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How to Train in Ninjutsu When You’re Training on Your Own – Historical Examples of Solo Training

Are you trying to learn the art of ninjutsu, but don’t have a Ninja teacher or dojo near you?

Do you want to know how to train in Ninjutsu when you are training on your own?

Well, you are not alone. Indeed, the Path you are walking, or at least considering entering, is not unique to you or our modern world. People would like to think that in order to learn ninjutsu, or any other martial art, you MUST go to a formal school and train directly under a master.

And while it was once necessary to be in the presence of a teacher, at least for short periods, to learn the lesson, modern technology has created a new paradigm: a new way to get the training you need.

And, while even a few years ago the self-training student was quite limited in trying to learn from the static images in martial arts books and magazines, today’s student can use the power of video and the Internet to gain much of the training they need. And you can do the same thing to learn ninjutsu.

In fact, you will be walking a Path that I, my own teachers, the Grand Master and even Takamatsu-sensei, the 33rd Grand Master of Togakure-Ryu Ninjutsu and Soke Master Masaaki Hatsumi, have walked.

We all participate in individual training to develop the most of the skills, competence and knowledge that we possess. Each of us, due to the distance between where we lived and our teacher, spent more time training on our own, researching, studying, and practicing away from our teachers, than in the dojo.

Does that mean we never train with a teacher?

Nope.

It means that we were entirely responsible for our own progress and development. We were responsible, perhaps even more so than the student who lives down the street from the dojo, for making sure that we take the lessons our teacher gave us and make them real, so that they work. Y…

…to show our teacher that we were worth his time and that we were ready for the next lesson when we got back to class.

Contrary to popular belief, ancient warriors did not normally have time to devote to study. So what often happened was that a warrior would take time away from “the world”, either intentionally or during his travels, and join a master for a day or three.

During this time, the warrior can only learn a technique or two: a principle, a concept, or a new way of looking at things. Then it was their responsibility to go and discover it for themselves, personalize, internalize the lesson and make it their own.

That is what Hatsumi-Sensei did during the week between one weekend visit with Takamatsu-Sensei and the next.

That’s what I did between visits to my teacher’s dojo in Atlanta, Dayton, and Noda-city, while living in Germany, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.

And that is what Takamatsu-Sensei did at various points in his own mastery development.

You will undoubtedly need several things to make this Camino work for you. Will need:

1) commitment and self-management ability to stay on track

2) basic lessons you can work with that come from a real teacher, and…

3) regular feedback to make sure you are doing things correctly and correction of anything that is wrong before you internalize a bad habit

Neither I nor any other teacher can give you “commitment” or the ability to manage yourself. That is not our job. But what you can and should get from a teacher, as often as possible, even if you train on your own, is a constant supply of basic lessons and feedback on your progress.

Regardless of whether this is done via video, by attending seminars or private training sessions on a regular basis, or a combination of the two…

…as a solo student, you are more responsible for your training than anyone else in the history of this art.

Are you cut out to be a Ninja? Do you have what it takes?

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