Fourth horses suffer a lot from I dont trust you or the shit that your selling syndrome. The less you talk to us the better. We like renshu(shut up and do it) and only trust in your keiko( talk about it, explain it.) if you have actually used it in a fight or used it to impress chicks. But eventually if you give us enough renshu to where we lose 30 pounds and can get up off the floor without moaning we'll listen to some keiko. .
The Tomiki system as we know it has basically 25 movements (8+17), a walking kata, plus Randori. Its a renshu model, We don't complicate things with ura and omote, irimi and tenkan. Those are issues to be figured out in randori. When I do an Ikkyo(what I call #6 neighborhood) on a Morty-ryu guy, I get corrected alot because I go ura when its supposed to be omote. It's probably because I've been trained to feel for resistance and head the other way. or I'm just stupid.
The thing about our school is that we are more renshu than we give ourselves credit. We have 25 movements. 25 movements can be separated and repeated pretty damn easy. That's why I'm a fan of doing everything all the way through 3 or 4 times. (It's only 25 movements, folks.) Then back tracking and doing reps on some trouble spots. With this type of training it doesnt take long to integrate something new. This is why the koryu kata should be practiced, all of them. The koryu show the morty ryu side of things, the basics are there to figure Morty out.
A bitchy digression: Nobody seems to know why everyone just dropped the koryu kata. I think everybody went to KooKoo for Tanto Randori in Japan, and Judo Guys with Bad Knees couldnt handle the seiza and Knee walking. But where its left us is that people have to guess(real bad), make shit up(worse than bad), relate everything to judo(Thank God Tomiki was a Judo guy), or pray for ten years worth of good randori partners.
Anyway, to get back to that zen and the stupidest horse thing. The notion is that anything that finally sinks in stays in, and the fourth horse knows it better than anybody else. It was beat into his bones.
I was having a discussion with Jack about how people throw around the word connection. How a lot of Aikido types throw it around but they have no idea what the hell it means in concrete terms. I got the best lesson on connection from a morty-ryu beginner who was trying hard to be a first horse. He told me not to allow my palm to separate from his wrist, so when he did his fourth release I was double bent trying to keep connected. He tried to get me to choke up on his arm so I could stay connected better but I wanted to be a stubborn fourth horse and stay welded to his wrist and see where that took the situation. What he got out of it was double kuzushi points.
Check out Crocodile Dundee doing the fourth release. He talks about Ki, but the trick is really in the Fu Manchu dude keeping his palm welded, if Dundee curls his wrist and Fu keeps the weld on then his balance is broken. If there is a pocket formed between Fu's palm and the Dundees hand then it doesn't corrupt the other guys posture so much.
I suspect now that this connection business starts out as UKE driven. It's simply a matter of keeping your palm welded to the guy, and not allowing a space to develop. Grab your own wrist and allow some space between your palm and the back of your hand. Now raise the back of your hand into your palm and perform a tegatana/daito movement. When I randori with Jack I get the tori driven connection/welding. I try to get away but I can't. Hell, I dont' want to connect but I'm forced to stay welded to whatever is going on. I suppose you can call it Ki if it makes your hakama fit better.
As a side note, if the UKE had a knife in his off hand, then that would present some problems in the Calf Fry department for Aiki Guy.
Anyway, In the 8 releases it may be instructive to do a rep or two where Uke welds his palm to Tori. It makes the wrist actions make sense. Then do a few reps where tori trys to maintain the weld, with hand action and footwork.
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