Reiki is a Japanese form of healing that is becoming increasingly
popular worldwide. What makes Reiki unique is that it incorporates elements of just about every other alternative healing
practices such as spiritual healing, auras, crystals, chakra balancing, meditation, aromatherapy, naturopathy, and homeopathy.
Reiki involves the transfer of energy from practitioner to
patient to enhance the body's natural ability to heal itself through the balancing of energy. Reiki utilizes specific techniques
for restoring and balancing the natural life force energy within the body. It is a holistic, natural, hands-on energy healing
system that touches on all levels: body, mind, and spirit.
Reiki (pronounced ray-key) is a Japanese word representing
universal life energy, the energy which is all around us. It is derived from rei, meaning "free passage" or "transcendental
spirit" and ki, meaning "vital life force energy" or " universal life energy".
What Is Reiki?
Reiki practitioners channel energy in a particular pattern
to heal and harmonize. Unlike other healing therapies based on the premise of a human energy field, Reiki seeks to restore
order to the body whose vital energy has become unbalanced.
Reiki energy has several basic effects: it brings about deep
relaxation, destroys energy blockages, detoxifies the system, provides new vitality in the form of healing universal life
energy, and increases the vibrational frequency of the body.
The laying of hands is used in Reiki therapy also as in spiritual
healing. There is a difference though. In spiritual healing, a person with a strong energy field places his or her hands above
a particular part of the recipient's body in order to release energy into it. So, here the healer is the one who is sending
out the energy. In Reiki, however, the healer places the hands above the recipient; however, it is the recipient that draws
the energy as needed. Thus, in this case, the individual being healed takes an active part in the healing process as opposed
to having a passive part in spiritual healing. The individual takes responsibility for his or her healing. The recipient identifies
the needs and cater to them by drawing energy as needed.
Although there are a few positions in which the practitioner
is in contact with the patient (such as cradling the head), most Reiki treatments do not involve actual touching. The practitioner
holds his or her hands a few inches or farther away from the patient's body and manipulates the energy field from there.
History of Reiki
Reiki is believed to have begun in Tibet several thousand years
ago. Seers in the Orient studied energies and developed a system of sounds and symbols for universal healing energies. Various
healing systems, which crossed many different cultures, emerged from this single root system. Unfortunately, the original
source itself was forgotten.
Dr. Mikao Usui, a Japanese Christian educator in Kyoto, Japan,
rediscovered the root system in the mid- to late 1800s. He began an extensive twenty-one-year study of the healing phenomena
of history's greatest spiritual leaders. He also studied ancient sutras (Buddhist teachings written in Sanskrit). He discovered
ancient sounds and symbols that are linked directly to the human body and nervous system which activate the universal life
energy for healing.
Usui then underwent a metaphysical experience and became empowered
to use these sounds and symbols to heal. He called this form of healing Reiki and taught it throughout Japan until his death
around 1893.
The tradition was passed through several grandmasters of reiki
such as Dr. Chujiro Hyashi, Hawayo Takata, and Phyllis Lei Furumoto.
There are many forms of reiki being practiced now. The two
principal ones are: "the Usui System of Natural Healing" and "the Radiance Technique."
The Usui System of Natural Healing balances and strengthens
the body's energy, promoting its ability to heal itself.
Reiki is useful in treating serious serious illnesses as well
as others. Examples are: sports injuries, cuts, burns, internal diseases, emotional disorders, and stress-related illnesses.
Reiki was introduced to the Western world in the mid-1970s.
Since then its use has spread dramatically worldwide.
Reiki Energy
Reiki energy is regarded as life energy at its most effective-with
the maximum vibration. It is considered to have an almost divine quality and as such includes everything, in a world where
problems and disorders are deemed to be due to the feeling of detachment from the world. There is no division of Reiki energy
into positive and negative forms but when a person undergoes a session of therapy, they allow the energy to be taken into
themselves with beneficial effects. Essentially, those receiving Reiki energy decide subconsciously just how much of the life
energy is taken in.
Those who use Reiki regularly often find they are more joyful,
lively and their own in-built energy is enhanced-almost as if their batteries had been fully charged! Existing conflicts within
the person are broken down and there is a greater vitality, leading to relaxation and a stimulation of the body. As this improvement
develops, the natural processes of renewal and removal of toxins are enhanced and rendered more effective, ultimately opening
up more of the body to the life energy.
Body organs such as the skin, and protective systems such as
the immune system are improved providing the individual is prepared regularly to undertake Reiki and in the first place to
undergo an attunement or initiation into Reiki energy. The initiation is merely a means whereby the universal life energy
is bestowed through the Reiki master. The master acts as a channel and a link with God to release the healing power.
An initiation is not absolutely essential but it allows the
individual access to the universal life energy, which is used rather than their own life energy. Also, an initiation conveys
a greater capacity for using Reiki energy, with no associated tiredness and further, it provides a protective mechanism against
any negative manifestations.