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Aikido, One Of The Latest Martial Art

The sphere of Martial Arts is one of the most important gifts of Asia to the world. Who will not remember Bruce Lee and the fact that he was first and foremost a martial arts competitor before being a film star?

Martial arts pictures are a huge hit with the ever-increasing popularity of Asian movies like ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’ and more recently ‘The House of the Flying Daggers’.

The Chinese are the first nation that come to mind when it you think of these things, but the Japanese are equally as sporty with a rich heritage of body contact sports in their past. Modern Japan still gives honor to the martial arts by holding tournaments and marketing their sports abroad,

One of these is Aikido. It is important to realize that the word comes from three Japanese characters from which one derives the meaning of the one word. Ai signifies ‘joining’, Ki signifies ‘spirit’ and Do means ‘way’. From this we can understand why Aikido lies beyond only the physical skills of it students, especially since its first proponent, Ueshiba, focused on the spiritual and philosophical improvement of his students.

In Aikido, one is not taught violence as a substitute, one is trained to be in concord with the opponent so that you are able to defeat him more easily. This might seem strange but it actually works. In approaching an opponent, the aim of the Aikido practitioner is to be one with the adversary so as to be able to tackle him where he is weakest and in so doing, deflect or immobilize him, but never to kill him.

This is where Aikido becomes an art form. Art is something delightful to look at and something constructive and Aikido is all that. At least one of the people involved in the combat is striving for harmony and harmony can only be achieved if there is grace in the actions.

The moves may be calculated, but there is an air of elegance in performing these movements. Not a feminine grace, but a grace that emanates peace. The ‘art of peace’ is what they call it in Aikido and it is one of the most affirmative influences of Aikido on its students and to everyone else who chooses to learn about this Japanese martial art.

Some of the techniques in Aikido embrace the following.

Ikkyo is the first technique. Using this technique, you manipulate an adversary by using one hand to hold his elbow and one to hold near the wrist. This action is supposed to allow you to pin your opponent down to the ground.

Nikyo, the second technique, is when you perform a wrist lock which enables you to twist the arm of your opponent which will in turn cause nerve pressure.

Sankyo, the third technique, is a technique that directs upward-spiraling tension throughout the arm, elbow and shoulder. There are many other techniques but the first three are enough to give you a basic insight.

In studying Aikido, it is vital to keep in mind that, along with building physical strength, you will need to improve your mind to be able to defeat your adversary. Just like in any art form, it takes a lot of practice and self-control to reach the summit of the art of Aikido.

The important thing to remember is, that anyone who wants to get into the art, must have the resolve to give honor to the art by performing it in the best way possible.

 

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Giles The Cartoonist And The Giles Family

Ronald ‘Carl’ Giles was one of the most well-known British post war cartoonists whose output appeared in the British newspapers The Daily Convey and its sister paper The Sunday Express between the dates of 1943 and 1991.

He was born Ronald Giles in Islington, London in 1916. His school-friends dubbed him ?Karlo? after the actor Boris Karloff to whom they thought he bore a resemblance. This was later shortened to Carl and it stayed with him for the remainder of his life.

He left school when he was 14 years old and started working as an office boy for a Wardour Street film firm where he was later promoted to an animator for cartoon . This led in 1935 to his working for the famous producer and director Alexander Korda on the first full-length British sound-tracked colour cartoon film, The Fox Hunt.

After a brief time working in Ipswich, he joined Fleet Street in 1937. He worked as a cartoonist on the weekly newspaper Reynolds News where his work came to the attention of the editor of the Sunday Express and he was offered a career working for both the Daily Express and Sunday Express at the not petty salary of 20 guineas a week. His first cartoon for his new employers appeared in the Sunday Express in October 1943.

The 20 guineas a week proved a portent of greater fortunes to come as by 1955 he was being paid no less than 8,060 GBP a week for producing three cartoons. He was now a wealthy man.

In 1959 he was awarded the OBE and among his greatest admirers and fans art were members of the Royal family who often received originals of his wit.

His most famous character creations were The Giles Family who first appeared in August 1945. They were a family from the more well off side of the British working class living in a suburban semi-detached house. The head of the family was Grandma a real battle axe of a person whom anyone crossed at their peril. She is now immortalised as a bronze statue standing in Queen St Ipswich gazing up at the office where Giles used to do his work.

They were utilized by Giles to comment on a current events in the news of the day and proved to be highly patriotic although wary of authority. One remarkable attribute of the family was that although their homes, hobbies and clothes reflected the changing standards of the day, their ages were unchanged although the cartoons ran for 46 years.

Today any middle-aged, middle class Englishman ( or woman) will have happy memories of the Giles Annual. This was a very welcome addition to the Christmas stocking and contained a assortment of Gile’s work for the previous year. For numerous years this compilation was chosen by Giles himself.

Carl Giles passed away in 1995 and in 2000 he was voted ‘Britain’s Favourite Cartoonist of the 20th Century’.

 

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Blogging As An Art Form And Promotion

If writing is an art form, then blogging can be seen as an art form as well. Blogging is no less an art form than regular writing only because it is more popularist and does not need paper. Bloggers compose articles on all sorts of items, in fact they write on every subject under the sun. People compose pieces on their daily lives, their jobs, their hobbies and their worries.

Blogging began life in the mid Nineties for webmasters to maintain a record of their involvement with their computers, which is where the term comes from: ‘web log’. Web log became weblogs and then it was contracted to blog. Web logs soon became a well-liked manner of recording and publishing other daily activities on line, much like a diary.

Blogs can be posted to a URL like a website is, or they can be posted to a free bloggers’ web site. There are lots of these free blogs, but one of the most famous ones is Google’s ‘Blogger’.

In spite of being free of charge, Blogger offers a fully flexible blog which can hold adverts like Google Ads and Amazon, so that the blogger can offer related things for sale and earn a little money at the same time.

If personal blogs are used to talk on daily life, business blogs can be used as rolling adverts for a firm’s products. The manager of the company’s blog can write on innovations, new products, jobs available and special offers. The company’s blog can be used as a private press release machine which can reach a worldwide audience.

If you want to make a blog for personal or business use, you will have to know something regarding blogging, so here are a couple of tips.

This first thing to do is delineate what your blog is going to be on. If it is a business blog then that is easy, but a personal blog should have a target audience. It ought to appeal to a niche group. Attempt to keep the niche group fairly tight, blogs that waffle on colossal sprawling topics are not as popular.

For instance, stamp collecting is too wide a subject. Collecting British stamps is better, but British commemorative stamps of the 20th Century is even better. Include some images to keep the blog looking bright and colourful. This is easily done since most modern printers have a facility to scan images and send them to your computer.

In the blogosphere, information is the name of the game. Most people surf to gain information. They surf to get the solutions to problems that they are experiencing; in order to help with their hobbies or only for general information. Therefore, you should make your blog a bearer of useful information.

You can make your blog interactive by allowing your readers to leave comments. Some software permits fairly lengthy comments so that visitors can leave their opinions in full. This interactivity will encourage readers to come back to follow the debate.

In fact, most blogging software will actually inform the leaver of a comment that there has been a reply and it will also harvest the commentator’s email address so that you can add them to a mailing list as long as you provide them with the facility to opt out of the list if they would like to.

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Ideas for Painting Walls

So here you are, you’ve bought your new house! Its a bit of a mess because the previous owner was in a hurry to sell and had been in the middle of renovating. You don’t really mind that though, since it gives you the perfect chance to do your house up exactly the way you want it to be done.

But now you need to decide where everything goes and what colours will suit your rooms, but you still don’t have any wall painting ideas.

So, you eagerly sort out your new keys and wander through your new house. The minute you step in through a door ideas assail you. That huge urn you bought a year ago would look fantastic in the corner, and you’re pretty sure that your existing sofa set will fit in this other room. And you know the antique mirror table would look stunning in the hallway. The only thing you really get stuck on though are wall painting ideas.

You certainly don’t want to simply dab on a few coats of neutral coloured paint and have done with it. What you want is something special! Something that you can look on with pride every time you see it and, naturally, you want to be able to keep looking at it with pleasure for quite some time to come as well, so it shouldn’t be too severe.

But where can you get some decent wall painting ideas from, and how do you go about getting the wall painting done? There are a few ways that you could go about it. The easiest being if you have an artistic streak in you, then you could always get your wall painting ideas out of your head, so to speak and paint the walls as you see fit. Unfortunately, most of us aren’t very artistic and we are hesitant to pick up a brush or roller and apply the first coat of paint without supervision. In this scenario then, you will need some help.

You could begin by hiring a professional decorator to help you to decide which styles would look suit your home or you could sit down and watch some DIY TV programs, in which they show some pretty stylish ideas on what to do when re-decorating a house and will even give you some stylish wall painting ideas.

If neither of these options is viable for you though, you might just try going down to your local DIY store with fabric swatches and colour sheets of your most prominent pieces of furniture and seek their assistance on stylish wall decorating ideas.

You might come up with a hodge-podge of wall painting ideas with this last idea, but I found that it was the one that worked best for me and now I’m very proud of my ‘personalized’ house, because it reflects who I am just perfectly.

 

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