In this new beautiful poster of Moon in the Water , Niall compares the wind with Aikido, let us go and let flow like the wind. The photo is again really great!
cool photo Rough Sea by Daniele Sartori http://www.flickr.com/photos/daniele...ri/3968339425/ photostream http://www.flickr.com/photos/daniele. ..th/3968339425 / used under creative commons license
We're like creatures of the wind
and Wild Is the Wind
Ned Washington and Dimitri Tiomkin Wild Is the Wind
I have forgotten much Cynara!
Gone with the Wind
Ernest Dowson, non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynarae
blows the wind of change just
in the face of time
Scorpions Wind of Change
A stormy wind signals the arrival of spring in Japan. He is Haru Ichiban 春 一番 - called Spring Number One - the first wind of spring. He is strong and blows away bicycles and plants, and signs. And then comes the warm weather.
It is easy to plug in the old ways of doing and thinking to stay. Sometimes it's good to have a strong wind. Unnecessary things are blown away. Everything is fresh and new.
In Japan, Shintoism in Fujin, god of wind. He stares angrily and with a bag of wind. It is more like Boreas, the god of the wind in Greek mythology.
I already talked about the wind, in Wind Forest Fire Mountain 风 林 火山 furinkazan , The motto of Takeda Shingen. In martial arts, we must be like the wind. We move like the wind. And be free like the wind.
The title of the movie Gone with the Wind was taken from a poem by Ernest Dowson. I used to think that gone with the wind meant that something was lost in the wind - young or the old days or the past. But it really meant that he blow themselves up and take the wind can be - and by the circumstances and fate - trying to forget his lost love. The
is a nice parallel to Ukemi - the art of aikido. You're making a real attack, but once your balance broken, do you think the connection as the wind and flowing like the wind. And if your movements are like the wind You'll never be hurt.
Wikipedia article on the Wind of Change Song and the Japanese and Greek gods of wind
A stormy wind signals the arrival of spring in Japan. He is Haru Ichiban 春 一番 - called Spring Number One - the first wind of spring. He is strong and blows away bicycles and plants, and signs. And then comes the warm weather.
It is easy to plug in the old ways of doing and thinking to stay. Sometimes it's good to have a strong wind. Unnecessary things are blown away. Everything is fresh and new.
In Japan, Shintoism in Fujin, god of wind. He stares angrily and with a bag of wind. It is more like Boreas, the god of the wind in Greek mythology.
I already talked about the wind, in Wind Forest Fire Mountain 风 林 火山 furinkazan , The motto of Takeda Shingen. In martial arts, we must be like the wind. We move like the wind. And be free like the wind.
The title of the movie Gone with the Wind was taken from a poem by Ernest Dowson. I used to think that gone with the wind meant that something was lost in the wind - young or the old days or the past. But it really meant that he blow themselves up and take the wind can be - and by the circumstances and fate - trying to forget his lost love. The
is a nice parallel to Ukemi - the art of aikido. You're making a real attack, but once your balance broken, do you think the connection as the wind and flowing like the wind. And if your movements are like the wind You'll never be hurt.
Wikipedia article on the Wind of Change Song and the Japanese and Greek gods of wind
The wonderful poem by Ernest Dowson Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynarae http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/dowson01.html
Scorpions Wind of Change
great cover of Wild Is the Wind by Cat Power. Also check the cool versions of Nina Simone and David Bowie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AICtij-Vtng
translation: Carina RL
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