
Book of Water
Eight modules on the scroll of fluidity and technique. The still mind in motion, the loose grip, the single decisive stroke, the rhythm broken at its source.

Eight keys from the second scroll.
- 01The stance of water — the body before any technique.
- 02The twofold gaze — ken and kan, sight and perception.
- 03The loose grip — release the tool so the body can work.
- 04The five approaches — read the angle before the move.
- 05The single decisive stroke — economy of action.
- 06Water-stepping — transition without breaking balance.
- 07Breaking the opponent's rhythm — make the moment.
- 08The integrated body — sword, hand and breath as one piece.
Eight modules, one scroll.

The Stance of Water
A body neither rigid nor slack. The posture that lets force pass through you instead of breaking against you.

Eyes of Water
Kan and ken, perception and observation. Two modes of seeing that operate at the same time. Master both, or be ruled by either.

The Grip Without Grip
Hold the implement as you would hold running water. Tight enough to keep it; loose enough to let it move.

The Five Approaches
Upper, middle, lower, right, left. Five fundamental angles of attack, and the doctrine that every situation requires only one of them.

The Single Stroke
Ichi-byōshi, one beat. The doctrine that the moment for the cut is the same moment as the decision to cut.

Body Like Water
Footwork that flows from the hips, not the feet. The whole body arrives at the same time, or it does not arrive.

The Rhythm of the Opponent
Every opponent, and every situation, has a cadence. The strategist reads it, then breaks it at the place it cannot recover.

Closing the Water Scroll
Earth was the ground; Water was the body moving on it. Fire will be the contest. Before opening Fire, close Water with the same ceremony you used to close Earth.
Step into the second scroll.
You begin with the stance of water and end with a single decisive stroke. Eight modules, one scroll, one verified certificate.