Your comment, Marco, reminds me of the ichi-bioshi principle. We can find it in karate-do, kendo, but I'd say in budo in general. It means one breath / one heartbeat, meaning how a practicioner should move. This is another example of how the way of the warrior is essentially linked to haiku through zen and its constant practice.
RE: Mizu No Oto- Every Image Has Its Haiku - Edition #43 (English)
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Mizu No Oto- Every Image Has Its Haiku - Edition #43 (English)
In my reads, I have found that for Japanese culture every practice is art, indeed the concepts of art and practice are superimposable. Thus, the same principles are found with little variation in every field, from martial arts to painting, architecture, poetry ... and the influence of Zen schools in Japan has been comparable to that of Christianity on our European culture, therefore Zen deeply permeates all these principles and arts.
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In my life, I have found the principles of art govern all things: cleaning, business, eating, love...
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