grew from Japanese soil, but has taken root in the USA, Canada, Australia, Europe, and elsewhere outside Japan.
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Episode 14: âHow to make this age betterâ
Section of the Book:
Part 1: The Philosophy and History of Shintaido
– Chapter 5: How to make this age better
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âCreativity is not the exclusive province of artists and artistic expression. If we stop the automatic acts of daily life, surrendering yesterdayâs happenings and separating ourselves from the old self of one day ago, through an act of our will, we will discover a new life of continuing satori, or many small enlightenmentsâŠâ With these words, Aoki succinctly brings home the relationship between the physical movement practice of Shintaido and its meaning in the broader context of so-called âspiritualâ traditions, and most importantly, describes its immediate application to our daily lives.