Japanese
Yoga
Japanese
Yoga: The Way of Dynamic Meditation - by H E Davey - Health
& Fitness - 2001 - 239 pages ... Yoga ... 
Emphasizing soft
stretching and meditation exercises, the ultimate goal of
Japanese yoga-known as Shin-shin-toitsu-do-is enhanced mind/body
integration, calmness, and willpower for a healthier and fuller
life. Developed by Dr. Tempu Nakamura in the early 1900s from
Indian yoga, Eastern arts, and Western medicine and psychotherapy,
Japanese yoga offers a new approach to experienced yoga students
and a natural methodology that newcomers will find easy to
learn.
After a brief history
of Shin-shin-toitsu-do, H. E. Davey presents Dr. Nakamura's
Four Basic Principles to Unify Mind and Body. These principles
relate the meditative experience to the movement of everyday
living and thus make it a "dynamic" meditation.
Each of the Four Basic Principles is illustrated with step-by-step
explanations of practical experiments. Readers are then introduced
to different forms of seated and moving meditation, health
exercises, and self-healing arts.
All these are
linked back to the Four Basic Principles and can enhance performance
in art, music, business, sports, and other activities. Readers
learn to use Japanese yoga techniques throughout the day,
without having to sit on the floor or seek out a quiet space.Included
at the end of the book are simple but effective stretching
exercises, information about ongoing practice, and a glossary
and reference section. Amply illustrated and cogently presented,
"Japanese Yoga" belongs in every yoga section and
on every mind/body/spirit reading
list.
H. E. Davey is
Director of the Sennin Foundation Center for Japanese Cultural
Arts in the San Francisco Bay Area and has studied directly
with disciples of Nakamura Sensei.
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