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ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Michimich -- The Shudokan Martial Arts Association (SMAA) is drawing attention to a foundational principle in traditional Japanese martial arts: the importance of the center of balance for effective, unified movement.
SMAA is highlighting why experiential understanding of this principle matters — and why knowing where the center is, without ever feeling it function, leaves a gap in any practitioner's development.
The Difference Between Knowing and Feeling
Most practitioners can locate the center immediately — roughly an inch and a half below the navel. The information appears in virtually every text on Japanese martial arts. What appears far less often is the physical work of feeling it.
The remedy starts with standing in the basic natural stance, which allows any practitioner to map their own balance boundaries quickly. By shifting the hips slowly in each direction without moving the feet, a practitioner can feel the center approach the edges of its base of support — and discover exactly where balance holds and where it gives way.
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What Disconnected Movement Actually Costs
In Junzuki, the style's lunging punch, stepping forward with the foot before the center has moved, fractures the technique from the start. The body works in pieces, and both excessive movement and wasted effort are introduced. In Wado Ryu, these aren't treated as matters of preference or style.
The same principle appears in Pinan Nidan Kata, in the third movement, where the practitioner retreats before turning 180 degrees. When the center moves first, the body evacuates together, and the escape is genuine. The footwork is identical, with a different outcome, determined entirely by what started the movement.
These observations reflect the mechanics of how the human body works, and they apply across the full range of traditional Japanese martial arts.
Beyond the Dojo
Decades of training aren't the only thing setting senior practitioners apart. The outward expression of a body that's learned to organize itself around its true center shows discipline, balance, and practice.
This is a hallmark of traditional training, and cannot be shortcut through intellectual study alone. It's what distinguishes a Japanese Karate Association (https://www.smaa-hq.com/certification) rooted in classical budo from modern fitness-oriented programs.
More on Michimich.com
Explore Traditional Budo Through a Japanese Karate Association That Preserves These Principles
SMAA is a Japanese Karate Association (https://www.smaa-hq.com/certification) and traditional budo organization with members in the United States, Japan, Canada, England, Australia, and beyond. The organization offers an internationally recognized ranking, the quarterly SMAA Journal, seminars, and a worldwide community of practitioners.
Membership is open to all who are interested in traditional Japanese budo. To learn more, visit: https://www.smaa-hq.com/membership
SMAA was founded in January 1994 by a group of martial artists committed to promoting and safeguarding Nihon budo and koryu bujutsu. Contact: https://www.smaa-hq.com/contact
SMAA is highlighting why experiential understanding of this principle matters — and why knowing where the center is, without ever feeling it function, leaves a gap in any practitioner's development.
The Difference Between Knowing and Feeling
Most practitioners can locate the center immediately — roughly an inch and a half below the navel. The information appears in virtually every text on Japanese martial arts. What appears far less often is the physical work of feeling it.
The remedy starts with standing in the basic natural stance, which allows any practitioner to map their own balance boundaries quickly. By shifting the hips slowly in each direction without moving the feet, a practitioner can feel the center approach the edges of its base of support — and discover exactly where balance holds and where it gives way.
More on Michimich.com
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What Disconnected Movement Actually Costs
In Junzuki, the style's lunging punch, stepping forward with the foot before the center has moved, fractures the technique from the start. The body works in pieces, and both excessive movement and wasted effort are introduced. In Wado Ryu, these aren't treated as matters of preference or style.
The same principle appears in Pinan Nidan Kata, in the third movement, where the practitioner retreats before turning 180 degrees. When the center moves first, the body evacuates together, and the escape is genuine. The footwork is identical, with a different outcome, determined entirely by what started the movement.
These observations reflect the mechanics of how the human body works, and they apply across the full range of traditional Japanese martial arts.
Beyond the Dojo
Decades of training aren't the only thing setting senior practitioners apart. The outward expression of a body that's learned to organize itself around its true center shows discipline, balance, and practice.
This is a hallmark of traditional training, and cannot be shortcut through intellectual study alone. It's what distinguishes a Japanese Karate Association (https://www.smaa-hq.com/certification) rooted in classical budo from modern fitness-oriented programs.
More on Michimich.com
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Explore Traditional Budo Through a Japanese Karate Association That Preserves These Principles
SMAA is a Japanese Karate Association (https://www.smaa-hq.com/certification) and traditional budo organization with members in the United States, Japan, Canada, England, Australia, and beyond. The organization offers an internationally recognized ranking, the quarterly SMAA Journal, seminars, and a worldwide community of practitioners.
Membership is open to all who are interested in traditional Japanese budo. To learn more, visit: https://www.smaa-hq.com/membership
SMAA was founded in January 1994 by a group of martial artists committed to promoting and safeguarding Nihon budo and koryu bujutsu. Contact: https://www.smaa-hq.com/contact
Source: Shudokan Martial Arts Association
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