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KARATE WAY OF LIFE


Opening a class in the dojo.


Seido students training at zendo.

At the Seido dojo, students come together to train the body and the mind. The atmosphere is formal and respectful at all times, which requires concentration and discipline. The physical training is hard, but closely supervised. At every class, the idea is to give one’s absolute best physical and mental effort. Little by little, the student inexorably improves and can then unlock his or her true potential.

At the zendo, Seido students come together to do one thing with total concentration: that is, to sit. Again, the atmosphere is serious and purposeful. Physically, the student must master a strong seated posture and the proper breathing. At the zendo, as at the dojo, the purpose of training is to go deep inside the self and to unlock one’s higher nature.

Karate is a martial art, with its own unique history, philosophy and set of techniques. Karate can be practiced in the dojo, or, as the photos demonstrate, in the outdoors. It can be practiced in the hot sun or in the deep snow. Each season gives its own flavor to karate training, and each season imposes its own challenges to our physical and mental abilities.

Karate is also a way of life, a way of being. A karate-ka deals fully with the present moment, being totally absorbed in one action only. A true karate-ka seeks balance and harmony in his or her life; the karate-ka develops a strong body and spirit so as to better serve others.

The principles and values of karate, such as patience, concentration, respect and courtesy, are completely transferable and universally applicable to our daily affairs in business and at home.



Sei has several meanings. It can mean “calm” or “silent.” Modern life emphasizes endless activity. The constant pressure to be “doing something” creates fatigue and stress. Calm, silent periods of “active inactivity” help to create a harmony in our lives. Meditation puts our activity into proper perspective and helps us to make it more enriched.


Although do can mean “way,” it also conveys the idea of activity and energy. Karate practice is full of energetic, active movement. So, too, are our daily lives. Calm periods of meditation help to make our activity more focused and more meaningful. Calmness and energetic activity must be balanced and in harmony. To emphasize either one or the other is not correct. In Seido we strive to find the right individual balance.



Karate can be practiced in the outdoors, with nature. Meditation in a calm forest (left), and basic practice (above).


Beginner’s Mind

“In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities. In the expert’s mind, there are very few.”

Shunryo Suzuki

Sho Shin, or beginner’s mind, is something which is a key to karate and, indeed, to living. A beginner’s mind, like that of a child, is open and trusting. Knowledge can be fully absorbed into the consciousness and becomes part of our own understanding. When we gain a little knowledge about someone or something, then the mind puts up barriers; it forms opinions, preconceptions, and judgments, which inhibit true knowledge.

In Seido karate, we wear plain white cotton uniforms, with no personal decoration or adornment of any kind. White is symbolic of the beginner’s mind. It is pure, simple, and empty. It reminds us to always be ready to discover and to learn.

The beginner’s mind is something which we hope to meet along the Way. We cannot fix on the beginner’s mind as an object of our search, however, for,

“When one first seeks the truth, one separates oneself far from its environs. When one has already correctly transmitted the truth to oneself, one is one’s original self at that moment.” Genjokoan

Karate Technique & Spirit

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