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Henry Kono – Aikido Yin and Yang in Motio

I remember an interview of Gozo Shioda Sensei that he gave in England a few years ago where he explained that during the 10 years he stayed with O Sensei; never did he receive any explanation from the master about what he was doing. Therefore, Shioda had to patiently interpret everything by himself without any other form of instruction than watching his master demonstrate. While I was at Hombu, O Sensei used to very often say “Of course I am not going to tell you what I am doing; it is up to you to understand it”. It is obvious that the enormous differences between what the different students of O Sensei are showing is the direct result of Ueshiba’s approach to teaching. It is in these conditions that I realized that if I really wanted to understand what Ueshiba Sensei was doing, I had to focus on the content rather than the form. I started to try guessing what this old man had in his head while he was doing his Aikido. Very early during my stay in Hombu it appeared to me that O Sensei must have been basing all this on something simple, a principle as universal as Aikido itself. I practice patiently and diligently, waiting for him to unravel something, let go of a clue hidden within his mystical speeches. Once again, it was useless trying to ask him to explain what he was doing so I just waited and paid attention. Well, to be honest, I did also bring myself to attempt a more subtle approach… One day that we were having a party for celebrating his birthday, I quietly asked O Sensei “O Sensei, how come we can’t do what you are doing?” and he just replied “Because I know Yin and Yang and you don’t”. I spent the next 40 years of my life trying to figure out what the Yin and Yang was. In fact, it is really after one month of reflection and meditation that everything came clear to me. I suddenly discovered a model where all the techniques I had learned in Hombu integrated themselves. How to follow the principles of Yin and Yang in Aikido? This is precisely what I will try to explain to you in this article. One thing must be clear before we start; I am forcing no one, not even my own students, to do it like this, nor do I say that it is the only way to do it. I am just proposing another way to perform the techniques that you all know, a way that corresponds more to how the founder was performing them. I am eighty years old, I am well past the style quarrels and I just want to pass on what I have understood to whoever wishes to learn.
Yin and Yang is the sum of two equal polarities that are always found in pair. The combination of these two notions illustrates the harmony that lies within duality: the couples up/down, front/behind etc. To apply this principle in Aikido is to search for harmony between the two parts of the ensemble uke/tori. The only way to reach this harmony is to find the balance in reference to the center.
What came out from my study of the Yin and Yang in Aikido is that there are two possible approaches that can be undertaken relative to the “center”. I will try to define them both but first, we must agree on what we call the center. When I am on my own, my center is located just a few centimeters above my belly button. This is the concept of Hara well known of all the Aikidoka and Budoka alike. We should not have too much problems agreeing on that point. However, everything becomes more complicated when a partner comes into play. It is here that the fundamental differences between the two approaches can be found.
One of these approaches consists of working on, unbalancing or taking someone else’s center whilst using our own center if possible (Figure 1). Let us call it the “egocentric” approach: I take his center; he and I are very distinct entities, even at the moment of our interaction. This might remind you of something since Man, as a self-conscious animal, naturally performs all of his tasks from that perspective.
The other approach relies on the will to preserve harmony, whether we are alone, or in contact with someone. It is all about making one with the opponent. If it is so, we therefore share the same center because we are one. This center is no more mine than his, it is ours and it will remain as such for as long as our interaction occurs. Many examples are to be found in nature. In physics, for example, the center of gravity of a solid is defined by “the point of application of the result of all gravitational forces at all points of the solid”. To be clear, it is where the sum of all forces is nil, it is equilibrium, harmony. Another example can be found in geometry. If you take for example a triangle, its center of gravity is quite obvious, somewhere within itself. However, if you join two triangles together by one of their side, their respective centers of gravity disappear to the profit of the single center of gravity of the resulting quadrangle. From two centers we end up with only one, which is the famous 1+1=1.
During the time I spent observing O Sensei, I often wondered where he was focusing his attention. As many others, I was convinced that his attention was fixed on the center. The confusion lies in the fact that he did not focus on either his or the other person’s center but on their common center (Figure 2). Thinking about it now, he kept on saying it but nobody got it “between him and I, there is a 10 [Jyu in Japanese, which is represented by a Kanji in the shape of a cross]”. As if it was not enough, he also used to say “when uke comes to attack, he doesn’t exist, Ueshiba doesn’t exist”. He used to say that while storming into the Dojo because we did not do what he was showing. In this latest quote, nobody really disappear obviously but both become one, Ueshiba and his attacker do not exist anymore as separate entities but as a single product of there interaction: this is unity within motion. There is no Yin without Yang and no Yang in the absence of Yin.
The problem is now easily exposed and understood; the concept illustrated in Figure 1 is the one we must get away from but what makes it all so difficult to actually do it? It comes from the trick that nature played us by providing us with a consciousness that allow us to distinguish what is us from what is not us. We naturally feel secure in our center, comfortable in our own space and we perform all of our actions from that point of view. We are by nature trapped into the model 1 because of our conscience, our ego and our life experience. It is precisely here that all the Dojo work based on tireless repetition, we can manage to break free from these reflexes, whether they are natural or conditioned upon us by our education. It seems relatively simple to understand but it becomes incredibly difficult to actually, in practice, preserve this common center. Because this center is common, we cannot feel it and the presence of the other person leads us to forget it. In spite of what our instinct tells us, we must force ourselves to see ourselves and the opponent as two sides of a same coin, A=B and B=A.
There is yet another difficulty that arises when we try to practice this. You cannot discern the center through touch since touch always makes out the difference between what is me and what is him. In order to understand the concept of Yin and Yang, one has to go beyond sensory perception towards something simpler and more evident. This relates in a way to the obligatory simplicity of an efficient martial response. During an aggression, the physiological and emotional conditions are such that motility, coordination and capacity of analysis, amongst other things are greatly reduced. This is what many call the “adrenalin kick”. Many great martial arts masters say about techniques that are applicable “in the street” or in a “survival situation” that they must be simple and have to be based on very simple principle too. Such techniques do not require complex nervous influx, a minimum of memory resources (some advocates of the triunic brain might call it switching to reptilian brain) and limited physical coordination. Besides the sheer speed of execution, we must completely adhere to the matrix 2 to resist the temptation of our spirit, guided by fear from the unknown or what is the other, to switch back to matrix 1, the natural one that was hard wired into our brains subsequently to millenniums of Darwinian evolution. This matrix 1 is a mode where feelings and emotional state are prominent. Based on matrix 2, Aikido is therefore not an art of feeling but an art of knowing. Robert Nadeau told me once that O Sensei confessed to him that if he managed to understand the secret of Aikido, he could accomplish all the very same incredible techniques that O Sensei performed himself in just three months. The consequence of this is that I am convinced that we are actually trying too hard, working too seriously and that it is the very reason for our failure to grasp the concept. We become prisoners of the knowing how to instead of just trying to simply know. It is often important to take a step back in order to consider things under a new light, from a new angle which is all I am proposing you to do rather than repeating over and over again all those techniques that you all know so well already.
If we really want to understand what the Yin and Yang symbol means, we must understand clearly how these two energies are manifested and how they work together. They are both active energies that are in states of compression and expansion. They are in motion in order to equilibrate each other at all time. If we aim at using this principle in Aikido, we must understand the following: Yang energy (red line) comes from outside and goes towards the center. Yin (green line) energy starts from the center and is directed towards space (Figure 3). The main point here is to accept that Yin and Yang are not into direct contact with each other but are both linked through the center. Keeping that in mind when we observe the Yin and Yang symbol (Figure 4), we have to fight against seeing them touching each other but instead, assume that they are both linked through the center (green line). They act like one from the center in order to equilibrate each other.
I see great importance in not having stances or fixed postures in Aikido in order to be able to balance at all time these forces applied by uke on tori. O Sensei never spoke of posture because by definition, a posture is immobile; it limits the natural flow as well as the capacity to adapt oneself to what uke is proposing.
It is capital to keep in mind that if one of the energies is directed towards the center, the other moves away from it. The aim is to consider this as evidence so that our senses do not make us forget it, whatever happens on the mat. Once this is accepted, whenever the other side seems to touch us or that we are touching the other side, we must consider that we are only touching the center, never mind what our sense tell us. Once again, it is about knowing, not feeling; not to give in to the sensation that the other is touching us.
When our senses tell us that our partner touches us, it has the psychological consequence to make us perform body motions that are the opposite of uke’s. From there, the motion will be performed from the “egocentric” center (fig. 1); this is what our conscious spirit dictates to us. This is such a subtle change that we don’t even notice that we are moving away from the concept illustrated in Figure 2. In fact, this is such an automatism that our mind creates clues that lead us to think that there is no other solution than this one to reach an adapted solution to the situation in front of us.
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Course Features
- Lecture 1
- Quiz 0
- Duration 10 weeks
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 28
- Assessments Yes
- 1 Section
- 1 Lesson
- 10 Weeks
- Purchased: Henry Kono - Aikido Yin and Yang in Motio1

