What 45 Years of Aikido Training Teaches You

After 45 years of practicing Aikido, some lessons become impossible to ignore.

In this episode, Lia Suzuki reflects on several insights that have emerged over decades of training. These are not dramatic revelations or hidden techniques. Instead, they are the quiet truths that slowly reveal themselves over time through consistent practice.

One of the first realizations is that real change happens much more slowly than most people expect. Early progress in martial arts can feel exciting and rapid, but the deeper transformation takes years. Often it happens during long plateaus where improvement is subtle and difficult to notice in the moment.

Another important lesson is that the fundamentals never disappear. Posture, maai (distance), balance, and timing remain essential no matter how advanced a practitioner becomes. Over time, experienced practitioners often return again and again to these basic elements.

Eventually, Aikido itself begins to feel simpler. Movements become smaller, tension decreases, and timing becomes clearer. What once seemed complicated gradually becomes more direct and refined.

Lia also shares a memorable conversation with fellow practitioners about how to evaluate your progress in training—and how sometimes the most meaningful measure of success is simply showing up and training.

Practice Prompt

At the end of your next class, ask yourself two questions:
Did I make it to the dojo tonight?
Did I stay and train until the end?

If the answer to both is yes, you had a successful night of training.

If you'd like to explore these ideas further:

Books by Lia Suzuki
The Teacher
https://lia-suzuki.com/book 

Mastering the Shoto (waitlist)
https://lia-suzuki.com/shoto-book 

Get Weekly Aikido Training Insights (Free)
https://lia-suzuki.com 

Train with Lia Suzuki at seminars around the world
https://lia-suzuki.com/seminars