Nothing Changes if Nothing Changes.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

The Revolution has begun!

Ever since I started learning Sennin-So Shiatsu and my Shiatsu Master explaining the relevance and importance to having a alkaline pH (7.4 to be exact.), I've noticed that more and more publications, news syndicates, and even doctors are letting people know just how important it is to be alkaline.  Here is another article that I found that is a good read.

BAKING SODA... Guess what else it does?!?!?!

Live Happy, Healthy, and Ready for Anything!

3 comments:

  1. That's very good. You are the first person I write to who admits that 'Trick or Treatment' is not a piece of clinical evidence.
    SHIATSU TRAINING LONDON

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  2. I see that you haven't posted for a while, but perhaps you will get this comment none the less. I'm a massage therapist already and am very interested in learning shiatsu. Would you mind sharing how you got your training and how you found which teachers you wanted to work with? Thanks!

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    1. My training was for a very specific and very rare form of shiatsu. It cannot be found anywhere outside of Seattle except for Hawaii (the big island). There are different styles of shiatsu that exist and this version, Sennin-So Shiatsu, seems to stand out in comparison from what I've seen and have been told by those who can compare. My training came from a man whose family created the technique. He doesn't openly teach this and only taught me as an agreement with my present employer at The Pro Sports Club in Bellevue, WA. To say I was in the right place at the right time is quite the understatement. And just recently it sounds like he might be done teaching very soon. In the future, I plan on having my own Shiatsu business where I can take what I've been taught and pass it along to aspiring Shiatsu practitioners. Though learning this technique isn't something that is done in a workshop or a few weekend courses. Those who'd want to learn this technique from me would have to put some serious time in, as what I've learned has changed my life and many in whom I treat, and I don't want this rare art watered down. So the amount of discipline I had to use to learn it would be stressed upon those who learn from me. I'd be looking at a training regiment including multiple years of internship at my place of business, where the practitioner would be paid of course, but work under the guide of myself and all other practitioners in the business. I learned a long time ago that the best things in life are never given freely or easily. They must be attained through hard work. Most of the practitioners that I know who practice this art feel grateful for being introduced to it and incredibly humble in what it has taught us and allowed us to perform.

      I'll be updating the blog more often relatively soon with much more information coming henceforth, so please stay tuned. Thank you for reading and take care.

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