Aikido Paso A Paso Una Guia Practica By Moriteru Ueshiba.pdf (EXTENDED × Summary)
He notes that Spanish, with its rhythmic, syllabic structure, mirrors the tenkan (turning) and irimi (entering) movements of Aikido better than English. The book is not a translation of a Japanese original; it was written in Spanish, for a culture that understands the flow of duende —the spirit of passionate movement. What makes this guide revolutionary is its rejection of the "wax on, wax off" pedagogy. Ueshiba breaks the unspoken rule of traditional dojo : he quantifies the qualitative.
Then there is the rare third category: the technical manual written by a poet. Aikido paso a paso Una guia practica By Moriteru Ueshiba.pdf
In Chapter 11, dedicated to defense against a knife attack ( tanto-dori ), there is a startling photograph. Ueshiba shows the final pin. But in the margin, handwritten in digital script, is a note: "In 60 years, I have never used this. But I have used the calm of practicing it to avoid 100 fights. The step is a vaccine against fear." For the intermediate practitioner stuck at 3rd kyu (green belt), this book is a revelation. It solves the "floating hand" problem (where students move their arms before their hips). It quantifies the ma-ai (distancing) into literal meters and centimeters based on the attacker’s height. He notes that Spanish, with its rhythmic, syllabic
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Aikido paso a paso: Una guia practica (Aikido Step by Step: A Practical Guide) by , the current Doshu (Grandmaster) of Aikido and grandson of the art’s founder, is precisely that anomaly. Published exclusively in Spanish for the Latin American market—a deliberate choice that surprised many purists in Tokyo—this 214-page volume reframes the "Way of Harmony" not as a mystical revelation, but as a physical conversation that begins with the feet. The "Why Spanish?" Enigma The first feature of this guide is its intended audience. Moriteru Ueshiba, a quiet, meticulous inheritor of the Aikido legacy, chose Mexico City for the book’s launch in 2018. In the prologue, he writes: "In Japanese, the word for 'step' and 'pace' is the same as the word for 'clarity.' You cannot have harmony if your feet are confused." Ueshiba breaks the unspoken rule of traditional dojo
Chapter three is a masterclass in joint manipulation. Rather than showing the full technique, Ueshiba isolates the uke’s wrist as a clock face. 12 o’clock is the thumb; 6 o’clock is the ulna. He demonstrates that nikyo (the second teaching) occurs when nage applies pressure precisely at 4:30, not 4:00 or 5:00.
Moriteru Ueshiba has done something his grandfather never could: he has translated the unspeakable movement of ki (energy) into the speakable language of paso (step). For the Spanish-speaking world—and for any English speaker willing to learn the rhythm of the language—this is the most practical Aikido manual written in a generation.