Hiden
no Togakure Ryu Ninpo
(Secret
Ninjutsu)
by
Masaaki Hatsumi
The following is a translation from the Japanese Book,
Hiden no Togakure Ryu Ninpo, or Secret Togakure Ryu Ninpo,
by Soke Masaaki Hatsumi.
There is a lot of misunderstanding regarding the Ninja.
Some Ninja were originally "failed Samurai"; they started
out with a bad reputation. The Japanese character for
"Shinobi" implies a lack of heart, coldness, and
ruthlessness. That applies only to the lowest or worst
class of Ninja. True Ninja have very deep and proper
emotions. Love and peace is very important to them. They
must, however, learn to be very patient with their bodies
and emotions. They train their subconscious (natural
intelligence) also. They are not concerned with "saving
face". They strive to win in the end. The Ninja's emotions
are like a flower. Ninja enjoy the peace of nature, and
have a peaceful nature as well. They use natural movement
to disappear when attacked with a sword. They fight to
protect community and country. It is bad that people write
about the Ninja without really knowing anything about them.
Ninja have many techniques, but their secret is Kyojutsu
ten kan ho (the art of changing). Today's society is very
crazy. There is no good philosophy. Heart is the most
important element of my philosophy. It will carry the
warrior through this confused time.
Budo Philosophy: In general, it is used to protect the
country, your community, and your own body. The way one
approaches and uses this philosophy is very important.
People say that the way you cut with the sword is
important, but good eyes, strong muscles and bones are not
the "way". Gross technique is more like cutting wood than
swordsmanship. Swordsmanship against an opponent involves a
totally different "way". You also need to learn different
techniques but the "way" is the important part which sensei
stresses.
Jutsu means technique, but it also means heart. Jutsu must
come from the heart. Therefore, your heart must be straight
and honest. If your heart is not clear and straight, your
jutsu will be lacking and you will not improve in the
martial arts. Lust for victory will not give you the
victory. You must receive the victory from your opponent.
He has no choice but to give it to you because he will
sense your heart as better or truer. Nature is your friend;
it helps you to win. Your enemy will have unnatural
movement, therefore you will be able to know what he is
going to do before he does it.
I refer to mastery as a "feeling" in the individual. The
certificate, even 10th degree, is no proof. One must be
honest and think on this very deeply. There is no proof,
however, if you look for it. When you don't need to look,
that is the proof. When one develops Shin Ki To Ichi (the
heart, universe and weapon as one) that is mastery. This is
the proof; this ability always allows the budoka to win,
his technique always works.
Ninpo protects all of you, your body and spirit. Other budo
philosophies don't have this. In budo, and other
philosophies, if your spirit is not straight, you can kill
yourself! For example, medicine should protect one's
health, but used improperly, the same techniques will kill.
Likewise with eating and drinking; improper habits will
destroy the body. The same with the leadership of a
country. Leaders should protect the people; a bad leader
(poor philosophy, greedy, selfish) can destroy a country.
Religion can be good for society, but greed and fanaticism
can destroy. Here is a paraphrase of a letter from
Takamatsu to me: "The Universe gives you a mission and
guides you-- no one can stop you-- you will gain enormous
strength, lose all fear, become as one with all of the
natural world, and have total freedom in your movements.
Your mind will be straight and honest. If your are truly
straight and honest, you can get this power. Common sense,
justice, and no surprise: this is Togakure Ryu Ninpo".
How to learn the gokui (secrets) so as to become Meijin (a
master)? Everyone wants to get the Makimono (Ryu Scroll
Legacy that is held by the Grandmaster). Only by studying
long and hard can you become strong enough to take the
Makimono. Once you have it you may find that it is hard to
move for several years because the Makimono is too heavy.
You begin to understand the commitment that using the gokui
entails. The Makimono becomes like a physical weight. Here
are some clues to the gokui (secrets). It has to do with
Takamatsu Sensei's return to Japan from China. In China he
was known as Mo-Ko, the Mongolian Tiger. But in Japan his
friends called him the Yamomoto Pussycat. They asked him
why he was acting like a pussycat, and not like a tiger.
Takamatsu said that he needed to act like a tiger in China
to survive. Now he needed to act like a pussycat so that
women would like him and want to pet him. The secret is
flexibility and appropriateness. When you need to be a
tiger you can, and are one. When its better to be a cat,
you can be and are.
I was once asked by a friend: "Why don't you fight a bull
like Mas Oyama? You are a very strong Ninja master." I
smiled and said that even though a bull has more muscles,
even a farmer can pull it around by the ring in it's nose.
Gokui (the secrets of martial arts) is in a person's heart
and his personal commitment. Be ready to think all the
time. If you want enlightenment, practice every moment how
to answer these type of questions, like the one about the
bull. This means everyone has the capability to learn the
Gokui in Ninpo. Practice every day, every moment. Prepare
your heart, make it pure in the way that the Universe is
pure- natural energy. Then your techniques will also be
pure and from the heart. You can learn from anyone if you
are sure of yourself. If you are strong you can have good
friends and bad friends, and learn from both. I have all
kinds of friends because I have no compulsion to judge
them. I am not susceptible to bad influences, nor
over-influenced by "good" influences. To keep your focus,
you must have a purpose- don't waste your time. Learn from
everything.
People like to practice budo in the dojo with their
friends. It is very important to go by yourself into nature
and work against trees, rocks, with animals. Study the
movement of animals and "wrestle" with nature. It is
important to have a master, but if he is no good, it could
be better than none. Look to nature.
If you, as a teacher, have a student who doesn't respond to
teaching, don't teach him. Leave his training to him. If he
likes Ninpo, he will learn on his own by observing; if not,
he will leave. Don't talk too much: demonstrate. I have
many very high level techniques that I never teach. If the
student's are not advanced enough, the training can be
detrimental.
You must love before you can create. If you love Ninpo, you
can learn with or without a teacher. Strive to find the
root of winning. Practice yourself, by yourself if
necessary, all your life. Don't be wishy washy. Use your
brain. You can learn many things. Learn them all rather
than wasting time vacillating between what you think is
important to learn. Never give up, even if you get sick. I
thought about budo 3 times as much as anyone else I knew,
trained 3 times as much as anyone, and spent 3 times as
much money in my martial quest. I got strong enough to find
out that I was weak. I became very confused, but didn't
give up. I tried to just stop worrying and train. But I got
sick anyway. I thought that I would die at one point. I was
in bed for five years. I thought that if I died, then I
might find peace. After the five years I realized that, no
matter whether you are alive, dead, sick or healthy, old or
have lots of vitality, you must practice, honestly,
according to your situation. Now I don't worry anymore!
Use natural technique; nature's power. When you look at
someone else's technique and you feel inadequate, you are
probably open for improvement- unless this feeling persists
for more than ten years: then give up. Use your practice to
gain insight into other things. Techniques are based on
philosophy. The fundamentals of both must be strong.
Practice the basics. Don't worry about the flower, worry
about the roots. Some day you will bloom into a beautiful
flower anyway. Dreams can help you improve your techniques.
Dream about the techniques. Practice also, again, again,
again.
You have to have a purpose. Why are you studying? Most
great martial artists have these purposes.
Self improvement. They never quit. They practice all their
lives to improve.
They realize that it is their own self improvement that is
the positive thing that rubs off on others.
Both good for themselves, and good for those that come in
contact with them.
It is important to know how little you know. When learning
Ninpo, keep the fire in your heart. Your technique will
then be forged from fire like the samurai sword. Fire and
justice are the keys. If you want to change your body and
your life, train with fire and live a just life. The number
of techniques you know isn't as important as your attitude.
You need purpose and and good eye for those things in life
that help your purpose. Takamatsu Sensei was in many real
fights and never lost because he was mindful of these
important things.
How to become a student: first of all, you need a good
teacher. If you have a quack for a "Master" then you are
wasting your time. Usually a great teacher will go through
many students looking for the ones who have a great sense
of the martial arts. In the old days, students had rules-
for example, they had to cut wood, clean house, etc. for
several years. The master then judged their strength,
patience, perseverance, and attitude. If the master decided
that you were good, he would invite you into the dojo.
There the training would be very hard. Some students
couldn't hack it. They thought that the master was cruel.
The ones who could make it were the ones who saw the
greatness of the master.
The purpose of each person's quest can differ: physical
strength, mental strength, animal desire to win, or it may
be an emotional quest. Practice religion if you want to
make your mind/spirit strong, not martial arts. Martial
arts can kill. However, to make your body strong enough to
just kill or win honors, lift weights, eat vegetables, and
walk to become strong. Don't bother with the martial arts.
Only 1 in 1000 will continue to seek the true practice of
Ninpo. He is stubborn with a one track mind bordering on
stupidity. Student and master must respect each other.
Takamatsu Sensei always called me "Sensei". But master is
master, student is student, always. I learned life's most
important lessons from Takamatsu Sensei. Of the three great
relationships -Parent/child, wife/husband, master/student,
the third is the most important in life.