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On the RIPEcast this week close friend of ours Tadao! Recorded Live at Birds of a Feather 2024. Tadao became captivated by Breakbeats in the sands of the Black Rock desert in 2002. Years later he joined Strategik to help throw renegades and keep the Bay area Breaks scene vibrant. In the 2000 teens, the proliferation of Breaks in the Bay Area waned. Never content to stand on the sidelines, he jumped on the decks and founded Red Hot Beverly to help keep Breaks alive and well.
Millones de reproducciones lleva en Spotify y Youtube la canción de Shakira y Bizarrap, dedicada al exmarido de ella, Gerard Piqué, y en la que hace una clara referencia comparativa entre ella y la nueva pareja de su ex.Un tema sobre el que se ha escrito mucho desde la publicación de la canción, en el que no queremos incidir, pero vamos a profundizar en una de las marcas que se han visto salpicadas por la polémica: Casio. Aunque en su caso, a pesar del menosprecio, ha visto cómo el número de seguidores en redes se disparaba más de un 60% desde que estalló toda la polémica. El creador de la compañía fue el japonés Tadao Kashio. Nació en el año 1917, en Kureta-mura (actualmente Nankoku) en la prefectura de Kochi. Seis años más tarde, y tras un gran terremoto en Kanto, su familia y él se mudaron a Tokio, gracias a la invitación de un familiar.Una vez que se graduó de secundaria, Tadao comenzó a trabajar como aprendiz de operador de torno. Su jefe, el dueño de la fábrica, reconoció las habilidades del joven, y lo alentó para que estudiara en Waseda Koshu Gakko, mientras trabajaba en la fábrica.Cuando Kashio ganó experiencia laboral, haciendo ollas, sartenes y lámparas para bicicletas, se labró una buena reputación, que le trajo subcontratos para hacer piezas. Hacía todo esto mientras estudiaba en la universidad, al tiempo que ganaba el reconocimiento de sus profesores por ser un alumno aplicado.De esta forma, y con toda la experiencia sobre sus hombros, estableció, junto a sus hermanos, un negocio llamado Kashio Seisakujo, en Mitaka, Tokyo. Se dedicaban a la reparación de máquinas emisoras de billetes de avión, y después al resto de máquinas del aeropuerto, en el que fue su primer contacto con la tecnología. Al fundar la empresa, en 1946, los cuatro hermanos de la familia Kashio no sabían que iban a crear una de las compañías de electrónica de mayor éxito del mundo.Un día le llevaron a su pequeño taller, para reparar, una gran calculadora. La utilizaban los militares japoneses en las oficinas del aeropuerto, para controlar el transporte. Era una máquina grande, montada en una mesa con ruedas, con palancas y teclas mecánicas. Al arreglarla, y con un entusiasmo de un joven innovador, decidió fabricar una calculadora más pequeña, que pudiera ser transportada de un escritorio a otro. La clave para reducir el tamaño fue utilizar los primeros transistores que se conocían, e implementar el teclado númerico, con las claves del 0 al 9. Es considerada como la primera solución de alta tecnología aplicada en Japón.Así llegó a instalar su primera fábrica de calculadoras en Tokio en 1949, para atender la demanda nacional, en un país que se recuperaba de las consecuencias de la guerra. Ocho años más tarde, los hermanos fundaron la compañía CASIO y nombraron como presidente a su padre, Shigeru. A partir de entonces la empresa diseñó y fabricó calculadoras basadas en relés, posteriormente transistorizadas y, más tarde, electrónicas.La curiosidad de Tadao Kashio llegó más lejos, y dirigió su compañía hacia el universo de la relojería. Se fijó en los, por entonces, modernos relojes de mesa, que funcionaban gracias a un pequeño cristal de cuarzo, que movía las manecillas con una señal electrónica que recibía cada segundo de una batería. En el 56, crea el centro de investigación y desarrollo de nuevas tecnologías, para adaptar las nuevas tecnologías a todas las necesidades de la sociedad. Y es en 1969 cuando, gracias a este aprendizaje, inventa el primer reloj de pulsera de cuarzo, con pantalla de cristal líquido, lo suficientemente pequeño como para llevarlo en la muñeca. Era el Casiotrón. Fueron uno de los primeros fabricantes de relojes digitales de pulsera.No dejaron de investigar, y en unos años habían integrado diez funciones adicionales en ese reloj de pulsera, y hasta llegarón a integrar una calculadora electrónica. Mientras tanto, el centro de investigación y desarrollo les permitía desarrollar nuevas funciones, que convirtieron a Japón en el centro más importante del desarrollo de la tecnología electrónica moderna. Se crearon calculadoras de bolsillo, relojes con cronómetro, traductores de idiomas, una televisión de bolsillo con pantalla plana... Era la sociedad más avanzada en el uso de tecnología.Tadao murió en 1993, a los 76 años de edad, y considerado como uno de los padres del Japón moderno. Pese a su fallecimiento, Casio siguió trabajando en el desarrollo de su tecnología, llegando a convertirse, en el mundo de la relojería, en el sinónimo de reloj funcional deportivo. Casio registró ventas por más de 1.900 millones de dólares en 2022. Su principal mercado sigue siendo Asia, y sobre todo Japón. Y del total de ingresos, los relojes representan casi dos terceras partes. Casio sigue vigente.
Kai Bradbury stopped by Silence on Set to talk about the journey his character, 'Denny Cutler,' will go through in season 4 of the beloved Netflix show Virgin River. Bradbury talks about what it was like his first day on set in season three, his character arc this season, filming locations, and his love for the fans. *Virgin River has been renewed for a season five (we do discuss production and how it has been going w/o spoilers). Host: Monica Gleberman Editor: Polina Jdanova Social Media Graphic: Jojo -- Bio: Kai Bradbury. Most recently known for Freeform's “Motherland: Fort Salem,” Kai has joined as series regular ‘Denny Cutler' in the highly-anticipated fourth season of the Netflix Original Series “Virgin River” (July 20, 2022). Denny is a 19-year-old Seattle native, the long-lost grandson of the beloved character Doc Mullins played by Tim Matheson ("The West Wing"). Denny comes to Virgin River to forge a connection with the grandfather he just recently found out he had, but he comes bearing a dark secret. Kai kicked off his career in Amazon's “The Man in the High Castle” and went on to play ‘Glenn Stevens,' in Lifetime's “Menendez: Blood Brothers" following with TLC's “Untold Stories of the ER.” He went on to work on Netflix's “Altered Carbon” opposite Joel Kinnaman (“Suicide Squad”) where he plays ‘Tadao,' a 300-year-old businessman inside a younger man's body. He also appears in The CW's “Supernatural” as well as Amazon's hit series “The Boys,” playing the little brother of Karen Fukuhara's (“Suicide Squad”) character, Kimiko. Kai can also be seen in the new Netflix series “The Imperfects.” While details about his character remain a mystery, he can be seen in the trailer below. Premiere date is TBD. https://youtu.be/xcyrTyJnZrY Kai is incredibly proud of his mixed heritage. As the son of immigrant parents, Kai was born to a Japanese mother and Scottish father, combined with Venezuelan family, resulting in a multilingual and culturally-rich, real-life “Modern Family” upbringing. Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @SilenceonSet and on Instagram @SilenceonSetPod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/silence-on-set/support
Welcome to Dive Into Reiki With... an interview series that explores the journeys of high-profile Reiki teachers & practitioners. Hosted by Nathalie Jaspar. You can support the mission of spreading Reiki education through my Patreon for less than the cost of a cup of coffee or for free by rating this podcast on your app!IMPORTANT NOTICE: Dive Into Reiki's mission is to bring information that allows Reiki practitioners from all over the world to deepen their practice. Although this information is shared freely on my platforms, all content is tied to copyrights. Please do not repurpose or translate these interviews without previous authorization. EPISODE 24: SILKE KLEEMANN & AMANDA JAYNESilke Kleemann and Amanda Jayne are the authors of the book Women in Reiki, which you can find more about here: https://www.womeninreiki.com Based in Munich, Silke Kleemann is a certified naturopath in the field of psychotherapy and is trained in Hakomi, mindfulness-based psychotherapy, and teaches meditation and Jikiden Reiki. She also works as a freelance literary translator, editor and author, with a main focus on Latin American literature. She published a children's book in 2015 and has two young adult novels in the pipeline. You can contact Silke for therapeutic work at: www.jiruka.de Or find more about her writing at: www.drachenbauch.de Amanda Jayne currently lives in Kent, South East England, where she writes children's books, travel books and is currently writing about her pilgrimage experience. Amanda teaches Jikiden Reiki and gives treatments, offers Heart Circle coaching, and can frequently be found practicing taichi or swimming in the sea. She lived in Kyoto, Japan, for five years, where she learned Reiki with Chiyoko Yamaguchi and her son, Tadao, and moved to the USA in 2006, where she gained a master's in Spiritual Psychology. In 2009 Amanda walked a solo pilgrimage around 88 temples on the island of Shikoku. You can contact Amanda at: www.amandacjayne.com and www.learnjikidenreiki.comNathalie Jaspar, founder of Dive Into Reiki, is a Reiki master with over a decade of experience. She's a graduate teacher from the International House of Reiki, led by world-renowned Reiki master Frans Stiene. She also trained with the Center for True Health, and the International Center for Reiki. To gain an even deeper understanding of Reiki practice, Nathalie went to Japan to practice Zen Buddhism at the Chokai-san International Zendo. She is the author of Reiki as a Spiritual Practice: an Illustrated Guide, and the Reiki Healing Handbook (Rockridge Press). Support the show
Who are these down-and-out characters? What do their disappearances mean? Their abused childhoods? What nihilism drives them to violence? To self destruction? To eating their own flesh? Tadao Tsuge answers all such questions. Chris and James just need to visit with Drawn and Quarterly's edition of Trash Market. "The steam engine, in the end, was just a steam engine."
A hierarquia corporativa tem alguns cargos de enorme projeção e outros nem tanto. O mais conhecido você certamente conhece: o CEO, Chief Executive Officer. As três letras representam a forma mais popular de denominar quem é responsável pode liderar a empresa: tomar as principais decisões e arcar com as consequências, sejam elas boas ou ruins. […]
Osaka-born musician and inter-disciplinary artist moved to Kolkata, India after graduating art high school one week after the chance strains of a Sitar led to a love-at-first-sound of sorts. Navigating language barriers in a recently globalized India, he sought tutelage from Pandit Monoj Shankar of the Maihar Gharana in Kolkata who he would keep revisiting and living with over the years that followed in true Gharana tradition. His eventual long-term return to Japan in 2003 was the beginning of the third generation of Indian Classical musicians in Japan. Tadao has expanded since though, with eclectic global collaborations in Europe and the US. His recent success as an author of traditional Bengali cuisine which he learned from his Guruma and curation of a series of events celebrating South Asian culture in Japan has led to the establishment of his status as an unofficial ambassador of sorts that has been endorsed by the Indian Govt. and local Indian community. In this long-form conversation, we trace the beginning of his fascinating journey and discuss ideas on the role of global cultural exchange without from a space of fearless authenticity while paying respect to the source in the 21st century. This episode is brought to you by: www.holisticpianoacademy.com (Get a 25% discount on all courses as a podcast listener here) Music by: www.everynowheremusic.com Text: www.tlwrites.com Produced by T.L. Mazumdar Recorded on a Zoom L8 mixer kindly sponsored by: https://www.sound-service.eu Connect with Tadao: Website: http://www.tadao.in/ Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/ishihama Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/tadao.ishihama Connect with T.L: Artist Website: www.everynowheremusic.com Coaching: www.holisticpianoacademy.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everynowheremusic/ Spotify: https://spoti.fi/39S0dP5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tlmusician Twitter: https://twitter.com/tlmazumdar
Tadao Andō si dedicò all'architettura da appassionato autodidatta, arricchì il suo bagaglio grazie a numerosi viaggi studio in Europa e negli Stati Uniti, ma inizialmente condusse una vita molto varia, svolgendo attività in qualità di falegname, camionista e pugile. Cresciuto al di fuori delle istituzioni architettoniche, gli anni '60 sono stati per lui quelli dell'apprendimento dell'architettura, della formazione di una personale coscienza sull'abitare, mentre per il Giappone sono i testimoni di un processo di occidentalizzazione dei gusti e dei modi di vita. In questo clima culturale, spinto dall'economia di mercato e combattuto tra due poli opposti, Ando esordisce metabolizzando gli influssi esteri e operando, contemporaneamente, nel solco della civiltà giapponese.
Qui ne s'est jamais demandé à quoi correspondait les lettres YKK sur une de ses fermetures éclair. Vous n'avez pas pu passer à côté. Elles sont partout ! À vrai dire, plus de 10 milliards de fermetures éclairs YKK sont produites chaque année. Mais d'où vient cette marque ? Qui a créé cette société ? C'est ce que je vous propose de découvrir dans ce nouvel épisode d'Entrepreneurs Inspirants :) ▶️Pour me suivre, ça se passe en dessous :
ในยุคปี 1970 และ 80 แบรนด์ที่อยู่ในไฮไลท์ สำหรับอุปกรณ์อิเล็กทรอนิกส์ คือ Casio ไม่ว่าจะเป็น เครื่องคิดเลขวิทยาศาสตร์ เครื่องดนตรีอิเล็กทรอนิกส์ นาฬิกาดิจิตอล ฯลฯ ล้วนแล้วแต่ผลิตโดยบริษัทแห่งนี้เป็นหลักแทบจะทั้งสิ้น แม้กระทั่งทุกวันนี้ Casio ก็เป็นชื่อที่พบบ่อยที่สุดใน บริษัท เครื่องใช้ไฟฟ้า ต้องบอกว่าเกือบ 90% ของนักศึกษาวิศวกรรมใช้เครื่องคิดเลขของ Casio และนั่นคือวิธีที่พวกเราส่วนใหญ่รู้จักชื่อนี้ เลือกฟังกันได้เลยนะครับ อย่าลืมกด Follow ติดตาม PodCast ช่อง Geek Forever’s Podcast ของผมกันด้วยนะครับ References : https://astrumpeople.com/tadao-kashio-biography/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-tadao-kashio-1496820.htmlhttps://www.nytimes.com/1993/03/06/world/tadao-kashio-75-co-founded-and-led-casio-computer-co.htmlhttps://astrumpeople.com/tadao-kashio-biography/ =========================ร่วมสนับสนุน ด.ดล Blog และ Geek Forever Podcast เพื่อให้เรามีกำลังในการผลิต Content ดี ๆ ให้กับท่านhttps://www.tharadhol.com/become-a-supporter/——————————————–ติดตาม ด.ดล Blog ผ่าน Line OA เพียงคลิก :http://line.me/ti/p/~@tharadhol =========================ช่องทางติดตาม ด.ดล Blog เพิ่มเติมได้ที่Fanpage : www.facebook.com/tharadhol.blogBlockdit : www.blockdit.com/tharadhol.blogTwitter : www.twitter.com/tharadholInstragram : instragram.com/tharadholTikTok : tiktok.com/@tharadhol.blogLinkedin : www.linkedin.com/in/tharadholWebsite : www.tharadhol.com
durée : 00:59:07 - Bises Japonaises - par : Nathalie Piolé - La playlist jazz de Nathalie Piolé. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat, Olivier Guérin
Neste Podcast: Conversamos com o Sensei Tadao Nagai sobre sua trajetória e sobre a história do Judô brasileiro.
Nesse episódio, conto histórias de infância, de quando comecei a gostar de arquitetura, e também falo de alguns aprendizados que a arquitetura japonesa me trouxe para a vida.
Neste podcast eu trago um pouco da história do Reiki, de seu criador e os Benefícios dos tratamentos com o Reiki. Apresento também o Jikiden Reiki, a linhagem que resgata conteúdos do Reiki Tradicional Japonês, que foi fundada em 1999 por Chiyoko Yamaguchi e seu filho Tadao, em Kyoto, Japão. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/val-terapias-integradas/message
CONNECTING HUMANS AND NATURE. I interviewed the eminent Japanese architect Tadao Ando at Château La Coste, the beautiful hotel and vineyard located near Aix-en-Provence, where Ando was opening a show of his drawings in the art centre that he built in 2011. Afterwards, Ando was going on to Paris, as he is restoring and rebuilding the Bourse de Commerce building to become a museum that houses the Pinault Collection.
Telegram https://t.me/architourpodcastMail social@lucadonzelli.itSe merita di essere visto.....@MElosegnoEd ecco una nuova puntata con Elena e Marta di MElosegno, pagina Instagram che raccoglie e suggerisce eventi, mostre, musei da visitare, principalmente a Milano ma non solo.In questa puntata parliamo di:LONDRA“Only Human: Martin Parr”National Portrait Gallery, fino al 27 MaggioFotografo britannicodivertente, ironicasoggetti preferiti le persone, le abitudini, le attitudini e i comportamenti nella vita quotidianafocus su quelli britannici“Don McCullin”Tate Britain, fino al 6 MaggioSi tratta della più completa raccolta di immagini e scatti di McCullin mai esposta in una istituzione museale britannica: comprende molte delle sue iconiche fotografie di guerra, incluse immagini scattate in Vietnam, nell'Irlanda del Nord e, più recentemente, in Siria, spesso catturate e rubate con grande rischio personale.Immagini bianco e nero“Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2018”Natural History Museum , fino al 30 GiugnoLa miglior fotografia naturalistica del mondoAnteprima italiana al Forte di Bard (Valle d’Aosta) fino al 2 GiugnoVan Gogh and Britain, Tate Britain, fino al 11 AgostoStanley Kubrick: The Exhibition, Design Museum, fino al 15 SettembreChristian Dior: Designer of Dreams, Victoria and Albert Museum, fino al 1 Settembre MILANOIN PROGRAMMAThe Art Side of Kartell, Palazzo Reale, ultimo weekendRoy Lichtenstein. Multiple Visions, Mudec, dal 1 Maggio all’8 Settembre( Liu Bolin. Visible Invisible, Il performer cinese della fotografia mimetica al Mudec Photograzie a un accurato body painting, il suo corpo risulta pienamente integrato con lo sfondo,dal 15 Maggio)World Press Photo 2019, uno dei più prestigiosi premi di fotogiornalismo, Fondazione Sozzani, 12 Maggio fino al 2 GiugnoThe Challenge. Tadao Ando, Armani Silos, fino al 28 LuglioEditing a cura di Simona Capomolla di Esperienze Digitali
Time Codes: 00:00:28 - Introduction 00:02:35 - September in October 00:04:17 - Vérité #1 00:49:17 - Cutie Honey: The Classic Collection 01:23:32 - Wrap up 01:24:34 - Contact us Shea and Derek are back for their September manga episode. (Yeah, yeah. We know it's the beginning of October, but the guys were a little late getting last month's show recorded.) This time they discuss two intriguing titles, each quite different one from the other. They begin with the inaugural issue of Vérité, a new anthology series out of India featuring classic alternative manga as well as contributions from contemporary Indian artists that have a gekiga feel to them. The guys were glad to see work from Tadao Tsuge, Susumu Katsumata, and Youji Tsuneyama, but they were also taken by fresh Indian voices such as those of Anpu Varkey, Shaunak Samvatsar, Nandita Basu, and Bharath Murthy, Vérité's editor. After that, Shea and Derek discuss Cutie Honey: The Classic Collection, by Go Nagai. This is another one of Seven Seas Entertainment's nice hardbound collections of classic 1970s manga, other titles including Captain Harlockand Devilman. The guys emphasize Cutie Honeyas a representative kind of shonen manga for its time, but they spend most of the time discussing the, at times discomforting, sexual or erotic nature of Go Nagai's creation. What was written for a particular audience back in the 1970s may come across as gratuitous or even offensive to more contemporary readers. But both Derek and Shea point out that, despite the erotic weirdness apparent at times, the story is engaging and worth revisiting.
Time Codes: 00:00:27 - Introduction 00:03:34 - Captain Harlock: The Classic Collection, Vol 1 00:42:39 - Slum Wolf 01:14:09 - Wrap up 01:15:17 - Contact us This month Shea and Derek discuss two great works that bring back some older, or classic, manga. They begin with Leiji Matsumoto's Captain Harlock: The Classic Collection, Vol 1 (Seven Seas Entertainment), a series that originally ran between 1977 and 1979. Captain Harlockis a classic science fiction work, and with a space pirate protagonist who can be seen as a romantic hero. The Two Guys discuss the figure of Harlock as a curious mixture, while at the same time trying to ferret out the his philosophy. In many ways, they see this manga anchored in its time, both aesthetically and politically. But this work definitely isn't limited to it's time and can be appreciated today. Next they turn to Slum Wolf, another translated collection from Tadao Tsuge (New York Review Comics). An earlier collection of Tsuge's work, Trash Market, was released in 2015 by Drawn and Quarterly (which the guys reviewed on their June 2015 episode). Slum Wolfis a collection of nine stories originally published between 1969 and 1978 in various publications such as Garo and Yagyō. It also includes an essay by Tsuge, as well as a outstanding contextual essay by Ryan Holmberg, who also edited and translated the collection. The guys discuss all the stories, to greater or lesser degrees of depth, but they spend most of their time talking about the linking features that bind most of the narratives. As both Derek and Shea point out, this is one of the manga highlights of the year, so far.
Tadao has almost finished a two-year volunteering assignment in Papua New Guinea. Today we ask about what he is doing there, what the country is like and some of the differences he experienced.
This month on their manga episode, Shea and Derek discuss two very different works. They begin with Hirohito Araki's JoJo Bizarre Adventure, which is now being reissued in new editions from VIZ Media. The title has been published in smaller paperback form for quite a while, but this year VIZ began collecting Araki's world-famous -- and still ongoing -- series in larger hardcover editions, beginning with the first two volumes in the series' first narrative arc, Phantom Blood. (The third volume will be released this August.) Shea points out that one the distinguishing features of these new collections is Araki's more contemporary artwork that can be found on the cover of the volumes. This is markedly different, he mentions, from Araki's original style from the mid- to late 1980s, when the series first came out in Japan. In fact, the guys discuss how JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is very much influenced by -- or at least participated in -- the kind of over-the-top, extreme action narrative that defined that decade. As such, you can see these early JoJo stories as a cross between Sylvester Stallone, the Die Hard movies, and Rob Liefeld's art. What happens in the first two volumes is definitely melodramatic and strange. As Derek suggests, if elements of the story just don't make sense, if you feel that Araki is just getting a little too weird, just accept that and enjoy the ride. What else can you say about a series involving a Jane Austin-style setting, a sensei training premise, breathing techniques that can make your arm extend, and an Incan mask that creates vampiric zombies? Next, Derek and Shea look at a new release from Drawn and Quarterly, Tadao Tsuge's Trash Market. This may be the first English translation of Tsuge's work -- the guys are unsure about this -- and this book collects six stories that Tsuge had originally published in Garo and Yagyō between 1968 and 1972. One of Shea's favorites is "A Tale of Absolute and Utter Nonsense," perhaps the most political (intentionally or otherwise) piece in the collection, and one that he feels highlights Tsuge's defining art style. Derek is partial to "Song of Showa," a semi-autobiographical, unromantic tale of Tsuge's working-class roots, and especially the titular story, perhaps the collection's most sophisticated and complex when it comes to character development. But all of the stories here are outstanding: "Manhunt," about journalists investigating the phenomenon of "vanishing men," "Gently Goes the Night," about a psychologically atrophied father and husband still struggling with his experiences during the Second World War, and "Up on the Hilltop, Vincent Van Gogh...," another semi-autobiographical piece revisiting Tsuge's early years as an artist. Tsuge's grim, stark realism contrasts sharply with Araki's decompressed soap opera approach, but that's what makes these manga episodes so much fun, a study in differences.
Mari Hall is a multifaceted woman; a Life Skills Coach, Trainer, and Motivational Speaker. Her focus is on providing individual and couples skills to return to a balanced state. She specializes in stress reduction, women’s’ issues and family mediation services. Her goals are to continue to inspire people to remember their birthright and live life fully. Mari has been a teacher/practitioner of Reiki for over 30 years. She has a private practice and also does distance work and phone consultations. She travels to teach all over the world. She taught and lived in Europe for over 18 years. During that time she founded and still directs the International Association of Reiki. Through this association she has taught over 50,000 people Reiki and authored and had 9 books published on Reiki in many different languages. In 2009 Mari met Tadao Yamaguchi in Bogotá, Columbia where they were speaking at a Reiki Conference with Arjava Petter. She took her first Shoden and Okuden courses in Bogotá with Tadao and Arjava. She became a Shihan Kaku or assistant teacher of Jikiden Reiki in May 2011 and has assisted in a large number of courses since 2009 with Arjava. The seminars replicate those taught in 1930s and are based on over 65 years of treatment experience. She became a Shihan in May 2013. Mari is also a designer of very special one of kind prayer beads. Her designs incorporate precious and semi precious stones and prayer. She has an extensive web site devoted to the use of prayer, mantras and beads for health and harmony.
Interview Exclusive! We are joined by Tadao Tomomatsu, actor and host of Anime Sushi. We discuss Anime Sushi, a new anime television show in the works!