For my CIP this semester, I chose to take lessons in Kyudo, the traditional martial art of archery. I had practices at the Kyoto City Budo Center once or twice a week, and I was instructed by Furuya-sensei, a very kind teacher who has taught KCJS students in the past as well. I have actually been interested in Kyudo for a long time, and I’ve done archery before at a club at my home university, but as Kyudo is a very different kind of activity, I wanted to really learn it from the ground up while I had the rare chance to here in Kyoto. Kyudo is different from regular archery primarily in its objective. Rather than focusing on the particular result of hitting a target accurately, Kyudo emphasizes the form of the process itself, from stepping into the range to drawing the bow and everything in between. The idea is that the shooter focuses not on hitting the target, but completes every defined movement naturally and beautifully with an empty mind, and thus the arrow will always strike its target as a byproduct of one’s consistent efforts. I had an incredible time learning this difficult but rewarding art, and I would encourage anyone even remotely interested to give it a shot. A piece of advice I would give to beginners would be to not go into it with any expectations of yourself, as regardless of your previous experience with archery or other martial arts, you will almost certainly have to learn everything from the ground up, as there are just so many minute details about Kyudo. But should you be willing to fail over and over again until your body has remembered every specific movement and posture, I can guarantee that the feeling of gratification you’ll get when you finally hit the target is like no other.