|
The
meaning of " OSU! "
In the Kyokushin School of Karate, "OSU"
is a greeting, and is used to replace words and phrases such as "yes,
good, I will, and excuse me." The word "OSU" comes from the Chinese
Kanji characters "OSHI SHINOBU" which means "to persevere while
being pushed." This word is one of the most important philosophies in
Kyokushin Karate. "OSU" symbolizes the need to persevere at all
times, to push oneself to the limits of endurance, under pressure of any kind.
The following explanation of "osu" was taken from the U.S. Kyokushin Karate Official Text Book Basics No. 1 by [then] Saiko Shihan S. Oyama, Shihan Y. Oyama, Shihan M. Miura (Published 1981)
Osu means patience,
respect and appreciation. In order to develop a
strong body and strong spirit it is necessary to
undergo rigorous training.
This is very
demanding, because you must push yourself to what you
believe to be your limit, and you want to stop; to
give up. When you reach this point you must fight
yourself and your weakness and you must win. To do
this you must learn to persevere, but above all you
must learn to be patient. This is OSU!
The reason you
subject yourself to hard training is because you care
about yourself, and to care about yourself is to
respect yourself. This self respect evolves and
expands to become respect for your instructor and
fellow students. When you enter the dojo you bow and
say "Osu" . This means you respect your
dojo and the time you spend training there. This
feeling of respect is OSU!
During training you
push yourself as hard as possible because you respect
yourself. When you finish you bow to your insructor
and fellow students and say "Osu" once
more. You do this out of appreciation. This feeling
of appreciation is OSU.
Thus OSU is a very
important word in Kyokushin Karate because it
signifies patience, respect and appreciation. That is
why we always use the word OSU; to remind ourselves
of these indespensable qualities.
|