Oasis Reiki Newsletter
Volume I Number 2
Mar 11, 2003

A digital Tibetan Prayer Wheel
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Hello Subscribers!

In this newsletter:
GREETINGS & NEWS
INSPIRATION
THE WELLNESS CORNER--Tips to improve quality of life
SPOTLIGHT ON REIKI
REIKI TECHNIQUES


 
GREETINGS & NEWS

It's been a good start to the year. Our Newsletter got some great reviews:

"Have just picked up my newsletter from you and can't wait to sit down and read. Having glanced quickly at its contents, I'm looking forward to it....love your new newsletter --keep up the good work." P.L.

Needless to say, that makes it all worthwhile. :) There's a new way to get to our articles on the website--they're actually listed on the homepage in a drop-down menu. There's a brand new article entitled, Invisible Force by Jane R. McGoldrick about psychotherapists beginning to use 'subtle energy' therapies such as Reiki. Please go to Articles.

As always we encourage contributors to the newsletter.

info@reikihelp.com works for all correspondence.

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INSPIRATION

We feature quotes from Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido which he called the Art of Peace. He was probably the world's greatest martial artist, but also a deeply spiritual and metaphysical man, both very wise and loving.

The Art of Peace begins with you. Work on yourself and your appointed task in the Art of Peace. Everyone has a spirit that can be refined, a body that can be trained in some manner, a suitable path to follow. You are here for no other purpose than to realize your inner divinity and manifest your innate enlightenment. Foster peace in your own life and then apply the Art to all that you encounter.

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THE WELLNESS CORNER--Tips to improve quality of life

The Wellness Corner will be a regular feature of our Newsletter, where we will dedicate it to a certain subject for one or more issues. We will begin with stress, as one of common everyday challenges. All subjects will be common elements of everyday living and deal with how to improve the quality of our lives. Since stress is a biggie, we'll keep it in The Corner for a few issues.

ANTIDOTES TO STRESS

Last time we covered our breath as a readily available inner resource to be utilized with awareness to create an escape from stress, and also to increase our capacity to manage stress. If you need a reminder go to Five-minute Breathing.

Today, let us focus on some general points. One way to view stress is as a lack of spaciousness. We feel crowded in by deadlines, worries, undesirable environments and certain people. Breathing is one way to create spaciousness. There are other, simple measures you can take. What is common to all of these is the effect each has to take us out of the 'pressure zone'. We step out of time and space, even momentarily, to regain our perspective, create spaciousness and elicit specific physiological responses. You see, when we step outside of time and space, the pressure immediately lifts and we become objective about what it is we are facing, and also our priorities are realigned.

Let us get deep momentarily. Time has at least two dimensions. There is chronos and kyros, from the Greek. Chronos is what we spend most of our 'time' in--it is the clock and the calendar. Kyros, on the other hand, is 'eternal' time or timelessness. Being timeless it is also 'spaceless,' i.e., not tied in to the physical realm we inhabit. When we connect to kyros, we connect to other realms that we inhabit simultaneously with the physical.

What does this mean practically? It means that we have the capacity to disengage from the rules, limits and demands of the clock and regroup. Any activity or 'exercise' that creates this spaciousness for you will work. It is ideal if you have regular periods where the non-physical aspects of your being are cultivated. When you are committed to a practice, your buffer zone for stress is greater. Short of a regular spiritual practice, as well as in addition to it, here are some other suggestions:

  • Connect with nature in any way that you can. A plant in the room or on the desk, looking out the window, or walking along a pond in an office park during the workday will decompress your stress.

  • Any meaningful visuals that are unrelated to the source of your stress. These could be various artwork, family photos or depictions of nature.

  • Sound! The sound of water is one of the most effective ways to elicit the relaxation response. Get a small fountain. Invest in a nature sounds CD or other relaxation music.

  • Drink herbal tea.

  • Read a short inspirational passage.

  • Call a loved one.

  • Daydream for three minutes.

  • Be compassionate with yourself.
To be continued...
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SPOTLIGHT ON REIKI

The more I find out about the origins of Reiki the more I love it and my wonder at it increases. Being steeped in eternal spiritual principles and practices, Reiki's richness is profound and continuous. Usui Sensei was an innovator and practical. His spirituality was of the here and now. Compassion was a driving force in his life and he established a teaching so easy to follow that it is probably the greatest expression of his compassion, for adopting Reiki into your life is relatively simple, especially compared to other enlightenment/healing systems.

In Usui-san (san is an honorific) we have a family man who practiced Tendai Buddhism all of his life; incorporated Shinto (Japan's native spirituality) principles in his teachings on energy; and was an accomplished martial arts practitioner. He actually knew many of his martial arts contemporaries, including Morihei Ueshiba, whose quotes we feature.

Yet out of this background he left behind a comprehensive system that it universal in its accessibility and applicability. Now that we know more about the man and his methods, we see that simple meditation exercises are at the core of Reiki practice, and deeply enhance its effect. In these meditations the hara is a consistent focal point. The importance of the hara in oriental spirituality is legendary, as it is in the martial arts.

Regardless of whether you practice Reiki, please consider the following very carefully. It is taken from The Three Pillars of Zen, compiled and edited by Philip Kapleau, a seminal work on Zen Buddhism. While there are certain references specific to Zen, the appeal of the hara and its cultivation should be obvious to everyone.

"Hara literally denotes the stomach and abdomen and the functions of digestion, absorption, and elimination connected with them. But it has parallel psychic1 and spiritual significance. According to Hindu and Buddhist yogic systems, there are a number of psychic centers in the body through which vital cosmic force or energy flows. Of the two such centers embraced within the hara, one is associated with the solar plexus, whose system of nerves governs the digestive processes and organs of elimination. Hara is thus a wellspring of vital psychic energies. Harada-roshi, one of the most celebrated Zen masters of his day, in urging his disciples to concentrate their mind’s eye (i.e., the attention, the summation point of the total being) in their hara, would declare: "You must realize"—i.e., make real—"that the center of the universe is the pit of your belly!"

"To facilitate his experience of this fundamental truth, the Zen novice is instructed to focus his mind constantly at the bottom of his hara (specifically, between the navel and the pelvis) and to radiate all mental and bodily activities from that region. With the body-mind’s equilibrium centered in the hara, gradually a seat of consciousness, a focus of vital energy, is established there which influences the entire organism.

"That consciousness is by no means confined to the brain is shown by Lama Govinda, who writes as follows: "While, according to Western conceptions, the brain is the exclusive seat of consciousness, yogic experience shows that our brain-consciousness is only one among a number of possible forms of consciousness, and that these, according to their function and nature, can be localized or centered in various organs of the body. These 'organs,' which collect, transform, and distribute the forces flowing through them, are called cakras, or centers of force. From them radiate secondary streams of psychic force, comparable to the spokes of a wheel, the ribs of an umbrella, or the petals of a lotus. In other words, these cakras are the points in which psychic forces and bodily functions merge into each other or penetrate each other. They are the focal points in which cosmic and psychic energies crystallize into bodily qualities, and in which bodily qualities are dissolved or transmuted again into psychic forces."

"Settling the body’s center of gravity below the navel, that is, establishing a center of consciousness in the hara, automatically relaxes tensions arising from the habitual hunching of the shoulders, straining of the neck, and squeezing in of the stomach. As this rigidity disappears, an enhanced vitality and new sense of freedom are experienced throughout the body and mind, which are felt more and more to be a unity.

"Zazen (meditation) has clearly demonstrated that with the mind’s eye centered in the hara the proliferation of random ideas is diminished and the attainment of one-pointedness accelerated, since a plethora of blood from the head is drawn down to the abdomen, "cooling" the brain and soothing the autonomic nervous system. This in turn leads to a greater degree of mental and emotional stability. One who functions from his hara, therefore, is not easily disturbed. He is, moreover, able to act quickly and decisively in an emergency owing to the fact that his mind, anchored in his hara, does not waver.

"With the mind in the hara, narrow and egocentric thinking is superseded by a broadness of outlook and a magnanimity of spirit. This is because thinking from the vital hara center, being free of mediation by the limited discursive intellect, is spontaneous and all embracing. Perception from the hara tends toward integration and unity rather than division and fragmentation. In short, it is thinking which sees things steadily and whole.

"The figure of the Buddha seated on his lotus throne—serene, stable, all-knowing and all-encompassing, radiating boundless light and compassion—is the foremost example of hara expressed through perfect enlightenment. Rodin’s "Thinker," on the other hand, a solitary figure "lost" in thought and contorted in body, remote and isolated from his Self, typifies the opposite state."

1 “Psychic” here does not relate to extrasensory phenomena or powers but to energies and body-mind states which cannot be classified either as physiological or psychological.

To find out more about classes in Original Usui Reiki
Please call: 954-661-4263
E-mail:
info@reikihelp.com
Or visit:
Reiki Training
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REIKI TECHNIQUES

This is a unique and profound way to combine prayer and intention with Reiki. I discovered it during self-Reiki when healing needed to be done between another and myself. I needed to heal certain feelings in me and also wanted to speak to this person's inner Self, which would be more receptive than the conscious mind. Here's what I was led to do:

  1. Start self-Reiki lying down.
  2. Feel the issues you have with a certain relationship.
  3. Your hands will be guided to the parts of your body that "hold" these feelings.
  4. When you feel clearer, raise your forearms so your hands are facing out, elbows next to you. You're still lying down.
  5. Invoke the presence of the other person.
  6. Speak to their soul in prayer form all the while beaming Reiki to carry forward your thoughts.
  7. You will experience further releases in your body as you do this.
  8. The feelings you cleared first will allow you to speak to their soul from an elevated place of healing, compassion and forgiveness.
  9. You must be healed enough to mean what you say and genuinely wish them good will.
  10. You may feel the need to continue with some self-Reiki to finish.
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Tibetan Buddhists believe that saying the mantra (prayer) Om Mani Padme Hum, invites the blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion. They also believe you can produce the same effect by spinning the written form of the mantra around in a prayer wheel (called "Mani wheels" by the Tibetans). The effect is said to be multiplied when more copies of the mantra are included, and spinning the Mani wheels faster increases the benefit as well. 

His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, has said that having the mantra on your computer works the same as a traditional Mani wheel. As the digital image spins around on your hard drive, it sends the peaceful prayer of compassion to all directions and purifies the area. 

Deb Platt suggests:

"To set your very own prayer wheel in motion, all you have to do is download this mantra to your computer's hard disk. Once downloaded, your hard disk drive will spin the mantra for you. Nowadays hard disk drives spin their disks somewhere between 3600 and 7200 revolutions per minute, with a typical rate of 5400 rpm. Given those rotation speeds, you'll soon be purifying loads of negative karma."

She suggests that you simply save the text "OM MANI PADME HUM," or use the Tibetan characters, which you can save by clicking on the image below, and then selecting the "Save As" option from the "File" menu in your browser:

If you use the default filename for the image file, om-mani-padma-hum.gif
you'll be storing the mantra twice.

--from www.dharma-haven.org

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