Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Encinitas Aikido

With the start of the New Year, I've been focusing our dojo efforts on not only growing via marketing but growing through Friendship Ties with local schools. SoCal, and San Diego in particular, have a few great Aikido schools and teachers. Not many are Yoshinkan, or a style that is very similar to ours, but they do exist. And the ones that are more Aikikai in base, would make for great friends as well. I've begun reaching out and starting a conversation per say, with neighboring schools. So far, it's going well. And when the time comes for our schools to host seminars and special events, I can only hope that we can all participate together. As you grow and learn so much from one another, even if the language is slightly different.

In the same regard, I have focused on continuing to make Encinitas Aikido an active part of the community. We are now members of DEMA or Downtown Encinitas Mainstreet Association. We have participated in a few major festivals in the community by having a booth and/or demonstrating: 2012 Health and Fitness Expo, 2012 Feeling Fit Festival and 2013 Wellness Week Festival. I think it's a great opportunity for not only the students to get a chance to 'showcase' all their hard work and training, but also for our community to get to know our name and see our otherwise private martial art.


The students seem to really enjoy themselves and it gives them something to work hard for. In turn, it makes me very proud as their sensei to watch them do so well, and enjoy themselves while doing so.

Stay tuned for more events in 2013--including the birth of the newest Doshin-family member in early April! 


Sunday, April 29, 2012

SoCal AikiGal

Well, it's again been far too long since I've checked in. To catch you up, since my last blog we've had holidays, a house sale and a house purchase, a 2800 mile move to the left coast, and last but not least, the opening of another Doshinkan Affiliate: San Diego-Doshin Aikido!

Within the first week of being a California resident, I had contacted all dojo's within a 10 mile radius of our new home, inquiring if they were interested in renting mat space so I could work on building a school. I was fortunate to come across a Japanese Traditional Dojo, studying the Samurai Arts, who were very interested in expanding their classes and program offerings. They were mainly interested in a Children's Instructor. They were very interested in a Japanese Martial Art. It was fate. So as of April 1st, San Diego-Doshin Aikido, aka Encinitas Aikido, was born. We are small but growing. We are promoting, networking, and spreading the word about Doshinkan Aikido and all we have to teach and learn with others here in Encinitas. It's exciting.

So our new weekly routine includes many things that are different from our old routine in Philadelphia: One being that we take at least bi-weekly trips to the beach for pm playtime (considering it's only 4 miles from our house), and another being that I go to "work."

It's still an adjustment not being able to walk in the doors at Doshinkan, see my Aikido Family regularly, see my Philadelphia-area friends easily, or have Sunday dinners with my parents. But we're being patient, enjoying all things new. Relishing in the warm sunshine and salty air, the frequent dinners outside, the beautiful tropical flowers, and hearing all the new kids yell "OSU Sensei!"


The first two San Diego-Doshin AikiKids!

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Thankful


(with a little more wood flooring and some tatami mats, this is where my mind practices..)

while away from the dojo for the thanksgiving holiday, may you enjoy some mental training, some moments reflecting on things you are thankful for, and some wonderful time with your family. 

osu!

Friday, October 21, 2011

To Begin..

Ok, we all have a love-hate relationship with testing. Don't we? Or is it just me? I mean, I see how it's important.. not for rank, but more for always pushing yourself. Never allowing yourself to become stagnant, stuck, to plateau for too long.

I've been neglectful, again, of this blog-that believe it or not-I do really love. But just like my houseplants, I don't bring the watering can to you often enough. (Hopefully you're more of the cacti variety and haven't wilted much. Ahem.) This time my excuse, besides living life, raising a baby who has now grown into a full time running, climbing, talking toddler, deciding upon a relocation to the other side of the country and all the real estate crapola involved in that, is the aikido-side of my brain has been focused on November. My Shodan test.



It's been a long time coming and I'm really excited and am looking forward to testing. Of course part of me simply can't wait for it to be over. And that part of me is the one that knows there is SO much to know, I can barely be scratching the surface. But for good reason, we look at Shodan as "the beginning." And like all testing, kyu, dan, schoolwork etc.. it's more about the preparation than the test itself. It's all the hours training, studying, and practicing. We love the adrenaline that surges during tests, we hate the nervous stomach that comes along with it. But like most things, you'll walk away having gotten out of it what you put into it.
Hopefully come November 20th, I will have started on my path.
The beginning.

How about you guys? How do you feel about testing?
How does your dojo award rank?
Anyone testing soon and want to share their feelings? I'd love to hear...

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Stillness







Inspired by a friend's "Quiet Posts," I wanted to do a series of simple, silent posts. I think a lot can be said without words and likewise, so much of aikido is learned in silence. So much is learned through feeling, rather than through dissection and analyzing. Therefore, on occasion, I plan on throwing in these simple posts, mainly wordless, but hopefully a great marinade for thought and reflection.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Imagine

I think one of the best ways to live your life and keep you always excitedly looking forward to the future, is by daydreaming. Come on, we've all done it.. sitting in math class in 4th grade, thinking about hearing that final bell ring and running home to play outside. Or 10th grade, that really cute boy (or girl) a few rows away. Or as an adult, sitting in a meeting at work, imagining yourself carving some beautiful figure 8's with your skis down a great run in the Rockies. Daydreaming provides the imagination an outlet. Let's you imagine the beauty of what you'd love to have, what you'd love to do. It let's you dream.

One of my favorite daydreams is thinking about the day I have my own dojo. I love to envision it: surrounded and canopied by big old trees, maybe a stream nearby, built from beautiful wood, and wide, wide open. A simple but beautiful structure. No walls..just open air. So you can feel one with nature, bowing in and out, you're bowing to everything around you...feel the breeze as you're training... you feel the 'harmony' in everything, everywhere. You feel empowered, rejuvenated, alive, and that everything and everyone are connected.
I often daydream about my dojo. It makes me happy. Even if I never get around to building this wonderful space, it already exists in my mind. And I love visiting it. If I ever do get around to building it before the ripe-old age I hope I'm intended to live to, I hope you'll all come train with me there. How wonderful that would be.

I thought about including a picture of a similar building, but then it would distract from my vision. Because any picture that I'd include, that building already exists, and has characteristics that may be similar but are also different from the one in my mind. Besides, in reading this entry, you've likely started to imagine what I've described, and including a picture would distract from your ability to imagine.

So..
big old trees, with thick bark and lucious green canopying leaves.
simple strong wooden structure.
no walls.
nearby running creek.
inviting.

imagine.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Sakura Sunday

This past Sunday was the annual Cherry Blossom Festival, or Sakura Sunday, in Philadelphia. Every year our dojo participates in demonstrating aikido for all the festival goers. Basically it's the one time we get to show the public an otherwise pretty private art. This year the weather was a bit cooler, but nonetheless, a beautiful day. The cherry trees were in full bloom, the demonstration went wonderfully and the company and training of my fellow aikidoka, marked the start of a wonderful spring. Hope to see you there next year!