1:42
Hindu priests ceremoniously waving fly whisk during Ganga Aarti in Varanasi
The Varanasi Ganga Aarti takes place every sunset at holy Dasaswamedh Ghat, near Kashi Vis...
published: 29 Mar 2013
author: WildFilmsIndia
Hindu priests ceremoniously waving fly whisk during Ganga Aarti in Varanasi
Hindu priests ceremoniously waving fly whisk during Ganga Aarti in Varanasi
The Varanasi Ganga Aarti takes place every sunset at holy Dasaswamedh Ghat, near Kashi Vishwanath Temple. It differs from the aartis at Haridwar and Rishikes...- published: 29 Mar 2013
- views: 58
- author: WildFilmsIndia
1:43
Hindu priests waving fly - whisk or chowric at the Ganga Aarti Puja in Varanasi
The Varanasi Ganga Aarti takes place every sunset at holy Dasaswamedh Ghat, near Kashi Vis...
published: 29 Mar 2013
author: WildFilmsIndia
Hindu priests waving fly - whisk or chowric at the Ganga Aarti Puja in Varanasi
Hindu priests waving fly - whisk or chowric at the Ganga Aarti Puja in Varanasi
The Varanasi Ganga Aarti takes place every sunset at holy Dasaswamedh Ghat, near Kashi Vishwanath Temple. It differs from the aartis at Haridwar and Rishikes...- published: 29 Mar 2013
- views: 84
- author: WildFilmsIndia
0:56
Eight Immortals Bagua Sword & Fly Whisk - Doing Chores While Demons Attack
Forms Starts about 20 secs in, I had to describe what the fly whisk was to all the Karate ...
published: 27 May 2013
author: Neil Ripski
Eight Immortals Bagua Sword & Fly Whisk - Doing Chores While Demons Attack
Eight Immortals Bagua Sword & Fly Whisk - Doing Chores While Demons Attack
Forms Starts about 20 secs in, I had to describe what the fly whisk was to all the Karate Judges. The form is called "Doing Chores While Demons Attack" . It ...- published: 27 May 2013
- views: 255
- author: Neil Ripski
0:54
Horse hair fly whisk
Sifu Binh from the Chinese Kung Fu Wushu Academy performing a rare horse hair fly whisk fo...
published: 13 May 2013
author: TheTCKWA
Horse hair fly whisk
Horse hair fly whisk
Sifu Binh from the Chinese Kung Fu Wushu Academy performing a rare horse hair fly whisk form.- published: 13 May 2013
- views: 77
- author: TheTCKWA
0:46
FunnyThoroughbred falling asleep while being tickled with fly whisk
Funny thing is, he nearly flipped out when anyone would come at him with this fly whisk at...
published: 06 May 2011
author: marzinn47
FunnyThoroughbred falling asleep while being tickled with fly whisk
FunnyThoroughbred falling asleep while being tickled with fly whisk
Funny thing is, he nearly flipped out when anyone would come at him with this fly whisk at one time.... We didn't really do much desensitization, but for som...- published: 06 May 2011
- views: 97
- author: marzinn47
0:56
Shaolin Fly Whisk form
Shaolin Fly Whisk form Performed by Performed by 31st generation Shaolin Temple Disciple N...
published: 26 Apr 2011
author: nnickm
Shaolin Fly Whisk form
Shaolin Fly Whisk form
Shaolin Fly Whisk form Performed by Performed by 31st generation Shaolin Temple Disciple Neil Genge at the World Guoshu Competition Hong Kong.- published: 26 Apr 2011
- views: 2030
- author: nnickm
6:07
Fly Whisk Incident of 1827
...
published: 04 May 2011
author: megameg1111
Fly Whisk Incident of 1827
0:49
Wudang kung fu - horse tail whisk - 武当拂尘
This video shows Daoist monk and martial arts teacher Zhou Xuan Yun using the horse-tail w...
published: 25 Nov 2008
author: DaoistGate
Wudang kung fu - horse tail whisk - 武当拂尘
Wudang kung fu - horse tail whisk - 武当拂尘
This video shows Daoist monk and martial arts teacher Zhou Xuan Yun using the horse-tail whisk. Originally used by Daoist monks to swat away flies during med...- published: 25 Nov 2008
- views: 3597
- author: DaoistGate
0:11
How to Pronounce Whisk
Learn how to say Whisk correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. ...
published: 16 Nov 2012
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Whisk
How to Pronounce Whisk
Learn how to say Whisk correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of whisk (oxford dictionary): verb 1 [with object and ad...- published: 16 Nov 2012
- views: 30
- author: Emma Saying
3:56
The Quintet of Royal Regalia of THAILAND [ SIAM ]
The Quintet of Royal Regalia Among the symbols of regal authority, The Quintet of Royal Re...
published: 03 Sep 2011
author: Chutiwathana
The Quintet of Royal Regalia of THAILAND [ SIAM ]
The Quintet of Royal Regalia of THAILAND [ SIAM ]
The Quintet of Royal Regalia Among the symbols of regal authority, The Quintet of Royal Regalia, or the Bencharajakakuthaphan, is considered to be of prime i...- published: 03 Sep 2011
- views: 1214
- author: Chutiwathana
4:36
Fofie Festival - Peace Corps Ghana
The Fofie Festival in Tanoboase (Techiman District, Brong-Ahafo, Ghana) happens once in a ...
published: 21 May 2012
author: Peace Corps Ghana
Fofie Festival - Peace Corps Ghana
Fofie Festival - Peace Corps Ghana
The Fofie Festival in Tanoboase (Techiman District, Brong-Ahafo, Ghana) happens once in a lifetime. The celebration arises from a sense of renewal and respec...- published: 21 May 2012
- views: 175
- author: Peace Corps Ghana
6:48
Ashwa Poojan Ceremony 2012
Ashwa Poojan - Ashwa Poojan 2012 - A Timeless Gratitude To Equinity Ashwa Poojan' is celeb...
published: 19 Nov 2012
author: EternalMewar
Ashwa Poojan Ceremony 2012
Ashwa Poojan Ceremony 2012
Ashwa Poojan - Ashwa Poojan 2012 - A Timeless Gratitude To Equinity Ashwa Poojan' is celebrated at The City Palace Complex each year on the last day of Navra...- published: 19 Nov 2012
- views: 9573
- author: EternalMewar
0:24
How chimpanzees handle death: Biro 1
A chimpanzee mother, Vuavua, chases away flies circling the body of her dead infant, Veve,...
published: 19 Apr 2010
author: cellpressvideo
How chimpanzees handle death: Biro 1
How chimpanzees handle death: Biro 1
A chimpanzee mother, Vuavua, chases away flies circling the body of her dead infant, Veve, at Bossou, Guinea. She uses her hands and a twig tool (a fly-whisk...- published: 19 Apr 2010
- views: 77534
- author: cellpressvideo
Vimeo results:
30:23
Like Ghosts (Video Album)
I finished this video album last spring and mailed copies of it to you. The Squeaky Wheele...
published: 20 Feb 2012
author: Damian Weber
Like Ghosts (Video Album)
I finished this video album last spring and mailed copies of it to you. The Squeaky Wheelers at Squeaky Wheel asked me to perform it live at their micro-cinema, which was HUGE honor for me. This is what I wrote in the libretto:
Like us, Moomin finds comfort and guidance from friends. Like Moomin we almost die attempting to capture beauty, find trulove, and avoid villains. Broken hearted, away from home, but surrounded by friends, we thrive. Mouse is always crying – just like me. And Moomin is always comforting him – just like me. Mouse has been devastated – he’s left his family, he’s lost love, and he’s on a mountain. Friends are the only trulove. It will find you in the end. Just like Moomin, I am flying and don’t know how to come down. My friends think quick and enlist the help of all their friends. When they realize they need so much more they are whisked away by a tornado. When the lovers are lost in the woods they realize they are kids again, and chant:
We can start a fire
we can make it burn
when we learn
we can burn a home
we can when we grow
then we’ll know
we can build a world
with all we need
to build a world
with all we need
6:56
Steve Peat 2009 Downhill World Champion!
FINALLY THE BRIDE, PEATY WINS THE BIG ONE, MINNAAR HIS BRIDESMAID.
Sept. 8, 2009 - Canb...
published: 08 Sep 2009
author: Santa Cruz Bicycles
Steve Peat 2009 Downhill World Champion!
FINALLY THE BRIDE, PEATY WINS THE BIG ONE, MINNAAR HIS BRIDESMAID.
Sept. 8, 2009 - Canberra, Australia
Finally in the record books, Santa Cruz Syndicate’s Steve Peat (SRAM/RockShox), makes history as he bags the big one winning the UCI Downhill World Championships in Canberra, Australia. Syndicate’s Greg Minnaar finishes a mere .05 behind Peat in the closest margin in World Championship history, and Mick Hannah takes the last medal just .69 behind Peat.
I’ve just finished dropping off the rental van and riding my bike home from Avis in Temecula, which concludes the last ground logistics from the Syndicate’s World Champs trip. I can now start on this press release and I just thought I’d write it from my point of view. There will be plenty of releases with the standard interviews, so I’ll give you my take on the lead up to the World Champs and how we got there.
Riding home today across the meadow with the wind blowing through the tall grass reminded me of how we started the season on safari in South Africa which resembled the open meadow I just rode across. The season was wide open then and full of promise, and now we are writing the final chapters to the 2009 downhill race season with most of the promise realized.
As I pedaled my jet-lagged legs up the single-track I thought what makes this world champs win so special is the emotion. At the end of the day it is just a bike race, someone rode their bike fast down a hill and was faster than the others. That is just a fact. But what makes it so special is that the man who did it has had a 15 year career of winning every race but the world championships, and to finally do so, on his terms, makes it gratifying for every fan, sponsor, support crew, and every family member involved, or who has ever been involved in Steve’s career. These people make up the building blocks of the foundation on which Steve can excel, and every sacrifice Steve has made, his family has made, every effort his support team put into him, it was a payday; one whopping huge payday of relief, respect, excitement and satisfaction for a job well done. With tears flowing, a choked up Steve said, “This is the way I wanted to win it, with all the top guys having their best race, no mechanicals, no crashes, totally legit. It is going to take some time for this to sink in.”
The road to Canberra started with the 6:00 am arrival of the Syndicate into Sydney a week and a half before the race to acclimate to the time zone. First stop, Bondi Beach for breakfast on a fine spring day. Doug was the only brave soul to take a dip while the others enjoyed some Frisbee on the fine sand beach. Checking into the Holiday Inn within view of the Sydney Harbor Bridge and Sydney Opera House young Bryce and I took a dip in the rooftop pool. Paul Begg was meeting us later to show us the hotspots, but the boys needed fancy shoes to get in the clubs so shopping we went. Minnaar tested his shoes out doing his version of the moonwalk while Josh picked out a pair of very pointed shoes, and Steve pimped himself out in a slick version of slip-ons.
Hitting the rooftop for evening cocktails we were treated to a bat show, thousands and thousands of bats were flying past us coming from the Botanical Gardens on their way to find a nice evening meal. Ben Monroe picked us up and whisked us off to the most amazing Thai dinner we’ve ever had. Meanwhile the UK mechanics arrived and joined us for the rest of the evening’s entertainment. A few of us got some sleep, but some were in the hot-tub rooftop at 6:00 am soaking in the sunrise.
Lunchtime we hit Deus, a vintage and custom motorcycle shop and café that is a must stop for anyone passing through Sydney. After lunch we made the hour and a half drive to Wentworth Falls in the Blue Mountains for four nights of rest, relaxation and some training rides. I made sure the boys were eating well and we had some great meals, the standout item being the Sweet Potato Soup recipe that Steve gave me.
Scott Sharples and Bryn Atkinson live nearby, and Brian Lopes flew in and we had a neighborhood full of talent. Some went golfing and hiking, and some of us went to the movies and saw Inglorious Basterds (a must-see movie). We had a fun rental car and cruised the small main street of Katoomba. Arriving back to the rental house the boys treated the front garden to a trim, well, tore it up in the name of fun, and lucky for us Paul’s brother Michael (the home-owner), took it all in stride and had a laugh with us:
Sadly, Greg received the news that his beloved Grandmother had fallen ill and had be admitted to the hospital. By evening she had slipped into a coma. I worked on flight details to send him home, but by the next morning she had passed. It was a difficult time, a time where this incredible job we have takes a toll, to miss the things in your personal life, and to be a world away when they happen is a downside to the wonderful experiences we do hav
16:19
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER ...
published: 13 Aug 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Perls calls them the "essences" of a patient's personality, or we can say he is working from his "centers", stretching those sounds, moves and psychological motivations in as many creative directions as he can. I monitor closely to be sure he is not faking it, the way most actors end up doing since they do not have the centers to begin with.
Before the performer begins working with others doing improvs and scenework, there is an important transitional stage in the work in which I help him get comfortable using his very personal Gestalt material freely as creative material. He needs to shift from seeing himself as a patient to enjoying the role of an artist of the
29:21
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is...
published: 01 Jan 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is "the rhythm of contact and withdrawal", alternating between contact with the environment and withdrawal into the void of "not knowing" to discover what fantasies and new ideas are waiting to emerge into awareness there.
TO VIEW OR DOWNLOAD ALL OF MY VIDEOS, PLUS 1500 PAGES OF MY EXPLANATORY ESSAYS (ALL AT NO CHARGE) PLEASE VISIT MY WEBSITE: franklynwepner.com. ALSO PLEASE NOTE MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS, IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH ME ANY COMMENTS ABOUT MY WORK: franklynwepner@gmail.com. IN THE LISTING OF VIDEOS THE LETTERS (HQ) REFER TO A HIGHER QUALITY VERSION OF THE VIDEO, WHICH IS AVAILABLE TO YOU IF YOUR COMPUTER CAN HANDLE IT.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Per
Youtube results:
9:19
Demeke Explains Ethiopian Manuscripts: Part III
Ato Demeke Berhane shows and discusses Ethiopian manuscripts in Ge'ez, pointing out aspect...
published: 11 Feb 2009
author: wendybelcher
Demeke Explains Ethiopian Manuscripts: Part III
Demeke Explains Ethiopian Manuscripts: Part III
Ato Demeke Berhane shows and discusses Ethiopian manuscripts in Ge'ez, pointing out aspects of their binding, wooden board covers, cloth backings, cloth cott...- published: 11 Feb 2009
- views: 1453
- author: wendybelcher
6:36
Helmet Games
Playing with the helmet. I put his favorite target, the fly whisk made from his own tail h...
published: 22 Jun 2012
author: Susan Cooper
Helmet Games
Helmet Games
Playing with the helmet. I put his favorite target, the fly whisk made from his own tail hair, there for a distraction.- published: 22 Jun 2012
- views: 21
- author: Susan Cooper
5:30
Andi "Walk on" cue
Teaching the "walk on" cue. Andi is going from magic mat to magic mat. I am using his fly ...
published: 08 Jul 2012
author: Susan Cooper
Andi "Walk on" cue
Andi "Walk on" cue
Teaching the "walk on" cue. Andi is going from magic mat to magic mat. I am using his fly whisk to "touch" to get him past the mat he is at so he does not ge...- published: 08 Jul 2012
- views: 39
- author: Susan Cooper