History

My photo
TouChung Township, Yilan county, Taiwan
We created this studio in 2006; made some TaiChi & Calligraphy programs for kids by three years(2007-2010); Moved to Yilan in 2011. We do believe that- The oldest will be the neweat. Welcome aboard. NOW ON FACEBOOK facebook.com/ohouse2007taiwan

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

compositions 20070823

These are my compositions recently.
The two pieces share with you....




The character style is from Chin Dynasty in China.
4000 years before-maybe more.
Almost like the nature figure we can see in the nature.










It's later than Chin Dynasty,
We called Han Dynasty.
Very different style,right?
And I would like to remind you-
The two pieces are the same poems.
The same meaning,the same characters,
Can you figure it out?︿︿

TaiChi-Calligraphy Modern Image ~always in my mind...︿︿

Sunday, August 19, 2007

After five months....

My course about TaiChi & Caligraphy in Taiwan,
almost compared with me in five months.

I designed every single course for every student,
because it's about psychology research too~
the body,the mental,the mind,and practitioner's feeling.

It's not easy for me-
combined three area to be one course-
good for human being is the own goal.

Doday I just want to give myself a metal-
for my tring-so-hard.︿︿

You go girl-Annie.







TaiChi-Calligraphy Modern Image in my mind...︿︿

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

What's the Somatic Psychology?

What's the Somatic Psychology?

Somatic psychology, also referred to as body psychotherapy, is an interdisciplinary field involving the study of therapeutic and holistic approaches to the body, somatic experience, and the embodied self. It is based in psychological, neurological, developmental, medical, social and cultural sciences. The word somatic comes from the ancient Greek somat (body). The word psychology comes from the ancient Greek psyche (breath, soul hence mind) and logia (study). Wilhelm Reich was the first to bring the body into psychoanalysis, and to physically touch the client.[1] The only reference to the body in psychotherapy had previously been physiological and neurophysiological. Some credit Reich as a singlehanded founder of somatic psychology (though he called his early work character analysis). Many body-oriented psychotherapies trace their origins to Reich, yet in mainstream psychology his work remains marginalised.[2] However, there are earlier practitioners for example, the Persian physician Avicenna (980 to 1037 CE) who performed psychotherapy only by observing the movement of the patient's pulse as he listened to their anguish.[3] This is reminiscent of both traditional Tibetan medicine and current energy therapies that employ tapping points on a meridian. Some writers describe 'body as slow mind'[4] and this has coincided with research into embodiment and consciousness, and an unconscious mind that 'speaks' through the language of body. Dance therapy reflects this approach and is included in the field of somatic psychology


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_Psychology










TaiChi-Calligraphy Modern Image in my mind...︿︿