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・ Koichi Oshima
・ Koichi Sakamoto
・ Koichi Sasada
・ Koichi Sato
・ Koichi Sato (philatelist)
・ Koichi Sekimoto
・ Koichi Sugiyama
・ Koichi Sugiyama (footballer)
・ Koichi Suzuki
・ Koichi Takada
・ Koichi Takemasa
・ Koichi Tanaka
・ Koichi Tanaka (fighter)
・ Koichi Tani
・ Koichi Togashi
Koichi Tohei
・ Koichi Toyama
・ Koichi Uehara
・ Koichi Wajima
・ Koichi Wakata
・ Koichi Yaguchi
・ Koichi Yamaguchi
・ Koichi Yamamoto
・ Koichi Yamauchi
・ Koichi Yokozeki
・ Koichi Zenigata
・ Koichiro Harada
・ Koichiro Hirayama
・ Koichiro Ichimura
・ Koichiro Katafuchi


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Koichi Tohei : ウィキペディア英語版
Koichi Tohei

(20 January 1920 – 19 May 2011) was a 10th Dan aikidoka and founder of the Ki Society and its style of aikido, officially Shin Shin Toitsu Aikido (literally "aikido with mind and body unified"), but commonly known as Ki-Aikido.
==Aikido==
Koichi Tohei was born 1920 in Shitaya ward (下谷区), presently Taitō, in Tokyo and graduated from the Economics Department of Keio University. As a boy he was sickly and frail, leading his father to recommend Tohei for judo studies. He trained hard and his body prospered, but soon after he began his pre-college studies at Keio University, he developed a case of pleurisy. This forced Tohei to take a year off.
Tohei was distressed at the thought of losing his newfound strength of body and his means of training it, so he decided to replace his judo studies with Zen meditation and misogi exercises, learned at the Ichikukai Dojo in Tokyo. As with his judo studies, Tohei entered the training of the mind with fervor and soon excelled despite his serious health issues. After his recovery from pleurisy, Tohei became convinced that it was his efforts in training his mind and cultivating his ki that had helped him to heal and recover. This stimulated his later development of Kiatsu, a system of treating physical illness by pressing with the fingers and extending the ki into the ill persons body. Tohei describes this as "priming the pump" allowing the person to heal themselves.
After recovering from pleurisy he returned to judo, but Tohei wanted more than just physical training and did not think that judo was the right art for him to practise, although he did continue studying judo until he started aikido.
In 1940, when he was 19, Tohei's judo instructor, Shohei Mori, recommended that Tohei meet with the founder of aikido, Morihei Ueshiba.
According to Tohei, when he first met with an aikido instructor and practised some techniques at the Ueshiba dojo, he had doubts about aikido and its value to him. That changed when Ueshiba entered the dojo and started to perform his techniques on the instructors. Tohei was still not entirely convinced until Ueshiba asked Tohei to step onto the mat and try to grab him. Tohei's attempts were unsuccessful, and after this personal demonstration by Ueshiba, Tohei asked to enroll on the spot. Tohei continued to train his mind as well as his body with meditation, misogi and aikido.
Tohei trained with Ueshiba for six months before being sent as a representative (dairi) to teach at the Shumei Okawa school and the military police academy. This was before Tohei was ranked as either dan or kyu. Ueshiba presented Tohei with the rank of 5th dan after Tohei had begun his military service.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Koichi Tohei」の詳細全文を読む



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