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Junomichi Is Not a Sport and Not a Martial Art

Junomichi Is Not a Sport and Not a Martial Art

“You can only fight the way you practice.” — Miyamoto Musashi

Miyamoto Musashi fought over sixty life-and-death duels and never lost. He wrote about combat, rhythm, and emptiness to understand. His battles were questions asked with steel and answered through awareness.

No one would ever say Musashi was playing a sport and, Junomichi follows the same spirit.

Junomichi (or real Judo) is not a sport. It never was.

The Common Misunderstanding

When we tell people about Junomichi, the most common response is something like:
“Ah yes, my cousin does judo!” or “My daughter has a judo black belt.”

And so we have to gently explain: Junomichi is real Judo and we follow Dr Kano’s principals, This is not sport Judo.
The judo most people know today, Olympic judo, competitive judo, is a distortion of Dr. Jigoro Kano’s original vision.
His work was a path for self-development and mutual prosperity, not a framework for combat or domination.

What sport judo has become is based on opposition and fear of losing.
You can see it in the body: bent over, tense, rigid, fighting both the other and themselves.

  • They don’t stand. They brace.
  • They don’t breathe. They hold.
  • They don’t listen. They plan to win.

This is not what Kano intended. And it is not what we practice.

Junomichi Is Something Else Entirely

In Junomichi, we do not train, we study, bacause Dr Jigoro Kano created Judo as an educational tool for the mind first and then the body

Each session is a research, an investigation.
We pursue understanding.
We work with a partner to study what happens between us.
There is guidance that invites us to feel more.
We prepare for being present.

No Fear of Losing

In sport, losing is failure.
But in Junomichi, there is no such thing as losing—because the very concept doesn’t exist.

There is no scoreboard.
No competition.
No adversary.
Nothing to win, and therefore, nothing to lose.

No one is ahead. No one is behind.
There is only now. And there is only what we feel in this moment, together.

We don’t fall because we lost—we fall because we moved.
We don’t make mistakes—we make discoveries.

What others call “losing,” we would call learning—if we needed to call it anything at all.

Musashi Didn’t Play Games

Musashi never trained for tournaments. He studied movement, perception, presence.
His practice became a mirror. His duels were life or death, but his path was internal.

Likewise, Junomichi isn’t about collecting victories. It is about sensing, listening, and learning to move with another being in a moment of shared truth.

We don’t “fight.” We don’t “win.” We seek to create Ippon—not a point, but a moment of perfect harmony.


Why Calling It a Sport Is a Mistake

Calling Junomichi a sport sends the wrong message.

It invites people to:

  • Compete instead of connect
  • Perform instead of perceive
  • Win instead of wonder

It changes the entire mindset—from relation to result.

But Junomichi is not a result. It is a question that deepens the more sincerely it’s asked.

So What Is It?

It is not a sport.
It is not a fight.
It is not a performance.

It is a an EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM

It is the ongoing, intimate exploration of how two human beings can move together, not against each other, with sensitivity, intention, and mutual respect.

Like Musashi, we are not here to play. We are here to look deeper.

Final Reflection: The Illusion of Winning

Winning a medal may look like success. But often, it is simply the fear of facing reality—painted gold and placed around the neck.

The dream of victory is a distraction. Those who chase it are dreamers—running faster and faster, not toward life, but away from it.

The reality is this: we all arrive at the same destination. The final Ippon is death.

Sport teaches us to fear that ending, to resist it, to delay it, to disguise it with trophies and titles.
It teaches us to measure life by success, to fear failure, to compete even as the clock runs out.

But Junomichi teaches us something else entirely.

It invites us to move through life without fear of falling, without fear of ending.
To feel each moment fully.
To be at peace with the body.
To study, not to win.
To meet others, not to conquer them.

And when the final moment comes—not to panic, but to smile.
Not because we won, but because we were awake.
That is Junomichi.

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