Yonkyo - The Aiki Dojo 2 Minute Technique
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- Опубликовано: 29 мар 2022
- The Aiki Dojo 2 Minute Technique - Yonkyo
In this episode of the Aiki Dojo 2 Minute Technique, David Ito Sensei explains the basics of Yonkyo (四教) or “the fourth teaching.” Yonkyo is also called tekubiosae (手首押さえ) which means “wrist pin.” Yonkyo is not just a pin, it is also a nerve attack. Omote style attacks the median nerve while ura style attacks the radial nerve.
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I now have a better understanding of yonkyo. Thank you so very much!
Glad it was helpful. Thank you for watching!
When done properly, it's like a taser hitting your forearm. It's a love/ hate relationship. Love performing the technique, but hate having to receive it. :)
You're so right. I feel the same love/hate
Thank you. A very clear understanding. Great teaching points
Thank you
The first time I nunderstand the yonkyo technique. Thank you sesei
A wonderful illustration and demonstration of the Joint Lock / Arm Pin. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you! We appreciate you watching
Keep up the great content 👍🏾
Thanks, will do!
interesting
What do you mean by exposing the nerve? Stretching the skin between your two hands?
I mean you have to spread the fascia to get as close as you can to the nerve. We do this by spreading the skin which thins out the fascia and muscle. Hope that explains better
With the greatest respect and only an observation. Would you be giving ukes balance back by sliding in? A quick uke could overbalance you. Is it not better to raise the arm as per a bokken in toris center and move ukes center over the area where the grabbed arm is?
Graeme. You are not wrong. In my opinion, you slide into to take control of the uke's center. If you watch the Omote one I did quickly you'd see that the transition is quite fast and I move in to put him on his opposite arm which could be thought of as rebalancing him. But it is a set up so that they can't use the opposite arm to grab my leg. Making him come up on his opposite arm enables me to control his center which disables him from rolling out of the technique as well. One thing I didn't mention is "why" one would do yonkyo rather than just do ikkyo. Yonkyo is an immobilizer or control hold that you can use where you don't have to go to the ground to apply it like the ikkyo, nikyo or sankyo pins. Once, Furuya Sensei was a youngster and teaching at the Sheriff's academy and a Sgt. questioned whether Aikido was a martial art and whether or not yonkyo would work. Furuya Sensei did it so hard on this adult that it damaged the nerve causing the officer to have to medically retire because he could no longer make a fist. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Thank you for such a detailed response. Arigato. If I have already applied irimi and pinned uke, and this is more from the point of standing rather than taking uke to the mat, I feel that moving in towards uke for yonkyo physically is counter productive. I agree that there needs to be a disruption to ukes shize and to take his center, hopefully this has already happened, a point many aikidoka miss, so can be achieved by turning the hips to uke "keeping the weapon between me and uke" and I so doing so yonkyo can be applied achieving the elemental prerequisites. (yet to get kokyu rokyu lol) kind respects Graeme
On another note. Please do not take this as a targeted criticism, more as a general observation and niggle at the lack of martial understanding. Why oh why can very few people, including some high grade instructors, get kotegeshi correct. It seems that this highlights people's lack of "real life" understanding. Turning their back on uke, doing the big circular motion that opens them to a hook, changing hands behind their back etc etc. I practice a more martial orientated aikido, as you do, I would never dream of turning my back on uke. Rather than uke coming towards us we turn the hip and send uke away so that there is no risk of catching a hook to the face. Yet we see people like,Christian Tisseier showing this and many others. I name Shihan Tisseier as he is one of the higher ranking and easily found on RUclips. I respect his work but he does seem to leave the door open on this.. The link is about the only decent ( again no insult inferred or implied) kotegeshi I could find. Your thought. ruclips.net/video/zd__JjKT0Ms/видео.html&feature=share
If it's fourth teaching what was the lesson?
You should have shown us how to break the arm when you've got your opponent on the ground. No mercy!
You can't break the arm with this technique because Is a pressure point technique, it's not working on the joints.