Saturday, October 31, 2009
Self Defense
Friday, July 31, 2009
A Famous Photograph of O Sensei
An old man walking, aware
this moment is being
preserved,
watering with a practiced hand
green, green plants in black & white
with grace and harmony.
Another image: at night, at war,
far, far away, after Curtis LeMay’s
incendiaries turn the dojo roof
to yellow flame. It falls to the
old man’s son, Kisshomaru, to
water with efficient desperation.
No photographer, no green,
green plants. Alone, on a roof, watering
to preserve an old man’s dream.
© Hal Taylor, April 30, 2008
[Based on a picture of O Sensei watering plants in Iwama found in Invincible Warrior, page 158, by John Stevens (Shambhala Publications, Inc. 1997)
My favorite picture of the Founder. He is wholly centered in his posture, even in the simple act of watering flowers. This is O Sensei at peace in Iwama, but still very much aware of his surroundings, including the photographer. The reference to his son, Kisshomaru, fighting flames that threatened to engulf the Tokyo dojo, is from the same book, pages 67-68.]
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Aikido To Me
I've been practicing Aikido for about three years now. Maybe it's not a long time, but it's enough time to turn my life around. In the past, I was searching for a way to balance my inner-self, and to find harmony between my body and mind. I was already practicing yoga, meditation, and kung-fu when I became more aware of my health, my energy level, and how it connected with my emotional state. Aikido taught me how to fully be in my body, and to expand my awareness and learning of being here and now. It was not an easy task, but it's the best way for me to connect intuition and inner wisdom.
During training, I learned how to rise above my physical conditions, how to tolerate pain and quiet my mind, how to become more focused and have fun with it. Pain became my best ally, because it showed me where I needed to change, emotionally and physically. I learned to take full responsibility for my health, to find the right knowledge, and then became my best doctor. I'm 51, and I have found my way to feel young, healthy, powerful, and to freely flow with my life.
Guly Erwin
2nd Kyu
Monday, July 6, 2009
Haiku
"Genesis"
Verticality
When added to a circle
A spiral is born
*************************
"Portrait"
White, O-Sensei's beard
Broad, his smile, watching practice
Eternal, his chi
*************************
"Kokyunage"
Blending with circle
Spiral up, balance taken
Breath spiraling down
Michael Ashley
Friday, July 3, 2009
“Trust the process…”
This is something that was explained to me in other classes that I have taken, but it also applies to Aikido.
In Aikido it is stressed that we leave our worries and concerns about the outside world outside and concentrate on what we are learning and doing while we are in the class. Unlike activities such as running and yoga, where you can find yourself wandering back to your life’s stresses and worries, Aikido is an activity that can make it very easy to put all of that out of your mind while you are training. This practice has helped me to come back to work or home feeling refreshed and rejuvenated. My husband also practices Aikido and we both have seen positive impacts on our relationship.
It is also stressed in Aikido to focus on your physical self – your breathing, your posture, your movements – so that you can feel balanced and grounded and you can get in touch with the power that is within you. I believe that this aspect will help me as I age (I am now 52) to keep good flexibility and balance, and will help maintain healthy bone density and muscle tone.
By going through the process of learning the movements and philosophy of Aikido, I believe that my life has been enriched mentally and physically, in addition to the friendships that have resulted from being around others who are caring and treat each other with respect, and who also “trust the process…”
Laura Klaich
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Interview
Rachael: I have driven my kids to everything from dance class, soccer, bowling league, trombone lessons - just to name a few. But Aikido is the one activity that has held their interest year after year. I know that aikido has made them more self confident, more able to calmly handle stressful situations, and more respectful and tolerant of others. I have seen first hand how they use the principles of aikido in everyday life, and I am so very proud of my kids!
Book Review of George Leonard's Mastery
In his book Mastery, George Leonard applies his years of training in Aikido to the process of any role in life. One of the main points of this book is that when people engage in a process, they will spend much of their time on a plateau. In the modern world, success is often rated on moments of achievement or gain. However, the master is one who enjoys the process and does not attach to outcomes.
George Leonard gives many examples of ways to apply the concept of mastery to your life, including loving the basics in Aikido. As they say, practice makes perfect! This is a quick read and well worth it.
- Reviewed by Aric Shapiro
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Reno Gazette Journal Article by Frank X. Mullen Jr.
Sensei reaches high rank in Japanese martial art
Vince Salvatore of Reno recently reached the sixth-degree black belt rank in the Japanese martial art of aikido, an honor that took decades of learning and teaching. But that doesn't mean he's a master of anything, he said. “There are no masters; you never master it,” said Salvatore, 45, owner of Aikido of Reno. “You can only try to get better with continual practice.” Salvatore apparently is the first Nevadan to reach sixth-degree rank in aikido, which means “way of spiritual harmony” in Japanese. The art was developed in Japan by Morihei Ueshiba, known as “O Sensei” (Honored Teacher) to generations of students. Ueshiba was a martial arts instructor who lived through World War II and sought a system to resolve physical conflicts without violence. The result was aikido, which makes use of techniques borrowed from jujitsu and other self-defense disciplines. An observer watching an aikido demonstrations sees a teacher's almost efforless reaction in responding to multiple attackers. Bodies fly, but nobody gets hurt. The person being attacked moves in circular patterns, flowing like water, as attackers are thrown outward. “The main focus is harmony with yourself and with whatever attack comes at you,” Salvatore said. “The idea is to neutralize an attacker, not defeat him or hurt him. It's a true self-defense art, not a sporting contest.” The techniques of aikido rely on using an opponent's own momentum against him, rather than meeting force with opposing force. For instance, a student acting as an attacker may grab a fellow student by the wrist, shoulder or arm. The defender moves with the attack, usually in a circular motion, and the attacker's own force of motion causes him to lose his balance and be guided to the floor.
Honor took him decades of learning to achieve

Salvatore trained in Iwama, Japan, for 11 years under Morihiro Saito Sensei, a direct student of Ueshiba. He came to Reno in 1998 and started his dojo (practice hall) with students from the Reno Aikido cooperative, the forerunner of Aikido of Reno. The dojo is a renovated former warehouse on Wells Avenue now has more than 200 students, ranging in age from children to adults older than 60. “Vince is an excellent teacher,” said Randy Onitsuka, 61, of Reno, a third degree black belt who began training at the aikido co-op in 1996. “We have many (skill) levels of students, and he allows everyone to train at their own level. ….There's something there for everybody.” Salvatore, who also teaches conflict resolution seminars, said aikido is mental as well as physical discipline. “Aikido looks at conflict in a very different manner than something won or lost,” he said. “You have a choice. The result of conflict can be win-win.” He said anger, such as in a road rage incident, is an uncontrolled reaction. Anger makes people lose their emotional centers and often results in physical confrontations, he said. “In aikido and in conflict resolution, being centered and in control of your emotions is key,” he said. “That state of calm takes practice, … Aikido is the physical manifestation of conflict resolution.” Being able to control and neutralize verbal and emotional confrontations is something aikido students strive for, he said. “In World War II, O Sensei saw the destruction of Hiroshima and Nakasaki and knew if we all can't get along as people, we may face the destruction of the human race,” Salvatore said. “In aikido, we strive to find creative solutions to conflict that are win-win solutions.”
