Interesting. It sounds a lot like what taiji/tai chi/taijiquan has been doing for hundreds of years. :-) Anything that strives for such goals is admirable.
2007-03-19 17:33:34
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answer #1
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answered by artfuldragons 3
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Shintaido (æ°ä½é), meaning "new body way", is a body movement art emerged from a research on martial arts and contemporary visual and performing arts, led by Master Hiroyuki Aoki(éæ¨ãå®ä¹) in the 1960s. He sought to create a new form of movement that would embody the modern desire for peace, cooperation, and mutual understanding among people of all cultures, rather than to cultivate a competitive fighting art.
It has been called a moving meditation. Shintaido's forms exemplify openness and freedom. The movements of Shintaido provide a new way of experiencing our relationship with ourselves, others, nature, and the spiritual world. Shintaido is also a healing art, and a form of artistic expression. Shintaido attracts people who are interested in change, self development, and re-connecting with their bodies, their community, their spiritual nature.
Shintaido is practised in Japan, USA, Britain, France, Italy, Germany, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Australia, India and Russia.
* Shintaido
* http://www.shintaido.org/
* http://www.shintaido.com/
* http://www.shintaido.net/
* http://www.shintaido.co.uk/
* http://www.shintaido.tm.fr/
* http://www.shintaido.it/
* http://www.shintaido-cz.org/
* http://www.geocities.jp/shintaidobrasil/
* http://www.shintaido-australia.org/
2007-03-19 22:28:35
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answer #2
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answered by Phlow 7
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