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YOGA RETREAT
Yin
Yoga the best combination to the Detox program and the Japonese therapy massage
The unique and very reward Japonese traditional Amma massage therapy base
on stimulating the meridien system and having a very good result with my
patients.
Also I had many
experiences, beginning 10 to 15 years ago, of the flow of vital energies and I
clearly felt, around the meridians [energy channels], some vital energy like
liquid ligth and heat going around my body. Particularly I felt Kundalini
Shakti or power was very strong around the spine and in every cells of my body.
This go all along with a direct experience and teaching with the meridien of the Earth grid of light energy, the harmonisation known as Feng Shui. All this knowledge have been given back to permit global and individual healing.
So in my therapy practice I can feel such energy flowing. In place of power, for instance Notre Dame de Paris have a great flow of energy that we call the leys lines that I could feel, same with my patients. As natural dowser of the subtil energy, is very real, is the Ch'i or Prana well known in the ancient Eastern and Asian culture. The Canary volcanic Islands are very energetic and are know also for it.
Yoga and Ying yoga
The yoga is the very ancient knowledge of such subtil energy body that pervade everything. It' is a real science that we rediscoverd here in the Western modern world.
The combination of Ying Yoga, during the time of the body detox with the Japonese Amma massage therapy base on the meridiens of the body, can be very effective.
This go all along with a direct experience and teaching with the meridien of the Earth grid of light energy, the harmonisation known as Feng Shui. All this knowledge have been given back to permit global and individual healing.
So in my therapy practice I can feel such energy flowing. In place of power, for instance Notre Dame de Paris have a great flow of energy that we call the leys lines that I could feel, same with my patients. As natural dowser of the subtil energy, is very real, is the Ch'i or Prana well known in the ancient Eastern and Asian culture. The Canary volcanic Islands are very energetic and are know also for it.
Yoga and Ying yoga
The yoga is the very ancient knowledge of such subtil energy body that pervade everything. It' is a real science that we rediscoverd here in the Western modern world.
The combination of Ying Yoga, during the time of the body detox with the Japonese Amma massage therapy base on the meridiens of the body, can be very effective.
Yin Yoga, gentle
meditative yoga, a less popular style of yoga in the west is an approach that
some may have never even heard of. One that in my experience, as my friend yoga
teacher showing me, I start to practise daily and found out a very interesting
tool to relaxe come back flexible and feeling very good with greats
benefits.
Why? And how? Same
as the Tao of Yoga, through deep meditation, the ancient spiritual adepts won
insight into the energy system of the body. In India, yogis called this energy
prana and its pathways nadis; in China, the Taoists called it qi (pronounced
chee) and founded the science of acupuncture, which describes the flow of qi
through pathways called meridians. The exercises of tai chi chuan and qi gong
were developed to harmonize this qi flow; the Indian yogis developed their
system of bodily postures to do the same.
Western medicine
has been skeptical about the traditional energy maps of acupuncture, tai chi,
and yoga, since no one had ever found physical evidence of nadis and meridians.
But in recent years
researchers, led by Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama in Japan and Dr. James Oschman in the United States, have explored the possibility that the connective tissue running throughout the body provides pathways for the energy flows described by the ancients.
researchers, led by Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama in Japan and Dr. James Oschman in the United States, have explored the possibility that the connective tissue running throughout the body provides pathways for the energy flows described by the ancients.
Drawing on
Motoyama’s research, Taoist Yoga weds the insights gained by thousands of years
of acupuncture practice to the wisdom of yoga. To understand this marriage—and
to use it to help us
sit with more ease in meditation—we must familiarize ourselves with the concepts of yin and yang. Opposing forces
in taoist thought, the terms yin and yang can describe any phenomenon. Yin is the stable, unmoving, hidden aspect of things; yang is the changing, moving, revealing aspect. Other yin-yang polarities include cold-hot, down-up, calm-excited.
sit with more ease in meditation—we must familiarize ourselves with the concepts of yin and yang. Opposing forces
in taoist thought, the terms yin and yang can describe any phenomenon. Yin is the stable, unmoving, hidden aspect of things; yang is the changing, moving, revealing aspect. Other yin-yang polarities include cold-hot, down-up, calm-excited.
Yin and yang are
relative terms, not absolutes; any phenomenon can only be yin or yang by
comparison with something else. We can’t point to the moon and say, “The moon
is yin.” Compared to the sun, the moon is yin: It’s cooler and less bright. But
compared to the Earth (at least from our perspective), the moon is yang:
brighter, higher, and more mobile. In addition to being relative, a yin-yang
comparison of any two objects depends on the trait being compared. For example,
when considering location, the heart is yin compared to the breastbone because
the heart is more hidden. But when considering substance, the heart is yang
compared to the breastbone because the heart is softer, more mobile, more
elastic.
Now if you’ve never
practiced Yin yoga you might not quite understand how this is so different, but
for me Yin has dug deeper than I could have ever gotten otherwise. For my
students I often tell them when they are about to try a Yin class that they
need to try it three or four times to really make a decision about the
practice. Many find immediate benefits like more open hips, a more relaxed body
and centered mind. To me, I don’t think one practice is better than the other,
but what I would see as beneficial is for the practitioner to see the benefit
in each and that there is a need for both. Possibly one benefiting more than
the other at times in your life, but a need none-the-less.
Some of the
benefits of Yin yoga are:
- Calming and balancing to the mind and body
- Regulates energy in the body
- Increases mobility in the body, especially the joints and hips
- Lowering of stress levels
- Greater stamina
- Better lubrication and protection of joints
- More flexibility in joints & connective tissue
- Release of fascia throughout the body
- Help with TMJ and migraines
- Deeper Relaxation
- A great coping for anxiety and stress
- Better ability to sit for meditation
- Ultimately you will have a better Yang practice
- I really do believe that if you incorporate a little of both will create a more well-rounded practice as well as a better-rounded version of the awesome you!
If you take a peek
at a Yin-Yang symbol, it is suggesting that no matter what, we should take a
“tiny bit” and put it in the heart of its opposite. Knowing both practices, and
having struggled with a wide variety of eating disorders, addiction, depression
and anxiety, I get that too much of something is simply too much. Yin yoga as
taught me to truly be still, to really come face to face with myself, even more
than my past practice has; and because of this I am now able to bring what Yin
has taught me into my more Yang like practices and ultimately my life as a
whole.
The Flow of Qi
Even if you only
spend a few minutes a couple times a week practicing several of these poses,
you’ll be pleasantly surprised at how different you feel when you sit to
meditate. But that
improved ease may not be the only or even the most important benefit of Yin Yoga. If Hiroshi Motoyama and other researchers are right—if the network of connective tissue does correspond
with the meridians of acupuncture and the nadis of yoga—strengthening and stretching connective tissue may be critical for your long-term health.
improved ease may not be the only or even the most important benefit of Yin Yoga. If Hiroshi Motoyama and other researchers are right—if the network of connective tissue does correspond
with the meridians of acupuncture and the nadis of yoga—strengthening and stretching connective tissue may be critical for your long-term health.
Chinese medical
practitioners and yogis have insisted that blocks to the flow of vital energy
throughout our body eventually manifest in physical problems that would seem,
on the surface, to have nothing to do with weak knees or a stiff back. Much
research is still needed to explore the possibility that science can confirm
the insights of yoga and Traditional Chinese Medicine. But if yoga postures
really do help us reach down into the body and gently stimulate the flow of qi
and prana through the connective tissue, Yin Yoga serves as a unique tool for
helping you get the greatest possible benefit from yoga practice.
The Ying Yoga is
the best combination with the detox program and the ancient Amma Japonese
Massage therapy base on the flow of energy the Ch'I.
"Be Happy & Healthy!"
Energetic medicine and a pionnier to unite knowledge
Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama
Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama, a well-known Japanese scholar, was born in Japan in 1925. Dr. Motoyama graduated from the Tokyo University of Literature and Science with Ph.D. degrees in Philosophy and Physiological Psychology, and was awarded a prestigious prize for his work in the comparative study of Eastern and Western mysticism.
Dr. Motoyama is both a scientist trained in empirical methodology and a psychic who has experientially gained deep philosophical knowledge. He is the head Shinto priest of the Tamamitsu Shrine in Tokyo, and a yogi well-versed in the yoga treatises. His scientific endeavors resulted in the establishment of the Institue for Religious Psychology, a research facility (1960), and the International Association for Religion and Parapsychology, an international organization whose members are not only composed of scientists in theses and related fields, but are from diverse professions (1972). For the purpose of specialized research in the field of life physics, the Motoyama Institute for Life Physics was established in 1990. Dr. Motoyama is the author of over 50 books (Japanese and other languages) and numerous monographs and papers, and has traveled widely throughout the world, participating in conferences and workshops, and presenting his work.
In recognition of his important work in the field, he was awarded the McDougall Research Fund Award from Duke University in 1962, selected as one of the world’s leading parapsychologists by UNESCO in 1974, recognized as an “ordinary academician” by the Instituto di Cultura Universitaria e di Studi Superiori, Academia Tiberina in 1977 and awarded Dr. J. B. Rhine Biennial Research Award in 1996. He has also been honored by several renowned scientific and religious organizations. He serves as an advisor/lecturer to various international associations and institutes, and as a member of the editorial board of international journals in related fields.
In 1980, he established the Motoyoma-Bentov Fund Research Fellowship to assist promising scientists who wish to study human existence in its holistic sense.In 1991, he established the Southern California Institute Japan Branch (Graduate School) in Tokyo. In 1992, he established California Institute for Human Science in the hope of 1) elucidating the mechanism of the correlation between mind and body; 2) understanding the human mind (unconscious, conscious, superconscious); 3) synthesizing Eastern and Western religions; and 4) synthesizing Eastern and Western medicine (energy medicine and health science). He invites reputable researchers and scholars as professors of the school in order to educate promising researchers. Dr. Motoyama established CIHS in the belief that this project is important for the realization of a global society – one which will require individuals with mental and spiritual development.
Energetic medicine and a pionnier to unite knowledge
Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama
Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama, a well-known Japanese scholar, was born in Japan in 1925. Dr. Motoyama graduated from the Tokyo University of Literature and Science with Ph.D. degrees in Philosophy and Physiological Psychology, and was awarded a prestigious prize for his work in the comparative study of Eastern and Western mysticism.
Dr. Motoyama is both a scientist trained in empirical methodology and a psychic who has experientially gained deep philosophical knowledge. He is the head Shinto priest of the Tamamitsu Shrine in Tokyo, and a yogi well-versed in the yoga treatises. His scientific endeavors resulted in the establishment of the Institue for Religious Psychology, a research facility (1960), and the International Association for Religion and Parapsychology, an international organization whose members are not only composed of scientists in theses and related fields, but are from diverse professions (1972). For the purpose of specialized research in the field of life physics, the Motoyama Institute for Life Physics was established in 1990. Dr. Motoyama is the author of over 50 books (Japanese and other languages) and numerous monographs and papers, and has traveled widely throughout the world, participating in conferences and workshops, and presenting his work.
In recognition of his important work in the field, he was awarded the McDougall Research Fund Award from Duke University in 1962, selected as one of the world’s leading parapsychologists by UNESCO in 1974, recognized as an “ordinary academician” by the Instituto di Cultura Universitaria e di Studi Superiori, Academia Tiberina in 1977 and awarded Dr. J. B. Rhine Biennial Research Award in 1996. He has also been honored by several renowned scientific and religious organizations. He serves as an advisor/lecturer to various international associations and institutes, and as a member of the editorial board of international journals in related fields.
In 1980, he established the Motoyoma-Bentov Fund Research Fellowship to assist promising scientists who wish to study human existence in its holistic sense.In 1991, he established the Southern California Institute Japan Branch (Graduate School) in Tokyo. In 1992, he established California Institute for Human Science in the hope of 1) elucidating the mechanism of the correlation between mind and body; 2) understanding the human mind (unconscious, conscious, superconscious); 3) synthesizing Eastern and Western religions; and 4) synthesizing Eastern and Western medicine (energy medicine and health science). He invites reputable researchers and scholars as professors of the school in order to educate promising researchers. Dr. Motoyama established CIHS in the belief that this project is important for the realization of a global society – one which will require individuals with mental and spiritual development.








1 comentario:
The sacred sciences, that are the great human potentiels for a balanced, good healthy life was kept hidden. In opposite the industrial barons brought the stress, scarcity, fight flying from the nervous's sympathetic system, that weakening the whole biological human system , make it fragile. An automatic system of the 4 revolution industry can bring an emphasis to reduce this stress through more free time spending in self development. A sane mind, body, spirit human bring a sane society.
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