Ninjutsu Training Techniques

Ninjutsu Masters Knowledge Base

What would happen if I attack a Ninjutsu master to test his ability? Suppose, I say to a ninjutsu master: "Let's see how good you are. I'll attack you at my best(simulating that I really want to hit him) and you try to defend yourself" I have no experience in martial arts. Suppose I attack him mainly with kicks and punches.
I am close to becoming a ninjutsu master and i need tips on teaching? i need to learn tips on teaching and how to make them do their best.
Anybody know a good ninjutsu master in Durham? Im new to training and want to practice in a proper school. I have been informed that there are one or two close to but desire suggestion on how and where to train. It would be especially great if the school had wooden dummies or a martialarm to train on.
Is Masaaki Hatsumi the unique Ninjutsu traditions heir? Some say hatsumi is the only perosn who inherited ninjutsu traditions. I do not doubt he is a real Ninjutsu master, the Japanese govertment regards him so. But I don not think he is the only one, it might there be other sokes also, from other traditons or linages.
Is Hatsumi Maasaki Sensei the only authentic ninjutsu Master? Or are there any others in the world ??
Ninjutsu question...? Is there anywhere I can learn real ninjutsu...I mean like training to use your surroundings and what the Grand Master of Ninjutsu teaches? I read a book by some guy (sorry I forgot his name, ti was something Hayes) who went to train with Grand Master Hatsumi in Noda<Japan and he wrote of one instance when he had to use a certain part of his nose to sense how far water was from him. I want to learn that kind of ninjutsu, but is there anywhere I can outside of Japan? I've found many Ninjutsu schools that don't offer what I'm looking for though. According to Grand Master Hatsumi there is a way to sense how far water is using a certain part of you nose...I think he said if you focus on the the top, but I'm not sure.
Want to learn a little about ninjutsu and to-shin do? Just thought I'd paste some info from skhquest.com in hopes of providing accurate info for those with ninja or ninjutsu questions. Due to misrepresentation in movies and media by the late 1980s, the art of Japan's ninja was so misunderstood that the words "ninjutsu" or "ninja" blocked many people from considering training in our schools. The image of Japan's authentic ninja had become so tarnished that it seemed time to bring in a new wave of understanding for the 21st Century. The ninja arts have been misunderstood throughout Japan's history. In the 1800s, grandmaster Toshitsugu Takamatsu avoided awkward attention by referring to his ninja arts as happo-biken . In the 1900s, Masaaki Hatsumi came to call his ninja martial arts practice budo taijutsu. Taking the tradition into the first century of the 2000s, Stephen K. Hayes refers to his ninja art as To-Shin Do, of which he and his wife Rumiko are An-shu directors of the Kasumi-An At the heart of the martial techniques that we teach is the depth heritage of the original Togakure ninja invisible warriors. SKH Quest students are introduced to the original ways of the Togakure ninja through training in the highly practical physical, mental, and strategic skills of To-Shin Do. What is the difference between To-Shin Do and Bujinkan training? To-Shin Do is best explained as a way of training for self-defense and personal development that embodies everything the Bujinkan has to offer, PLUS a whole collection of training methods and insights that are important for 21st Century American students. Obviously, fights are different in modern America than they were in 1500s Japan. Masaaki Hatsumi has made it quite clear that it is not the job of Japanese masters to attempt to translate classical combat lessons into relevance for countries and cultures foreign to Japan. That is our job, and Stephen K. Hayes' genius is his ability to eliminate the need for all the guesswork when it comes to translating classical lessons into vibrant modern relevance. An-Shu Stephen K. Hayes has a unique ability to teach the classical exercises in ways that allow us to apply the essence of the kata to modern attack situations. An-Shu Stephen K. Hayes has said for years, "To-Shin Do is the greatest tribute I can pay to my teacher Masaaki Hatsumi. Training with Hatsumi Sensei in Japan opened my eyes and heart to vast realms of warrior truth that were inaccessible in the martial arts scene of late 1960s America. After immersing myself in training with Hatsumi Sensei in the 1970s and 1980s, my inspiration was bubbling over. This stuff was incredibly valuable, and I was captivated by the idea of translating the gift of Hatsumi Sensei's lessons into a form that could serve my own culture and people back in America."
Ninjutsu True or false? If ninjutsu schools today are fake then let me know why the 34th Generation Grand Master to the Togakure Ryu Ninjutsu is still living in Japan and why His Instructor the 33rd Genration Grand Master died Just several Years ago. I started to do resaerch in the Late 70's when I was a child and came across a book by Andrew Adams called NINJA the invisible assassins where he enterviews Dr. Massaaki Hatsumi who holds lineage in 9 traditions and I now have not 1 but 2 instructors certified by him 1 in California and 1 in NYC. If they are phonies please tell me how to know. Otherwise given Dr. Hatsumi's lineage and the fact that he is a national treasure in Japan and his instructor Toshitsugu Takamatsu who earned the title Last True Living Ninja befor his Death they are legitimate. Please bear in mind that I have known of charlatans who claim to teach real ninjutsu but don't and in fact do teach a made up system of their own.
Tae Kwon Do, Okinawan Karate, or Ninjutsu? I had done a little bit of tae kwon do when I was little. I liked the basics they taught, but I only advanced to a yellow belt because my family had to move; for this reason, I cant judge the effectiveness of the system. Many say that it is flashy and mainly for competition. Some say that high kicks and spin kicks are not useful in real fights. But I believe that high kicks and the speed of it must have some value. Then I tried ninjutsu in my college last year. It's part of Hayes' system. While everything is useful and devastating, I felt that it was too defensive and hard to master. Then I checked out Okinawan karate. It seems pretty cool, but I do not know if it's effective or not. The question is: which one should I do? Is it possible to do 2 at the same time? (karate and ninjutsu?) P.S. I'm not very flexible, therefore ninjutsu is the easiest for me. But if my flexibility can improve as I practice, I do not mind doing tkd or karate. I know Bujinkan is the traditional ninjutsu, but I like my current one because there is less weapons and realistic applications.
What is the most effective Martial Art form? Tae kwon doe? Capoirea? muay tae? aikido? karate ? ninjutsu? Which of these would take the shortest time to master? Which one would be the most effective to defend yourself?
Martial Arts Question on Ninjutsu? Is it really Possible to Unlock your hidden potential locked inside? I read somewhere that Ninja's of Feudal Japan along time ago where masters of unlocking the Hidden potential and they where able to pull of stunning feats such as jumping from the ground to ontop of a building of somesort I Also Heard somewhere that the Human body puts up mental blocks from reaching your full potential and there is blocks when surpassed your power advances and your muscles joints and bones would start breaking and ripping is this all true?
Ninjutsu Training? I need to know what my next step is, I have mastered walking through walls, walking up walls, flying and red Chi balls. By the way Chi gives me a rash on my @$$ so I need to learn more moves that dont utilize it.
Taik kwon do or Ninjutsu? I want to take both but im not sure which one... Please like tell me how they vary and about how long they take to master
Tai kwon doe or Ninjutsu? I want to take both but im not sure which one... Please like tell me how they vary and about how long they take to kind of master
Is there any schools that teach Ninjutsu in Oregon? I'm interested in mastering these skills: 1. Seishin-teki kyōyō (spiritual refinement) 2. Taijutsu (unarmed combat, using one's body as the only weapon) 3. Kenjutsu (sword fighting) 4. Bōjutsu (stick and staff fighting) 5. Shurikenjutsu (throwing shuriken) 6. Sōjutsu (spear fighting) 7. Naginatajutsu (naginata fighting) 8. Kusarigamajutsu (kusarigama fighting) 9. Kayakujutsu (pyrotechnics and explosives) 10. Hensōjutsu (disguise and impersonation) 11. Shinobi-iri (stealth and entering methods) 13. Sui-ren (water training) 14. Bōryaku (tactic) 15. Chōhō (espionage) 16. Intonjutsu (escaping and concealment) 17. Tenmon (meteorology) 18. Chi-mon (geography)
Do you think Kakashi is stronger than Gai or Tsunade ? I think he is stronger.He have the sharingan, he is fast and he is master in taijutsu and ninjutsu.
Looking for the name of an old martial arts "game show"...? Back in the late 80's or early 90's when I was living in the S.F. Bay Area (around the same era as American Gladiators), there was a show that pitted contestants against eachother in "realistic" staged confrontations where they would use their own specialized martial arts forms. One that is particularly on my mind was a Native American martial artist of some sort, however others were masters of everything from Karate to Ninjutsu. Plus, just for kicks, there would also be random ninjas tossed in here and there, etc., and the whole thing worked out as being a "ladder fight" where it would start off with say 4 conestants who would go through eliminations until one was declared champion for that show. The real question though, was what was the show? I would love to try finding episodes of it, but I need a name to start with. I believe it was hosted/sponsored by the American Martial Arts Association, but I'm not 100% sure.
is taijutsu hard how long would it take a 14 year old to master? also is ninjutsu real and if it is is it hard
Contradiction? Talkin in circles? They(Martial arts masters) Say 'run away from fights' 'its NOT about fighting&killin,its really about:Spiritual Enlightenment.' and the 33rd ninja grandmaster said "If u Master the martial arts and study ninjutsu,then you will gain the ultimate prize..The Eyes&Mind of God." But yet,they teach you HOW to Kill,they teach you HOW to apply the Dim Mak(Death touch),they teach you HOW to throw Chilli Pepper dust in the eyes,they teach you HOW to Snap,Crackle&Pop the next man's arms &joints You AINT gonna gain "Spiritual Enlightenment" thru Punches,Kicks,Arm-locks nor thru the use of a Manrikisugari nor a Chain-whip (You'll become a DEADLY Warrior NOT a Rabbi/Imam/Bishop/ Buddhist Monk !) If you want Spiritual Enlightenment...Go to the Church/Synagoge/Mosque/ Buddhist Temple right or wrong?
Pein and Madara Uchiha: who is the strongest? I don't understand if Pein has the strongest dojutsu the "Rin'negan" than why would he take orders from Madara? Madara theoretically has the power of Tsukyomi, Amateratsu, and Sasanoo; and Space/Time Jutsu. But Pein can master all 6 elemental chakras, the ability to take host and take control over the deceast--in doing so, aquiring all the deceast's abilities. One such body is a master summoner, the other eats all ninjutsu, the other is great at taijutsu, another can sense chakra levels using rain, another is great at using defense.... Wouldn't it be safe to assume that Pein has the potential to be stronger than Madara, if he is not already? Yes I am aware that Pein is weak to genjutsu as seen in his fight with Jaraiya, but no Uchiha has ever been seen using genjutsu that effects more than 1 target. Tsukyomi only effects 1 person, which means that Madara would have to use it 6 times if he is to beat Pein. So what can he do to control Pein?
why is madara the leader of akutsuki? madara i'm sure is powerful. however i fully believe pein has the greatest potential out of anyone in the naruto world. since jiraya said that pein could naturally control all six types of chakra (wonder what the sixth is?) and learn any jutsu, he could easily have mastered the jutsu that orochimaru used to revive the hokage's. or just made orochimaru revive them. he could defeat the hokages after they were revived, and use them as vessels. recieveing... wood ninjutsu and tailed beast bending unparalleled water ninjutsu all the other ninjutsu in kohona and god like speed; the rasengan, and whatever else the 4th could do. combine that with a powerful genjutsu/medical ninja(maybe throw in some puppet skills for b.a. points) and like... hidan's body, as a summoner, giving him immortality. how can you kill hidan. easy reaper death seal. body would be immortal. no soul. pein could kill madara; with those vessels; easy.
Which kung-fu/wushu would suit me best? I would like something that moves along at the learner's pace, fast, agile, and a beautiful art that is also effective. As well as something that incorporates weapons a lot and as its own and not using another separate style (karate does more kedno than an actual karate sword style for example... or so ive observed). Also an art that will make me ponder its philosophies such as ninjutsu and shao-lin kung-fu. im going to say it now that i LOVED crouching tiger-hidden dragon and am curious about the REAL styles that were used in the film. I love all weapons to absolutely no end and want to learn how to properly control them with finesse and effect. Oh. Also something that takes a long time to master with many many many aspects/secrets to the art to keep me learning and growing for a looooong time (i learn martial arts REALLY fkn fast). so again i ask. what fighting style would be best for a determined, fast, not so strong, philosophical kinda person that loves any/all weapons to no end.
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