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  2. Spirit turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirit_turtle

    In Japanese mythology, the creature is identified as the Reiki (霊亀 "spirit turtle"). The Zenrin-kushū provides a kōan that reads Reiki o o hiku (靈龜曵尾 "The spirit turtle sweeps its tail"). It is described as a variant of the phrase Ato o haratte ato shōzu (拂跡跡生 "Erasing traces creates traces"). [3]

  3. Reiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiki

    A reiki practitioner who offers teaching is known as a "reiki master". [6] There is no central authority controlling use of the words reiki or reiki master. [28] Certificates can be purchased online for under $100. [29] It is "not uncommon" for a course to offer attainment of reiki master in two weekends. [30]

  4. Mikao Usui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikao_Usui

    To Note: this section marked as ~*~ is written by Lauren Alexis Divinity, a Reiki Master of Life, as Gennette Huber was her Reiki Teacher, and our Reiki Lineage extends though William Lee Rand back up to Sensei Mikao Usui as the Grandmaster of Reiki Reiju. The family's ashes are buried at the grave site at the Saihō-ji Temple in Tokyo. [10]

  5. Mount Kurama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Kurama

    It is the birthplace of the Reiki practice, and is said to be the home of Sōjōbō, King of the Tengu. Kurama is also the location of the annual Kurama Fire Festival (鞍馬の火祭り, Kurama no Hi-matsuri), which takes place every October. Kurama-dera (鞍馬寺) is now designated as a national treasure of Japan.

  6. Harima no Kuni Fudoki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harima_no_Kuni_Fudoki

    [citation needed] The grounds for this are that local government administrative divisions were revised from kuni (国), kōri (郡) and sato (里), to kuni (国), kōri (郡), sato (郷) and ri (里) in the first year of Reiki (715 CE) or Reiki 3 (717 CE), and Harima no Kuni Fudoki employs the former.

  7. Ame-no-Nuboko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ame-no-nuboko

    Tenchi Reiki Furoku, the Shinto book of Ryobu Shinto, states that Amenosakahoko is the vajra which was stuck in Onogoro Island. Being influenced by these Shinto books, "Senguin Himon" describes that the grandson of the sun goddess descended from heaven carrying a sacred treasure Amenonuboko.

  8. Energy (esotericism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_(esotericism)

    Practitioners of reiki, a pseudoscientific healing modality, believe that qi is transmitted to the client via the palms of the practitioner’s hands. In tai chi , the ancient Chinese martial art, participants aim to concentrate and balance the body's qi , providing benefits to mental and physical health.

  9. Kotodama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotodama

    Kotodama is a central concept in Japanese mythology, Shinto, and Kokugaku. For example, the Kojiki describes an ukei (or seiyaku) 誓約 "covenant; trial by pledge" between the sibling gods Susanoo and Amaterasu, "Let each of us swear, and produce children".

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