One Woman's Foray Into the Martial Arts
Oct 16th 2023
A Story By the Owner of This Site - Written in 2009
This
is a personal account of how one woman, completely inexperienced in the
martial arts, undertakes the challenge of learning a Japanese
battlefield martial art and her sometimes scary, sometimes comedic
journey to acquiring her black belt.
Up until five
years ago, if anyone had told me that I would practice martial arts, I
wouldn’t have believed it. In fact, I would have laughed my head off and
said “no way!” I grew up in Canada as a sheltered “little Jewish girl”
in an environment so safe that I never even witnessed a fight in the
schoolyard, or anywhere else. Fighting, in any shape or form, whether
for self-defense or for violent purposes, was completely and totally
foreign to me.
At the age of 39, I found myself living in
Florida, divorced, with two children aged 10 and 12. I was seeing a man
who had been practicing a martial art called Ninjutsu for three or four
years and he was absolutely enthralled with it. Up to that point in my
life, the only exposure to martial arts that I had experienced was when,
at a younger age, my kids had taken taekwondo. The atmosphere in the
dojo where my kids trained was not particularly inspirational, nor was
their instructor, and though they took class for several years, none of
us was left with any lasting impression.
One day, I decided to
stop by the dojo where my friend trained, purely because I was curious
to see him doing what he loved so much. It had never entered my mind
that I was going there to check it out as something I might be
interested in doing myself.
The sensei came over and introduced
himself and chatted with me for a few minutes and it was at this point
that things started to become strange and unexpected. For some reason,
unbeknownst to me, as I talked to the sensei I began to get this weird
feeling that he had something that I wanted, though I had no idea what
that something was. Bear in mind that I really knew nothing about
martial arts and it was not a situation where I watched the class and
suddenly got the urge to do what they were doing. I just knew that this
sensei had some kind of knowledge that I wanted. I met with him a few
days later and decided to start coming to class.
The first time I
stepped out on the mat, I was petrified. I was so far out of my comfort
zone that I couldn’t even see it from where I was standing on the mat!
Ninjutsu
is a Japanese battlefield martial art that combines ninja and samurai
arts and most of its practitioners are men. Though I do not know the
actual reasons for this, my theory is that the use of weapons and the
fact that there is a lot of physical contact and getting thrown down on
the ground, makes it less appealing to women than other martial arts. It
is not a sport and there are no tournaments or competitions. The use of
a wide assortment of weapons – swords, knives, bos (6 foot sticks), jos
(4 foot sticks), and hanbos (3 foot sticks) – to name a few, made it
that much more intimidating for me, not to mention the unfortunate fact
that when I joined the class it consisted of eight black belts and me!
In
Ninjutsu, you are not split into groups based on your rank or the level
of training you are at. Everyone trains together. This can be great for
learning, but at the beginning of my training all could think of was
that any black belt who was stuck practicing with me would not get good
training since I hadn’t the faintest idea of what I was doing!
For
the first few months that I attended class, I had to psych myself up
just to get on the mat and I would continually apologize to my training
partners for being inept and for giving them “bad” training. For the
most part, everyone was very helpful and it was explained to me that
part of the training is to help teach those of lesser rank and lesser
experience. Of course, it took me a long time to believe that, so
wrapped up was I in my own baggage. Only now, after four plus years of
training do I understand that teaching others is an incredible learning
tool for the one doing the teaching!
In Ninjutsu, though formal
testing does indeed occur, rank is not always assigned by means of test
taking. I have watched others in my class be formally tested in order to
earn a higher rank, but purely due to circumstance, that has never been
the case for me personally. There are only three belt colors in
Ninjutsu – white, green and black. However, there are fifteen degrees of
black belt, and it is said that though it may take several years to get
your black belt, and several more to reach fifth degree, it is only
when you achieve the rank of godan (5th degree black belt) that you even
begin to take the first baby steps in your training.
I never
even had a white belt. Our sensei wasn’t particularly conscientious when
it came to practical details. He was always more concerned with the
esoterics of the martial art and I loved that. The ego that can be so
much a part of the whole “rank thing” did not interest me at all and I
liked the fact that Ninjutsu seemed so unstructured. I also liked the
fact that the sensei did not strut around demanding to be idolized as
some might believe befitted an 8th degree black belt
(hachidan). I’ve always had a problem with those who use their positions
of authority to mistreat others in a condescending or overbearing
fashion. (Unfortunately, I was to discover later that there are other,
more covert and manipulative ways in which to abuse one’s authority, and
our sensei turned out to be a master at those less obvious but more
insidious ways. However, that is a story for another time…)
As I
was saying, I never even had a white belt - I had been training for
several months with no belt at all. One day, we were at a weekend
seminar at our dojo and we were doing sword training. I needed some kind
of belt in which to carry my sword so I approached my sensei and asked
to borrow a belt to use for that purpose. He handed me a green belt from
behind the counter and I returned to my training partner who proceeded
to tell me that I had just been given the rank of green belt. I told him
that he was crazy and that our sensei had just loaned me the belt to
use while we were doing sword training. My friend however, said “trust
me, you just got your green belt.” In complete shock, I went up to my
sensei and told him what my friend had said and that if it were true, I
wanted to thank him. His only reply was; “just train.”
This
became a refrain that I would hear over and over throughout my training
and still continue to hear regularly. It is the answer and the solution
to everything. If you don’t understand a training point, or can’t get a
particular technique – just train. If life is coming at you hard and
fast and you don’t know what to do – just train. And so on and so forth.
And that doesn’t mean just train in the physical sense but in the
mental, emotional and psychological aspects as well. It means that all
the answers are in the training because ultimately, martial arts is
about self-exploration and self-discovery. “Just train” means keep going
no matter what, and everything will eventually sort itself out.
Five
months into my training, I went to Japan with my boyfriend and our
sensei to train with the grandmaster of Bujinkan Ninjutsu, Soke Maasaki
Hatsumi, and the Japanese Shihan (master instructors) that have been
training with him for somewhere around fifty years. Every year, around
the Soke’s birthday at the beginning of December, there is a big seminar
in Japan called the Daikomyosai and Ninjutsu practitioners come from
all over the world to participate. After only five months of training, I
still knew next to nothing and was hard-pressed to understand anything
that was going on while training in Japan. I had consulted with my
sensei before undertaking the trip to ensure that he didn’t think it was
insane for me to be going to Japan so early in my training when I was
as green as my belt. He encouraged me to go so I found myself in Japan
meeting other Ninjutsu practitioners from numerous countries and having
an incredible, though overwhelming time. Until the last day of the
seminar…
My boyfriend and I tend to be very sociable so in spite
of the fact that it was our first time at one of these international
events, we got to know a lot of people rather quickly, or at least, they
got to know us. So there we were, in the middle of a training session
on the last morning of Daikomyosai, where various Shihan from around the
world were calling people up to demonstrate techniques in front of the
Grandmaster and the three hundred other attendees. I thought nothing of
it when my boyfriend’s name and that of our sensei got called and they
went up to do a technique, never suspecting that I would get called.
After all, I was way too much of a newbie for anyone to expect me to
demonstrate anything. Yet all of a sudden, I heard my name being called.
My
shock and horror at that moment are difficult to describe. I sat there,
stunned and terrified, refusing to get up. My boyfriend was whispering
urgently in my ear; “Hatsumi is waiting for you!” Still, I didn’t budge
and if it had been left up to me, I would have sat there until the
moment passed and everyone realized that under no circumstances was I
getting up in front of three hundred more experienced martial artists,
to perform a technique. However, the decision was not left up to me. The
Spanish Shihan that happened to be sitting on the floor directly behind
me, bodily lifted me up and basically threw me out on to the floor. I
confess that nothing else besides physical force would have gotten me
out on that mat, but now, I had no choice. All the other martial artists
were clapping and laughing at my discomfiture, rooting me on in a
friendly fashion. Well, I managed to execute a decent technique on my
boyfriend, one that we had just learned earlier that morning at the
seminar, in which I actually took him down by his nose! This certainly
made for comedic effect, but I was never so scared in my life and never
so relieved as when the moment was over.
The Grandmaster smiled
beneficently – I believe he was amused by the whole spectacle – but I
realized that though it may have been funny once, I could not make
another scene like that in the future, if I was ever called up again.
The other practitioners were very encouraging, many of them approaching
me in the course of the day to congratulate me on a good technique and
laughing with me at my own embarrassment. I knew that my goal for the
next year was to overcome my fear so that if I did get called up again, I
would be able to stand up like everyone else and do what I had to do.
Another
year of training went by and we again found ourselves in Japan at
Daikomyosai. I had been training for a year and five months. As
expected, I did indeed get called up to demonstrate a technique and this
time there was no scene. I admit that immediately after executing my
technique, and until this day, I have no recollection of which technique
I actually did. I only knew that I had managed to do what I had
mentally trained for all year. Though the fear was still there, I had
conquered it enough to be able to stand up with no fuss and get out
there and do something.
One evening, on that second trip to
Japan, my boyfriend and I got into an argument. We were having a drink
at the English pub near our hotel and we were discussing the fact that
in Japan, though they do have regular toilets, they also have these
porcelain troughs that you must squat over to do your business. He had
already used them on several occasions and claimed to enjoy it,
extolling the benefits of the squatting position! I, on the other hand,
was maintaining my stand that I had no interest whatsoever in using
these uncivilized “holes in the ground” and that I never would. Well, at
this point in the conversation, my boyfriend says to me that if I never
try anything new, if I don’t step outside of my proverbial box, I would
never get my black belt. Needless to say, that pissed me off and I took
his words as a challenge. At that moment, though I did not tell my
boyfriend what I was thinking, I knew that I would have to prove to him
(and to myself) that I could, in fact, do something like shitting in a
hole. I knew that at the next opportunity, I would try out the “foreign
facilities.”
The very next day, during our lunch break at the
seminar, I did use the trough, though I did not enjoy it or find it
comfortable and natural like my boyfriend did. Nonetheless, I tried it
and I proudly reported this fact to my boyfriend. And now comes the
crazy part - at the end of training that day, our sensei promoted me to
black belt! The top Shihan from the US, with whom we had trained on
several occasions, had apparently said to our sensei, “What are we going
to do about Susan?” the implication being that he felt that it was time
for me to receive my black belt.
My boyfriend had suspected
that this might happen and had mentioned the possibility of me being
promoted before we had left for Japan. I had not taken him seriously,
having had no expectation whatsoever of being promoted and feeling
completely unprepared to be a shodan. Indeed, there are certainly those
that would say that without a formal test, I did not deserve to be
promoted. However, I will attest to this; though I did not undergo an
“official” rank test, having to get up and perform in front of the
Grandmaster for two years in a row, so early in my training, and on top
of that, shitting in a hole, sure felt to me like being tested!