Linda Holiday Sensei
6th dan, Chief Instructor and
Executive Director, Aikido of Santa Cruz
Early Years of Training in Santa Cruz
         
Linda Holiday began her study of Aikido in the fall of 1970 at UC
Santa Cruz. She was a student of art and music at "College Five"
[now Porter College]. At that time UCSC was a new and innovative
school. Linda's college core course had a very interesting
requirement for first year students: to take a class in something
they had never done before, or thought they would be "bad" at.
So Linda chose to take Aikido! After her first few Aikido classes,
Linda was hooked. She was particularly drawn to the emphasis on ki
and the connection between mind and body.
         
It was the first year that Aikido had been taught on the UCSC campus,
and only the second year Aikido had been offered in Santa Cruz.
At this time Santa Cruz Aikido was one of only four Aikido dojos in
all of Northern California. Linda attended both of the two Aikido
classes offered each week. One class was taught by
Robert
Frager Sensei, a UCSC professor of psychology and religious
studies, (later co-founder and professor at the
Institute of Transpersonal Psychology),
who had trained under Osensei in Tokyo. The second class was taught by
Frank Doran
Sensei, a police officer and former Marine combat instructor,
who is now chief instructor of Aikido West. During Linda's second
year of training, another Aikido instructor
(Stan Pranin), now editor
of Aikido Journal, began teaching at UCSC. All of the instructors were
inspiring to Linda, and complemented each other in different ways.
This set up a theme that would recur throughout the history of Aikido
in Santa Cruz. From the beginning, there was never just one way to do
things. Instead, the instructors maintained an attitude of collaboration
and mutual respect. This has deeply influenced Linda Sensei's own approach
to teaching and her style of leadership.
Intensive Training in Japan
         
In 1973, after training for two years, Linda took a leave of absence
from her studies at UCSC and went to Japan with fellow student Richard
Revoir. They headed for the world headquarters of Aikido, the Aikikai
Hombu Dojo in Tokyo. While training in Tokyo, they were befriended by
a dedicated American Aikidoist by the name of
Mary Heiny (now 6th dan Aikido
seminar instructor). She took them to Shingu and introduced them to
Michio Hikitsuchi Sensei 10th dan, longtime direct
student of Osensei, and chief instructor at Aikikai Kumano
Juku Dojo. Hikitsuchi Sensei invited them to become the first
non-Japanese Aikido students to live and train intensively in Shingu.
So in April of 1973, Linda Holiday and Richard Revoir moved from Tokyo
to Shingu. With them went Jack Wada, who had also recently come to
Japan from Santa Cruz to study Aikido (now chief instructor of
Aikido of San Jose).
So these three young Santa Cruzans found themselves living in the
countryside of Japan, immersed in the rigorous apprenticeship
training of a Japanese michi or Way. They trained hard for many
hours each day, devoting themselves to their studies and their senseis.
         
For Linda, this first year of shugyo (intensive training) was
transformative: it inspired her to dedicate her life to the martial
art and spiritual discipline of Aikido. Along with companions Dick
and Jack, Linda received her shodan (first degree black belt) from
Hikitsuchi Sensei in December of 1973. She returned to the U.S.
penniless, in the spring of 1974, intending to go back to Japan
as soon as possible. She worked hard, saved her money, and resumed
her residence in Shingu in 1975. Linda spent a total of three years
training intensively in Shingu under the generous tutelage of numerous
inspiring shihan, primarily the late Michio Hikitsuchi (10th dan,
dojo-cho), Motomichi Anno Sensei (8th dan, current
chief instructor), Motoichi Yanase Sensei (7th dan)
and the late Yasushi Tojima Sensei (6th dan).
These instructors not only shared their Aikido expertise on the
mat, but also their passion, insight, and spiritual practices off
the mat, with the students from Santa Cruz. This gave Linda an
experience of the ancient sacred rites and practices of Japan that
would inspire her to continue these practices in her own life to this day.
         
During her years in Japan, Linda Holiday [then Linda Hultgren] also
visited and trained at other dojos in Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, and Iwama,
further building an appreciation for the multiplicity of valuable
training methods in Aikido. In addition, she studied the Japanese
language, Shodo calligraphy, Bojutsu, and a bit of Iaido. In 1974,
a formal Sister City connection between the cities of Santa Cruz and
Shingu was established, due to the presence of Linda, Richard, and
Jack in Shingu, and catalyzed by the initiative taken by Mary Heiny.
Hikitsuchi Sensei visited Santa Cruz in 1974 to teach and demonstrate
Aikido, and he was given the "key to the city". There have been many
Aikido and other cultural exchanges between the two cities since that
time. [Sister
City] [Sentinel Article]
Three Decades of Teaching and Leadership in Santa Cruz
         
In 1976 Linda Holiday moved back to Santa Cruz. For the next 6 years
she tirelessly taught as many classes as possible: as chief instructor
of the Santa Cruz Aikido Club and Aikido classes in the P.E. department
at UCSC, and also through the Parks and Recreation department of the
city of Santa Cruz at the Community Center. Then in 1982, a group of
friends and fellow dedicated Aikidoists (including Glen Kimoto and
Linda Holiday) incorporated to form "North Bay Aikido", out of a desire
to serve the community through a full spectrum of classes, including
children's Aikido classes. In 1986, North Bay Aikido received official
recognition as a non-profit, educational, tax-exempt organization whose
mission benefits the community. The dojo (called Aikido of Santa Cruz
since 2005) has been very successful, serving people of all ages, and
producing many black belts who have a passion for the art. Since
returning from her residence in Japan, Linda Holiday Sensei has been
steadily teaching Aikido in Santa Cruz for over 30 years.
         
Over those years Linda Sensei has been involved in a continuous
stream of activities and endeavors in service of the development
of Aikido. She has invested much time and energy to build a stable
foundation for the future transmission and inspiration of Aikido
in this area. This effort included a full decade of fundraising,
which culminated in the purchase of our present
dojo building in 1996.
This has created a stable, spacious, secure home for Aikido in
Santa Cruz that is blessedly independent of the rent increases
which present challenges to many struggling dojos. Our large
facility allows us to host big seminars with visiting instructors,
helping to bring the Aikido community together in a harmonious
and joyful way.
         
Linda Sensei enjoys collaborating with other Aikido teachers,
frequently hosting and co-teaching with Mary Heiny Sensei and
Jack Wada Sensei among many others. The annual
Santa
Cruz Aikido Summer Retreat in July brings together teachers
and students from many dojos. Linda Sensei often is asked to
teach at seminars elsewhere and enjoys building inter-dojo
connections that way. She is committed to Aikido as an
empowering and inclusive art, and to that end has taught
many special classes and
workshops
for women in Aikido.
         
Aikido of Santa Cruz is blessed by a thriving population of
black belt senior students who continue to train and to contribute
to the welfare of the dojo. As the students who train under her
have advanced, Linda Sensei has found it important and relevant
to nurture these current and future instructors of the art. In
addition to her regular instruction of multi-level classes at the
dojo, Linda Sensei periodically teaches classes aimed specifically
towards black belts and those who have been training for a long
period of time. She wants to encourage these advanced practitioners
to continue to grow and to be inspired by Aikido; and to maintain
humility and continue to identify primarily as students of the art
despite their advancing skill levels and roles as instructors.
She encourages these black belts to view all of their life
activities (including conduct at work, in family life,
interpersonal communications, as well as their teaching or
training in Aikido classes) as a part of their ongoing
education and practice of the principles of Aikido.
The Pursuit of Lifelong Training
         
Linda Holiday Sensei has continued her own study of Aikido over
all the years, with numerous wonderful instructors, and has been
honored to translate for a number of Japanese high-ranking shihan
during seminars in the United States. Her main sensei now is
Motomichi Anno Sensei, who she has been inspired by since she
first studied with him in Shingu in 1973. In addition to the
important instructors mentioned earlier (Senseis Frager, Doran,
Pranin in the early years in Santa Cruz, and senseis Hikitsuchi,
Anno, Yanase, and Tojima in Shingu), Linda Sensei has greatly
benefited by training under Senseis Mitsugi Saotome (8th dan,
head of the ASU), Terry Dobson (an American [1937-1992] who was a
personal student of Osensei), Robert Nadeau (7th dan, a major
Northern Californian Aikido teacher since its beginning),
Hiroshi Kato 8th dan,
and the inspiring instructors at
Aikikai Hombu
Dojo in Tokyo during her studies there in the 70's. These
include the Second Doshu Kisshomaru Ueshiba, Koichi Tohei Sensei,
Saotome Sensei, Osawa Sensei, Yamaguchi Sensei, Tada Sensei,
and Morihiro Saito Sensei. Many of these high-level instructors
have developed contrasting styles and some have even become
estranged from one another. But, in the Santa Cruz Aikido
tradition of collaboration and mutual respect, Linda Sensei
continues to admire and incorporate aspects of all of these
instructors, into her own training and teaching.
         
Linda Sensei frequently travels to Japan for further study
and to maintain the connection which began in 1973. This
has allowed Linda Sensei to host Anno Sensei (8th dan,
chief instructor of the Kumano Juku Dojo) here on the
West Coast on numerous occasions since 1999. She was
deeply honored to receive a promotion to 6th dan (Aikikai)
from Anno Sensei in 2005. Linda Sensei is collaborating
with Anno Sensei for a forthcoming book,
The
Floating Bridge of Heaven,
focusing on Aikido philosophy and practice.
         
Linda enjoys learning and practicing a variety of
disciplines. After returning from Japan, she completed
her B.A. in Japanese and Chinese Studies at U.C. Santa
Cruz (1979). Subsequently, she attended Stanford
University on a National Resource Fellowship and earned
an M.A. in East Asian Studies in 1982. She has continued
to study the Japanese language , and since 1999 has been
devoted to translating and facilitating Anno Sensei's
teachings. Linda has also enjoyed the practice of Tai
Chi since 1973, studying under Jack Wada. After her
son was born in 1991, Linda began to study creative
writing with teachers in Santa Cruz. She enjoys writing
poetry and prose. Inspired by the traditional Misogi
(purification) practices of Japan, she maintains a
personal practice of chanting and meditation. Linda
loves to make pilgrimages to sacred sites, in Japan
and elsewhere, and has been inspired since childhood
by being in Nature, and especially the high mountains
of California.

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