In the first
chapter, CHI NO MAKI, Musashi explains HEIHO NO HYOSHI
NO KOTO. The literal translation of this is tempo,
rhythm or timing. This is correct, and there’s nothing
wrong with that translation. This is how it is
translated in all the books. However, it has a greater
meaning than that, and I want to explain this more
deeply. Musashi said that everything in the world, even
everything in the universe, has timing or rhythm. He
said this is especially true for HEIHO. You have to get
the rhythm to win. To do this it takes a lot of
continuous training.
Remember that HEIHO means winning strategy, literally
how to win. This is a key point that you must keep in
your head as you read this article. HYOSHI is literally
rhythm, tempo, or timing. The very first point that
Musashi makes regarding HYOSHI is that there are so many
different HYOSHI for HEIHO, and that if you want to win,
you have to train hard to build up all of these
different types of HYOSHI. Without a strong command of
the different types of HYOSHI, you can not win. Musashi
says that this is a most important point. In Musashi’s
time, learning HYOSHI was the same thing as learning to
kill your enemy and not die yourself. And if you were
going to kill your enemy, you had to learn how to use
your weapons effectively. And in order to use your
weapons effectively, you had to use correct HYOSHI.
These concepts are inseparable. He described many
different types of weapons, but he made it simple by
telling you about only one weapon, the sword. Musashi
used the sword to illustrate his point about HYOSHI, and
he explained it in great detail. I want to show you how
to use HYOSHI for Karate. In Musashi’s time, he used the
sword as his weapon, but we use kick, punch, block, and
control of distance and angle with footwork. These are
our weapons. (Of course, we use weapons such as NUNCHUKA
and BO, but I’m going to keep this simple so that we can
move on through Musachi’s work.) You can see that if you
don’t have good HYOSHI with your kick and punch, etc.,
then your opponent will knock you out. It’s the same as
with the sword in Musashi’s time. You’ve got to build up
your HYOSHI, your rhythm, if you’re going to win.
I’m going to show you one other sports example to
help you understand this concept. Think about a great,
major league baseball pitcher. If he doesn’t change up
his rhythm, that is, if he throws the ball the same way
every time, then the batter will hit a homerun every
time – easy. So a good pitcher has to throw with
different HYOSHI to be successful, and that means he has
to practice, practice, practice.
O.K., back to Karate... I’m sure all of you remember
that when you first started training, it was easy to get
out of breath. But after many months and even years of
training, you began to understand how to control your
breathing. If you control your breathing you also
control your rhythm. The ability to maintain this
control requires continuous training, day in and day
out. Even advanced students lose this rhythm if, for
some reason, they must miss training for an extended
period of time. This is the same for all students, even
Black Belts, Senseis, Shihans, Shihan-Dais, and Saiko
Shihan. Yes, that’s right. Even my HYOSHI fades away if
I don’t train regularly. So I think that Musashi was
saying that you must train every day to get your
breathing right. Not only that, but you must also
control your eating and sleeping and every other aspect
of your life if you want to control your rhythm. And in
that day, if you didn’t, you would die.

In the next
paragraph Musashi explains that rhythm and timing
are tied to the success of everything. It’s just as
necessary as it is for musicians and dancers. All
musical instruments must be played with good rhythm.
If not, the result is definitely not a thing of
beauty. Do you remember Yule Brenner and Deborah
Carr in “The King and I”? What if he had stepped on
her foot during the dance scene? It would have been
a comedy! But they danced gracefully in perfect
rhythm, and the result was a thing of beauty.
Well, here I want to tell you a story from my
childhood. I was in Junior High School, and we were
all preparing for the great Fall Festival. This was
a really big deal for all of us. Every class had to
put on a performance of some kind. In my class there
were about 30 students, boys and girls, and we had a
singing chorus. We practiced so hard. Every day our
music teacher would make us stay after school and
practice, practice, practice! Even after all that, I
and another boy just could not follow the music –
the tune or the rhythm. Every time the music went up
in tone, we went down. Every time the music went
down, we went up. And we were always off-beat -
sometimes behind, sometimes ahead. We were awful!
The music teacher would wrap us hard on the head and
yell, “Do again!!” I had a headache every day for
almost a month from all this. I was so sore, I
couldn’t even touch my head. Where was my big class
law suit? Anyway, the Fall Festival arrived, and it
was our big day to perform. Everybody was all
dressed up and hair neatly combed. There was a big
audience. All the parents were there. Then, just
before we began our performance, the teacher said to
me and my buddy, “Don’t sing! Just move your mouth,
and don’t make a sound!” My feelings were so hurt!
That’s a true story, and I remember how I felt to
this day. It was a hard lesson, but because of it I
can understand what Musashi was saying. I understand
that rhythm is so very important. I have experience.
In the next line, Musashi says that timing is
important in the use of military weapons. The
Samurai had to have the correct timing to win. Think
about it. When a soldier fires his weapon, whether
it’s a bow and arrow or a gun, he must be in rhythm
with the moving target, or he will miss every time.
A cavalryman is dumped to the ground if he doesn’t
stay in rhythm with his horse. In other words,
Musashi was again saying that rhythm is important in
everything. Without it, you cannot win.
In the next paragraphs, Musashi describes KU NO
HYOSHI. This is the rhythm of the SAMURAI’S life.
Sometimes he rises up in his position. This is when
everything is going smoothly, and he is advancing in
his status as a warrior. At other times he
encounters many difficulties. He hits the wall.
Everything seems to go wrong, and he falls down in
his position. It’s the same today for a businessman.
Sometimes he advances successfully in his business
and makes lots of money. At other times his business
goes on the rocks – business stinks and he loses
money. You cannot see this HYOSHI of life. It’s like
a wave. But you need to know about it and the forces
that move it. You need to understand politics,
history, culture, the economy, etc. You must know
all of this to get the rhythm of life so that you
can see into the future. This is not something that
you physically see, but it is critical that you know
and feel this KU rhythm if you are to be successful.
That means that you have to study hard and open your
mind. Don’t isolate yourself from the world. You
need to “see” your future and whether it is rising
up or falling down, going right or going left. This
rhythm is called KU NO HYOSHI. And if you miss this
unseen rhythm, you will fail in whatever you are
trying to accomplish in life.
I want to explain HYOSHI in one more simple way.
When you are born, you’re a baby and dependent for
everything. Then you’re a toddler and everything is
so interesting. Then comes older childhood and
fundamental education. Then come the teenage years
and young adulthood. At this stage of life, you have
so much energy and enthusiasm! You want to act and
do! Then comes middle age, and you enjoy your
accomplishments. Then finally you reach old age. You
sit and receive, dependent in the end as you were as
a baby. You can see the rhythm of human life in this
cycle. This is HYOSHI, too. The point is that
whatever your time in life, you should try to build
yourself up. If you don’t, you will miss your timing
and miss your chance for success. Ride the top of
your wave by working hard and having ambition. That
way you can be successful no matter what your stage
in life, and you will stay forever young. (By the
way, we have a Senior Division in the Ultimate
Challenge Tournament on April 16. Here’s your chance
to build up your rhythm!)
In the next paragraph, Musashi really describes
HEIHO NO HYOSHI in detail. He says that there are
many different kinds of HEIHO NO HYOSHI. But, he
says, you will see that some HYOSHI fit you and some
HYOSHI do not fit you. You have to recognize this if
you want successful HEIHO. So let me explain this
point as it relates to Karate. Think about a big guy
who is very powerful, but he’s stiff. So his JODAN
MAWASHI GERI lands waist high. For this guy, high
kick techniques make him lose his rhythm. So it’s
best for him to come in close and in-fight. This is
the strategy that fits his HYOSHI. This is one
example of what HYOSHI fits and what does not.
Then Musashi describes in more detail in the next
sentence about HYOSHI. When he describes HYOSHI, he
talks about large and small movements and slow and
fast movements. When he describes large movements, I
think he means powerful, more dynamic movements.
When he describes small movements, I think he’s
really talking about holding the power or saving the
power. Of course, slow means slow, and fast means
fast.

Next, Musashi goes
even deeper to describe the three different timings
that can be used for each of those four HYOSHI.
These are A TARU HYOSHI, MA NO HYOSHI, and SOMUKU
HYOSHI. The first timing, A TARU, means simply to
engage your opponent. In the Karate world, this does
not necessarily mean that you make contact. It means
that you take action. You engage according to your
rhythm - the rhythm that fits you. This might mean
that you simply use your step work to get good
distance and angle.
The next timing Musashi describes is MANU HYOSHI.
In this HYOSHI, you break off from your opponent.
For example, if you feel that your opponent is
reading your rhythm and he knows your next
technique, then break away from him. Also, if his
spirit is very strong and you feel that he intends
to crush you, then you should break away and make
him cool down. The last timing is SOMUKU. This means
that you use opposite or different rhythm than your
opponent. If he’s not expecting a face kick, then
that is the time to use a face kick. If he’s not
expecting you to come straight, then do come
straight at him. So whatever your opponent is
expecting, you do something different. The point is
to confuse your opponent so that you control the
rhythm, the HYOSHI, of the fight. This makes good
HEIHO, winning strategy.
At the end of this chapter, Musashi says again
that if you want to make strong HEIHO (winning
strategy), then you have to have a strong SOMUKU
HYOSHI. This is such an important point that Musashi
closes the chapter with that point alone. He says in
the final two lines that in a real fight as in war,
you must know you enemy’s HYOSHI. You must read your
enemy’s rhythm. You must read his HYOSHI or he will
kill you. Your HYOSHI should always be whatever
HYOSHI your enemy in not expecting. That’s how you
should decide what HYOSHI to use for the fight.
Whatever HYOSHI you use, apply KU NO HYOSHI, too.
Remember that this is the “unseen rhythm”. In the
fighting situation, this means that you should use
psychology to confuse your enemy mentally. Make your
opponent uptight, mad, confused and emotional.
Then at the very end of this first chapter,
Musashi reminds us that there are five big chapters
in his book, and in each chapter he always ties back
to HYOSHI. The theme of every chapter is connected
to HYOSHI in some way. That’s how important rhythm
is. And how do you build up HYOSHI? By training,
training, training!
OSU!
