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Makiwara, or machiwara as it is called in
Hogen, is probably the most misunderstood and incorrectly used training
equipment in the dojo today. So, perhaps it is a good thing that most
modern Karate-ka don't train hitting one. The potential damage of
misusing a Machiwara could be very long lasting if not permanent. On
the other hand it is the primary tool for learning and polishing proper
technique. Any one sincerely interested in learning Karate will need to
spend countless hours in front of it; and as a result will learn to
respect what it has to offer.
Pre WW II Karate-ka all trained with it, see below Motobu Choki and
Funakoshi Gichin trained this way.
So why is it that few if any Shotokan dojo hit
Makiwara today?
If
I had to guess I would suggest that few sports karate people see any
benefit to their training from pounding their knuckles against a wooden
post. And I guess I can't blame them. Unless you understand that Tenshin,
Chinkuchi and Findi are, the building blocks of Machiwara training,
I have to admit that the thought of just standing in front of it and
pounding it for an hour or two doesn't have much appeal to it. And
unfortunately, that is all that the few people I've seen hitting
Makiwara are doing. Just building calluses on the hands.
Most students of Karate don't realize that the sounds
of the Makiwara is important, or for that matter how to bow in front of
a Makiwara or when to hit. The psychological or visualization exercises
that many Olympic athletes use in their training regimens have been
used for generations in front of the Makiwara in Okinawan Dojo by
Tijigaya.
 
Motobu, Choki
Funakoshi Gichin Hironishi, Genshin
If all you are going to do is hit it until your
knuckles get thrashed, there is little value to Makiwara. If on the
other hand you are taught how and for what, the Makiwara is the next
best thing to having your sensei in the dojo correcting you. Just like
your sensei, when you make a mistake it will teach in short order that
you've done something wrong.
Machiwara is not at all about the knuckles, it is about
the feet, the wrists and the shoulders.
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| Higa Yuchoku Sensei
10-Dan Kyudokan |
Arakaki, 5-dan
Shinjinbukan, was a Kyudokan student and later became the sempai
when Onaga sensei opened his dojo (taken '90) |
Onaga Michiko, 6-Dan
Shinjinbukan (taken 2001) |
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Copyright (c) 1999,2000,2001 & 2002
Shinjinbukan Canada, International Shinjinbukan and OkinawakarateDo.com.
All rights reserved.
Revised:
May 31, 2007
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