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Musings of a Budo Bum

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Musings of a Budo Bum

Contributors:

By (Author) Peter Boylan

ISBN:

9781483598680

Publisher:

BookBaby

Imprint:

BookBaby

Publication Date:

21st September 2017

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Martial arts

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

166

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 10mm

Weight:

263g

Description

"The techniques are really a vessel for carrying all the things that are budo..."

Most books about martial arts (budo) focus on techniques, although some tell the history, and a few wax philosophical. It is rare indeed to discover a book that so fluently combines all this within the broader context of culture and lifestyle, and does so in such a humble, engaging, and accessible way. "Budo Bum Anthology" is a book that answers not so much "how" or "what" as it does "why" Why call budo teachers "sensei" Why do we bow Why kata Why keep training

Peter Boylan, aka the Budo Bum, has achieved high rank in several martial arts judo, iaido, jodo, and morespending decades immersed within budo, straddling the worlds and cultures of Japan and America, and translating between them. In these essays, the reader is invited to walk alongside a quiet man who thinks deeply about the worlds in which budo was created and is practiced, and who brings the meaning of "all the things that are budo" into our daily lives.

CONTENTS

Introduction

Getting Started

Do you have to study in Japan to understand budo

Etiquette: Form and sincerity in budo

Sensei, Kyoshi, Hanshi, and Shihan: budo titles and how (not) to use them

Different ranks in martial arts

Zanshin

Budo

Do versus Jutsu ()

What kata isnt

Trust in the dojo

Training

Training, motivation, and counting training time in decades instead of years

The most effective martial art

The dojo as the world: learning to deal with violence and power

Budo and responsibility

Investing in failure

The spirit of learning

Training hard and training well are not the same thing

When it comes to training, fast is slow and slow is fast

Getting out of the comfort zone

There are no advanced techniques

Essentials

The most essential principles in budo: Structure

The most essential principles in budo: Spacing

The most essential principles in budo: Timing

Philosophy

The only things I teach are how to walk and how to breathe

Budo expectations and realities: understanding the limits of what we study

Will budo training make me a better person

Budo as a professional skill and professionalism in budo

Budo training and budo philosophy

How to adapt an art form to fit you

Is kata too rigid and mechanical

Author Bio

Peter has been studying Japanese martial arts for over thirty years. He started with Kodokan Judo while in college and added iaido and jodo after moving to Japan, where he lived and studied for nearly seven years. Currently, he is a fifth dan in All Japan Kendo Federation iaido, fifth dan in All Japan Kendo Federation jodo, third dan in Kodokan Judo, and holds a Shomokuroku in Shinto Muso Ryu and a Jun Shihan certificate in Shinto Hatakage Ryu.

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