Boston Martial Arts Center

Boston Martial Arts Center

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Where tradition meets excellence 

Where is your perception? 05/28/2026

Whether you are a martial artist, a security professional, or an academic train your perception. Receive before you respond. Let the technique arise from the encounter, not from your expectations of it. Practice until the practice changes you.

Mark Davis

Where is your perception? Whether you are a martial artist, a security professional, or an academic train your perception.

Shinken (The Real Sword) 04/21/2026

Shinken (The Real Sword)
Shin (心, heart/mind) means genuine or authentic pointing to that which is without pretense, uncontaminated by illusion or self-deception.
Ken (剣, sword/blade) in martial traditions represents the soul of the warrior: the instrument of life and death, the tool that demands absolute presence.
Together, Shinken (真剣) means real sword, distinguished from training implements such as the wooden sword or bamboo sword. When you hold a real sword, everything changes. A single moment of inattention can mean fatal injury. There is no reset button, no second attempt.
By extension, Shinken means deadly serious a total commitment to approach. To engage something Shinken is to approach it as though your life depends on it.

Total Presence
A warrior facing an opponent with a live blade cannot afford distraction. A mind that wanders, even for an instant, may not survive to wander again. This total presence is what the Japanese call Zanshin continuing awareness and it must characterize all of our practice.
When we step onto the mat, we leave behind the concerns of daily life. When we face our training partner, we see only them not our plans for later, not our worries from before, not our internal commentary about how we are performing. There is only this moment, this technique, this breath. The real sword demands nothing less.

Commitment and Accountability
The real sword teaches us that actions have consequences. In combat with live blades, a mistake cannot be taken back. This understanding infuses our practice with gravity and weight. We must move decisively, commit fully, and accept responsibility for our choices.
This principle extends far beyond the physical. Shinken means taking responsibility for our development in our relationships, in our impact, and in our lives. We cannot blame circumstances or other people. We cannot pretend our choices do not matter. The real sword makes us accountable.

Awakening Through Training
When we train with the spirit of Shinken, we come out from behind our excuses, rationalizations, and comfortable illusions. We must face ourselves as we are with our weaknesses, fears, and limitations fully exposed. Only from that place can we honestly and radically transform.
When we live and train this way, the mind begins to sharpen and awaken, which can open the door to profound transformation what might be called a great awakening.

The Warrior’s Diligence
Shinken diligence means there is no vacation from readiness, no day off from development. It means training whether or not we feel like it, pursuing mastery even when progress is invisible, and showing up fully even when no one is watching. The real sword cares nothing for our mood or our preferences.

Shinken Wisdom
Wisdom in the spirit of Shinken is immediate and practical. It cuts through deception including self-delusion and perceives what is actually happening, not what we wish were happening or fear might be happening. Shinken wisdom cuts away illusion and reveals reality. This is the wisdom of illumination.

The Modern Application
Most of us will never face a real sword. Yet the spirit of Shinken remains essential. Modern life offers countless ways to avoid authenticity entertainment, distraction, comfortable routines, socially accepted half-truths. We can pass an entire lifetime without ever truly showing up.
The martial path offers an antidote. On the training floor, pretense fails. Techniques either work or they don’t. Partners provide immediate feedback. The body cannot lie the way the mind can. Through consistent practice in the spirit of Shinken, we develop a capacity for authenticity that extends into every area of our lives.

What Shinken Means
Shinken is not grim intensity it is genuine presence and total commitment. It is not perfectionism, but authentic engagement. Not aggression, but the clarity that cuts through confusion and pretense.
The gift of Shinken training is the capacity to meet life directly to engage reality without a buffer, to bring our whole selves to whatever we do. In that meeting, in that engagement, in that wholeness, illumination awaits.
Owner and Head Teacher
Boston Martial Arts Center (Dojo)
New England Ninpo society (private training ,
 Seminars , Workshops ) 
www.bostonmartialartscenter.com

Shinken (The Real Sword) Shinken (The Real Sword)

Old way of doing things 04/14/2026

Old way of doing things I was working on an unarmed weapon defense that I learned from a martial arts teacher.

02/23/2026

There’ll be no class today at the Boston Martial Arts Center due to the snow emergency. Boston Martial Arts Center will reopen tomorrow Tuesday February 24, 2026

Boston Martial Arts Center Home - Boston Martial Arts Center 01/26/2026

Boston Martial Arts Center will be closed today, January 26 2026 for classes and private lessons and workshops. We will reopen tomorrow, January 27 2026 for regular classes. Private lessons and workshops. Have a wonderful snow day.

Boston Martial Arts Center
www. bostonmartialartscenter.com

Boston Martial Arts Center Home - Boston Martial Arts Center Want to try a free lesson at the Boston Martial Arts Center? Please fill out form below

Abundance in all directions 12/23/2025

Abundance in all directions 

Abundance in all directions I was standing in front of a pond in Springfield, Massachusetts, admiring how this little pond in the middle of the city provided abundant habitat for the wildlife in the area.

Unfolding energies of conflict  12/13/2025

Unfolding energies of conflict  Last night in our advanced class Black belt class ( i’d like to thank those Black belts who have been supporting our Dojo for over 3 decades ) at the Boston Martial Arts Center, we worked on the basics of our martial art, Ninjutsu.

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Location

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161 Harvard Avenue
Allston, MA
02134

Opening Hours

Monday 5pm - 9pm
Tuesday 6pm - 8:30pm
Wednesday 5pm - 9pm
Thursday 6pm - 9pm
Friday 6pm - 9pm
Saturday 9:30am - 1pm