Gankiryu Page
Train your body. Sharpen your technique. But never forget the oldest weapon in the arsenal—the look in your eye.
In self-defense, a mugger relies on your focus . If you stare at the knife, you will follow the knife (and get stabbed). If you stare at the mugger’s eyes, you trigger their aggression. But if you use Gankiryū—soft focus, peripheral vision—you see the accomplice, the exit, and the loose brick on the ground. Do not seek out "Gankiryū" expecting to find a manual or a master. It is not a technique you learn; it is a state of being you cultivate. The old texts say that a master of Gankiryū can defeat an opponent without drawing the sword—simply by walking past them with a gaze so heavy, so penetrating, that the enemy collapses under the weight of their own fear. gankiryu
The intermediate level. You look at the opponent’s eyes . This is the classic "death gaze." By locking eyes, you attempt to read their intent. Did their pupil dilate? Did their focus shift to your left side? This is a duel of wills, but it is still a battle. It requires energy. Train your body
When we think of martial arts, we think of physics: angles, leverage, speed, and mass. We think of the fist meeting the bag, the foot sweeping the leg, the hip driving the throw. In self-defense, a mugger relies on your focus
In a negotiation, if you stare at the contract, you telegraph weakness. If you stare at the other person’s eyes aggressively, you start a fight. But if you practice "The Gaze of the Distant Mountain"—seeing the whole room, the body language, the unspoken tension—you gain control.