Aryana Libris - Tag - MassageRecension d'ouvrages au format numérique PDF2024-03-27T00:19:02+00:00urn:md5:a0ee72454095f037bdb86f20b0b6b82bDotclearVyas Kiran - Le massage indienurn:md5:112536fdd3dfd5723830cebfe730461e2023-10-10T17:44:00+01:002023-10-10T16:46:37+01:00balderVyas KiranAyurvedaMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img4/Vyas_Kiran_-_Le_massage_indien.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Auteur : <strong>Vyas Kiran</strong><br />
Ouvrage : <strong>Le massage indien</strong><br />
Année : 2000<br />
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Lien de téléchargement : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook3/Vyas_Kiran_-_Le_massage_indien.zip">Vyas_Kiran_-_Le_massage_indien.zip</a><br />
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Introduction. Le massage indien ou massage ayurvédique est aussi vieux que la civilisation indienne. C'est la science la plus ancienne et un des arts les plus créatifs. Le massage est un point qui lie le corps et l'esprit, qui établit un équilibre entre le microcosme et le macrocosme par les différents circuits énergétiques. C'est une pratique de santé, de bien-être, qui nous fait voyager dans le monde intérieur, le monde occulte imperceptible. Parfois, c'est une psychothérapie (ou plutôt une catharsis) qui ouvre les plaies du passé et nous met face à face avec notre mental tourmenté. Tout cela a pour objet de nous faire avancer vers l'harmonie, vers la joie d'être. Parfois, c'est une méditation, un chemin pour l'évolution et le progrès. Le massage est une chose très tangible, bien palpable, avec un contact direct sur notre corps. C'est une forme de communication. Mais c'est aussi et simplement un état de l"être". <strong>...</strong></p>Robinson Nicola - Shiatsu and acupressureurn:md5:d8e6dccf8fe09568ecd3826e27a4d3582018-06-11T12:44:00+01:002018-06-11T11:47:54+01:00balderRobinson NicolaAcupunctureMassageMédecine <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img4/Robinson_Nicola_-_Shiatsu_and_acupressure.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Authors : <strong>Robinson Nicola - Lorenc Ava - Liao Xing - Donaldson Julie</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Shiatsu and acupressure A review of the effectiveness of evidence</strong><br />
Year : 2011<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook3/Robinson_Nicola_-_Shiatsu_and_acupressure.zip">Robinson_Nicola_-_Shiatsu_and_acupressure.zip</a><br />
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Preface. Commissioned by the Shiatsu Society UK, this piece of work is not in itself research, rather it is an examination and assessment of all the research that has been done into Shiatsu and acupressure. Why has this been done ? <strong>...</strong></p>Campan Hélène - Ma leçon d'automassageurn:md5:0fa8f9be799545673371ed820204f9a02017-04-26T15:29:00+01:002017-05-18T10:04:41+01:00balderCampan HélèneMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img3/Campan_Helene_-_Ma_lecon_d_automassage.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Auteur : <strong>Campan Hélène</strong><br />
Ouvrage : <strong>Ma leçon d'automassage Relaxez-vous et soulager rapidement vos tensions Anti-âge, bien-être et vitalité 240 manoeuvres expliquées et illustrées</strong><br />
Année : 2016<br />
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Lien de téléchargement : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook3/Campan_Helene_-_Ma_lecon_d_automassage.zip">Campan_Helene_-_Ma_lecon_d_automassage.zip</a><br />
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Vous souhaitez lutter contre le stress et retrouver bien-être et harmonie ? Rien de plus simple avec les 240 manœuvres d'automassage proposées par Hélène Campan. Des pieds à la tête, vous trouverez l'ensemble des gestes et des points énergétiques à activer pour aller rapidement mieux. <strong>...</strong></p>Masunaga Shizuto - Ohashi Wataru - Zen Shiatsuurn:md5:67d425cb3d90e0f61e59b726b693e3522016-10-05T16:27:00+01:002016-10-05T15:34:39+01:00balderMasunaga ShizutoMassageMédecine <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img2/Masunaga_Shizuto_-_Ohashi_Wataru_-_Zen_Shiatsu.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Authors : <strong>Masunaga Shizuto - Ohashi Wataru</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Zen Shiatsu</strong><br />
Year : 1983<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook2/Masunaga_Shizuto_-_Ohashi_Wataru_-_Zen_Shiatsu.zip">Masunaga_Shizuto_-_Ohashi_Wataru_-_Zen_Shiatsu.zip</a><br />
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Health. A constantly increasing number of people in the world fall into the category that can be called semi-sick. Something is wrong with them either mentally or physically, but they are not ill enough to consult a physician. In their attempts to remedy their condition, many of these people have become dissatisfied with western medical treatment and medicines and are reevaluating such oriental systems as acupuncture, massage, shiatsu and Zen meditation. In the West, medicine has followed the highly scientific course of determining the nature of a sickness on the basis of its symptoms and causes, giving that sickness a suitable name, and then treating it. The natural tendency of a living organism, however, is to cure itself. Consequently, the most effective and natural way to cure an illness is to stimulate self-healing. The basic approach of oriental medicine is to emphasize natural powers of self-cure and to evolve a therapy that is entirely in harmony with the entire organism of the patient. Shiatsu is one of the oriental medical disciplines that have made great progress in such therapy. <strong>...</strong></p>Anderson Sandra K. - The practice of Shiatsuurn:md5:d2b4331fbe61b092aea3b947e700c4342016-10-04T17:47:00+01:002021-02-07T01:09:37+00:00balderAnderson Sandra K.MassageMédecine <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img2/Anderson_Sandra_K_-_The_practice_of_Shiatsu.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Anderson Sandra K.</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The practice of Shiatsu</strong><br />
Year : 2007<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook2/Anderson_Sandra_K_-_The_practice_of_Shiatsu.zip">Anderson_Sandra_K_-_The_practice_of_Shiatsu.zip</a><br />
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Foreword. Shiatsu is a bodywork modality with roots in traditional Chinese medicine, various forms of Japanese massage, and a Western understanding of anatomy and physiology. In fact, shiatsu is the perfect meeting of Eastern and Western approaches to the human body. Its power lies in its approach to assessment and treatment. Shiatsu takes the whole person into consideration - the client’s mental, emotional, and physical state - and seeks to restore harmony and balance. Western science is gradually accepting, if somewhat grudgingly, the notion of mind-body interconnectedness (e.g., see Molecules of Emotion: The Science Behind Mind-Body Medicine, by Candace Pert, PhD). Not surprisingly (given its Asian roots), the concept of interconnectedness is inherent in shiatsu. The Western physiology term is homeostasis, and we learn in physiology class that the body is always seeking homeostasis. It literally means “same state” and refers to the process of keeping the internal body environment in a steady state of equilibrium. The importance of this cannot be overstressed because “internal body environment” includes our mental and emotional states. A great deal of the hormone system and autonomic nervous system is dedicated to homeostasis. Symptoms occur when homeostasis is disturbed, through injury, illness, or stress. Shiatsu has proved to be an effective modality for supporting the body in restoring overall homeostasis. Shiatsu is now part of the curriculum at a large number of massage schools all over the country, and you can pick up books on shiatsu at most bookstores. The shiatsu books available either are aimed at a general audience (e.g., do-it-yourself shiatsu, treat your family and friends with shiatsu) or are more suitable for acupuncture students (i.e., they are considerably more technical and involved than a shiatsu practitioner needs). Th e massage school I went to offered an evening program that combined massage certifi cation with shiatsu training. I was excited about learning both Western and Eastern modalities. However, there was many a night when studying Western physiology and pathology alongside traditional Chinese medicine and Five Element Th eory made my brain go TILT. Although the textbooks that were used for shiatsu were of good quality, they amounted to overkill - dizzyingly complex. Fortunately, one of my shiatsu teachers was Sandy Anderson. Sandy is an eminently practical person. As a teacher, she was able to translate an Eastern worldview and abstract concepts into language and exercises that made sense to us Western-schooled students. Now, as a writer, Sandy has produced a book that fi lls a big gap in shiatsu education. Th rough her review of the literature and her experience as both a practitioner and teacher of shiatsu, Sandy has crafted a book that provides the essential foundation to begin a practice of shiatsu. When I was a student, the hardest concept for me to transfer from theory to practice was that of Ki (Japanese), or Qi (Chinese), which is variously translated as “energy” or “life force.” Although I accepted the idea of Ki moving in channels (meridians) in the body, actually experiencing it and then applying the various theories (e.g., Yin/Yang, Five Element) were mind-bending challenges. In this book, Sandy effectively makes that bridge between theory and practice. Sandy approaches the discussion of Ki by stressing the importance of connection - that shiatsu treatment happens as a result of the connection between practitioner and client - another aspect of the interconnectedness that pervades life. Because the quality of treatment is directly dependent on the quality of the connection between practitioner and client, Sandy provides the student with a variety of techniques to achieve a clear, open state. In fact, one of the many strengths of the book is the emphasis on preparation. American culture is fast paced, and Americans are impatient for results. We take the fewest number of vacation days compared with any other country in the developed world. <strong>...</strong></p>Rich Grant Jewell - Massage therapyurn:md5:fdb02219f3392a02525d685b15ccd0e82014-09-17T21:13:00+01:002023-04-30T14:25:44+01:00balderRich Grant JewellMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img5/Rich_Grant_Jewell_-_Massage_therapy.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Rich Grant Jewell</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Massage therapy The evidence for practice</strong><br />
Year : 2002<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Rich_Grant_Jewell_-_Massage_therapy.zip">Rich_Grant_Jewell_-_Massage_therapy.zip</a><br />
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Foreword. Massaxe Therapy : The Evidence for Practice is an important volume because it deepens and broadens our awareness of the nascent scientific investigation of therapeutic massage. By collecting these papers into one volume, the editor and authors provide a starting point for conversationsconversations within the therapeutic massage community, conversations within the health sciences and research community, and, most importantly, conversations between those two groups. Only good can come from this. Therapeutic massage is at once one of the oldest of the healing modalities, and simultaneously one of the least studied. In itself this discrepancy is simply an interesting observation likely to prompt speculation. Maybe there has been relatively little research on it because it is so familiar to us. After all, didn't most of our mothers rub our bumps and bruises when we were little? It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that rubbing helps. Perhaps also because rubbing sore bits and giving backrubs is something we can all do, it is easy to dismiss massage as a household remedy, not 'real medicine' and therefore not likely to be very powerful. Of course it helps, but just a little. <strong>...</strong></p>Gaspar Carla - La réflexologie au quotidienurn:md5:d0bd3d7e421af1171e33a3ecfe7e89c42014-06-07T23:37:00+01:002014-06-07T22:40:41+01:00balderGaspar CarlaMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img/Gaspar_Carla_-_La_reflexologie_au_quotidien.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Auteur : <strong>Gaspar Carla</strong><br />
Ouvrage : <strong>La réflexologie au quotidien 100 massages plantaires pour être bien</strong><br />
Année : 2012<br />
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Lien de téléchargement : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Gaspar_Carla_-_La_reflexologie_au_quotidien.zip">Gaspar_Carla_-_La_reflexologie_au_quotidien.zip</a><br />
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Une pratique ancrée dans l’histoire À travers les âges et quelles que soient les civilisations, le pied est défini comme un miroir du corps humain. D’ailleurs, selon un proverbe chinois, le sourire vient des pieds ! De la Chine à l’Inde en passant par l’Égypte Dans les civilisations anciennes, de nombreux peuples faisaient usage de la réflexologie pour se soigner. D’après certaines sources, le berceau de ce type de massage est situé au Pérou, chez les Incas. En Chine et en Inde, en 5 000 av. J.-C., on guérissait certains troubles physiques par des pressions exercées sur les pieds ; c’est ainsi que furent identifiés certains points sensibles. Deux mille cinq cents ans plus tard, les médecins chinois découvrent qu’une énergie, le Qi, circule continuellement dans le corps humain, dessinant des lignes bien précises appelées méridiens. Ils donnent ainsi naissance à l’acupuncture et affinent la dimension énergétique de la réflexologie, deux pratiques étroitement liées et complémentaires. <strong>...</strong></p>Gold Richard - Thai massageurn:md5:9b867def475727ffe45b6f81dc8b7eb72014-03-08T21:10:00+00:002023-05-01T22:26:11+01:00balderGold RichardMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img3/Gold_Richard_-_Thai_massage.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Gold Richard</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Thai massage A traditional medical technique Mosby's massage career development series</strong><br />
Year : 1998<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Gold_Richard_-_Thai_massage.zip">Gold_Richard_-_Thai_massage.zip</a><br />
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Foreword to the Second Edition. The healing fostered by touch therapy is immediate, direct, and nuanced. The contact between two people is always unique and nonreplicable. The shifts in body and mind initiated by healing massage depend on countless subtle nuances and nonverbal negotiations between hands and body. Each civilization and culture has developed its own style and tradition that is a condensation and simplification of the inexpressible details that make bodywork such a subtle domain for healing. As the world develops an ever-increasing cross-cultural dialogue, it is important that the different approaches to massage learn from one another. Every approach can potentially increase the sensitivity of practitioners and their abilities to foster healing. The first edition of Dr. Richard Gold’s Thai Massage: A Traditional Medical Technique was a breakthrough event for Thai massage. Thai bodywork’s touch and voice were finally easily and authentically accessible in the west. The publication of a second revised edition of Dr. Richard Gold’s Thai Massage, now the recognized classic in the field, is a visible demonstration that more health care practitioners are seeking training in Thai massage. Many are undoubtedly trained in other massage traditions and are learning to expand their repertoire and sensitivity. Some may become primarily practitioners of Thai massage. But in any case, this expanded knowledge and skill set will benefit many patients and clients. Practitioners will have new sensitivities and patients will have more options. Besides its practical and therapeutic value, Thai massage will have an important influence on the entire Western encounter with Asian medicine. This book is valuable for any Western practitioner seeking to learn any form of Eastern healing. Drawing on indigenous traditions, Thai massage also represents an engagement and absorption of knowledge derived from China and India. This Thai encounter with its giant neighbors has important lessons to teach Westerners as we now encounter and absorb Chinese and Indian healing. How did the Thai absorb the Chinese idea of meridian pathway or the Indian idea of Chakras and still remain uniquely Thai? How does knowledge become global but still remain infused with local meaning and genuineness? These are important lessons in Thai massage on what it means to learn from other cultures, yet still remain authentic to local traditions. This second edition emphatically reminds us that Dr. Gold’s Thai Massage has become an important landmark for anyone who wants to learn from the East or learn how to learn from the East. Ted J. Kaptchuk Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School Author, The Web That Has No Weaver: Understanding Chinese Medicine. <strong>...</strong></p>Chia Mantak - Chi Nei Tsang I Internal organs chi massageurn:md5:394c3410fe50ab64e19beb0c423139972014-02-26T16:55:00+00:002014-02-26T16:55:00+00:00balderChia MantakMassage <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img/Chia_Mantak_-_Chi_Nei_Tsang_I_Internal_organs_chi_massage.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Chia Mantak</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Chi Nei Tsang I Internal organs chi massage</strong><br />
Year : 1990<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Chia_Mantak_-_Chi_Nei_Tsang_I_Internal_organs_chi_massage.zip">Chia_Mantak_-_Chi_Nei_Tsang_I_Internal_organs_chi_massage.zip</a><br />
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Words of Caution. The practices described in this book have been used successfully for thousands of years by Taoists trained by personal instruction. Readers should not undertake the practice without receiving personal transmission and training from a certified instructor of the Universal Tao, since certain of these practices, if done improperly, may cause injury or result in health problems. This book is intended to supplement individual training by the Universal Tao and to serve as a reference guide for these practices. Anyone who undertakes these practices on the basis of this book alone, does so entirely at his or her own risk. The meditations, practices and techniques described herein are not intended to be used as an alternative or substitute for professional medical treatment and care. If any readers are suffering from illnesses based on mental or emotional disorders, an appropriate professional health care practitioner or therapist should be consulted. Such problems should be corrected before you start training. Neither the Universal Tao nor its staff and instructors can be responsible for the consequences of any practice or misuse of the information contained in this book. If the reader undertakes any exercise without strictly following the instructions, notes and warnings, the responsibility must lie solely with the reader. This book does not attempt to give any medical diagnosis, treatment, prescription, or remedial recommendation in relation to any human disease, ailment, suffering or physical condition whatsoever. The Universal Tao is not and cannot be responsible for the consequences of any practice or misuse of the information in this book. If the reader undertakes any exercise without strictly following the instructions, notes, and warnings, the responsibility must lie solely with the reader. <strong>...</strong></p>Yang Jwing-Ming - Massage Chi-Kungurn:md5:9aff73dad17e9f3045dd02b99b4cca572014-02-19T02:08:00+00:002021-02-11T16:43:52+00:00balderYang Jwing-MingMassageMédecine <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img5/Yang_Jwing-Ming_-_Massage_Chi-Kung.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Auteur : <strong>Yang Jwing-Ming</strong><br />
Ouvrage : <strong>Massage Chi-Kung (QiGong) Le massage énergétique chnois</strong><br />
Année : 2003<br />
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Lien de téléchargement : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Yang_Jwing-Ming_-_Massage_Chi-Kung.zip">Yang_Jwing-Ming_-_Massage_Chi-Kung.zip</a><br />
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Avant-propos de l'éditeur. La recherche médicale de ces cinquante dernières années a été consacrée à guérir plutôt qu'à prévenir la maladie. Toute l'énergie des médecins est obstinément tournée vers le traitement des symptômes, qui en génère bien souvent d'autres, au lieu de chercher et de supprimer l'origine du mal. <strong>...</strong></p>