“O, my soul, do not aspire to immortal life, but exhaust the realm of the possible” – Pindar, Pythica III, apud Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus
Imagine an exercise of the mind that flirts with the absurd. It can also be an act of the soul. Imagine the perfect creation in undisputed, unimpeachable geometric form. Imagine also the perfect Creator. The flawless Creator is identical with His Creation. A sphere with the center everywhere and the circumference nowhere. In this creative act every self-aware being (at least humans) is the center of the universe.
In this act of being alive, in creation, each self-aware has a backbone, a sort of cranial spine of infinity. Not infinite time, not infinite space, but a process of almost permanent awareness. This process is present in every man’s life, in his experiences, in his job with which he earns his living. It is imbued in his essence if it is naturally identical with honesty, with integrity, with the effort to learn from every living moment or apparent abandonment. Of course there are other pillars that create balance: shoulders, elbows, hips, knees, ankles, soul, spirit and others. They all hurt more or less.
Yumeiho Japanese manual therapy puts you directly face to face with yourself, with your soul. It’s not a judgment, it’s an exercise in honesty. More than that, it teaches you to touch people so that they are better. Each point reached/pressed is equivalent to humbleness, another step of self-awareness and, in another words, one step closer to God. I am not a follower of habotnics, but it is obvious that being inspired by God helps. To feel the center of the universe means to become dedicated, involved, body and soul to every person who asks for your help, in no way self-centered. Each point is the center.
My challenge to you is this: How do you feel when you learn to practice in classes, seminars, specialization internships Yumeiho therapy?
Your answers are the light through which each practitioner has contributed to the good of each patient.
December, 2022
Lucian Dănilă, Yumeiho therapist