Monday, September 20th, 2010
“Come to the edge, he said.
They said; We are afraid.
Come to the edge, he said. They came.
He pushed them and they flew.” Guillaume Apollinaire
To all those of you teetering on the edge, ready to fly…
I am in Brighton 23 & 24 November 2010.
Reiki Master Teacher
23 & 24th November. 9am-2pm. £350
Reiki II
23rd November. 3-8pm. £125
See you there…
Friday, September 17th, 2010
Well, I don’t know how it happened but spontaneously I found myself last night in our little mobile home in the heart of the woods with the lights off and one candle burning brightly, attuning my Daughter Jasmin to Reiki I.
She had woken up that morning and not stopped asking for the attunement all day. She had, at the age of 7 decided it was time. This is the age when Rudolf Steiner believed a child had become its own ‘self’ and whilst growing adult teeth is also growing a perception about their place in the world and for Jasmin this meant time for Reiki. This type of healing has been in her life since conception but the need to explore it as a form had never occurred to her before now. Maybe she was just copying mummy but she had never really done this before and I think her being knew it was going into the second 7 year cycle of her life, where she would begin to confront the duality of her human existence. This interests me because she is part of a new consciousness, the children of parents who began to pick apart the truth of their own existence seeing the light of a greater consciousness ahead of them. How will her life differ, will she need to experience the ‘who you are not’ to experience ‘who you are’ in the same way as we did? I think not, this generation have absorbed the clearance their parents have done and will take this and the practices handed down to them through their life.
The growth of the child and of the greater consciousness will be wonderful to watch and will be, as usual enlightening for the parents. As I write this I can feel myself spending more time with children, helping them to shine into their futures and at the same time letting them help me. This symbiotic relationship between children and adults must be the way forward, surely gone are the days of the adults thinking they know all. The need for boundaries and structure for children is all the more important today, don’t get me wrong but within the framework of development there is also the need for recognising that they may have a greater light to shine than ours and we must give them the space to do this.
A way in which this was reflected after Jasmin’s attunement was that once she had rested for a short while, she instantly became very alert and began to place her little hands as hot as irons onto my back just where it was at that time quite aching. Her hands stayed there for a long while until the aching subsided and then she moved them. She was totally and intuitively tuned into the Reiki and my body. She was practicing what I now know after research, was the Reiki practiced and taught by Dr Usui. Without set hand positions, the Reiki practitioner worked intuitively over and on the body. I think watching Jasmin work like this without being told anything intellectually has strengthened my feeling that it is time to begin to practice and teach Reiki in this way. I can feel that times are changing and it may be wise to let go of the ‘western’ style Reiki that has until now served all who have come into contact with it and go deeper into the heart of Reiki.
With this in mind I will begin to explore the ‘Heart of Reiki’ as I believe it will become a new way to practice, focusing very strongly on the intuitive not only in healing but as a ‘way’ of being, a ‘way’ of life.
When I started writing none of this was in my awareness. For me, writing has become a flow of inspiration and such a wonderful creative way to access the truth…maybe this will be part of the programme…
Love you all. Rx
Thursday, September 16th, 2010
Now that I am travelling to Cambridge every month from the Dordogne, I will be holding Reiki I, II and Master Training workshops in central Cambridge. Some of these will be group workshops but if you would like to explore a one-to-one training, please get in touch.
I will also be holding treatments of 1.5 hours which include time to discuss history and intent before the treatment and discussion and relaxation afterwards.
25th September, Reiki Treatments between 10.00am - 2.30pm.
Please contact me to book a treatment or to talk more about Reiki:
reiki@rebeccahutley.com
Monday, September 13th, 2010
The last year has been a pleasant and enlightening interlude during which I have written new Reiki manuals from the heart of my own experiences over the last 12 years. Through this process I have come to realise that Reiki is a life journey home to your True Being, reflecting the original wisdom of Dr. Usui. I look forward to seeing you all again to continue…
I will be holding Reiki workshops in the UK (Worthing, Brighton & Cambridge), Reiki Holidays in the Dordogne where I live (please see the links to the right about the Domaine de Mazieras). I have also launched a Retreat company Morocco Retreats with my sister, check out the site www.moroccoretreats.wordpress.com
FORTHCOMING DATES:
UK
REIKI II - 24 September 2010
Worthing (10-3) £125
REIKI MASTERS – 24 November 2010
Brighton/Worthing (10-4) £350
MARRAKECH
Goddess Retreat
3-6 February 2011
www.moroccoretreats.wordpress.com
DORDOGNE
See the links to the right for details of the Domaine de Mazieras and how to get there
REIKI I - 8 & 9 January 2011
£95
REIKI II – 22 & 23 January 2011
£125
REIKI MASTERS – 26 & 27 February 2011
£350
For information on flights and accommodation for the Dordogne or further details about any of these dates please contact me: reiki@rebeccahutley.com
Anyone who has trained with me and would like to receive an e-copy of the new Reiki I and II manuals please get in touch…
Monday, September 13th, 2010
Over the past ten years, the world of Western Reiki has undergone rapid change. In fact, not since Iris Ishikuro disobeyed Mrs Takata by making the Master Level commonly available has anything of the like happened (Mrs Takata had decreed US $10,000 to be the going rate for the course, thus putting it out of most people’s reach).
While there are several plausible reasons for this change - the advent of the Web, a growing number of teachers etc. - the principal cause is almost certainly the rediscovery of Reiki’s Japanese heritage. This has led many practitioners to question much that was previously taken as ‘gospel’, and delve more deeply into a practice they soon learnt was not just a healing system, but also a way of life.
The Problem with Western Reiki
The Reiki almost everyone practices in the West was passed on - in one way or another - from Mrs Takata (a student of Dr Hayashi who, in turn, was a student of Mikao Usui, the founder of Reiki). Her style of Reiki has proven a great success and helped millions of people around the world. This is indisputable.
But is it true to Usui’s original system of Reiki? And, more importantly, is it as effective as what Usui originally taught?
The answer, I believe, is ‘no’, and the reason is that Mrs Takata focused too much on the healing component of Reiki. For her Reiki was - at least primarily - a hands-on healing technique; while for Mikao Usui it was something much grander: a path to Enlightenment.
Before I elaborate on this point, it should be noted that the difference in emphasis is not surprising given the way Mrs Takata and Mikao Usui found Reiki. Mikao Usui arrived at Reiki after a life of meditation, martial arts and (Tendai) Buddhism; Mrs Takata found it after she sought a solution to several life threatening health problems.
As a result, Usui saw Reiki in the context of Buddhism (and hence, Enlightenment); and Mrs Takata saw Reiki in the context of healing. It is therefore only to be expected that the way they taught Reiki differed substantially.
The Five Building Blocks of Reiki
Reiki, as taught by Usui, consisted of five principal parts:
- Attunements
- Healing
- Mantras and Symbols
- Traditional meditation techniques
- Reiki precepts
All five parts are seen to work symbiotically together: one part strengthening the other in a bid - ultimately - to find Enlightenment.
In Western Reiki (as taught by Mrs Takata) many of the five components are either lost or greatly weakened. They all exist, sure, but the emphasis - as we have explained - is on the healing. Everything else is useful only insomuch as it helps this.
The Quest for Enlightenment
Since Reiki, for Usui, was not principally about healing (in fact, he only bothered teaching hands on healing in the last few years of his life!), then it is worth examining how it fits in with the goal of Enlightenment . In particular, it is useful to re-examine the five building blocks of Reiki to see how traditional Usui Reiki differs in emphasis from that handed down by Mrs Takata.
The Attunements
The attunements are for the most part used in a similar way in both Western and Japanese Reiki. Their purpose is to connect the aspiring practitioner to Reiki energy. The principal difference is that in Japanese Reiki the attunements (reiju) are not a one off thing. Rather, they are performed over and over again to help maintain one’s connection to the Reiki energy.
In fact, in Usui’s time, it was even common practice to perform reijus each time Reiki practitioners met as a group.
Healing
As we have already said, healing for Usui was not so much an end in itself as a path to Enlightenment. Through healing you entered into a deep meditative state that led to a closer connection with the true Self.
That is not to say that the healing component wasn’t valued. After all, Usui himself spent much time healing people (sometimes even doing so for days on end - for instance after the 1923 Tokyo earthquake). The point is simply that healing was of secondary importance. It was the spiritual state of an individual that truly mattered.
Not surprisingly, Japanese healing sessions tend to be much more intuitive as a result, since the emphasis on the meditative element makes them less ‘heady’ than their Western equivalent.
As a rule, there are no set positions, with a practitioner moving intuitively from one place to the next (unlike the method Mrs Takata taught which involves students using a set of fixed hand positions).
Mantras and Symbols
In Western Reiki, the mantras and symbols are primarily used to strengthen healing. If the practitioner feels that more energy is needed on a certain part of a patient’s body, for instance, the Power Symbol can be drawn to intensify the Reiki energy. The mantras and symbols are generally used together - the mantras being repeated after the symbols are drawn.
In Japanese Reiki the symbols have a role of lesser importance. Indeed, the best way to describe them - according to Frans Stiene - would be something like ‘training wheels’. While a beginner practitioner has a less reliable (or weaker) connection to the Reiki energy they will be used; but as soon as the practitioner has learnt to embody the energy of the symbols they will be let go of.
Furthermore, the symbols are used more for the practitioner’s sake than the client’s. They are not drawn on the client so that he or she can receive ‘more energy’. Rather, they are drawn by the practitioner so that she, herself, can better embody their energy.
Another key difference between the two Reiki systems is that in Japanese Reiki the mantras are often used on their own. They are generally chanted with the aim of strengthening certain energy centres (for instance the CKR mantra - that is pronounced slightly differently to normal - bolsters the hara, or second chakra).
Students will spend months - maybe even years - chanting these mantras, working their way from one to the next only when their teacher deems them ready for the next one.
Traditional Meditation Techniques
As a rule, traditional Western Reiki neglects meditation practice. Sometimes meditation techniques involving the visualization of the Reiki symbols are taught, and students are usually encouraged to be in a meditative state when practising Reiki; but systematic meditation is seldom part of Western Reiki.
For Usui, on the contrary, meditation was a genuine cornerstone upon which Reiki developed. Using particular meditation techniques - in particular breathing into the hara - students learnt to focus their mind, strengthen their energy and merge with the true Self.
Since Reiki - as we have said - was for Usui a path to Enlightenment, then moving more deeply within oneself was the most important thing one could do. As such, it is hardly surprising that Usui taught meditation for many years before teaching the healing component of Reiki.
Healing the body is great, for sure; but healing the mind (through meditation) is more important still.
Reiki Precepts
The Reiki precepts are taught in both Western and Japanese Reiki and, to some extent, are important to both. The main difference between the two systems is how they are used.
While in Western Reiki the precepts are often understood on an intellectual level, Japanese Reiki aims to understand them in a more intuitive, non-rational way. Practitioners meditate on them, trying to understand with the ‘gut’, not the head. In this way, it is hoped, they can more fully embody the principles (in both actions and spirit).
When the principles are understood with the head alone, students will generally find that they do not greatly influence their actions.
Conclusion
Due to the multiple developmental influences on Western Reiki - for instance, Indian, Tibetan and Egyptian to name just a few - it is impossible to make any statements that are valid for all of its forms.
That said, it is nevertheless true that on the whole, Japanese Reiki is principally a path to Enlightenment, while Western Reiki is a path to healing. This, it could be argued, is the main difference between the two systems.
(Note: This discussion should be seen as a general one. In other words, as accurate as it will often prove to be, many Reiki practitioners and systems will not conform to the ‘norm’.)
Sunday, September 12th, 2010
This summer, I came to some realisations about dependency. How it holds you back and also how rife it is in today’s society. Dependency on people, structures, money, material objects, the list is endless it seems.
I came to realise that dependency is a cruel sword which sits tucked neatly under your arm. It has been there right from the start, given to you in early childhood. Its been there so long that you can’t really feel it even as it cuts into you slowly. You’ve become so used to it that it becomes a part of you. And then, after many years of nagging pain, you may even come to acknowledge it and you rejoice at this great revelation and see it as a real step that you’ve taken. But, you leave it there because its quite another thing to remove it, lay it down and walk away. This is because it feels so familiar to you that laying it down would create a deep sense of loss. This is totally ridiculous of course, it being an obvious cumbersome burden to you, but by then it has played such a large part in who you have become.
All I know is that for true healing to occur, the sword of dependency must be laid down. Be aware however, that those who gave it to you may not be so happy to see it go. You are not alone in your dependency and it will take great strength to remove something from your life that is still so much a part of the people and society around you.
Thursday, September 9th, 2010
Well now, I know the Universe has a sense of humour as so often I find myself just looking up to the sky and saying, ‘this is very funny, very funny indeed’. But, now it really is quite great.
In the search for freedom, nature, a spontaneous and connected lifestyle we find ourselves drawn to France. Finally, we feel that we have found a place which suits us all and we are loving it. Wide open spaces of verdant, lush countryside, beautiful stone houses… We can see a future here, the school at Issac is great and we have found a gem of a place to live owned by lovely, helpful people.
What more could you ask? So now we feel we ought to look into ways of making a living whilst we rent and set up a life here. And we have now met the French tax system! A system where you have to choose which box your profession sits and more or less stick to it. At first glance, it would appear that we have walked straight into the lion’s den of restricted, non-spontaneous bureaucracy…
But, am I worried, no. I am laughing at the perfection of it all. I see the greatest gift in this and am marveling at the brilliance of it. In having to restrict myself to only one profession, and as you know I am well known for carrying out 3 or 4 at any given time, I am going to have to practice the Buddhist art of ’single-pointed focus’! For the first time in my life, I am going to have to choose ONE profession and not only that, I am going to have to stick to it, for very boring french fiscal reasons.
So, the journey continues and the best thing is, I know which box I’m going to choose and I’m also going to have to make it work…
Thursday, September 9th, 2010
We’ve been living in a tent and have now moved into the ‘luxury’ of a mobile home for a month, waiting for our house in the Domaine to come free at the beginning of October.
I find the journey since we left Spain interesting for a few reasons. Just before we left we had problems with our one way hire van and had to buy a trailer, leaving us without any spare money at all. So, we found the nearest campsite to Issac where Jasmin would be starting school and set up our very basic tent, living out of the back of our car. I think before I would have seen this situation as a problem and been quite depressed by the fact that I hadn’t been able to negotiate a smooth house move. But, these days we see all this as just how it’s meant to be.
Because of this situation, we have been living very close the earth which has grounded us and allowed us to really experience the environment we will be living in. It has given us time and space away from telephones and internet to be in the natural rhythm of the day and well, when we moved into this mobile home with its own shower and toilet, we were in heaven! We remembered that even living in this basic accommodation we are better off than most people in the world with sanitary conditions and enough food on our plates. And as we live here without a tv and now the internet card has run out, we find ourselves doing the things we’ve been meaning to do but ‘didn’t have time’.
So, instead of seeing it all as negative, I can feel that accepting what ‘is’ brings such a wonderful feeling of peace to your life. The duality of positive and negative is a construct which the mind has been given and latches onto when situations arise. But, really that’s all it is. There is no situation that is ‘bad’, the acceptance of a situation and also a feeling or emotion that arises without judging it, holds a great prize within. A chance to learn, grow, bring yourself (sometimes with a bang) into the present moment, which of course as we know is the only truth. The past has gone and the future will only be a reflection of where you’re at ‘now’. So, I continue to watch the stories in my mind which try to delude me and give thanks for where I am NOW…