Lia Suzuki’s Virtual Dojo

Lia Suzuki

Weekly reflections on Aikido, movement, and practice—on and off the mat.

  1. Why Many Aikido Practitioners Continue Training for Life

    6d ago

    Why Many Aikido Practitioners Continue Training for Life

    Why do so many Aikido practitioners continue training for decades? In this episode, I explore one of the most fascinating aspects of Aikido: its ability to remain engaging year after year, decade after decade. While many people begin martial arts training with goals related to fitness, self-defense, or personal challenge, long-term practitioners often discover something deeper. I discuss three reasons Aikido tends to become a lifelong practice. First, the techniques themselves continue to evolve in our understanding. The same movement can reveal entirely different lessons depending on our age, experience, and stage of development. Second, the training changes us. Over time, many practitioners develop greater patience, awareness, and calmness that extend beyond the dojo and into daily life. Third, there is the community. The relationships built through years of paired training create a sense of connection and support that keeps people returning to practice. I also share a story from my years training in Japan and reflect on what it meant to watch older practitioners continue their training alongside students decades younger than themselves. Practice Prompt: During your next class, pay attention to something that feels different than it did a year ago—even if the technique is the same. What has changed: the movement, your understanding, your awareness, or you? For books, training resources, and upcoming events: https://www.lia-suzuki.com To receive my weekly training insights and reflections: https://www.lia-suzuki.com To train with me in person or online: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Thank you for listening, and I hope this episode encourages you to reflect on your own journey in Aikido.

    9 min
  2. Why Some Aikido Students Improve Faster Than Others

    Jun 23

    Why Some Aikido Students Improve Faster Than Others

    Why do some students improve faster than others? Most people assume the answer is talent. Yet after decades of teaching and training, I've found that natural ability is often far less important than how a person approaches practice. In this episode, I explore several qualities that frequently show up in students who make steady, long-term progress. These include the ability to pay attention, quiet the mind, stay curious, and reflect on training rather than simply repeating techniques. I also share stories from the dojo, observations from my years living and training in Japan, and a conversation about why some practitioners seem to advance more quickly despite training fewer hours than others. The goal isn't to find shortcuts. It's to understand how learning actually happens. Practice Prompt: During your next class, choose one technique and approach it as if you've never seen it before. Rather than trying to demonstrate what you already know, look for one new detail in the movement, timing, posture, or connection. Notice what changes when you stay curious. If you enjoyed this episode: Explore my books and training resources: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Subscribe to my weekly training newsletter: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Train with me in person or online: https://www.aki-usa.org Thank you for listening. I hope these reflections help you get more from your practice and enjoy the process of learning for many years to come.

    14 min
  3. Why Ukemi May Be the Most Important Skill in Aikido

    Jun 16

    Why Ukemi May Be the Most Important Skill in Aikido

    When most people hear the word Ukemi, they think of falling, rolling, or protecting themselves during throws. Those are certainly important skills. But Ukemi may be teaching far more than many practitioners realize. In this episode, I explore why Ukemi is one of the most valuable aspects of Aikido training. Beyond injury prevention, Ukemi develops timing, balance, sensitivity, and connection. It allows us to stay engaged with our training partners long enough to gather information that can improve our own movement and understanding of technique. I also share stories from my senior teachers and fellow practitioners about training in Japan, where receiving techniques was often considered an essential part of learning. In some cases, students spent years primarily taking Ukemi before being given significant opportunities to throw others. These stories highlight an important idea: receiving techniques is not a lesser role in training. It is often one of the most direct ways to learn. Practice Prompt: During your next class, pay attention to how long you can maintain connection with your partner while receiving a technique. Can you stay connected a little longer than usual without rushing to prepare for the fall? Notice what information becomes available when you remain present all the way through the technique. For books and resources: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Get my free Weekly Aikido Training Insights newsletter: https://www.lia-suzuki.com/newsletter Train with me online or in person: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Thank you for listening, and I hope this reflection adds something valuable to your own training journey.

    7 min
  4. Jun 2

    What I Learned Watching Japanese Aikido Teachers

    What makes certain Aikido teachers feel completely different from everyone else? After decades of training, teaching, and spending time with senior Japanese instructors such as Yamaguchi Sensei and Takeda Shihan, I've noticed patterns that continue to shape my understanding of Aikido. In this episode, I explore several of those observations. These teachers often seemed to enter before an attack fully developed. They moved less than most practitioners. Their posture remained organized under pressure. Most importantly, they maintained an extraordinary sense of connection that extended beyond technique itself. One story in particular surprised me. While reflecting on training with Yamaguchi Sensei, I realized that the same quality I experienced while taking ukemi for him also appeared during an ordinary conversation in a coffee shop. It was an unexpected lesson about zanshin, attention, and engagement. Rather than focusing on specific techniques, this episode examines qualities that can influence every aspect of training regardless of style, rank, or experience level. Practice Prompt: During your next class, pay attention to how much movement you are using. Can you solve problems earlier through timing, posture, and positioning instead of adding more effort? Look for opportunities to create bigger results with smaller adjustments. Resources: The Teacher: https://www.lia-suzuki.com/book Mastering the Shoto (Waitlist): https://www.lia-suzuki.com/shoto-book Join the Weekly Training Video Newsletter: https://www.lia-suzuki.com Train with Lia Suzuki: https://www.lia-suzuki.com/seminars If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, share it with a training partner, and leave a review. Your support helps more people discover Aikido and the lessons it offers both on and off the mat.

    11 min
  5. Why Soft Aikido Is More Difficult Than Most People Think

    May 26

    Why Soft Aikido Is More Difficult Than Most People Think

    In this episode, I explore one of the most misunderstood ideas in Aikido: softness. From the outside, soft Aikido can look effortless and natural. But in reality, developing truly soft movement is often much harder than learning to force techniques. Real softness requires structure, balance, timing, awareness, and years of repetition. I discuss why tension interrupts movement and connection, how practitioners accidentally train themselves to rely on force, and why mature Aikido often appears simple only because of the depth behind it. I also share stories from training in Japan, including an experience connected to Yamaguchi Sensei, and explain why the phrase “you get good at what you do” has such important implications for martial arts practice. One of the central ideas in this episode is that every difficult moment in training presents a choice: force the technique and reinforce that habit, or pause, reorganize, and continue searching for a softer and more efficient solution. Practice Prompt: During your next class, pay attention to the exact moment you begin forcing a technique. Can you release unnecessary tension and reorganize your movement instead of pushing harder? If you’d like to continue training with me: • Join my weekly video newsletter • Explore remote training options • Attend an upcoming seminar or event Books: The Teacher Mastering the Shoto (waitlist) More information is available through the links below.   🎁 Free resources      📬 Get a new lesson each week Join my Free Weekly Training Video Newsletter → https://www.lia-suzuki.com/newsletters/2147530761/subscribe      📥 Eliminate inefficient or harmful movement patterns NOW. Body Alignment Checklist for Martial Artists → https://www.lia-suzuki.com/body-alignment-checklist   📚 Grab my books      📘 The Teacher: → https://lia-suzuki.com/book      ⚔️ Mastering the Shoto, A Comprehensive Guide for Aikido Enthusiasts → https://lia-suzuki.com/shoto-book

    14 min
  6. Why Aikido Feels So Confusing at the Beginning

    May 19

    Why Aikido Feels So Confusing at the Beginning

    Many people who begin training Aikido feel a surprising amount of confusion during their first months of practice. Movements feel unfamiliar, techniques seem counterintuitive, and reactions that feel natural in everyday life—such as blocking or retreating—don’t always apply the same way in Aikido training. In this episode, I explore why that confusion happens and why it’s actually a normal and healthy part of learning Aikido. Aikido asks practitioners to replace instinctive reactions with entirely different ones. Instead of retreating from an attack, we often enter. Instead of blocking, we blend and reposition ourselves. Instead of waiting for an attack to fully arrive, we often move earlier than feels comfortable. These ideas can feel awkward at first because they challenge patterns that we’ve developed over many years. But with consistent practice, something interesting begins to happen. Repetition builds familiarity. Movements that once felt strange start to feel natural. And understanding gradually emerges through the experience of training. Another important part of the learning process is simply staying connected to the dojo community. Spending time with teachers and senior students—both on and off the mat—often leads to insights that deepen our understanding of practice. Practice Prompt: During your next class, notice any moment when you feel confused or awkward during a technique. Instead of resisting that feeling, treat it as information. Ask yourself: What new movement or timing is this practice trying to teach me? Then simply keep repeating the movement with patience. If you’d like to continue learning with me: Books The Teacher https://lia-suzuki.com/book  Mastering the Shoto https://lia-suzuki.com/shoto-book  Free Weekly Training Newsletter https://lia-suzuki.com/weekly  You can also train with me in person at seminars around the world: https://lia-suzuki.com/seminars  Thank you for listening, and I hope we have the chance to train together someday.

    11 min
  7. The Biggest Misunderstanding About Aikido

    May 12

    The Biggest Misunderstanding About Aikido

    One of the biggest misunderstandings about Aikido is what the art is actually trying to accomplish. Many people encounter Aikido for the first time through a combat lens. They watch a demonstration and immediately try to judge whether the techniques would work in a street fight. Others attempt to defend Aikido by explaining how the techniques could injure an opponent if necessary. But this approach often misses the deeper purpose of the training. In this episode, I explore what Aikido is really developing in practitioners. The art trains balance under pressure, calm movement in stressful situations, awareness of both oneself and the environment, and the ability to connect with another person without escalating conflict. I also share a personal memory of training with Yamaguchi Sensei and how his movement felt both effortless and incredibly powerful — a reminder that the most important aspects of Aikido are often subtle and difficult to see from the outside. Ultimately, the principles of Aikido are not limited to the dojo. Every day we face conflicts — sometimes external, sometimes internal. The real value of training appears when we begin applying the same principles of balance, calmness, and awareness to our daily lives. Practice Prompt During your next training session, notice what happens when a technique stops working. Instead of forcing the movement, pause internally and check your own body. Look for tension, misalignment, or imbalance. Adjust and continue. This simple practice builds the awareness that lies at the heart of Aikido. If you’d like to continue exploring these ideas: Get my free Weekly Aikido Training Insights https://lia-suzuki.com/subscribe  Books The Teacher https://lia-suzuki.com/book  Mastering the Shoto — A Comprehensive Guide for Aikido Enthusiasts https://lia-suzuki.com/shoto-book  Training events and seminars https://lia-suzuki.com/seminars

    7 min

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Weekly reflections on Aikido, movement, and practice—on and off the mat.