0% found this document useful (0 votes)
280 views3 pages

Understanding Inyo Kyojitsu Principles

The document discusses the Chinese concepts of inyo (yin and yang) and kyojitsu (falsehood and truth). It explains that inyo represents the natural cycles and balanced flow between opposing but complementary forces in life. Specifically, inyo refers to the two sides of a mountain (sunny and shaded) which cannot be separated. Kyojitsu similarly represents playing with deception and truth, or martial technique, to confuse an opponent into making wrong decisions. The key idea is that balance, understanding natural changes, and reacting without intention are important for training and protecting life.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
280 views3 pages

Understanding Inyo Kyojitsu Principles

The document discusses the Chinese concepts of inyo (yin and yang) and kyojitsu (falsehood and truth). It explains that inyo represents the natural cycles and balanced flow between opposing but complementary forces in life. Specifically, inyo refers to the two sides of a mountain (sunny and shaded) which cannot be separated. Kyojitsu similarly represents playing with deception and truth, or martial technique, to confuse an opponent into making wrong decisions. The key idea is that balance, understanding natural changes, and reacting without intention are important for training and protecting life.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Inyo kyojitsu

Posted on April 13, 2010by kumafr

1 Votes

These days sensei speaks a lot about inyo kyojitsu. inyo is the Japanese name for yinyang and kyojitsu refers to falsehood/truth, similar to when we played with menkyo kaiden a few years ago. Beyond these terms there is another reality that would like to e!plore further. inyo" #any things ha$e been said about this %hinese prin&iple on whi&h Taoism is based. The first thing you should know is that those two &on&epts should ne$er be separate. 'here there is in, there is yo. n an&ient %hina (as the kanji shows) these words defined the two sides of the sa&red hill. They were &reated to define the two sides of a mountain" the sunny side (yo) and the darker one (in). t is impossible to &ut the first one from the other. f you &ould split a mountain into two parts you would still ha$e a dark side and a sunny side* This inyo prin&iple is like the two sides of a sheet of paper, or a &oin, one side implies the other. 'hen you say in +,- yo you &reate duality and do not see the whole pi&ture. The two kanji gi$es us more information" The kanji for yo is and it is &omposed of three groups of strokes. The one on the left side looking like a B symboli.es the sa&red hill where rituals were performed. The se&ond group of two &hara&ters one on top of the other, is made out of hi, the sun () on top, and of ame the rain () below. They are separated by a hori.ontal bar meaning that things are &hanging and that after rain (dark time) the sun is &oming (light time). This is not a /udgment on things but merely an obser$ation of the natural e$olution of things in 0ife. The kanji for in is and begins with the same B showing that the two are linked together. The group on the right is also made of two &hara&ters. 1n top is ima (, now), and below is a simplified kumo (, &loud). t means that

&louds are building up now and that &hange is being e!pe&ted. This in is 2uite similar to the I of the I Ching used to indi&ate a &hange, a transformation. The &lear meaning of inyo therefore is that 0ife is &hanging permanently and swit&hing from one state to the other. There is nothing negati$e or positi$e in this inyo (&on$ersely to the understanding &ommonly used in the 'est), it is only a &rystal &lear obser$ation of nature3s &y&les (seasons, days, weather). 4emember that the %hinese ne$er in$ented the gods as we did in the rest of the world. 5or them ,ature was permanent and e$olution, and &hange was its main rule. They in$ented the I Ching in the first pla&e to help make de&isions on agri&ultural matters and render the in$isible world (impli&ate) $isible (e!pli&ate). This is what ske means when saying" art is the ability (saino) to render the in$isible, $isible. Kyojitsu is another ni&e &on&ept. Kyo is false, untruth and jitsu is truth. 0inking them both gi$es the idea of playing with falsehood and truth to de&ei$e the opponent, or better, to &onfuse him so that he is always taking the wrong de&isions. 6ometimes in Japan, during &lasses sensei speaks of kyojutsu instead of kyojitsu. Truth (, jitsu) is then repla&ed by martial te&hni2ue (, jutsu). But as it goes with theinyo &on&ept false implies the e!isten&e of truth too. -efining something also defines its opposite. +s they say badness is an absen&e of goodness, &old &reates hot, dark &reates bright, female defines male et&. nterestingly, it is always the negati$e understanding of things that defines the positi$e understanding as if we were programmed to be optimisti&. use here the terms negati$e and positi$e not in opposition but in the same merging approa&h as in inyo, this is like the bipolarity of the magnet. 6o when they speak of kyojutsu you should understand it as kyojitsu no jutsu, jitsu being &reated by &ompleting kyo. 4ead between the lines. This is the definition of balan&e. Inyo kyojitsu allows us during training to understand the permanent flow of &hanges in 0ife and on the mats the nagare between uke and tori. +&tually all our a&tions ha$e to be balan&ed (kyojitsu) to be able to swit&h naturally into the inyo. Balan&ing e$erything we get rid of the thinking pro&ess and de$elop the ability (saino) to rea&t to the non manifest aspe&ts of things. Thinking would stop this pro&ess and pre$ent us from rea&hing whatsensei tries to make us understand this year with rokkon shj, the logi&al &onse2uen&e stemming from the saino kon ki of last year. 7a$ing de$eloped the ability (saino), and our spirit/soul (kon/tamashii), we en&ompass the &ontainer (utsuwa/ki). 8lease note that the bigger the &ontainer,

the bigger the kkan. Being ali$e in the kkan we understand the balan&e of all things and rea&t a&&ordingly. 7a$ing no intention we de$elop happiness and prote&t 0ife. Rokkon shj ARNAUD COUSERGUE BUJINKAN

You might also like