
ORGANIZAÇÂO: AMBOEVENTS e ATMA Porto
INSTRUTOR:
AMARO BENTO
3º Dan Pencak Silat
Master Trainer Krav Maga Tactical
PREÇO: 35€ (Desconto de 10% para os alunos da ATMA Porto)
Informações:
Amaro Bento - 91 516 90 77
Hugo Guedes - 93 574 83 21
NINJUSU



Here is some important insight from the heart as to what it feels like to challenge yourself mentally and physically in the martial arts training hall. Man or woman, we can all have these periods of doubt and then make breakthroughs if we are brave enough to ask the disturbing questions.
At one point in the seminar I was working with my sister, Melissa, who I kept over powering when I was her uke. So she hunted down Mrs. Hayes to ask her why this was occurring… what was she doing wrong. We were doing some technique that required the uke to throw a MMA style cross punch.
Mrs. Hayes kindly came over, watched us do the technique, then had me be her uke. At this point all I could think of was “oh man I actually have to try to hit her. I CAN NOT be a bad uke for Mrs Hayes…. this is going to hurt, a lot.”
So I focused on Mrs. Hayes center and threw that punch. And for a brief moment, nothing…. she disappeared. Seconds later, she reappeared and hit me multiple times with some part of her body… not sure what… all I know was it was powerful and if I was a real bad guy it would have really really hurt. It was the most amazing thing of the seminar for me.
My sister’s issue ended up being her alignment. In addition, Mrs. Hayes explained to us about having a triangular base. This base makes you strong by grounding you.
Read the full post by Jess Burleigh and great comments in response here on the New Hampshire blog site.
Posted by Stephen Hayes on 02 Feb 2011 08:07 on An-SHu's Densho

I opened my seminar in Tournai, Belgium, this morning with the observation that there are 3 key aspects present when any lesson, class, or seminar is truly to be of value to the learners. There needs to be:
That third aspect might actually be the most important element for determining the value of any lesson. When a student is loaded with questions and hungry for knowledge leading to skill and wisdom, even a poor teacher and a mediocre lesson cannot hold such a learner back.
Maybe this was how it was for me back in the 1960s in my first formal martial arts training sessions. Truth told, my initial martial art’s technology was pretty primitive and did not really relate well to the way real fights, muggings, kidnaps, rapes, and hostage-takings took place, and my teachers were of the old school of militaristic hazing as instructional method and appeared to be quite aloof when it came to inspiring student advancement. But I was determined to get the most I could from those lessons, and I believe that my determination was the most important key to my becoming the martial artist I am today 40-plus years later.
Such determination to learn is one of the 37 Parts of the Path of Awakening – the San-ju-shichi Do-Bon – that is in the foundational teachings of the spiritual system I explored with Japanese and Tibetan teachers. Within the 37 Parts of the Path is a section called the Shi Nyo-I Soku – the “Four Miraculous Legs” – four ways of pursuing personal advancement so radical as to be beyond rational comprehension or logical description. Miracles happen. In one of these four astonishing possibilities, we can study so hard that literally miraculous learning occurs. Beyond rational explanation, we are so determined that we end up learning far more than what the lesson itself ostensibly offers or the teacher is capable of delivering.
How about you? Can you identify at all with the possibility of miraculous learning? Have you ever had an experience where strong and insistent wanting to know something led you beyond what would have been reasonable learning under the circumstances? Write your experience on here below as a comment, or even better, add your story to the discussion on the SKHQuest.com On-Line Community Forum where you can read even more details from me on this Shi Nyo-I Soku miracle super learning.

It is always depressing to see leftover evergreen trees leaning unpicked and neglected in sales lots after Christmas. Each in its own way is a beautiful manifestation of nature that with the right attention and decoration could brighten some family celebration in the cold grayness of year end. But those leftover trees never get to find their glory. They grew for years in sunshine and snow, waiting for this one final moment of purpose, and now it is too late. All was for naught. Yes, I realize those trees are just crops and they do not have conscious feelings, but I am still sad seeing them bound up and ready for the landfill along with our coffee grounds and soiled diapers and used-up appliances. They were there in the lot for a purpose at that special moment in their lives, and life ignored them. What a heart wilting waste, it seems.
I sometimes see people that remind me of those overlooked trees so full of potential. I see a young person with an unimpaired body ready to become vibrantly healthy. I see a person aching with quiet discontent ready to pursue a childhood dream. I see a person bored and lonely ready to serve a great cause and help others. I see them ready to transform. And I see them fail to take action needed to realize their potential because nobody with the capability of guiding them steps in and shows them where to find their power. Nobody picks them.
I was once just like those bare tree people myself, lost and overlooked and so far away from realizing my gift. I was fortunate to find the guides I needed at the right points in my life. I found a martial master willing to show me the secrets of the shadow warriors. I found an Asian spiritual king willing to show me the technology for accessing truest human brightness. I found a resplendent spirit willing to share my battles and breakthroughs as my life partner. I was fortunate to find them as guides in my life, and I take credit for being honest enough to know what I was lacking and brave enough to put myself in position to receive their blessings.
I made a vow 15 years ago to set up a dojo to be there for anyone who saw in my life story a hint of what could be in theirs. Whenever anyone tells me of a difficult road in their life, I say, “Come to Ohio to live and train with me.” My staff and I will demonstrate for you how to find your gift and bring it to blossom in the world. We did it in our lives, and you can do it in yours.
I want to see each and every one of the world’s neglected bare tree people come home to where they shine in a breath-taking radiance of sparkling joy and meaning. Know anyone full of potential but not yet roaring with activated purpose? Push them towards my dojo in Ohio. We are ready to help everyone shine.
| A Japan Week é um evento organizado anualmente numa cidade do mundo. A primeira Japan Week decorreu em Florença em 1986. Em 2010, ano em que se comemoram os 150 Anos da Assinatura do Tratado de Amizade Portugal-Japão, o Porto foi a cidade escolhida pela organização japonesa para a realização deste grande evento de celebração da cultura nipónica durante cinco dias, de entrada livre para o público. O programa tem início no dia 20 de Novembro, às 14h30, nos Jardins do Palácio de Cristal e no Pavilhão Rosa Mota, com diversas actuações de grupos japoneses (tambores, folclore japonês, música tradicional) e inclui exposições de pintura e artes diversas japonesas na Biblioteca Municipal Almeida Garrett e no Museu Nacional Soares dos Reis, além de cinco dias de espectáculos no Rivoli, com actuações de grupos japoneses que demonstrarão as diversas facetas da cultura do País do Sol Nascente. Além da promoção da cultura japonesa, tem sido também objectivo da Japan Week ao longo dos seus 30 anos de existência a promoção da mútua compreensão e amizade entre o país anfitrião e o Japão e, por isso, muitos grupos do Porto, partilharão o palco com os grupos visitantes do Japão. Haverá ainda actividades com escolas e entidades de apoio social, conferindo ao evento uma faceta de inclusão e de intercâmbio cultural e social. O evento é co-organizado pela Câmara Municipal do Porto (Pelouro do Conhecimento e Coesão Social - Fundação Porto Social, Fundação Ciência e Desenvolvimento; Pelouro do Turismo, Inovação e Lazer - Porto Lazer e pela Direcção Municipal da Presidência - Divisão Municipal de Relações Internacionais e de Protocolo) com a International Friendship Foundation , fundação japonesa com sede em Tóquio, e tem o Alto Patrocínio da Embaixada do Japão em Portugal. | |||




EVERYONE IS WELCOME... NO MATTER YOUR STYLE OR SKILL LEVEL
Do your best to join us March 11th-14th, 2010 (Thursday night to Sunday eve) in beautiful
San Francisco, CA as we have an exciting 2010 IBDA Tai Kai theme I'm calling
"Perfecting Your Budo Taijutsu", which will of course include weapons training!! - so bring your toys.
This once a year IBDA Tai Kai event will be limited in size to 40 people, including instructors. Most all of our events sell out so take advantage and sign up now to reserve your place. (Many spots are already gone as people started booking in September).
This years instructors are as follows:
Shihan Richard Van Donk - Judan+++++
Shihan Dan Ordoins - Judan++
Shihan Joel Everett - Judan++
Shihan Jim King - 9th Dan
Shidoshi John Owsiak - 6th Dan
Shidoshi Carlito Flores - 6th Dan
Shidoshi Roman Marquez - 5th Dan
Shidoshi Charles Benham - 5th Dan
Shidoshi James Clum - 5th Dan
Shidoshi-ho Jamie Daiken - 4th Dan
Shidoshi-ho Theodore Schink - 3rd Dan
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