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Laurence Berkley



Last Updated: 8/8/2007

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 69
Sign: Virgo

City: LAS VEGAS
State: NEVADA
Country: US
Signup Date: 9/7/2006

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, May 22, 2007 

I was interviewed on a PRWeb Podcast today, and he spent five minutes discussing the genesis of his samurai fitness philosophy.  The interview is available in mp3, iPod, and OGG formats.  Enjoy!

Laurence

Wednesday, May 02, 2007 

Steady as you go.  Designed just for you.

Make sure no wind blows on you.

Stand steady, feet apart, solid on the earth, and breathe slowly ... first through your chest. 

Now, swallow and inhale normally with a slight pause and exhale.

Look up.  Look down.  Look around.  Check out your space. 

Go get a juice and make something happen. 

Laurence

Tuesday, April 24, 2007 

Apr. 24, 2007
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

TOTAL FITNESS: MIND, BODY, SPIRIT

A Samurai Workout combines martial arts, fitness, safety

By JOHN PRZYBYS
REVIEW-JOURNAL

Link to web edition w/ photos:  http://www.lvrj.com/living/7164776.html

You know about medicine ball workouts and boxing workouts and hip-hop workouts. Now, Laurence Berkley offers a workout that not only keeps your body in shape but your mind and spirit in tune, too.

Berkley, a personal trainer who also teaches martial arts, yoga and tai chi chuan at 24 Hour Fitness, 601 S. Rainbow Blvd., has developed A Samurai Workout, which employs a martial arts mind-set as a means of enhancing balance, strength, flexibility and personal safety.

For Berkley, the workout is the latest step in an evolution that started when he began to study martial arts nearly 45 years ago.

Berkley was first exposed to martial arts while serving with the Army in South Korea from 1959 to 1960. But, he said, "I just saw it and it really didn't catch my interest at the time."

After leaving the Army, he returned to Los Angeles. A friend who knew of Berkley's time in Korea asked him to meet with his karate group.

Berkley agreed. And, he said, "when I tried it, it was like a duck in water."

Berkley eventually earned a black belt in karate -- he currently holds a fourth-degree black belt, as well as a degree in physical education/movement education -- and began to augment his martial arts work with studies in Asian history, music and film. In 1967, he added yoga to his studies and, in 1969, tai chi chuan.

It turned out that one of Berkley's martial arts instructors was "very involved with the jo, a four-foot staff," he said. "And, it tweaked my interest."

Berkley added to his studies kobudo, an Okinawan weapons discipline.

"It intrigued me because, in the modern age, (the weapons) weren't meant to be combat weapons," he said. "They were meant to be implements of fitness and well-being."

During his studies, Berkley developed the notion of using martial arts to develop "personal safety," a phrase he coined that describes a sense of awareness of one's surroundings that goes beyond mere self-defense.

"Personal safety means, to me, the ability to function in everyday life: balance, flexibility, breathing," Berkley said, and it can describe something as simple and as practical as not turning an ankle for lack of awareness that a curb was in one's path.

From 1995 to 1997, while living in Japan, Berkley began to develop a sort of fusion discipline that incorporated personal safety with several martial arts philosophies he had studied to promote "what I felt mind, body, spirit meant in terms of fitness, well-being, energy."

He wanted his new discipline to be functional and suitable for both men and women of all ages. After moving to Las Vegas in 1997, Berkley began formalizing what would become A Samurai Workout.

Berkley began developing a DVD of his new workout in 2003, and a year later began teaching it at 24-Hour Fitness. The DVD, available through Berkley's Web site (www. asamuraiworkout.com), has been out for about a year-and-a-half and features original music and scenic California locations.

Berkley said A Samurai Workout differs from other fitness regimens in that the jo, or staff, manipulated in ways that stem from the Samurai sword tradition of Japan, is key.

In fact, Berkley added, the mechanics of manipulating the jo translate well to golf, tennis or other similar sports.

In addition, most martial arts-inspired workouts tend to be high-impact affairs best suited for those in their 20s and 30s, while A Samurai Workout can be done by people of any age.

"Mine is really based in a combination of dance and Asian martial arts with a very mind/body feel," Berkley said. "We move slowly. It has a lot of the yoga feel behind it, because everything is directed. The brain is involved.

"Most of the other studies, you can get caught up in the moves, kicking and punching, and it's not a matter of form and technique."

A Samurai Workout focuses on "technique and placement," Berkley added. "You are moving around with a staff. You are using the jo. You're using a movable object that has to be given energy when you work. It's not just kicking and punching and doing the latest hip-hop moves."

Jerry Gagich, 63, has been studying martial arts with Berkley for about eight years and added A Samurai Workout to his routine about a year-and-a-half ago.

"I started the workout to get myself in better shape," Gagich said, and A Samurai Workout was appealing "because (Berkley) put some martial arts weapons training into the fitness program. That's what pulled me in."

Gagich suspects some may be wary of the workout's "martial arts aspect." But, he said, "it's a great fitness program. Some of the stuff we do, I feel, is more extensive an exercise, especially cardiovascular exercise, than walking on a treadmill.

"Sometimes you do get your heart rate up but, as a general rule, it's sustained movement, it's continuous movement, and it is strenuous."
 

Wednesday, April 04, 2007 

In their daily revolutions around the sun, the planets of our solar system give off vibrations of streaming energy. 

Plants and animals have unique ways of absorbing and utilizing this vibrational energy.   

Getting in touch with this solar energy is the basis for Hatha Yoga.  

Let's try a Hatha Yoga exercise:  

1.) Drink a glass of water

2.) Stand with your feet HIP-WIDTH apart.

3.) Relax your back, but make sure it is straight. 

4.) Place your hands at your side.  OPEN your fingers wide. 

5.) BREATHE in through your nose.  Hold.  Focus on the center of your chest.  Breathe out slowly. 

6.) Repeat three times. 

Try this again before you go to bed and again when you wake up in the morning. 

Laurence

Tuesday, April 03, 2007 

According to the Tao, energy is physical matter produced by vibration. My teachings emphasize a particular approach that opens the soul to the powers of vibrational energy. 

 

For today's Yoga Byte, you only need to stand from your desk.  

 

1)      Put Your Feet together, toes pointed out.

 

2.)    Hold your hands at your side, palms down, fingers pointed out.

 

3.)    Close your eyes and focus.  Calibrate your body—is your back straight?  Are your hips in line with your spine? 

 

4.)    STRETCH your neck… tilt your head back.

 

5.)    BREATHE.  Deep.  Feel the air rush to the center of your chest. 

 

6.)    Hold the breath one count. 

 

7.)    Repeat three times, swallow, and take a drink of water.   

 

Om,

Laurence

Monday, March 26, 2007 

There is energy all around you.  Follow this simple method of tapping into what's available…

 

1) Put your hands down at your side.  Point you fingers out, away from your body.  Keep your feet together.  Touch your heels, keeping your toes pointed outward.   

2.) Stand up straight.  Stretch your spine.  

 

3.) Breathe.  Drop your shoulders. Breathe through your nose and exhale three times.

Connect with the hidden energy fields that are available to you.  

Laurence

Tuesday, March 20, 2007 

Category: Religion and Philosophy

Today's Yoga Byte comes from the yamabushi, a mountain-dwelling samurai. 

 

 

Yamabushi were Japanese warriors who chose to live spare lives in the mountains.  On occasion, they would come down and fight alongside Samurai warriors.  Yamabushis still exist today, a rural society whose members place their greatest value on harnessing the energy from the sky and putting it into action through livelihood.  

Energy, coming from the sky, is put into action through living, moving, hunting

Go outside.  Look up at the sky.   Breathe deeply.

You are alert and vibrant and on the hunt, in the yamabushi tradition.

Laurence

Wednesday, March 14, 2007 

Current mood:  thirsty

How is the weather?  A little warmer?  A lot warmer?

As temperatures rise, we need energy to keep cool.

One way to do that is to stay in touch with the source…WATER.  

 

1.)    Go to a window with a glass or bottle of water. 

 

2.)    Take THREE deep breaths. 

 

3.)    Swallow…take a SLOW drink of water.  

 

4.)    Softly pronounce…..OH-SSSS…repeat three times

Have a great rest of the day

Laurence

Friday, March 09, 2007 

Current mood:  refreshed

Set aside some time today to go outdoors for some deep breathing.

 

1.)    Once outside, take a few long, SLOW BREATHS.

 

2.)    Relax your shoulders…INHALE

 

3.)    Focus your breathing on the CENTER of your chest.

 

4.)    Exhale…PUSH your breath out from the abdominals with a little squeeze at the end.

Thursday, March 08, 2007 

A walk in the woods, or among just a few of our green friends, is a wonderful way to renew yourself. 

1.) Find a TREE or plant. 

2.) Take a FULL and deep breath. 

3.) Breathe in, PAUSE for five seconds, release, and PAUSE again for five seconds.

4.) Repeat this three times, SWALLOW and have a nice day.

Laurence