• Work
  • About
Menu

Aonghas Crowe

  • Work
  • About
DSC04547.jpg
C2sJ_FkUAAAa5xH.jpg

The Way of the Bow

February 19, 2021

My long walks continued. I’d been coming down with such a severe case of cabin fever that even the heaviest of showers was no longer enough to keep me inside. I’d even traded in my flimsy convenience store umbrella for one from Paul Smith costing ten times as much, just so that I could get out of my apartment and out of my head, as often as possible. Call me Thoreau; Fukuoka, my Walden.

One afternoon, as I was returning from one of my longest walks yet that had my shins and arches aching with a dull, throbbing pain, I dropped in at the Budōkan to see what kind of martial arts were taught there.

At the entrance was a bulletin board with a schedule of classes. On Saturday evenings, big boys in diapers pushed themselves around a clay circle. Sumō wasn’t really my cup of tea, which is just as well; of all my blessings, girth is not one of them. Three evenings a week, the kendō members met to whack each other senseless with bamboo sticks. That wasn’t quite what I was looking for either.

I walked over to a small window, stuck my head in, and said excuse me in Japanese, disturbing three elderly men from their naps.

“You really gave my heart a start,” said one of the men as he approached the window.

“Um, sorry about that.”

“Wow! Your Japanese is excellent.”

“Tondemonai,” I replied reflexively. Nonsense! “My Japanese is awful. I’ve still got a lot to learn.”

“Oi, Satō-sensei. This gaijin here says his Japanese is awful, then goes and uses a word like, ‘Tondemonai!’”

Satō rubs the sleep from his eyes says, “Heh?”

“How can I help you?”

“I’m, um, looking for a kick boxing class. You got any?”

“Kick boxing? No, I’m sorry we don’t. We do have karate, though. Tuesday and Thursday evenings. And there’s Aikido on Wednesday and Friday evenings.”

“Nothing in the afternoons?”

“No, only in the evenings.”

“Well, what about jūdō?”

The man’s eyes lit up. I was in luck, there was a class in session now, he said pointing to a separate building across the driveway.

“That building?” I said. I had my doubts.

“Yes, yes. Just go right over there. Tell them you’re an observer.”

I wasn’t sure the old man had heard me correctly, but I went to the adjacent building all the same, and removed my shoes at the entrance. As I stepped into the hall, two women in their fifties wearing what looked like long, black pleated skirts and heavy white cotton tops minced past me, their white tabi’ed feet[1] sliding quietly across the black hardwood floor. A similarly dressed raisin of a man, upon seeing me bowed gracefully, then glided off to the right from which the silence was broken with the occasional “shui-pap!”

“Anō,” I called out nervously. “I was told to come here. I’m, um, interested in learning jūdō.”

“Jūdō?” the elderly man asked.

“Yes, jūdō.”

“This isn’t jūdō,” he said, eyeing me warily. “It’s kyūdō.”

“Kyūdō?” What the hell is kyūdō?

He gestured nobly in the direction the “shui-pap!” sound had emanated from and encouraged me to follow him to a platform of sorts overlooking a lawn at the end of which was a wall with black and white targets.

“Kyūdō,” the man told me again. The Way of the Bow.

He instructed me to watch an old woman who had just entered the platform carrying a bow as long as she was short. She bowed before a small Shintō household altar, called a kamidana, then minced with prescribed steps to her place on the platform. Her posture was unnaturally rigid: her arse jutted out, spine curved back. Her head was held high. With her arms bent slightly at the elbows she raised the bow upward, bringing her arms nearly parallel to the floor. She then adjusted the arrow, stabilizing the shaft with her left hand and fitting the nock onto the string with her right hand. She turned her head ever so slowly, and, fixing her gaze on the target some thirty yards away, raised her arms, bringing the bow to a point above her head.

Inhaling slowly and deeply, she extended her arms elegantly, pulling the bowstring back with her right hand, and pushing the bow forward with her left, such that the shaft of the arrow now rested against her right cheek. The old woman paused momentarily before releasing the arrow. The string snapped against the bow with the “shui-pap” I had heard before, and the arrow was sent flying majestically right on target. It fell ten yards short, landing in the grass with a miserably anticlimactic “puh, sut!”

A small, nervous laugh snuck out before I could stop it. The old man at my side gave me a nasty look then went over to the woman who had just delivered the lawn a fatal shot and praised her effusively. She remained gravely serious, bowed deeply, then bellowed: “Hai, ganbarimasu!”  I shall endeavor to do my best! All the other geriatrics there suddenly came to life and also shouted: “Hai, ganbarimasu!”

When the old woman had minced away, another man came out onto the platform and went through the very same stringent ritual. He ended up shooting his arrow into the bull’s-eye of the target . . . two lanes away. He, too, was lavished with compliments by the old man, whom I’d only just realized was the sensei, the “Lobin Hood” to these somber “Melly Men and Women”, if you will.

A third man walked onto the platform with the very same gingerly steps and bowed as the others had in front of the kamidana. Standing with a similarly unnatural posture, he went through the movements before releasing his arrow. To my surprise, the arrow actually hit the target. No bull’s-eye, mind you, but close enough for a cigar. And just as I was thinking, “Now here’s someone who finally shows a bit of promise,” the sensei marched over and ripped the man a new arsehole. His form was apparently all-wrong. The poor bastard looked thoroughly dejected as he slinked off the platform.

I went back to the Budōkan the following day to begin kyūdō lessons in earnest, not so much out of a burning passion for the martial art itself as a consequence of an adherence to the Taoist doctrine of wu wei—the art of letting be, or going with the flow: I had got this far, and was curious where it might take me. It was a mistake, although I didn’t know it at the time.

The adorable Hirose Suzu in a Kyūdō-gi.

The adorable Hirose Suzu in a Kyūdō-gi.

I didn’t want the other members at the Budōkan to think of me as a mikka bōzu, that is a-three-day monk, which is what they called quitters here, but of all the martial arts I could have ended up doing, kyūdō must have been zee vurst. Being pushed around by big boys in diapers in the sumō ring would have been a vastly more entertaining.

My training progressed with unnervingly small baby steps with each visit to the dōjō. During the first several lessons, I was not allowed to even touch a bow. Instead, I was made to practice how to step properly into and then walk within the staging area. Oh yes, and how to bow reverently before the goddamn kamidana.

After weeks of mincing effeminately, I was allowed to move on to the next stage which involved going through the elaborate ritual of holding the bow, threading the nock with the bow string, aiming and releasing the arrow. Problem was, I had neither bow nor arrow and was asked, rather, to rely on my fertile imagination. Several days of this humiliation were followed by at last the opportunity to hold a bow and practice releasing imaginary arrows at an imaginary target. After the hour-long practice, I would have tea with my imaginary friends.

[1] Tabi are Japanese socks that have the big toes separate from the other toes, like mittens for your feet.


Nails+cover.jpg

Excerpt from A Woman's Nails. To read more, go here.

© Aonghas Crowe, 2010. All rights reserved. No unauthorized duplication of any kind.

注意:この作品はフィクションです。登場人物、団体等、実在のモノとは一切関係ありません。

All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

A Woman's Nails is available on Amazon's Kindle.

In Japanese Customs, Life in Fukuoka, Martial Arts Tags Kyudo, Kyūdō, 弓道, Japanese Martial Arts, Budokan, 武道館, Fukuoka City, Wipe on, Wipe off, Hirose Suzu
Comment

Latest Posts

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!
Blog RSS

Blog

Featured
que-12241102027.jpg
Mar 26, 2025
 Meiji Modernization and German Influence
Mar 26, 2025
Mar 26, 2025
Screenshot 2025-02-04 at 6.21.14.png
Feb 4, 2025
Risshi-Shiki
Feb 4, 2025
Feb 4, 2025
政党の変遷_20181001.jpg
Nov 3, 2024
Japan's Political Parties
Nov 3, 2024
Nov 3, 2024
EB9D8A29-A874-400F-9D59-619E85CFD8C5.png
Sep 9, 2024
Keio JR High School’s Entrance Exam
Sep 9, 2024
Sep 9, 2024
Sinburyou.jpg
Mar 25, 2024
Shinburyo
Mar 25, 2024
Mar 25, 2024
GH1mAHXXUAAaJgc.png
Mar 18, 2024
Survival Japanese
Mar 18, 2024
Mar 18, 2024
Usui.jpg
Feb 20, 2024
Usui
Feb 20, 2024
Feb 20, 2024
images.png
Feb 16, 2024
Blue Bottle
Feb 16, 2024
Feb 16, 2024
Screenshot 2024-02-13 at 8.32.52.png
Feb 13, 2024
Private Schools
Feb 13, 2024
Feb 13, 2024
Screenshot 2024-02-05 at 8.58.03.png
Feb 5, 2024
Love Hotels
Feb 5, 2024
Feb 5, 2024

INSTAGRAM

View fullsize All ready for Thanksgiving.

#shochu #imojochu #焼酎 #いも焼酎
View fullsize Display Cases of Kyoto
View fullsize Inuyarai in Kyōto 

京都の犬矢来

Found under the eaves of townhouses (machiya) in Kyoto and along the road, inuyarai were originally made of split bamboo. In modern times, however, they are sometimes made of metal. The original purpose of the arched barri
View fullsize Walls in Gokusho Machi, Hakata
View fullsize The 15th of August is the last day of the Bon Festival of the Dead, Japan’s version of Dia de muertos. On this day, Japanese say goodbye to the spirits of their ancestors. Today I say goodbye to my last drop of Yamato Zakura Beni Imo 35%. Forgi
View fullsize Azaleas at Fukuoka’s Kushida Shrine 

#櫛田神社 #Kushida #springinjapan #Fukuoka
View fullsize Mugon (Tacit, lit. Without Words) rice shōchū genshu from Sengetsu Distillery of Hitoyoshi, Kumamoto. Aged in cypress casks, I believe, it retains that telltale hinoki scent. I normally don’t drink Kuma-jōchū, but this is lovely. I’ll buy
View fullsize Another one of my somewhat hard-to-find favorites. Sang Som from Thailand. So smooth. I used to keep a bottle of it at Gamaradi before the pandemic. May have to do so again. Missed it. Missed Mr. Chang.
View fullsize First drink of the New Year is the best find of the past year: 

Yaesen Shuzō genshu #awamori from #Ishigaki Island. Aged in oak barrels, it has the nose of whiskey, the mellow sweet taste of a dark rum. At ¥5000 a bottle, it’s rather price
View fullsize Santa arrived early and just in time for Labor Thanksgiving Day 🇯🇵 

Two bottles of imo shōchū—one is a favorite, the other an interesting find I happened across during a short visit last summer to the Koshiki archipelago off the western coas
View fullsize Mission accomplished!

Dropped by the new Flugen in Hakata to drink one of my all-time favorite spirits, the somewhat hard-to-fine-but-worth-the-search Linie Aquavit from Norway.

#Flugen #Aquavit #Hakata
View fullsize Two or three weeks ago a friend invited me to join him at a big shōchū and awamori wingding at #FukuokaDome. Ended up buying about ten bottles of booze which I have stashed away at the in-laws’ for safekeeping. Of all the things I bought, this
View fullsize Takumi has once again included Maō in one of their #shochu box sets. At ¥5550, it’s not a bad deal. 

Kannokawa genshū—another favorite of mine made with anno sweet potates from Tanegashima—sold me. Ended up buying two. 

#かんぱい
View fullsize A little present to myself to mark the midpoint of the semester. Easy coasting from here.

Cheers and kampai!

#いも焼酎 #imoshochu #shochu #大和桜 #YamatoZakura
View fullsize Naha, Okinawa

#マンホール #Manhole #Naha #Okinawa #shisa #シーシャ
View fullsize At American Village in Chatan, Okinawa.

#北谷 #マンホール #沖縄 #Manhole #Chatan #Okinawa
View fullsize Final bout lasted 8 seconds. So, I guess it’s safe to say we’ve got that fickle momentum back.

#Karate #空手 🥋 #Kumite #組手
View fullsize 京都ぶらぶら

A long, slow walk through Kyōto
View fullsize 京都ぶらぶら

Kyōto stroll
View fullsize Always good to visit with my fellow traveler.

Gourmets of the world unite!
IMG_3919.jpg

KAMPAI Blog

Featured
Screenshot 2024-02-07 at 17.39.19.png
Feb 7, 2024
60 : 35 : 5
Feb 7, 2024
Feb 7, 2024
1614050579_3.jpg
May 15, 2023
Satsuma Imo Motogusare Disease
May 15, 2023
May 15, 2023
Seifuku Imuge.jpeg
Jun 22, 2021
Seifuku's Imugé
Jun 22, 2021
Jun 22, 2021
May 24, 2021
Kachaashii
May 24, 2021
May 24, 2021
MCHS1968.jpeg
May 16, 2021
Destine
May 16, 2021
May 16, 2021
Apr 26, 2021
Moriawaro
Apr 26, 2021
Apr 26, 2021
Mar 3, 2021
Kampai Shanshan
Mar 3, 2021
Mar 3, 2021
IMG_2395.jpeg
Jan 28, 2021
Mitake Genshu
Jan 28, 2021
Jan 28, 2021
Kikoji.jpeg
Jan 27, 2021
Kokubu Kikoji Kura
Jan 27, 2021
Jan 27, 2021
Hakaio.jpeg
Jan 15, 2021
Hakaio
Jan 15, 2021
Jan 15, 2021
rokuban+wing+2.jpg

Too Close to the Sun

Featured
Feb 20, 2019
80. Why the long face?
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
79. The Itch
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
78. Soaring
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
77. Yaba Daba Doo!
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
76. Let's Make a Deal
Jan 3, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
Nov 22, 2018
75. The Pied Piper of Patpong
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 16, 2018
74. Ping Pong Pussy
Nov 16, 2018
Nov 16, 2018
Oct 18, 2018
73. Yaba
Oct 18, 2018
Oct 18, 2018
Oct 16, 2018
72. Lightning Strikes Twice
Oct 16, 2018
Oct 16, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
71. Contacting De Dale
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
A Woman's Tears.jpg

A Woman's Tears

Featured
Apr 2, 2018
18. Just When I Stop Looking
Apr 2, 2018
Apr 2, 2018
Apr 1, 2018
17. Catch and Release
Apr 1, 2018
Apr 1, 2018
Mar 29, 2018
16. Nudging Destiny
Mar 29, 2018
Mar 29, 2018
Mar 25, 2018
15. HAKATA RESTORATION PROJECT
Mar 25, 2018
Mar 25, 2018
Mar 20, 2018
14. Reversible Destiny
Mar 20, 2018
Mar 20, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
13. Graduation
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
12. Reading Silence Aloud
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 7, 2018
11. Shut Out
Mar 7, 2018
Mar 7, 2018
Mar 6, 2018
10. The Second Night
Mar 6, 2018
Mar 6, 2018
Feb 28, 2018
9. At the farmhouse
Feb 28, 2018
Feb 28, 2018

Silent Ovation

Featured
Ovation.11.png
Feb 27, 2024
11. High School
Feb 27, 2024
Feb 27, 2024
Screenshot 2024-02-11 at 4.25.37.png
Feb 11, 2024
10. Taichiro Remarries
Feb 11, 2024
Feb 11, 2024
Screenshot 2024-02-05 at 6.24.29.png
Feb 5, 2024
9. Death of My Father
Feb 5, 2024
Feb 5, 2024
hand1.gif

A Woman's Hand

Featured
Jan 24, 2019
52
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
51
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
50
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
49
Jan 3, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
Nov 22, 2018
48
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 22, 2018
unnamed-1.jpg

A Woman’s Nails

Featured
CHHn-rqUIAA4iPq.jpg
Feb 21, 2021
14. Nekko-chan
Feb 21, 2021
Feb 21, 2021
71e7595d28eb0d7d76becf80c766aba2_3.jpg
Feb 20, 2021
13. Tatami
Feb 20, 2021
Feb 20, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
Yoko (Extended Version)
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
197512.jpg
Feb 18, 2021
11. Yoko
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
10. Yumi
Feb 17, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
00006204.jpg
Feb 16, 2021
9. Mie
Feb 16, 2021
Feb 16, 2021
aonghascrowe-reina-2.jpeg
Feb 11, 2021
8. Reina
Feb 11, 2021
Feb 11, 2021
mie-6.jpg
Feb 10, 2021
7. Mie
Feb 10, 2021
Feb 10, 2021
aonghascrowe-reina-3_4.jpg
Feb 4, 2021
6. Reina
Feb 4, 2021
Feb 4, 2021
abeoto-gravure-image5-52.jpg
Feb 3, 2021
5. Machiko
Feb 3, 2021
Feb 3, 2021
Schechter.Bavel_.TowerofBavel.jpg

HOGEN/Dialect

Featured
Uwabaki.2.jpg
Apr 17, 2024
Uwabaki
Apr 17, 2024
Apr 17, 2024
chinsuko.jpg
Apr 9, 2024
Chinsuko
Apr 9, 2024
Apr 9, 2024
Scan.jpeg
Mar 17, 2024
The Snack with 100 Names
Mar 17, 2024
Mar 17, 2024
Minsa Ori.1.jpg
Feb 26, 2024
Minsa Ori
Feb 26, 2024
Feb 26, 2024
71a4db62b521cf61e57d092101ed1615.jpg
Feb 7, 2024
Taicho ga Warui
Feb 7, 2024
Feb 7, 2024
DTa7CejVoAAGPWU.jpg
Aug 17, 2023
Hashimaki
Aug 17, 2023
Aug 17, 2023
img01.png
Aug 16, 2023
Dialects of Japan
Aug 16, 2023
Aug 16, 2023
town20191010201613_large.jpg
Aug 16, 2023
Yoso vs Tsugu
Aug 16, 2023
Aug 16, 2023
IMG_0831.jpeg
Aug 13, 2021
Uchinaguchi nu Arinkurin
Aug 13, 2021
Aug 13, 2021
Mar 18, 2021
Kampai Shanshan
Mar 18, 2021
Mar 18, 2021
Articles.jpg

Articles

Featured
GPBlog_SummerHomework(GaijinPot_iStock-1024x640.jpg
Aug 27, 2021
With Friends Like These
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
スクリーンショット 2021-06-11 20.22.21.png
Jun 13, 2021
2 Seasons
Jun 13, 2021
Jun 13, 2021
952-LW-illo.jpg
Apr 14, 2019
High Time for Summer Time
Apr 14, 2019
Apr 14, 2019
onomatopoeia.jpg
Jun 18, 2018
Potsu Potsu: Japanese Onomatopoeia and the Rain
Jun 18, 2018
Jun 18, 2018
point-card-lead.jpg
May 19, 2018
Point Break
May 19, 2018
May 19, 2018
last-word-01-860x480.jpg
May 2, 2018
F.O.B. & A-Okay
May 2, 2018
May 2, 2018
Cathay.fukuoka-guide.jpg
Apr 4, 2018
Fukuoka Guide: Spring 2018
Apr 4, 2018
Apr 4, 2018
IMG_4503.jpg
Feb 12, 2018
Woman Kinder-rupted
Feb 12, 2018
Feb 12, 2018
expo_25.jpg
Feb 11, 2018
Summer of Loathing
Feb 11, 2018
Feb 11, 2018
Electtttt-2.jpg
Feb 11, 2018
Election Primer
Feb 11, 2018
Feb 11, 2018

Play With Me

Featured
IMG_0541.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
IMG_1318_2.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
IMG_1319_2.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018

Please Write

Featured
IMG_0862.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
IMG_1145_2.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
IMG_1417.jpg
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
1000 Awesome Things About Japan

1000 Awesome Things About Japan

Featured
Peas and rice.jpeg
Feb 26, 2020
8. Peas Gohan
Feb 26, 2020
Feb 26, 2020
Finders, Keepers.jpg
Jan 16, 2019
7. Finders, Returners
Jan 16, 2019
Jan 16, 2019
Things+Love+About+Japan.6.1.jpg
Oct 10, 2018
6. No Guns
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
Lockers+IMG_8310.jpg
Oct 10, 2018
5. Coin Lockers
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
IMG_5676.JPG
Sep 11, 2018
4. Sentō
Sep 11, 2018
Sep 11, 2018
manu.jpeg
Sep 10, 2018
3. Uprightness
Sep 10, 2018
Sep 10, 2018
IMG_2220.jpg
Sep 6, 2018
2. Manhole Covers
Sep 6, 2018
Sep 6, 2018
On+Board.jpg
Sep 5, 2018
1. Flying in Japan
Sep 5, 2018
Sep 5, 2018
Featured
2nd Carrier Kido Butai.jpeg
Dec 5, 2021
5 December 1941
Dec 5, 2021
Dec 5, 2021
NYT 1 Dec 1941.png
Dec 1, 2021
1 December 1941
Dec 1, 2021
Dec 1, 2021

Powered by Squarespace