Why is this called ‘Failure is the key to success’?

Posted by Ian on 25th Mar 2007 at 10:36 am
2007
25 Mar

Picture of Morihei Ueshiba

I have just realised that after over 18 months, I have never explained why my blog is called ‘Failure is the key to success’.

One of the sayings of Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of the Japanese martial art of Aikido, is ‘Failure is the key to success; each mistake teaches us something.

When I was looking for a name, this seemed very appropriate. Everyone has failures in our lives and only by learning from them do we improve ourselves and succeed in our goals.

My connection with aikido goes back to the 1988. Several of my friends had joined a local martial arts club and talked me into coming along. Now, I had never seen myself as the next Bruce Lee or anything like that, but thought I would go along for a few weeks to keep them company. One of my friends, Dave Long, was a 1st Kyu (brown belt) in Shotokan Karate, so I figured that if he thought it was worth going to, it was probably worth looking into. I turned up the first night not even knowing the name of the martial art that they were doing.

What I found was a martial art that didn’t rely on strength or flexibility (although the latter comes with time). It uses a combination of wrist locks, pins and throws to deal with your opponent. You take your opponent’s balance and use their strength and momentum against themselves. I never saw myself as a slugger in a fight situation and the almost analytical approach to how the techniques work appealed to my logical mind. So much so that I outlasted all of those who talked me into going.

When training, you take it in turns to be uke, the receiver of the technique, and tori, the person applying the technique. The relationship between tori and uke has been similar in all clubs and courses where I trained; uke provides a honest spirited attack and then, if necessary, helps tori to understand where the technique is failing to have them falling to their knees in pain. Oh yes, I forgot to mention that, the wrist locks, twists, pressure on nerves can all be quite painful. You have to be mad; you pay for the privilege of having someone else inflict pain on you.

Anyway, after I had been training for about 3 years, when I was a 3rd Kyu (green belt), I was asked if I would be a reserve uke for Joanne, one of the club’s lady 2nd Kyu (blue belt) who was taking her 1st Kyu (brown belt) grading. I was second reserve, so there was little chance of being needed. That was until, in the same week, the first uke twisted his knee on a building site and the first reserve had a hospital appointment for an operation on a longstanding shoulder injury. Suddenly it was real and I was going to be thrown around in a grading. After getting some extra training in, we discovered that my breakfalls weren’t quite correct and it was a small miracle that I hadn’t broken anything yet. So in the months before the grading, not only were Joanne’s techniques polished, but my breakfalls were completely taken apart and relearned. This took me from turning up once a week and enjoying myself, to seriously getting involved and travelling around the country to courses.

So, that’s how I met my wife Joanne; she spend several months throwing me around a mat before her grading to get her brown belt. We eventually ended up running the local club for a few years and learnt from and trained under many instructors from the UK and abroad. During my time training I received technique many hundreds of times. However when being thrown, I can count on one hand the number of times when I was thrown without being aware of it. What I mean by this is the attack gets so redirected that you feel no force when you are thrown, one minute you are attacking (grab, strike etc) and the next you are flying through the air thinking ‘what happened?’ This has happened once with Jo and twice with Sensei Tony Sargeant the head of Takemusu Iwama Aikido Europe, another time was from Sensei Mike Smith who was the head of our association the Kai Shin Kai.

Aikido is not a quick martial art to learn. It is only at dan grade (black belt) that you really start to understand how to use it effectively. I am sure there are some people that would disagree with this, but this is my personal opinion. I stopped training about 10 years ago due to other commitments. I renewed my membership annually for another 3 years, before I accepted that I had stopped training for the moment.

Anyway, as you can see, aikido has had quite an effect on my life and so it seemed natural to look to the sayings of Morihei Ueshiba, known as O-Sensei, for a suitable name.

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Changes to blog layout

Posted by Ian on 25th Feb 2007 at 3:02 pm
2007
25 Feb

Cloudy
While looking at a comment I received from jmb about the area of my blog entry, I mentioned increasing the text size to make it more viewable.

However, when I started to look at my style sheet, I could see a few changes that I wanted to make.

I have changed the blog so that the title of a post takes you to the entry page with any comments on. On the entry page the categories list has been moved from the right hand side of the screen to the left, leaving more space for the post and the post font size increased. On all pages, the post area is relative to the window size, not a fixed size.

I have increased the font size used for the comments, so a magnifying glass is no longer required.

If I have broken something or you think it has improved, let me know through the comments.

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Blogs I read

Posted by Ian on 23rd Feb 2007 at 10:29 pm
2007
23 Feb

While reading some of the blogs that I follow through MyBlogLog today, I came across a post by Anatoly Lubarsky, MyBlogLog Service On Decline. There have been a few security and identity exploits in the past weeks and the recent one discovered by
ShoeMoney got him banned
.

This got me thinking, if MyBlogLog disappeared, would I be able to find all the blogs that I have started to follow. So partly for that I have decided to list the blogs that I am currently watching.

Blogname Author
Blogging to Fame Divya Uttam
The Thinking Blog Ilker Yoldas
All Day I Dream About Photography Antoine Khater
Anatoly Lubarsky Anatoly Lubarsky
Avinash – An IT Blog Avinah Kumar
Baby Boomers Blog David Au
Benedikt
Rieke-Benninghaus
Benedikt Rieke-Benninghaus
Brave Humans  
Calivi Orkun Soylu
Chateau Lalinde Red Shoes
CompuWorld Salman Siddiqui
Craig Photography John Craig
Creative Design David Airey
Evolution … not
“just a theory” anymore
Greg Laden
Guitar Realm nightS & Shogo
Heida Biddle Heida Biddle
I once was HP Sarabeth
John Chow Dot Com John Chow
Jonathan-C. Phillips Jonathan-C. Phillips
Just a Girl in
short shorts talking about whatever
Becky C
Metastatic Liver
Cancer
Metastatic Liver Cancer
Musings
of a Distractible Mind
Dr Rob
My New Choice mnc
My View Of It Carol1461
Nobody Important JMB
Of Zen and Computing  
Ruminate This Site The Ruminator
scan man’s notes scan man
Screen Rant Vic Holtreman
Six Degrees of Inspiration Nicholas
Out on the
Coast
Susan Jones
Tech Bold Vikas Nigam
TechnoGroove Vaandoo
Through the Lenses Jas
Using My Powers For Good Jenny Ryan
Very Short Novels David B Dale
Waiting For Fairies Kia

Thanks to JMB, scan man, Sarabeth, David Airey and Jonathan-C. Phillips who have all left me comments on previous posts.

[Edit] Changed the link for ilker’s ‘The Thinking Blog

[Edit] Changed the link for David Airey’s ‘Creative Design

Copy and Paste

Posted by Ian on 22nd Feb 2007 at 9:09 pm
2007
22 Feb

Cloudy Night
In today’s computer literate society, you get so used to some concepts like copy and paste that you start assuming everyone is familiar with the skills required. It becomes difficult to remember when it didn’t exist.

I think a post a few weeks ago by John Chow was a prime example of this. He was explaining about using a typewriter to write a letter and was asked “How do you copy and paste with that?

So, for anyone how needs to know, here is a quick guide to copying text from a webpage and pasting it into a blog post. The details may vary slightly depending on the blogging software that you use, but the concept is the same. I will use my last post Book Meme as the example.

Find the text on the webpage that you want to use, in this case it was from sarabeth’s post Book Meme 2. Move your mouse to just before the text that you want to copy.

Move mouse to before text to copy

Press and hold the left mouse button, then drag the mouse pointer, which will have probably changed to look like a letter ‘I’, over the text that you want until it is all selected, then let go of the left mouse button.

Highlight text to copy

At this point you either go to the Edit menu on your web-browser and select Copy or you can use the keyboard shortcut CTRL C (press and hold the CTRL key, then press the letter C, then let go of both). This copies the selection to the computer’s clipboard.

In your blogging software, choose the place in a post where you want to put the selected text and left click with your mouse in this place. Then either on the Edit menu choose Paste, or you can use the keyboard shortcut CTRL V (press and hold the CTRL key, then press the letter V, then release both).

Choose Paste from Edit menu or Ctrl C

This pastes the selection from the computer’s clipboard to the location that you selected.

Text pasted into post ready for formatting

After this you can reformat individual sections by selecting them and choosing Bold or Italic or changing the colour as required.

[Edited for spelling]

My MyBlogLog experiance

Posted by Ian on 20th Feb 2007 at 7:36 pm
2007
20 Feb

Cloudy
About 2 weeks ago, I followed John Chow to MyBlogLog and set up a profile and community for my blog. Since then my community has slowly but steadily grown as people find my blog and add themselves to my community.

I have also added myself to several communities that I have found here. I have tried to be sensible about adding communities as I don’t want to just add to every community that I find. I do try to check all of them for new posts at least once a day. I figured if I wasn’t interested enough in what the author had to say on a regular basis, then there was no point in joining. There may be some blogs that I will subscribe to the RSS feeds if they are interesting, but post irregularly, like I do.

It does annoy me a bit when some people just post links to their blog in everyones comments. I figure that if someone is interested enough to check my details out then they will look at my blog and make there own decision, but I suppose this doesn’t provide lots of links for the search engines to index.

Anyway, welcome to anyone who has found me from MyBlogLog. Please read any of my posts that may be of interest and leave me comments.

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Why do I blog?

Posted by Ian on 12th Feb 2007 at 9:26 pm
2007
12 Feb

Cloudy Night
I think it is a combination of reasons. I use this blog to record my successes and findings in my family tree research. I also use it to vent my frustration over things, usually it seems related to cars. I record technical information and details of software I use or have found. Sometimes it is just used to record my thoughts and intentions.

I’m not sure who my audience is. Me, my family, distant relatives, complete strangers, I’m not sure. If any of my postings help someone with something, all the better, I have found solutions to many problems because other people were prepared to share information via the internet.

Until last year when I claimed my blog on Technorati, I hadn’t even considered actively trying to promote it. Even then I didn’t really do anything about it, just carried on making posts on a semi regular basis.

It was only earlier this year when John Chow started his competitions to win some goodies, that I started to get interested in doing something with the visability of the blog. I added John to my Technorati Favourites and then last weekend joined mybloglog.com. This is when I discovered just how many other varied blogs there are out there. I have joined several communities and now check on many different blogs.

Why do you blog or read blogs?

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