A master that is letting his student demonstrate the techniques on him. You don't see this everywhere. In fact, this is considered rare in traditional martial arts. I love it. It shows that you are not an egotistical master. This is wonderful.
Once trained in Aikido years ago back in the early 90s and the Sensei's first rule of the dojo while training was always let your partner reciprocate during training. Meaning no matter what belt you hold, you must let your partner apply the same technique you applied on him on you in return. So if you apply a lock or a throw on him 5 times on the right side and 5 times on the left side, you are obligated to let him apply the same technique the same number of times on you regardless if you're a higher belt and he is a white belt. The only exception is if the lower belt doesn't know how to perform ukemi or breakfalls yet, then the higher belt do not get to throw him for safety purposes, only apply the technique up to the point before you break his balance to throw him and let him slowly roll out of the throw instead, while he on the other hand can throw you to his hearts delight as long as he performs the techniques properly.
I just want to Express, that if you never learn anything about combat, learn how to fall. A martial art that incorporates break falls, rolls, relaxation, and physical self-manipulstion, may save an older you from injury.
A very nice cooperation between the student and the teacher regardless the obvious difference in their age, experience and competence. The teacher is not afraid of taking hits and being thrown by his student though he is apparently not in his twenties or thirties any more. Event the best teachers have always something new to learn, and this master clearly keeps developing himself openly. Great respect.
I love the fact that the techniques being demonstrated is in real time no slow mo training.. and the fact that the teacher goes trade for trade with his students as I do myself. Great vid Shihan !!
First thing I like doing is reading the comments. Those locks are no joke, especially Nikkyo. You just have to feel it to appreciate it for sure. The breathing hard thing is simple... it takes a lot of energy to get thrown and get up, and repeating it over an over. It is always wonderful to see the instructor being Uke. I've been in martial arts for 43 years now and I always take falls during every class. Never stop doing that. I like this video and I live next door, in Indiana. So if the school wants to get in contact with me at my channel I'd like to visit and and do a few videos/ classes with you all. Over all I enjoyed the skills shown, I must admit, however, I so want to express a few points to that arm bar that was shown.... but I will not at this time.
Its way more intresting to see a student execute good techniques than a master. Gives you an idea of what the master actually can teach you. Lots of matial artists out there that are very talented at their art but are bad teachers. I got suprised when my ju jutsu head instructor had one of our senior students teach some of our classes. Suddenly advanced techniques became a lot easier to grasp. That student was also studying to become a grade school teacher. Didnt have half the jutsu skills of our head instructor but he was superb at teaching others whatever he knew himself. The art of teaching is often overlooked among martial artists.
If you can stop the opponent's arm moving early as the opponent executes an upward knife stab attack against you provided you can anticipate the attack motion early you could possibly utilize the osoto gari technique you demonstrated as an effective knife defense response.
The wrist/joint controls are NOT called Ikkajo, Nikajo, Sankajo, Yonkajo, Gokajo. Those names are for the series of techniques covered in the Hiden Mokuroku of Daito-ryu. The controls, however, are named as follows: Ikkyo, Nikyo, Sankyo, Yonkyo, Gokyo.
No Aiki in this video. Only jujitsu. “Pain from start to finish” means poor technique. If you can’t do the technique without pain, you don’t understand it yet. Never rely on pain, rely on structure, connection, kuzushi. All of this was muscle and power, not a single demonstration of Aiki or control. Sad.
@@angel-rq4fz sadly incorrect on that point. If you have structure control, pain is not needed. With enough adrenaline pumping, people can ignore tremendous amounts of pain even breaks. And still re-engage in attack. Instead control the structure, remove their ability to re-engage. Pain is sometimes a byproduct of control, but never the goal. Pain compliance is not necessary for control.
@@HimesMagic Amazing that you say it , actually I was watching George Ledyard Aikido and is about structure , connection . In these seminars many are not only from different styles of Aikido but also from . different martial Arts .
My name is Attilio Messina, I study Daiyo Ryu Saigo Ha aikijujutsu from several years, more 15. Really that I have seen is some Jujutsu techniques, some judo skills, but there is not Aiki. Uke have no reason to stop his assault, because the maai, the kokyu are wrong. Aiki is: use of timing, speed, action in yo when the uke is in in, so correct breathing to defeate the enemy. If you use strength you make only Jujutsu.
Actually it doesn’t hurt. As a white belt student, the first thing that is taught are the proper techniques of falling. By the time we reach black belt status, we have fallen thousands of times. Each time perfecting the technique better.
Cmon man. I practice aikido and jujutsu..and what the hell is this?? I do see why u call it aikijutsu, but ain't it! this not realistic and has no speed or sufficiency at all. Ur nami the technique isn't even right Again, I can understand WHY u are demonstrating and all but these kinds of videos and displays are why ppl dont believe in aikido now..damn u just slapped us in the face. Please don't It's all love tho, its the practitioner not the art!!
Aikido isn't Ju Jutsu either. It comes from Daito Ryu Aiki Ju Jutsu, but it is still very different is it not? Also to Note: on the battlefield, Daito Ryu Aiki Ju jutsu didn't look compliant, and teh Samurai didn't move gracefully in a wooded battlefield. The premise was used in battle but I can assure you, the techniques didn't look harmonious. Notihng does in a realy fight.
@@jaychyzyk I agree with that, nothing looks harmonious in a real fight. Survival mode one doesn't have time for that. Some of the ways this guy is applying the techniques...is neither aikido or aikijustu. I know that Daito Ryu is were aikido started, aikido softened it up a bit...but when ppl see stuff like this ☝🏽. They lose the faith.
Yeah I hear you what you're saying 100%.it seems some north American Ju jutsu is missing alot of the movement and have added more Judoish/Karate to their syllabus. Check out Small circle theory by Wally Jay. I belive alot of the traditional parts were discarded in the 50s and 60s in favor of the more popular up and coming styles.
@@jaychyzyk oh yeah definitely. I e said that a lot I prefer the traditional Japanese jujutsu, but I'm glad u gave me that info. Ive wanted to look into small circle much more. I appreciate cha!
Definetly not lol. They are not moving at all like they would in Aikido and they are throwing and Aikido doesn't throw with Ippon Seo nagi etc. This is more of a North Amercian Ju Jutsu. This is not Daito Ryu Aiki Ju Jutsu, there is no Tenkan, Kaiten movement. There is alot of bouncing going in into throws, there is alot of work that needs to be done here for a Shihan to be a Shihan.
This is basically a mix of judo, karate and aikido. This is neither Daito Ryu nor Aiki jutsu. There are a lot of clubs in Europe who practice that kind of stuff. It is called "ju-jutsu", they even have competitions. They are often related to their Judo Federation. Btw, what is that red and white belt, it looks really Mcdojo ! And btw, really poor executions of Seoi Nage and Koshi Guruma. No hip bump in Koshi Guruma, that's a wheel around the hip, your center of gravity is too high, you need to flex your knees more. For Seoi Nage, you have to load Uke more on your back and throw in front of you and not to the side. Again, you should lower your center of gravity by flexing your knees more. In O Soto Gari, the toes of your reaping leg should point towards the ground, you will get more power. And so on and on and on. Really poor judo from both of you...
This is how the Sasaki-rorokku clan Shinobi have taught for generations now. It is familial ryuha not a dojo. I teach small children to use this on me so that it is effective. I am a big guy. It helps them overcome major psychological, physical and intellectual difficulties. I believe it allows them to first work through emotional hurdles that are otherwise debilitating. Also the responsibility of honor and self confidence building allows them to have a self image that counters the social friction caused by conditions like autism. The philosophy comes first. You do not lay hands on anyone. If someone is doing something bad report them to responsible adults. If someone is hurting you or attempt to take you make a bunch of noise and escape first. If you can't escape use everything you know to hurt maim destroy or overwhelm the bad guy and run to safety. They know how to run. They practice that most often. The greatest tactic of war a general has is the retreat.
Why are you grimacing so intensely. Are you hurting each other that much? If I was grimacing like that, I would be injured. Is it just for effect? Why do you call it jiu jitsu? Jiu jitsu is mire of a grappling thing. I have one main question. Have you ever sparred or fought against an opponent trying to hurt you. You are showing how to submit passive opponents. What practical use is that? How about someone fighting back. Or is your art, more of an acrobatic sport. You asked for a punch, but your opponent didn't punch, he stuck out his arm so you could grab it. No one punches like that. Can you demonstrate how to defend against an attacker trying to sctually hurt you, not to help.
"jiu jitsu is mire of a grappling thing." NOPE. ju-jutsu includes striking, throwing, stand-up locks and ground techniques. It's a japanese Martial art used in medieval Era. Only judo and Gracie's Brezilian judo are grappling things.
ikkajo, Nikkajo, Sankkajo etc are not single technique there sets of techniques. You have no connection to Daito ryu. Daito ryu Ippon is not done like Judo Ippon and Daito ryu doesnt have Osoto gari, that Judo. Yin and Yang are Chinese in Japanese its In and Yo. Your throws are all Judo style Nage not Daito ryu.
The R slides into the Y very quickly. Don't tell me otherwise because I've heard it from Japanese themselves - and right here on TH-cam. I can tell you it definitely isn't Roo as in kangaroo. I don't understand why Americans or Englishmen who practice these traditional arts never make the effort to find out how to better pronounce the terminology.
@@Igaluit i think it depends on context, like "GoJu Ryu" is pronounced "Go Ju Roo" but "Ryu Kyu Kingdom" is pronounced phonetically, but "ryu" in "GoJu Ryu" or "Uechi Ryu" both mean "style" and are both "roo", but often it seems with a rolled tongue on the "R"... "Ryu Kyu" im fairly sure doesnt mean "style" though haha :)
L'Aïkido, le judo, le Bjj et un certain nombre de techniques de karate (shotokan, shito ryu etc.) viennent du Jujutsu. Si tu tape "Jujutsu traditionnel" tu verras les même techniques que dans la vidéo
A master that is letting his student demonstrate the techniques on him. You don't see this everywhere. In fact, this is considered rare in traditional martial arts. I love it. It shows that you are not an egotistical master. This is wonderful.
I was about to say the same thing, less eloquently, :-) Also, his ability to absorb the damage is very impressive. Much respect!
Once trained in Aikido years ago back in the early 90s and the Sensei's first rule of the dojo while training was always let your partner reciprocate during training. Meaning no matter what belt you hold, you must let your partner apply the same technique you applied on him on you in return. So if you apply a lock or a throw on him 5 times on the right side and 5 times on the left side, you are obligated to let him apply the same technique the same number of times on you regardless if you're a higher belt and he is a white belt. The only exception is if the lower belt doesn't know how to perform ukemi or breakfalls yet, then the higher belt do not get to throw him for safety purposes, only apply the technique up to the point before you break his balance to throw him and let him slowly roll out of the throw instead, while he on the other hand can throw you to his hearts delight as long as he performs the techniques properly.
I just want to Express, that if you never learn anything about combat, learn how to fall. A martial art that incorporates break falls, rolls, relaxation, and physical self-manipulstion, may save an older you from injury.
A very nice cooperation between the student and the teacher regardless the obvious difference in their age, experience and competence. The teacher is not afraid of taking hits and being thrown by his student though he is apparently not in his twenties or thirties any more. Event the best teachers have always something new to learn, and this master clearly keeps developing himself openly. Great respect.
My old hapkido instructor was also an aikijitsu instructor - and I miss it so much. It was hard hard work.
I love the fact that the techniques being demonstrated is in real time no slow mo training.. and the fact that the teacher goes trade for trade with his students as I do myself. Great vid Shihan !!
First thing I like doing is reading the comments. Those locks are no joke, especially Nikkyo. You just have to feel it to appreciate it for sure. The breathing hard thing is simple... it takes a lot of energy to get thrown and get up, and repeating it over an over. It is always wonderful to see the instructor being Uke. I've been in martial arts for 43 years now and I always take falls during every class. Never stop doing that. I like this video and I live next door, in Indiana. So if the school wants to get in contact with me at my channel I'd like to visit and and do a few videos/ classes with you all. Over all I enjoyed the skills shown, I must admit, however, I so want to express a few points to that arm bar that was shown.... but I will not at this time.
Its way more intresting to see a student execute good techniques than a master. Gives you an idea of what the master actually can teach you. Lots of matial artists out there that are very talented at their art but are bad teachers. I got suprised when my ju jutsu head instructor had one of our senior students teach some of our classes. Suddenly advanced techniques became a lot easier to grasp. That student was also studying to become a grade school teacher. Didnt have half the jutsu skills of our head instructor but he was superb at teaching others whatever he knew himself. The art of teaching is often overlooked among martial artists.
What is the direct lineage you speak of? Who is your teacher?
Cheers
Great demonstration, but why so few atemis?
I train Muay Thai but this was fun to watch. No clue what you guys are doing but it looks awesome.
When they yelp upon hitting the ground. Like my god lol
If you can stop the opponent's arm moving early as the opponent executes an upward knife stab attack against you provided you can anticipate the attack motion early you could possibly utilize the osoto gari technique you demonstrated as an effective knife defense response.
The wrist/joint controls are NOT called Ikkajo, Nikajo, Sankajo, Yonkajo, Gokajo. Those names are for the series of techniques covered in the Hiden Mokuroku of Daito-ryu. The controls, however, are named as follows: Ikkyo, Nikyo, Sankyo, Yonkyo, Gokyo.
Very good oh i miss those days of Takeda ryu aikijujutsu
I am located in IL. and would like to learn Aiki Jujitsu from you.
Excellent video. Thank you!
did i hear right brown belt in 2 years
Pretty fly for running out of breath..great job!
This martial art is no joke. It has many defensive techniques that are offensive and can deliver serious damage if properly executed .
forgive me for asking a question that you probably get asked too often, but what is the difference between aiki jujutsu and aikido?
Great work. The brown belt has a BJJ brown belt on I think.
What if the guys takes you to the ground?
If somebody pats you on the chest that one technique would seem to work great. But where are you going to find an attacker that pats and slaps?
I mean I saw some good stuff in here. I wouldn't call it aikijujutsu but the technique form of the jujitsu was good.
Respect for Sensi for being an Uke too.
great stuff guys.
2:05 *sloppy Joe* 😆😆😆😆
No Aiki in this video. Only jujitsu. “Pain from start to finish” means poor technique. If you can’t do the technique without pain, you don’t understand it yet. Never rely on pain, rely on structure, connection, kuzushi.
All of this was muscle and power, not a single demonstration of Aiki or control. Sad.
True that it was more like Aikimuscke than Aikijujitsu but @ the end to submit the opponent it should be pain or break to disable him .
@@angel-rq4fz sadly incorrect on that point. If you have structure control, pain is not needed. With enough adrenaline pumping, people can ignore tremendous amounts of pain even breaks. And still re-engage in attack. Instead control the structure, remove their ability to re-engage. Pain is sometimes a byproduct of control, but never the goal. Pain compliance is not necessary for control.
@@HimesMagic Amazing that you say it , actually I was watching George Ledyard Aikido and is about structure , connection . In these seminars many are not only from different styles of Aikido but also from . different martial Arts .
@@angel-rq4fz George is a good guy. He’s got a good feel and some good mojo. I’ve worked with him at a few seminars.
Absolutely no Aiki shown!
I'm seeing all jujitsu honestly
Check out Sanucus Ryu Juitsu
Thanks for the share.
Very gud 👍👏⛩️🥋🇪🇸
My name is Attilio Messina, I study Daiyo Ryu Saigo Ha aikijujutsu from several years, more 15. Really that I have seen is some Jujutsu techniques, some judo skills, but there is not Aiki. Uke have no reason to stop his assault, because the maai, the kokyu are wrong. Aiki is: use of timing, speed, action in yo when the uke is in in, so correct breathing to defeate the enemy. If you use strength you make only Jujutsu.
sweet simple as THAT!
Why are you crying before you tap?
Aiki jujutsu?? Are you joking??!!
I dont the attackers are just going to leave one arm out there
These moves look related to small circle jujitsu
Great observation. Wally Jay taught our Sensei years ago. 👍
Chido
Even falling on that mat looks painful
Actually it doesn’t hurt. As a white belt student, the first thing that is taught are the proper techniques of falling. By the time we reach black belt status, we have fallen thousands of times. Each time perfecting the technique better.
No Daito ryu visible in this video....
Cmon man. I practice aikido and jujutsu..and what the hell is this??
I do see why u call it aikijutsu, but ain't it! this not realistic and has no speed or sufficiency at all. Ur nami the technique isn't even right
Again, I can understand WHY u are demonstrating and all but these kinds of videos and displays are why ppl dont believe in aikido now..damn u just slapped us in the face. Please don't
It's all love tho, its the practitioner not the art!!
Aikido isn't Ju Jutsu either. It comes from Daito Ryu Aiki Ju Jutsu, but it is still very different is it not? Also to Note: on the battlefield, Daito Ryu Aiki Ju jutsu didn't look compliant, and teh Samurai didn't move gracefully in a wooded battlefield. The premise was used in battle but I can assure you, the techniques didn't look harmonious. Notihng does in a realy fight.
@@jaychyzyk I agree with that, nothing looks harmonious in a real fight. Survival mode one doesn't have time for that. Some of the ways this guy is applying the techniques...is neither aikido or aikijustu. I know that Daito Ryu is were aikido started, aikido softened it up a bit...but when ppl see stuff like this ☝🏽. They lose the faith.
Yeah I hear you what you're saying 100%.it seems some north American Ju jutsu is missing alot of the movement and have added more Judoish/Karate to their syllabus. Check out Small circle theory by Wally Jay. I belive alot of the traditional parts were discarded in the 50s and 60s in favor of the more popular up and coming styles.
@@jaychyzyk oh yeah definitely. I e said that a lot I prefer the traditional Japanese jujutsu, but I'm glad u gave me that info. Ive wanted to look into small circle much more. I appreciate cha!
Ahhhhhh yes ancient Booshido
I do Aiki Jujitsu
This is a Lot of AIKIDO
Definetly not lol. They are not moving at all like they would in Aikido and they are throwing and Aikido doesn't throw with Ippon Seo nagi etc. This is more of a North Amercian Ju Jutsu. This is not Daito Ryu Aiki Ju Jutsu, there is no Tenkan, Kaiten movement. There is alot of bouncing going in into throws, there is alot of work that needs to be done here for a Shihan to be a Shihan.
Maybe hit. The treadmill some more
LOL what a prick
That's irrelevant to self defense it's not a 5 min fight. Critique the technique not the guys weight
Looks like aikido or jujitsu. Don’t see any Daitoryu in it.
This is basically a mix of judo, karate and aikido. This is neither Daito Ryu nor Aiki jutsu. There are a lot of clubs in Europe who practice that kind of stuff. It is called "ju-jutsu", they even have competitions. They are often related to their Judo Federation. Btw, what is that red and white belt, it looks really Mcdojo ! And btw, really poor executions of Seoi Nage and Koshi Guruma. No hip bump in Koshi Guruma, that's a wheel around the hip, your center of gravity is too high, you need to flex your knees more. For Seoi Nage, you have to load Uke more on your back and throw in front of you and not to the side. Again, you should lower your center of gravity by flexing your knees more. In O Soto Gari, the toes of your reaping leg should point towards the ground, you will get more power. And so on and on and on. Really poor judo from both of you...
Baki hanma
Dont call o soto gari a sweep, please.
This is how the Sasaki-rorokku clan Shinobi have taught for generations now. It is familial ryuha not a dojo. I teach small children to use this on me so that it is effective. I am a big guy. It helps them overcome major psychological, physical and intellectual difficulties. I believe it allows them to first work through emotional hurdles that are otherwise debilitating. Also the responsibility of honor and self confidence building allows them to have a self image that counters the social friction caused by conditions like autism. The philosophy comes first. You do not lay hands on anyone. If someone is doing something bad report them to responsible adults. If someone is hurting you or attempt to take you make a bunch of noise and escape first. If you can't escape use everything you know to hurt maim destroy or overwhelm the bad guy and run to safety. They know how to run. They practice that most often. The greatest tactic of war a general has is the retreat.
tough student-
gas out
Why are you grimacing so intensely. Are you hurting each other that much? If I was grimacing like that, I would be injured. Is it just for effect? Why do you call it jiu jitsu? Jiu jitsu is mire of a grappling thing. I have one main question. Have you ever sparred or fought against an opponent trying to hurt you. You are showing how to submit passive opponents. What practical use is that? How about someone fighting back. Or is your art, more of an acrobatic sport. You asked for a punch, but your opponent didn't punch, he stuck out his arm so you could grab it. No one punches like that. Can you demonstrate how to defend against an attacker trying to sctually hurt you, not to help.
Keyboard warrior? ^^
@@nanomet2669 a keyboard warrior with crap grammar and syntax.
"jiu jitsu is mire of a grappling thing." NOPE.
ju-jutsu includes striking, throwing, stand-up locks and ground techniques.
It's a japanese Martial art used in medieval Era.
Only judo and Gracie's Brezilian judo are grappling things.
youy are not my firsy choice sir.. i learned from roy sunaka
ikkajo, Nikkajo, Sankkajo etc are not single technique there sets of techniques. You have no connection to Daito ryu. Daito ryu Ippon is not done like Judo Ippon and Daito ryu doesnt have Osoto gari, that Judo. Yin and Yang are Chinese in Japanese its In and Yo. Your throws are all Judo style Nage not Daito ryu.
Well technically he said it was based off of not that it is daito ryu.
Definitely not Daito Ryu. Real daito ryu needs no pain and uke is off balance upon touch
This is a lot of judo.
Well judo, Bjj and aikido come from Ju-jutsu. So if a martial art is named "aikijujutsu" it might be a lot of judo
@@isachamidou4488 Bjj comes from judo, not ju-jutsu.
REE-YOO, not ROO.
The R slides into the Y very quickly. Don't tell me otherwise because I've heard it from Japanese themselves - and right here on TH-cam. I can tell you it definitely isn't Roo as in kangaroo. I don't understand why Americans or Englishmen who practice these traditional arts never make the effort to find out how to better pronounce the terminology.
@@Igaluit i think it depends on context, like "GoJu Ryu" is pronounced "Go Ju Roo" but "Ryu Kyu Kingdom" is pronounced phonetically, but "ryu" in "GoJu Ryu" or "Uechi Ryu" both mean "style" and are both "roo", but often it seems with a rolled tongue on the "R"... "Ryu Kyu" im fairly sure doesnt mean "style" though haha :)
You have zero connection to Daito ryu. Stop the nonsense.
McDojo
Lorsqu'on observe cette vidéo de cet art martial,on dirait le judo mélangé avec de l'a¨i k i d o , .
L'Aïkido, le judo, le Bjj et un certain nombre de techniques de karate (shotokan, shito ryu etc.) viennent du Jujutsu.
Si tu tape "Jujutsu traditionnel" tu verras les même techniques que dans la vidéo
Leave it to US citizens to fuck up something Japanese with red white and blue shit.
Holy cringe Batman.
Stop complaining