
A friend of mine who successfully graded for 2nd kyu a year before me said that it took him 45 minutes to fold his hakama for the very first time. Later this time was obviously reduced but I always remembered that certain 45 minutes and I couldn't wait to try to fold my own hakama and show that I can do it much quicklier. It looked obvious that I can do better because all the senior students with hakama always finished with folding within maximum five minutes. I thought I could probably do it within half an hour first and go down to 5 minutes within the matter of months. However, this is not how it happened.
Another friend lent me her hakama after a training (but months before my 2nd kyu grading) because she needed to go somewhere and couldn't take her hakama with her. I felt "this is the opportunity, I can show myself that I can do it well and quickly". So I folded hakama first at home where noone could see and watch me after training. Trying it at home was a lucky decision (my friend with the 45 minutes record tried it at home first, too). It took me more than 45 minutes... and then again it took me more than 45 minutes. I followed all the instructions I was given or could find online [1][2][3][4 - my favourite][5][6 - a pdf], why did this happen? I had several versions of how to fold a hakama printed from various websites and they still didn't help me much.

Some people even 'cheat' by sewing a bit here and there making 'permanent' folds.
So what happens when you see people packing their hakama in 5 minutes? They either have a very well ironed hakama made of a very good fabric or they are cheating by not folding the hakama nicely and properly. This kind of cheat, however, is much more acceptable than sewing because what they do is they take the hakama home to hang it and fold it properly before the next training.
This is what I do as well. I don't have time to fold my hakama properly after a training, so I do my best in five minutes. Maybe I could do an acceptably good job in five minutes but I'm a bit more perfectionist than that. Besides, hakama folding at home has become a kind of meditative process for me (as another friend pointed it out). It can still take 45 minutes but I don't mind that anymore. I arrange a bit here, a bit there and at the end I'm satisfied with the quality of my folding (I also use my clothes-brush as I don't wash my hakama as often as I wash my gi). A couple of hours later training begins, my nice folds are destroyed but it feels much better to put on a hakama that is in order and taken care of. As part of my folding procedure I enter I kind of shallow meditative state when I just focus on what I'm doing and not really on how I am doing it. When I'm finished it feels much better.

In case you are looking for instructions on how to fold a hakama please wait until my next post.
Sensei taught me to fold my hakama into a "football" that holds the pleats nice and tight. I like it better than the traditional fold, which I use when I fold her hakama.
ReplyDeleteAnd how do you fold it into a football? I can't even imagine how a hakama can look like one :)
ReplyDeletethanks for this post. I just spent three hours trying to fold an used hakama for the first time; it wasn't stored properly so the pleats were all wrong… I’m still unsure about whether I was able to fix them (-_-)’ as you say, the most difficult part is getting to the “start position”. there’s so much stuff going on under those pleats!
ReplyDeletebtw, my favourite set of instructions is this one, and I also like the “alternative end knot” shown at the bottom of this page.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I will definitely try the alternative knot :)
ReplyDeletepretty cool stuff here thank you!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete