Thursday Notices – 4.1.07
This
is your Thursday emailout of notices for 4.1.07 to club members and interested
parties on Yahoo groups regarding club matters and upcoming events. If
you have something to include or a constructive comment to improve this
newsletter, please let me know.
Hello everyone,
Our club President suggested we give these Thursday Notices a
name. Any suggestions? Just email me back and I’ll continue
offering your suggestions for comment. I was also thinking our Japanese
club members may have some plays on Japanese words/concepts which might
work.
Eri
Takahashi has said that if we don’t want to be fancy, we could have
‘Shukan News’, as Shukan means weekly, and if we wanted to refer to
Thursday, it would then become ‘Mokuyo Shukan News’.
Ben Tan has offered a
smorgasbord of possibilities: "Ukemi Shoutouts!" or
"Atemi Ukemi News" or "Weekly Shin" or "Ukemi
Weekly" or "My Taninzugake News" or "My Ukemi News".
Thank
you to Eri and Ben.
‘Griffith
Kiai’ and ‘Shukan News’ appear to be the early
favourites. Any comments or more suggestions? I’d really love some more
suggestions and/or feedback!!
Steve M.
Contents:
1. Aikido Classes Resume
Next Week
2.
Ordering Quality Weapons
3.
Club Marketing/Advertising Advisor - Expressions Of Interest
4.
Fridge Genie
5.
6. Maruyama Sensei 2007
7. Previous news (but good news) –
worth another read!:
1. Aikido
Classes Resume Next Week
We
have had our opportunity to rest over Christmas, although I’m sure many
took the opportunity to practice on their own? Nevertheless, we can break
our respite from the mats this coming week. Let’s get back into it
and lose some of the extra kilos we might have added during the festive season!
The
first few weeks of the year tend to be smaller as students find it difficult to
turn up as they have been away long enough that it is a real effort to pack
their gi, and get in the car or on the bus. It seems to be just so much
easier to stay at home lying sprawled on the couch! Then at the end of
January they feel so guilty that they’re falling behind in their aikido
that they drag themselves to training, and then remember why they were doing
aikido in the first place, and they realise how much fun they’ve missed,
and they’re back into the routine again.
Remember,
December mat fees cover January as well. Start 2007 now, re-establish the
routine, make use of mat time you’ve already paid for, and have
some fun.
There
will still be a Friday class at
2.
Ordering Quality Weapons
I am getting together a bulk order from Things of
Japan (http://www.thingsofjapan.com.au)
to be made in the last week of January. I'm calling out for anyone who is
thinking of purchasing, or upgrading, their weapons.
Things of
Have a look on their weapons page http://www.thingsofjapan.com.au/Martial.htm and
please let me know asap if you are interested in buying any. Either get me in
class or email gabrielle.paynter@... or
call 0413 009 897.
Cheers
Gabby Paynter
2.
Club
Marketing/Advertising Advisor
Everyone
will have noticed that the club is growing well, and the vitality that new
members bring to the club is wonderful, and very welcome. We would like
to continue our success in attracting new members, and spend our advertising
dollars more effectively, if possible. Do any of you have skills/
qualifications/experience in marketing and advertising that we don’t know
about? If you do, would you let us know. We promise not to
over-exploit you!!, unless you’re happy for us to!
4. Fridge Genie
We
have found a new fridge genie. Aikido is not just about martial arts,
self-defence and training, of course. Service is also strongly valued and
encouraged, so thank you to Ross Ebert, a relatively new member, for his
enthusiasm and willingness to jump in and organise the replenishment of
beverages, light liquid refreshments and nibblies for his fellow club
members.
If
you have any particular or unusual requests, please let Ross know. If you
haven’t gotten to know him yet, I can point him out for you.
5.
Griffith
Uni will be holding its Orientation Week during the week starting Monday 19th
February. I’m expecting some of our members, especially our uni
students, would like to express their interest in promoting the club during
that week, and/or the following week, in which there will be ‘club
sign-on days’ and ‘market days’ at each campus. These
days are excellent opportunities for our club to promote aikido and recruit new members. Our future as a
club on campus, with all the uncertainty of voluntary student unionism, is to
continue to attract more club members from the uni. Further, our club is
constantly invigorated by its new members. Plus we have a responsibility
to aikido to be unselfish!:) and allow others to enjoy the benefits we gain
from aikido. We can do that by showing we want others to join our club,
letting them know how much enjoyment and fun we have, and by making them feel welcome.
If you can give us a couple of hours of your time late in February to do that,
it would be fantastic.
If you would like to help out, please let me know via
email or give me a call (see bottom of this page).
6. Maruyama
Sensei 2007
I am delighted to announce that we will again have
Maruyama Sensei in
This seminar is also likely to be somewhat larger in
terms of numbers on the mat and it goes for 6 days as well. The
Nathan dojo is probably not big enough, so arrangements are being made for an
alternative venue, with the
Maruyama
Sensei’s 2007 tour will include
Maruyama
sensei will also be celebrating his 50th Anniversary of teaching
Aikido in
Details about the seminar are available at
www.akachawaii.com/aloha.html
I will post more information in these notices as
venues and classes are finalised.
Danny James
7. Previous
news (but good news) below – worth another read!:
“Taking Stock”
Yet another year is drawing to a close & we once again
find ourselves taking stock of our efforts that has brought us here. We
ask the questions, “are we where we wanted to be”, “have we
done our best” “could we have done more”, “what
do we have to show for our efforts” & so on. With our Aikido it
can be quite simple & for those fortunate enough to wear a coloured belt,
some of these questions are easy, you just need to look down & see if the
colour has changed. But we need to judge ourselves beyond the rank &
file & take an honest look at whether we have be doing all we can.
It can be as simple as counting the classes we
attended but that really is a little hollow. Look further & we can judge
whether we paid true homage to the art & to ourselves. Did we turn up
on time & help set up? Did we maintain a good Seiza posture?
Did we pay 100% attention to the class? Did we talk ourselves into
not going to class?… and so on. But I’m here to tell you
that, as easy or as hard it is for you to answer these questions, it’s
still a shallow perspective of the potential of Aikido training.
Now, can you give a true answer to the following:
How much training have I done off the mat & away from the dojo?
Answer this one question & all the other ones may seem a little
worthless. As we enter a short break from regular classes, it is timely
that we review our efforts of solo training. Many new students hold the belief
that we need mats, Ukes & a Gi to be able to practice our beloved
art. This thinking is OK for a new student, but for those that have done
at least one grading, experience will have told us otherwise. Leading up
to that first grading we would have danced around the back yard or lounge room,
visualising Uke, correcting our posture & body alignment as we went through
the moves in slow motion. This type of solo training is essential to our
growth & development as it provides us with an environment that cannot
exist with an Uke.
Only in this solo environment can we traverse new
heights & depths in our understanding of the art. In solo training we rely
on our mind to push our will & our mind to lead our body. It forges
the shapes & forms of our art into our body & then into our
subconscious mind. I would go as far as to say that solo training
accounts for 70% of our potential, which means that just training on the mat in
the dojo will only deliver 30% of our potential.
If you are not yet converted to the idea of focused
solo training, spare some time to think back on the year’s events &
look for the times when your Aikido shapes & forms came to the fore without
your thinking. For those who were lucky enough to attend the Systema
Knife Defence workshop that was held 2 weeks ago, would have heard, or found
themselves saying things like “I was doing this or that & suddenly
Shihonage (or insert other Aikido technique name here) came out”. Most of
the feedback I got from the Systema workshop was not about the Systema but
about how surprised students were that their Aikido came out & worked
without them consciously thinking about it.
Think about how much more could come out & how
much more effective it would be if there was more in there to start with. And
how do you get more in there?? Solo training. We are really lucky
in this club in that we have regular classes with lots of Ukes so it’s
easy to think that the class time is training. This thinking should be
changed around & instead we should be taking what we learnt from class,
going home & practicing it to death & then bringing it & our
newfound facets back to the next class to try them out on the unsuspecting
Ukes. If you’re not sure, try it over the Christmas break, what
have you got to lose? It’s a poorly guarded secret that the keys to
improve our Aikido lie in the Taiso, the weapons kata & the technique kata.
Three not so secret aspects that can & must be trained by ourselves.
I hope you can all come back from your Christmas break
feeling newfound strengths from your solo training.
Simon Russell
Entertainment Section
These Thursday Notices are meant
for all our club members to contribute to. They’re not meant
to be just a news service. And beginners sometimes feel they don’t
know enough to contribute meaningfully. This is absolutely not the
case. All our members are interested in news, but they’re also
very, very interested in the way others perceive aikido, what they get out of
aikido, how they weave aikido training into their lives, and so on. So
members, and that definitely includes beginners, should not hesitate to
contribute.
It probably appears that all
the items in these notices are about news, and you need to be an instructor or
executive member to contribute. Absolutely not true.
I’m wanting to encourage all sorts of contributions from all our club
members. I think I need to go first, though, to show you there’s
stuff other than news which is welcome. Anybody got any limericks?
I wrote the verse below as a contribution for a club newsletter that almost
went ahead about a year after I started aikido.
Anyway,
hopefully you’ll enjoy the product of my feverish beginners
mind:
Some Thoughts of an Older Beginner
I’m getting older now and the joints were
creaking
So a sort of sport was what I was seeking
My body was slowly starting to rust
I had to do something to unsettle the dust
I sometimes think about my distant youth
They were times of sport and times uncouth
And even though I had a ball
They’re increasingly difficult days to recall
So, I considered gym as a genuine notion
But it required significant devotion
I’ve done it before and it was a definite bore
The call to the gym would be a call I’d ignore
Swimming isn’t pleasant when the weather’s
not hot
And public pools and kids mean litres of snot
Every kid sneezing means a likely infection
Swimming for me was an easy rejection
Jogging was also definitely out
Even though it might get me out and about
Strains my ankles and makes me hobble
I’d have to hold my belly to stop the wobble
Walking is an activity which has been suggested
But it fails to burn up all the food I’ve
ingested
I’ve done it for years, I was a walking machine
But I’m also still not particularly lean
In the end, I just needed to move
Something that might improve my groove
I liked that Aikido wasn’t about competition
And offered a non-combative tradition
Aikido seemed to be the way
To the way of harmony I heard someone say
But I just wanted fitness and flexibility
And perhaps self-defensive ability
After a year or so I’ve emerged from confusion
Although I’m sure that’s just a handy
illusion
And while I think I understand the key to ki
The way of harmony is not yet to be
There’s discord between my muscles and mind
Over-thinking the moves is what I find
And my failing memory makes me freak
When I’m trying to remember a lengthy technique
And my skills probably lack some synchronisation
But there is a degree of consolation
My vitality is great and my fitness increased
My flexibility has grown and my creaking has ceased
Muscles are stronger and tendons robust
I’ve definitely unsettled the dust
I arrive at training ready to start
I absolutely feel a little younger at heart
Steve Mitchell
Membership
Form to be Completed in January
I just want to remind everyone that you will need to complete
a new membership form for 2007, when you return in January. There is a
membership fee (see below), but mat fees which you should have already paid in
December cover January as well.
Jutta Dowdy
Club Sponsorship
We are proud
to announce our new sponsorship arrangement with
I
sent a separate email three weeks ago detailing our sponsorship arrangement
with Direct
Credit Home Loans Australia. If you didn’t receive it but want the
details, please let me know. Many thanks to Gary Weigh, one of our brand
new 3rd kyu’s, who has arranged this sponsorship.
Mat Fees and Club Membership Fees
Jutta
wants everyone to know that Membership fees are due at the beginning of the
year and should be paid in January. Remember
that mat fees paid in December cover January as well, so it will be the usual
mat fees in December and then membership fees in January. The
University requires University clubs to charge a membership fee. The
University has also recently required us to charge
Please
be advised that annual membership fee in the new year will be $15 for all
members who are also bona fide Griffith Uni students. For other members,
including instructors, annual membership fee remains at $30. Children
whose parents are financial members (and therefore have paid the membership
fee) don't pay membership fees. Other children pay a membership fee of $10.
Also, if you
have graded, there is a small grading fee. As always, it is not good
etiquette to have someone chase you.
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