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Showing posts from April, 2026
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  Zanshin: The Remaining Mind in Japanese Martial Arts In the dojo, as in life, the most critical moments often come not during the peak of action, but in the quiet that follows. This is the essence of zanshin —the “remaining mind” or “lingering awareness”—a concept that permeates the classical Japanese martial arts we practice at Itten Dojo. Over more than five decades of training, beginning with Isshinryu karate in 1975 and extending through kenjutsu, aikijutsu and aikido, Muso Jikiden Eishin-ryu iaido, and Nihon Jujutsu, I have come to see zanshin not as some abstract philosophical ideal, but as a practical, trainable state of being that separates competent technique from true mastery. It is the calm, alert readiness that persists after the cut, the throw, or the release of the arrow. Without it, even the most flawless execution is incomplete, for the opponent—or the challenges of daily life—does not vanish the instant your strike lands. Read more at https://www.ittendojo.org/a...
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  The April edition of Sword and Spirit has been posted. In “The Life of Hayashizaki Jinsuke Minamoto no Shigenobu,” guest contributor Jack James Sensei shares what is clearly the most extensively researched and documented history in English of Hayashizaki Jinsuke Shigenobu, the founder of iaido. James Sensei works as a translator and interpreter in Fukuoka, Japan. He has won the Fukuoka Prefectural Taikai across multiple grades and has represented Fukuoka at the All Japan Iaido Championships. He studies Muso Shinden Jushin Ryu and leads the Higashi Wakahisa Iaido Branch of Jushin Ryu Tekisuijuku. James Sensei is currently the only non-Japanese instructor teaching this tradition in Japan. In addition to his training and teaching, James Sensei devotes his time to researching the history of iaido, with a particular focus on Hayashizaki Jinsuke Minamoto no Shigenobu and the art’s development within the Tosa Domain. We are deeply grateful to James Sensei for his permission to reprin...