Showing posts with label
China
.
Show all posts
Showing posts with label
China
.
Show all posts
How Tai Chi Can Transform Leadership Qualities
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The traditional Chinese practice of Tai Chi is renowned the world over for its many martial arts, physical and mental health benefits. Hig...
Things nobody tells you about Soft vs. Hard
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“Soft can beat hard” is a saying in martial arts . It is hard to understand that one can be soft in martial arts and still win, isn’t it? ...
2 comments:
How to Guide Your Change
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“Change is the only constant in life” Heraclitus . Then why are we so afraid of it? In the post Organizational change I have written th...
3 comments:
Fajin Power that radically changes your Leadership
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Fajin or fa chin is a term used in some Chinese Martial Arts … When I first heard the term I didn’t know what to think of it. If your...
3 comments:
Practicing “Tai Chun”
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There is no martial art with the name Tai Chun. I just melted names of two arts to form a new expression: the first word from Tai Chi ( T...
2 comments:
Sun Tzu wisdom and Leadership
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In my previous posts I have deliberately omitted any connection to well-known book The Art of War by Sun Tzu. This book is one of the seven ...
Leadership way: Wing Chun or Karate
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In my posts Wing Chun basics 4 Leadership and Wing Chun in Leadership I have already explained about Wing Chun principles. They are very w...
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Pushing hands
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What could pushing hands in Tai Chi and leadership have in common? ‘ Pushing hands ’ or ‘tui shou’ is a two-person training routines in T...
Added value of leadership names or labels
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In my previous post Labeled leadership I described some name labeled styles of leadership and argued that there should always be more tha...
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Dualism vs. Yin-Yang
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Can Western dualism be compared to Yin and Yang? We are probably all aware that René Descartes was a major figure in seventeenth-cen...
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Tai chi in the leadership world -1
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In my post Tai Chi Quan Leadership I have given you some historical information and points to be used in leadership process from Tai Chi. I...
5 comments:
Learning Leadership from Martial Arts - II
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The principles I’m sharing today are not rules or steps that most of the times are offered and used separately instead of integrally in W...
2 comments:
Teaching coupled with Leadership
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A teacher should by default be a leader: he/she teaches new things, influences others, has listeners, defines personal growing path, can de...
Dao De Jing
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Dao De Jing is a transcript of around five thousand Chinese characters in eighty-one chapters or sections. The chapter divisions were durin...
Tai Chi Quan Leadership
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Tai Chi Quan (Tai Chi) is represented through steps by the coordinated actions of the body’s extremities, of the body as a whole including ...
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Wing chun in Leadership
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Wing Chun (in Mandarin Yong chun) means “eternal spring”. It is a marvelously efficient system of aggressive self-defense that allows immed...
Qi–energy–leadership
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In search for describing the Chinese term Qi (氣) I found: Ki in Japanese, Prana or Shakti in India, Gi in Korea, Ka in ancient Egypt , the a...
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I Ching
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The I Ching or Zhouyi – the Book of Changes is a collection of practical wisdom used as oracular statements and pertaining to every concei...
I Decided to Give My Book Away for Free
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With a myriad of cultures in multinational corporations, research into leadership has been endless, yet not very conclusive. An old friend o...
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Least of effort in leadership
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The Mandarin Chinese word wú wéi could be described: ‘by inaction nothing is left undone.’ It may well be also translated as ‘non-acting...
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