I'm posting this for memory... If I put it anywhere else I will likely forget where I put it.
- Ten Precepts of Karate
- Karate did not develop from Buddhism or Confucianism.
In the past the Shorin-ryu school and the Shorei-ryu school were
brought to Okinawa from China. Both of these schools have strong points,
which I will now mention before there are too many changes:
- Karate is not merely practiced for your own benefit; it can be used
to protect one's family or master. It is not intended to be used against
a single assailant but instead as a way of avoiding a fight should one
be confronted by a villain or ruffian.
- The purpose of karate is to make the muscles and bones hard as rock
and to use the hands and legs as spears. If children were to begin
training in Tang Te while in elementary school, then they will be well
suited for military service. Remember the words attributed to the Duke of Wellington after he defeated Napoleon: "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton."
- Karate cannot be quickly learned. Like a slow moving bull, it
eventually travels a thousand miles. If one trains diligently every day,
then in three or four years one will come to understand karate. Those
who train in this fashion will discover karate.
- In karate, training of the hands and feet are important, so one must
be thoroughly trained on the makiwara. In order to do this, drop your
shoulders, open your lungs, take hold of your strength, grip the floor
with your feet, and sink your energy into your lower abdomen. Practice
using each arm one to two hundred times each day.
- When one practices the stances of Tang Te, be sure to keep your back
straight, lower your shoulders, put strength in your legs, stand
firmly, and drop your energy into your lower abdomen.
- Practice each of the techniques of karate repeatedly, the use of
which is passed by word of mouth. Learn the explanations well, and
decide when and in what manner to apply them when needed. Enter,
counter, release is the rule of releasing hand (torite).
- You must decide if karate is for your health or to aid your duty.
- When you train, do so as if on the battlefield. Your eyes should
glare, shoulders drop, and body harden. You should always train with
intensity and spirit, and in this way you will naturally be ready.
- One must not overtrain; this will cause you to lose the energy in
your lower abdomen and will be harmful to your body. Your face and eyes
will turn red. Train wisely.
- In the past, masters of karate have enjoyed long lives. Karate aids
in developing the bones and muscles. It helps the digestion as well as
the circulation. If karate should be introduced beginning in the
elementary schools, then we will produce many men each capable of
defeating ten assailants. I further believe this can be done by having
all students at the Okinawa Teachers' College practice karate. In this
way, after graduation, they can teach at the elementary schools at which
they have been taught. I believe this will be a great benefit to our
nation and our military. It is my hope you will seriously consider my
suggestion.
- Anko Itosu, October 1908
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