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Reiki

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Reiki
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinlíngqì
Wade–Gilesling2-ch'i4
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingling4-hei3
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetlinh khí
Korean name
Hangul령기
Hanja靈氣
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationryeonggi
McCune–Reischauerryŏngki
Japanese name
Hiraganaれいき
Kyūjitai靈氣
Shinjitai
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnReiki

Reiki (霊気, /ˈreɪkiː/) is a spiritual practice[1] developed in 1922 by Japanese Buddhist Mikao Usui. It uses a technique commonly called palm healing as a form of complementary and alternative medicine and is sometimes classified as oriental medicine by some professional bodies.[2] Through the use of this technique, practitioners believe that they are transferring healing energy in the form of ki through the palms.[3]

There are two main branches of Reiki, commonly referred to as Traditional Japanese Reiki and Western Reiki. Within both Traditional and Westernised forms of Reiki, there are three forms of degrees, commonly referred to as the First, Second, and Master/Teacher degree. According to Reiki practitioners and Masters, at First Degree, a Reiki practitioner is able to heal himself and others, at Second Degree is able to heal others distantly (commonly called distant healing) with the use of specialised symbols, and at Master level (specifically Master/Teacher level) is able to teach and attune others to Reiki.

A 2008 systematic review of randomised clinical trials[4] concluded that "..the evidence is insufficient to suggest that reiki is an effective treatment..[sic]" for the conditions studied (depression, pain and anxiety, and others).

History

Derivation of name

Mikao Usui 臼井甕男 (1865 – 1926)

The English word reiki, meaning "an alternative healing method", derives from the Japanese loanword reiki 霊気 "mysterious atmosphere or feeling", which derives from the Chinese loanword lingqi 靈氣 "spiritual atmosphere; cleverness". It is comprehensively defined by the Oxford English Dictionary,

Reiki, n. Alternative Med. Brit. /ˈreɪki/, U.S. /ˈreɪki/. Forms: also with capital initial.

[‹ Japanese reiki, specialised use of a term usually meaning 'mysterious atmosphere, miraculous sign' (1001; compare Chinese língqì numinous atmosphere) ‹ rei soul, spirit (‹ Middle Chinese) + ki vital energy (‹ the Middle Chinese base of Chinese chi n.2).]

The spiritual life force, or vital spiritual energy, said to reside in all living things (cf. chi n.2). Hence: a therapy, apparently based on an ancient Tibetan Buddhist technique, developed in Japan in the late 19th or early 20th cent. by Dr Mikao Usui (1865–1926), in which the therapist channels this energy from him- or herself into the patient by the gentle laying on of hands, to activate the natural healing processes of the patient's body and restore physical and emotional well-being.[5]

The OED lists 1975 as the earliest recorded usage of the word reiki.[6] Instead of the usual transliteration, some English-language authors loosely translate reiki as "universal life energy",[7] which is different from the Japanese meaning. Japanese reiki, meaning "mysterious atmosphere", is commonly written either 霊気 in shinjitai kanji (new Chinese character forms) or as レイキ in katakana syllabary (typically used for transcribing foreign words). It compounds the words rei meaning "departed spirit, ghost; spirit, soul; miraculous, sacred, divine" and ki "gas, vapor; atmosphere; vital energy, spirit, breath of life, vitality; energy, force; natural phenomenon; spirit, mind, consciousness…"[8] This ki (namely, Chinese qi or chi) in reiki is understood as meaning "spiritual energy; vital energy; life force; energy of life".[9] Some Reiki translation equivalents from Japanese-English dictionaries are: "feeling of mystery",[10] "an atmosphere (feeling) of mystery",[11] and "an ethereal atmosphere (that prevails in the sacred precincts of a shrine); (feel, sense) a spiritual (divine) presence."[12] Besides the usual Sino-Japanese pronunciation reiki, these kanji 霊気 have an alternate Japanese reading, namely ryōge, meaning "demon; ghost" (especially in spirit possession).[13]

Chinese lingqi 靈氣 was first recorded in the (ca. 320 BCE) Neiye "Inward Training" section of the Guanzi, describing early Daoist meditation techniques. "That mysterious vital energy within the mind: One moment it arrives, the next it departs. So fine, there is nothing within it; so vast, there is nothing outside it. We lose it because of the harm caused by mental agitation."[14] Modern Standard Mandarin lingqi is translated by Chinese-English dictionaries as: "(of beautiful mountains) spiritual influence or atmosphere";[15] "1. intelligence; power of understanding; 2. supernatural power or force in fairy tales; miraculous power or force";[16] and "1. spiritual influence (of mountains/etc.); 2. ingeniousness; cleverness".[17]

Origins

See also Five Precepts and Timeline of Reiki history
Chujiro Hayashi 林 忠次郎 (1880 - 1940)

Reiki was developed by Mikao Usui (臼井甕男) in 1922 whilst performing Isyu Guo, a twenty-one day Buddhist training course held on Mount Kurama.[18] It is not known for certain what Usui was required to do during this training, though it most likely involved meditation, fasting, chanting, and prayer.[19][20] It is claimed that by a mystical revelation, Usui had gained the knowledge and spiritual power to apply and attune others to what he called Reiki, which entered his body through his crown Chakra.[19] In April 1922, Usui moved to Tokyo and founded the Usui Reiki Ryōhō Gakkai ("臼井靈氣療法學會" in Traditional Mandarin, meaning Usui's Spiritual Energy Therapy Method Society) in order to continue treating people on a large scale with Reiki.[19][21]

According to the inscription on his memorial stone,[22] Usui taught Reiki to over 2000 people during his lifetime, and sixteen of these students continued their training to reach the Shinpiden level, a level equivalent to the Western third, or Master/Teacher, degree.[22][23] While teaching Reiki in Fukuyama (福山市, Fukuyama-shi), Usui suffered a stroke and died on 9 March 1926.[22]

Early development

File:Hawayo Takata.jpg
Hawayo Takata (24 December 1900 - 11 December 1980)

After Usui's death, Mr. J. Ushida, a student of Usui, took over as president of the Gakkai.[24] He was also responsible for creating and erecting Usui's memorial stone and ensuring that the grave site would be maintained.[24] Mr. Ushida was followed by Mr. Iichi Taketomi, Mr. Yoshiharu Watanabe, Mr. Kimiko Koyama and the current successor to Usui, Mr. Kondo, who became president in 1998.[24] The sixteen Masters initiated by Usui include Toshihiro Eguchi, Jusaburo Guida, Ilichi Taketomi, Toyoichi Wanami, Yoshihiru Watanabe, Keizo Ogawa, J. Ushida, and Chujiro Hayashi.[24][25] Chujiro Hayashi (林 忠次郎 Hayashi Chūjirō) left the Usui Reiki Ryōhō Gakkai and formed his own clinic where he gave Reiki treatments, taught, and attuned people to Reiki, and it was to this clinic that Hawayo Takata was directed.[24] Hayashi simplified the Reiki teachings, stressing physical healing and using a more codified and simpler set of Reiki techniques.[26]

After multiple Reiki sessions from Hayashi's trainees at his clinic for illnesses including abdominal pain and asthma, Hayashi initiated and trained Takata to use Reiki,[27][28] and was made a Reiki Master on 21 February 1938.[27][29] Takata established several Reiki clinics throughout Hawaii, one of which was located in Hilo,[27] and then went on to travel throughout the United States, practising Reiki and teaching the first two levels to others,[30] and it was not until 1970 that Takata began initiating Reiki Masters.[31] At this stage, Takata also introduced the term Reiki Master for the Shinpiden level.[32] She stressed the importance of charging money for Reiki treatments and teachings, and fixed a price of $10,000 (roughly £6,500 or 7,400) for the Master training.[31]

Takata died on 11 December 1980,[31][33] by which time she had trained 22 Reiki masters,[34][35] and almost all Reiki taught outside Japan can be attributed to her work.[36]

Five Principles

Usui was an admirer of the literary works of the Emperor Meiji (明治天皇 Meiji tennō). While in the process of developing his Reiki system, Usui summarised some of the emperor's works into a set of ethical principles, which later became known as the Five Reiki Precepts (五戒 Gokai, meaning "The Five Commandments," from the Buddhist teachings of being prohibited against killing, thievery, sexual misconduct, lying, and for intemperance). It is common for many Reiki teachers and practitioners to abide by these five precepts, or principles.[37]