Провоцируй и Развивайся – АРХИВ

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Субтитры: Все архивные фильмы имеют субтитры на 10 языках.

01. Resignation from Jikiden – Why and What now?

Frank Arjava Petter resigned from Jikiden Reiki and discussed this sensitive topic with outsiders for the first time on January 7th, 2025.

Frank Arjava Petter resigned from Jikiden Reiki. We were the first outsiders with whom he discussed this sensitive topic on January 7th, 2025. This breaking news would influence the ensuing interview.

We discovered that Arjava had asked Bert Hellinger to make a constellation for Reiki already in 2000. The session is on video: A67 Reiki Constellation with Bert Hellinger (2000)

02. Mission Statement

The agreement between the producer René Vögtli and the interviewee Frank Arjava Petter.

The overall purpose of and spririt behind this project: to look at the past, to reconcile in the present, to liberate the future. This video describes the agreement between the producer René Vögtli and the interviewee Frank Arjava Petter.

This video describes the agreement between the producer René Vögtli and the interviewee Frank Arjava Petter.

03. Carefree Childhood

The father's war induced nightmares, the loss of an unknown sister and an elusive brother. Yet a carefree childhood.

Arjava’s sister, Cornelia, was the family’s first born. She died as a baby. The father, traumatised in WWII, is plagued by nightmares. Yet, the parents provide for a protected childhood with much freedom. The second born, Martin, who would play an important role later, is the only one still alive today.

Recollecting the trauma of their fathers after WWII leaves Arjava and René wondering about the world today.

04. Rebellion, Disaster, Vision

Trouble starts as a teenager. An escape ends in injury and leads to the first exposure to mystical literature.

Arjava’s rebellious streak got him expelled from High School. His parents did not give up on the troubled boy and enrolled him in a private school. There, his sense for uprightness got him kicked out again.

Experiencing police brutality and following his teenage dreams, which are accentuated by smoking pot and the longing for spiritual answers, Arjava decides to run away from home. In the ensuing disaster, he discovers mystical and spiritual literature, culminating in Paul Reps’ books about Zen Buddhism.

05. Exotic WomenExpelled from SchoolYoga and Farming

The allure of exotic women and the attraction of Yoga end in the sobering observation that industrial farming comes first.

Seeing a beautiful Japanese woman awakens dreams of Japan in Arjava. He is impressed by the calmness of a friend’s father who insists on rigid rules befrore introducing Raj Yoga to the youngster.

After getting thrown out of school, he speaks to the most prominent advocate of organic farming at the time, only to be told to start an apprenticeship in industrial farming first. This would teach him what to do — and what not to do — in the future.

06. Saving Himself and Becoming a Disciple of Osho

Rushing to save his brother from the fangs of what the parents thought might be a devilish sect, Arjava saved himself.

An adventurous journey on the Hippie trail brings Arjava’s brother to Poona in India, where he becomes a disciple of the notorious Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, aka Osho. Meanwhile in Germany, the family worries that he might have become the victim of an insane cult.

18 years old, Arjava travels to India to save Martin, now known by his Sannyasin name Raj. Unexpectedly, the ashram turns out to be the place of Arjava’s yearning. An ‘intensive enlightenment’ reveals to him the belief systems about oneself and how illusionary they are.

Arjava meets Osho personally for the first time before returning to Germany — without his brother.

07. Objecting Army Duty – Escaping from Social Service

Osho appears during the night and calls Arjava to come to India immediately. His father's nightmares are compelling arguments for the judge.

Back in Germany, Arjava has a dream of his guru, after which he stops his farming apprenticeship. This is the first time in his life that he stops doing something he loves. The second time is now in 2025, resigning from Jikiden.

Arjava objects army duty on pacifistic grounds. In front of a commission he recounts his father’s nightmarish screams as a result of the war trauma. He should now do social service for 1 ½ years. Instead, he escapes to India. On the way his guru is mistaken for Karl Marx.

08. Life at the Ashram – a Pressure Cooker

Encounter groups, free sex, drugs at the ashram? Early impressions. Later, Arjava writes a book about his experience with Osho from 1978 until 1990.

The ashram is like a pressure cooker. It is a place where buttons are being pushed and situations are used to get one out of one’s comfort zone.

Arjava, still a kid really, neither takes part in psychotherapeutic encounters nor does he join sex orgies. Instead he participates in a 10-day Vipassana meditation.

The book in René’s hand during the question recounts life in Poona and the USA with and around Osho. (Still … Here and Now, 2022).

09. The Master’s Gardener Holds a Wisdom for Life

Menial jobs help to ‚ego-check'. And are prerequisite to learn a life lesson with the promise of the most valuable of all prizes.

A Greek lady takes the youngster Arjava under her wings. Yet, the trained gardener is to collect leaves – an exercise to delve into consciousness. Sex and drugs may be good for exploration but at the end, one has to find one’s own nectar inside.

Arjava becomes Osho’s gardener and an assistant presents a piece of wisdom to him that would become a leading principle for the rest of Arjava’s life, affirming the effort to do one’s best at any given moment.

10. Deserted, Sick and Facing Jail – Social Service Provides Shelter

Sick with Hepatitis, Arjava escapes to Germany, avoiding prison. Only to be invited to Osho's Oregon commune after a stint of social work!

Weak with Hepatitis, Arjava learns that Osho has left overnight to USA. America is out of reach and in Germany a jail sentence hangs over him. With the help of a former policeman his desperate odyssey ends in Germany. He is pardoned but has to do social service for 18 months helping the elderly and needy.

Then, just as his social service ends, he receives a letter from the infamous Sheela, Osho’s powerful secretary: «We need help in our new community. Would you come and join us in Oregon?»

11. The Elusive Guru Triggers

Osho gets deported. Lovers travel the world. A broken heart and a new Japanese love in India. Arjava's epic journey: gardener to bodyguard.

Osho gets deported from USA. Arjava and his American girlfriend Lino prepare their own flight from the ranch. They follow their elusive guru around the globe.

Back in India, they end their relationship. Heartbroken over yet another love story, Arjava gets consoled by Chetna, his future Japanese wife.

Arjava becomes Bill Gates’ gardener in the USA before Chetna and he return to Poona once more. Osho introduces the Mystic Rose Meditation, a transforming experience. Arjava quits gardening and becomes Osho’s body guard.

12. Essence of Osho versus Essence of Reiki

Can the essence of Osho be compared with the essence of Reiki? What are their overlaps?

The essence of Osho’s teaching – quite in union with the 5 Reiki precepts – focusses on being in the present, not past or future.

Osho is catalysing a dismantlement of ego. That in turn is a spiritual experience, which leads to wanting to share one’s own experience with others.

The spiritual path of Reiki is leading to the same end.

13. Search for Meaning Across Borders

A journey with Chetna through Japan, the U.S. and Germany - between cultures, jobs and identities. It ends in a language school in Sapporo, Japan.

Arjava and Chetna visit to Osho for the last time, he dies less than an year later. They journey to Japan, with cultural challenges, visa issues, and odd jobs, before returning to Germany. There, an unexpected opportunity leads Arjava into TV crime-drama production. Eventually, Arjava and Chetna move back to Japan to start a language school.

An honest, humorous tale of adaptation and self-discovery across continents.

14. Tokyo → Berlin → Tokyo German re-imports Japanese Healing Art

A headache leads Arjava to Reiki, but his path is anything but linear. He flies to Berlin to learn a Japanese healing technique to bring it back to Japan. The heart is tickled and big questions fill the mind.

Traditional healers were part of Arjava’s upbringing. In 1988, a painful headache leads a sceptical Arjava to his first Reiki session. Though unimpressed, something in him stayed curious – his ‘soul was tickled’.

In 1991, while running a busy language school in Japan with his wife, his brother Raj calls from Germany urging him to learn Reiki. Arjava follows the nudge – flying from Japan to Berlin to study a Japanese healing art to bring back to Japan. Ironic, yet fatefully right.

In Berlin, Arjava completes Reiki levels 1, 2 and teacher training in just a few days. Back in Japan, he initiates Chetna, who promptly perceives flaws in the system. Her reaction plants the first doubts in Arjava and sets him off on a mission to eventually uncover the roots of Reiki.

15. Too Close to Teach?

Teaching partners or family? Arjava chooses romance over teaching to preserve personal boundaries. The conversation unpacks taboo boundries and the question of ethical conduct.

Arjava speaks candidly about ethical boundaries in teacher-student dynamics, sharing how he turned down his future wife as a Reiki student because of his romantic feelings for her. Instead, he encouraged her to learn from another teacher to ensure an authentic, independent experience. His story highlights the importance of integrity and clear roles in spiritual teaching.

The conversation explores teaching close relatives or partners. Using his own children as an example, he says he’d have no hesitation teaching them Reiki, as long as roles and intentions are clearly defined. It’s all about awareness and respect for personal dynamics.

16. Was Reiki Even Japanese?

Arjava doubts Reiki's roots. Yet, he is teaching it and discovers a Western Reiki legacy in Japan. They flock into his classes for the higher degrees of Reiki.

In 1992, Arjava returns to Japan with doubts about the authenticity of Reiki’s origin. His early exposure to Japanese culture didn’t align with what he was taught. As confusion grows, he suspects Reiki might not be Japanese at all. Yet, he continuously teaches.

Arjava learns he wasn’t the first. Mieko Mitsui had already introduced Western Reiki in the 1980s but made the higher degrees inaccessible to most Japanese people, demanding travel to the USA, language and academic prerequisites, and a significant financial contribution. Arjava benefits from this situation and picks up where Mieko left off, beginning a journey of teaching and historical investigation that would change everything.

17. From Guilt to Guidance

His initial success kindles guilty feelings in Arjava, as well as a need for research. His brother initiates what would become 'Reiki Fire'.

Arjava reflects on his ever accelerating journey into teaching Reiki, starting with ads in Japanese magazines to drawing students from all over Japan. He recalls doubts about the value-for-money he offered based on what he had learnt from his brother Raj. A sense of guilt became a motivator for deeper research, the results of which gradually were introduced in his teachings.

A student demands a good Reiki book and Arjava asks his charismatic brother Raj, who tells him to write it himself. For Arjava this is another reason to explore Reiki and he begins writing what would become his first book: ‘Reiki Fire’

18. Feisty and Abrasive – Yet, She Reveals the Secret

A cold lead makes Arjava almost quit – until a mysterious feisty elder dropped the truth.

Arjava hits rock bottom in his research on Usui, even doubting his existence. A random van labelled «REIKI» destroys all hopes.

A tip from a student makes Arjava coax his wife to outmanoeuvre Japanese protocol. They call a mysterious and abrasive woman with 65 years of Reiki practice going back to Usui’s time. Mrs Koyama’s rejection of «Western» Reiki implies for the first time the existence of a Japanese practice. Eventually, she concedes and shares key facts about Usui, including his birth date and burial site.

19. Chasing Ghosts – Tangible Discovery

The research of Usui's biography hits dead ends, but a clue from a survivor of his era leads to his burial site, promising an ever more tangible Reiki quest.

Arjava investigates claims that Usui earned a doctorate in Chicago and that he was president at the Dōshisha University – to no avail. These dead ends begin to shake the foundation of accepted Reiki history, leaving Arjava both sceptical and intrigued.

A clue from the extraordinary survivor of the Usui era points to Saihoji Temple as Usui’s burial site. Chetna reluctantly helps call similarly named temples in Tokyo. Eventually they hear: «Yes, we have him here.» Arjava is ecstatic – after years of rumours and myths, there’s finally a physical trace of Usui. This moment marks the start of a deeper, more tangible journey.

20. The Stone That Spoke

The amazing discovery of the memorial stone. It finally reveals the first written account of Usui's life and teachings.

The pivotal discovery of the Usui memorial unlocks long-lost historical insights. A touching moment of curiosity, frustration, and eventual triumph unfolds as a group of friends struggles to decipher pre-war Japanese inscriptions. Through persistence and a little serendipity, the foundational text emerges, becoming a key source for understanding Usui’s life and legacy.

21. Whispers of Silence

Arjava faces a bewildering silence about Usui in his own family. A dramatic teaching document reveals Usui's vision: Reiki for all.

Arjava recounts contacting the Usui family via a carefully worded letter, only to be told that Usui’s deceased daughter-in-law’s will forbade any mention of Usui’s name.

Despite this painful injunction a powerful document by Usui surfaces, his ‘mission statement’ as it were. In it he breaks with tradition by making Reiki available for everyone. It may very well hold the seed for Reiki’s future development, but also allows for a chaotic development. Arjava speculates that this may be why Usui became a persona non grata his own family. René brought this up in response to questions raised by the ‘Tokyo Yokoi thesis’ that emerged in 2024.

22. No Wrong Reiki

A newly discovered Gakkai member answers a flood of questions from the West. Confusion ensues. And a message resonating louder today than ever before.

A serendipitous meeting leads to Arjava connecting with Mr. Oishi, who gifts him a photograph of Mikao Usui. What’s more, he links him to the existence of an organisation founded by Usui and so far hidden away. This opens a door to one of its teachers, Mr. Ogawa, and to insights challenging everything Arjava thought he knew about Reiki.

Arjava describes how despaired he was by the contradictions between what he had learnt and the newly discovered Gakkai information. He gives a preview that the future would hold unexpected developments and he shares one of the most significant messages of the entire interview.

23. Hands Like Waterfalls

Arjava debunks lineage myths, affirming Reiki's purity beyond tradition. Practitioners become living sources of nature, like waterfalls or sacred trees.

Arjava reflects on the trap of unverified Reiki stories and ponders the impossibility of a foreigner being accepted into a traditional Japanese art.

He marvels at Reiki’s purity which is beyond form or lineage and explores Shinto roots of healing, where nature itself is the sanctuary. Reiki practitioners, he says, become the modern equivalents – embodying waterfalls, trees, and springs.

24. Predicament

Arjava guards a private archive, but sees this video series as real legacy. A hands-on exchange sparks access to original Japanese techniques he now teaches.

Arjava discusses his vast personal archive of Reiki documents – digitally organised but kept private. He reflects on not having handed it over to the Jikiden institute and doubts the objective value of the material, viewing this video series as truer legacy.

Blocked from joining the Usui Association by it’s rigid rules, Arjava finds peace through a hands-on exchange with Ogawa Sensei. A healing session opens the door to direct teaching of Japanese techniques, which Arjava later integrates into his own practice.

25. Silenced by Blood

Raj is evasive about his lineage; the book needs to be re-written. It is received with antagonism and eventually Arjava needs a new Western Reiki lineage.

An unacceptable misinterpretation of the Japanese publisher coincides with a pivotal call from Walter Lübeck. ‘Reiki Fire’ finds a surprising home in Germany.

Brother Raj is evasive about his lineage and wants his name erased from the book. This is stunning and the beginning of a fallout of the two brothers which would last for decades. It will also necessitate a new Western lineage for Arjava.

In the book, Arjava opts for a veiled reference to his teacher’s name. The critics respond with antagonistic rejection – while Arjava was hoping for Champagne corks flying over his revelation of long lost historic facts.

26. Painful Truth and Integrity

After his book is out, Arjava learns his lineage is fabricated. He gets re-initiated in a verifable Western lineage and offers his own students re-training. Many return, some don't.

After ‘Reiki Fire’ is released, Arjava receives shocking news: Raj had made up the attunement process and taught it to Arjava – who in turn taught it to his Japanese students.

In response, Arjava re-trains with his friend Ageh Popat, who trained in Switzerland in 1998 within a verifiable Reiki Alliance lineage. The attunement turns out to be different from that which he had learned from Raj. Back in Japan and with full transparency he contacts his students and offers to re-initiate and re-train them. Not all students return.

The two brothers have never cleared this with each other.

27. Ghosts in the Lineage

Grappling with broken lineages and lost records, Arjava reflects on an unexpected "grand-parenthood", a surprise present and the weight of a past he both carries and questions.

Arjava grapples with the legacy of students continuing to teach under his brother’s disputed lineage. He reflects on Hiroshi Doi’s initiation process and his own unintended «grandfather» role in that chain. The records of students from that time are inaccessible after the couple’s contentious divorce. Later developments suggest that Chetna keeps them.

Ogawa sensei presents Arjava with his memoirs ‘Everyone can do Reiki’ and with Usui’s and Koyama’s teaching manuals. Not to be copied! Arjava would later break his vow. Only once! He gifted – and thus preserved – a copy of Koyama’s manual to Chiyoko Yamaguchi. After Ogawa’s death, his family offered his legacy to Arjava, who humbly declined.

28. Polemics, Ridiculing and Apologies

Arjava hoped 'Reiki Fire' would enlighten–critics saw ego and arrogance instead. He owns his tone and humour, but denies chasing fame or power.

René confronts Arjava with the criticism of seeking fame and fortune with his publications. He also holds him responsible, in his role as a teacher, for students’ inappropriate behaviour.

Arjava recounts the release of his book «Reiki Fire». He was convinced that to unearth historic new ‘truth’ will do the Reiki community a favour. Instead, he received a severe, unexpected backlash. Somewhat unapologetically, he admits that his humour has caused misunderstandings; but he stands firm by his intention to inform, not to offend.

29. Boycotted but Persistent

The boycott against 'Reiki Fire' was instigated by Phyllis Furumoto. Arjava stood by his work and now muses why people react so strongly to him and seeks answers in self-reflection.

Arjava discusses how ‘Reiki Fire’ faced organised boycotts, including a legal injunction initiated by Phyllis Furumoto, for which she later apologized (see ‘Reconciliation — A path to Mastery’). He shares how the backlash shocked him. But he had finally chosen to stop running from conflict and speak his truth.

Despite his deep desire for peace and harmony, Arjava admits that he unknowingly irritates people. He reflects on ego, rejection, and the frustration of feeling unappreciated for his decades of work. Yet, he remains committed to introspection and growth.

30. Beyond Flames – Peace

Reiki Fire' unleashed threats, sabotage and break-ins. Resilience was needed to hold the ground and to carry on. Nowadays, Arjava chooses peace: no victimhood, no grudge - just heartful presence.

Arjava experiences a fierce backlash following the release of ‘Reiki Fire’, including claims that he was guilty of breaking Japanese law. He faces intense resistance and boycott networks amongst Western Reiki students calling for a burning of his work, which is particularly ironic in light of Germany’s history.

Despite experiencing break-ins, stolen books, extortion and emotional fatigue, Arjava now looks back with peace. He rejects victimhood, embraces the past lessons and recognizes his role as a threat to the then prevailing mind-set. Today, he seeks only to return to heartfelt presence, looking back with reconciliatory awe.

31. The Beach of Forgivenesshas Two Sides.

In 2017, Phyllis Furumoto intended to express her apology in person to Arjava. Unfortunately they never met. Arjava ponders on reconciliation and opens the door to closure.

René recounts Phyllis Furumoto’s intention (2017 in Gersfeld) to apologise to Arjava in person before her death, acknowledging past injustice. Though they never met, Arjava receives the message and reflects on letting go of old conflict. Closure with her leads to inner peace and serenity.

Arjava expresses openness to dialogue with Johannes Reindl, the successor of Phyllis Furumoto, and reiterates his core view: Reiki is not about styles or ownership. He explains its Shinto roots as universal blessing equal to everybody.

32. Finding Chiyoko Sensei

After key people die, a new door opens and Arjava finds Chiyoko Yamaguchi. Her son's simple welcome defies expectation, launching a rare, small-scale training journey.

Practically all Japanese Reiki practitioners stem from Arjava’s (Western) lineage. The deaths of Koyama and Ogawa closed the door to the Usui association (Gakkai) on Arjava’a Japanese Reiki path — until a book led him to Chiyoko Yamaguchi. With help from Hiroshi Doi, he gets her number and – being a Westerner – nervously reaches out.

To his surprise, Chiyoko and her son Tadao welcome him. He joins their modest trainings — just twelve students per year. For Arjava, it’s about alignment with a Japan-rooted practice, in line with his affinity for the East.

33. Constellation Reveals:Usui is Done – Hayashi Reverberates

An astonishing Reiki constellation with Bert Hellinger reveals Usui's peace and Arjava's link to Hayashi. This shifts Arjava's mission and foretells his destiny even before meeting Chiyoko Yamaguchi.

Arjava starts to organise Family Constellations with Bert Hellinger. In 2000 in Tokyo, he asks Hellinger for a Reiki constellation to understand ongoing conflicts. Usui’s representative walks out – a signal that his work was done. Chujiro Hayashi’s representative expresses feeling safe when Arjava is near.

This moment foresees a new chapter in Arjava’s Reiki path and a connection to Hayashi even before Arjava meets Chiyoko Yamaguchi, Hayashi’s student.

The exclusive footage of Bert Hellinger’s entire Reiki constellation is shown in our archive video A67 ‘Exclusive: Bert Hellinger’s Reiki Constellation’.

33. Constellation Reveals: Usui is Done – Hayashi Reverberates

An astonishing Reiki constellation with Bert Hellinger reveals Usui's peace and Arjava's link to Hayashi. This shifts Arjava's mission and foretells his destiny even before meeting Chiyoko Yamaguchi.

Arjava starts to organise Family Constellations with Bert Hellinger. In 2000 in Tokyo, he asks Hellinger for a Reiki constellation to understand ongoing conflicts. Usui’s representative walks out – a signal that his work was done. Chujiro Hayashi’s representative expresses feeling safe when Arjava is near.

This moment foresees a new chapter in Arjava’s Reiki path and a connection to Hayashi even before Arjava meets Chiyoko Yamaguchi, Hayashi’s student.

The exclusive footage of Bert Hellinger’s entire Reiki constellation is shown in our archive video A67 ‘Exclusive: Bert Hellinger’s Reiki Constellation‘. 

 

34. Venerable Simplicity

Her life blends Reiki and daily life – simple, powerful, lovable. In her high age she is living proof of her practice. Arjava finds in Chiyoko Yamaguchi the humble, heart-based teacher he longed for.

Arjava describes meeting Chiyoko Yamaguchi in 2000 – a humble woman with over 60 years of Reiki practice, having commenced practicing at the age of 17.

She treated clients while running a stationery shop, embodying practicality and grace rather than ego-driven showmanship. Unlike some Western teachers, Chiyoko displayed humility, heart, and embodied the five Reiki precepts.

For Arjava, she represented the ideal end state of a life in Reiki.

35. Practice is Teaching

Arjava is the first to be invited onto the Jikiden teacher's path, not by request but through practice. A cultural mix-up between Kyoto and Tokyo Japanese gives birth to the Institute almost by accident.

Chiyoko Yamaguchi initially refuses to teach beyond Reiki 2. Her humility and mastery deeply affect Arjava, her first Western student. In 2001 he organised for Walter Lübeck and a delegation to meet with Chiyoko sensei.

Arjava is invited to pursue teacher training with her after proving his dedication through practice – not by asking for it! He is the first trainee.

The Jikiden Institute gets formed unintentionally as a result of the petulant persistence of Tokyo students. They believed that Chiyoko’s Kyoto politeness was negotiable. Arjava opens the Yamaguchi’s vision and is instrumental to Jikiden’s global expansion.

36. Honourable Tradition or Enrichment?

Arjava reveals traditional teacher hierarchy of Jikiden Reiki and defends it against pyramid-scheme claims – while questions around ownership and succession cast long shadows.

Arjava unpacks the layered hierarchy in Jikiden Reiki, rooted in tradition. From Shihankaku to Dai Shihan, he explains how teaching rights are earned – and always limited.

Responding to pyramid-scheme criticism, he clarifies: Gokai scrolls aren’t ‘bought’ – they are conferred as honours. Cultural misinterpretations may blur the lines, but tradition guides the structure. Meanwhile, ownership and succession remains vague. René suggests that if Arjava were the Source but is no longer a member of Jikiden, it may lead succession into dire straits.

(For Peter Koenig and ‘Source’ visit https://reiki-conciliation.org/rtalks/peter-koenig/).

37. More in Common Than Meets the Eye

Arjava shares insights on Reiki's shared roots, defends Jikiden's monetary practices, and urges aspiring authors to be guided by passion, not dreams of profit.

Arjava and René note striking similarities between Western and Jikiden Reiki. Mieko Mitsui had discovered Ogawa sensei 10 years before Arjava, who also emphasises Takata’s relation to the Hayashi Institute. He was not the first to know, but Arjava was merely the first to talk about these facts publicly.

Arjava debunks accusations, explaining that fees cover actual production costs, for example of the Gokai scroll, that is carved as woodcut art by artisans.

Arjava has no financial interest in the Institute and discolses his earnings from book royalties, highlighting that his motivation is love for the work.

38. Poetry in Motion

Arjava uses travel and Covid downtime to publish 25 years of poetic work. A trilingual Meiji poetry project merges Reiki roots with artistic reverence.

Arjava answers criticism for writing poetry instead of Reiki books. In truth, he’s been writing poetry for 25 years, mostly on flights. Refusing to compromise by teaching online, Covid gave him time to organise his literary body, leading to collections themed around Love, Pain, Night Walks, Oneness, and Awareness.

He unveils a new 2025 project: a tri-lingual edition of the Meiji Emperor’s poems used by Mikao Usui, featuring stunning calligraphy by Erie Luman.

For all publications by Frank Arjava Petter visit https://frankarjavapetter.com/ → My Books

39. The Best Reiki Is Yours!

Arjava dismantles the idea of "correct" Reiki, urging practice beyond ego and technique. He emphasizes intention-free practice, unity over style, and compassion through both self- and shared treatment.

Reiki is not a path to something, instead, the act itself is awakening. Arjava stresses practicing «without intention», which René finds paralleled in Western Reiki when they say «to the highest good». Arjava criticises the idea that one style is superior to the other, and admits that Jikiden students sometimes repeat the very antagonism which came from the Reiki Alliance in the past – and finds it equally inappropriate.

Responding to criticism of Jikiden’s focus on treating others, he clarifies: self-treatment is included, but the deeper purpose is sharing compassion. In truth, Reiki transcends division.

40. Between Two Worlds

Arjava finds his Reiki home with Chiyoko Yamaguchi and becomes instrumental in Jikiden's global rise. The failed attempts to 'fuse' East and West leave him wondering whether true 'bridging' is even possible.

After years of confusion and knowing what was not true and not right, Arjava finally finds answers about traditional Reiki training and how it is done. He describes it as coming home.

On the question how instrumental he was for the success of Jikiden Reiki, Arjava’s modesty does not hold up to his role as seen by the public for more than two decades.

Arjava reflects on a lifelong effort to fuse East and West – personally and professionally. His admission to failure and his brooding over the impossibility of this dream let his resignation from Jikiden appear in a new light.

41. Life is Good

Arjava resigns from Jikiden, tired of cultural mediation–but stays optimistic for his future. Though labels fall away, he stays committed to supporting his students.

The two discussants share their optimistic world-view. Yet, musing over his resignation, Arjava expresses exhaustion from years of trying to mediate between East and West. The predicament is unsustainable, and ultimately lead to his decision.

Though no longer flying under the flag of Jikiden, Arjava offers unwavering support to all of his past students. With humour and humility, he shares his enduring optimism, love for life, and belief in pain as a powerful teacher.

42. Heeding Her Wisdom

Arjava and René reflect on intuition, trust and encouragement, honoring how their wives' wisdom grounds them when need it most – even amid dreams they don't always share.

Arjava and René reflect on past choices, intuitive timing, and the value of supportive partners. Arjava emphasises he encourages others based on their passion – whether he agrees with the idea or not.

In their conversation, the two men discover that when life’s chips are down, they always turn to their wives’ wisdom – and never hesitate to heed their council.

43. The Grandmaster Dilemma

Arjava honors Takata with gratitude. With view to the OGM and Jikiden he questions where spiritual teaching and business entwine.

Arjava expresses his grateful recognition to Hawayo Takata. He addresses concerns and acknowledges the risk that Jikiden Reiki might mirror the ‘Office of Grandmaster’ model, in which spiritual clarity is compromised by questions of succession – both familial and commercial.

Drawing on the Hellinger constellation (Video A67), Arjava rejects the idea that Reiki is inherently flawed, not least because the founders are honoured to this day. It’s human ego that complicates things.

44. No Master Symbol — No Master Initation

An excursion into the Japanese idea of soul serves as background to explain that in Jikiden Reiki, mastery comes from experience, not initiation or symbols. Reiju clears ego, again and again.

Arjava explains the core difference between Western and Japanese Reiki: there’s no teacher-level initiation or master symbol.

Initiation is not into symbols or levels, but a refining of ego–repeated to cleanse the connection to source. The repetition of ‘Reiju’ (initation) exists also in certain Western traditions.

Readiness to teach isn’t based on spiritual judgement but on practical experience. The level of experience with treatments is decisive.

45. The ‘Master Symbol’ Has a Long History – or Does It?

Arjava honours the master symbol's value in Western Reiki and sheds light on its origin. Long live diversity!

Arjava traces the master symbol to the concept of Sonten, reaching back into millenia-old Hinduism. Though not part of his own practice, he respects its beauty and relevance in Western Reiki.

Maybe there is less difference than what meets the eye. Afterall, Takata gave no master initiation at the beginning, reminiscent of the practice outlined in video A44: «No Master Symbol — No Master Initiation»

Using football as a metaphor, Arjava urges celebration of diversity: Reiki is about playing together, each in their own style.

46. In the Same Boat, Yet Drifting Apart?!

Arjava reflects on ego and division – in the real and in Reiki and urges self-awareness as a cure. Even failed efforts to unify Reiki in the past, he says, sparked unexpected growth and connection eventually.

Arjava and René explore fragmentation of society, from politics to the Reiki community. Arjava urges self-understanding as a remedy, suggesting that when ego dissolves, so does the notion of an ‘enemy’.

Arjava’s early attempts to unify the Reiki world often backfired – yet, over time, they still sparked collaboration and growth.

Arjava recalls his surprise at discovering that Bert Hellinger had practiced Reiki and concludes that money has frequently fuelled divisions within the Reiki family.

For more on ‘Universal Basic Income’ see ‘Unravel the Crochet’ https://reiki-conciliation.org/rtalks/frank-arjava-petter/

47. A Hell with Nobody in It

Arjava and René explore collective wisdom and unity beyond culture or ego. A Jesuit Zen Master offers a powerful image: a hell with 'nobody in it'. Silence becomes the gateway to shared truth.

On day three of the interview, Arjava reflects on the nature of wisdom: it is humanity’s inheritance, not an individual’s possesion. He describes self-realisation not as a sudden event, but as a gradual unfolding.

Referencing a Jesuit and Zen master, René illustrates the shared humanity that transcends culture and belief. His reflections echo Arjava’s ideas on non-duality and self-realisation. A moment of silence – shin – becomes the gateway to shared truth.

48. Arjava & Phyllis: Free to Let Go

The constellation session with Hellinger freed Arjava from a sense of obligation towards Usui. Arjava reflects on Phyllis's apology – revealing strong parallels in their words and philosophy.

Arjava reflects on the constellation with Bert Hellinger, where Usui simply walked away – content and complete. This freed Arjava from feeling he had to do anything for him.

He shares his life philosophy: always give your best. René points out that Phyllis Furumoto expressed the same idea – literally – in her apology*. When asked what he would say to her if she walked through the door now, Arjava suggests a hug and to «start new.» He adds that he avoids hypothetical scenarios, preferring instead to respond spontaneously to any given moment.

*See Videos ‘Apology’ and ‘The four agreements’ on https://reiki-conciliation.org/66-steps-on-the-path-to-reconciliation/.

49. Ethics of Exceptions

Arjava tackles absentee Reiki ethics, prioritising participation over consent – Western individuality meets Eastern collective. In practice, there are no rules without exceptions. This is universally true.

Arjava tackles the debate: is absentee Reiki without consent ethical? In Western thought, the individual is sacred. In the East, it’s the collective. Arjava suggests participation is key – not verbal permission.

Regardless of Western or Eastern perspectives, it is important to reflect on the ethical framework of absentee treatment. Exceptions to rules need to be considered carefully, and the rules themselves require individual scrutiny.

50. The Controversial Topic of Absentee Initiation

Arjava rejects absentee initiations as incompatible with his sacred, physical Reiju. René offers a nuanced view. Both uphold ethical considerations and code of conduct.

Arjava categorically rejects absentee Reiki initiations within his practice. While he does not judge others, his Reiju practice – taught by Chiyoko Yamaguchi – is sacred and physical. Even during Covid, when facing serious financial hardship, he refused to compromise his values.

René offers a Western perspective rooted in Hawayo Takata’s practice and grounded in a strict code of conduct: absentee initiation is possible in rare, deeply considered cases.

Both discussants agree: ethics, sincerity of conduct, and inner alignment are key.

51. Free Will and KarmaCelebrating Uniqueness

Arjava redefines freedom as inner alignment, not external circumstance – seen in Reiju and marriage alike. Most choices aren't free, they're shaped by lifetimes of unconscious momentum.

Arjava compares his strict stance on Reiju to loyalty in marriage: some see it as a prison, but he feels free within commitment. True freedom, he argues, is internal, not circumstantial–just like monks in voluntary isolation.

The discussion turns to free will and reincarnation. Arjava reflects on how past experiences – possibly even past lives – shape present actions. The best decisions arise when heart and mind meet in the present moment and we surrender to the flow of life.

52. Lost in Translation: Secrecy

Arjava demystifies 'secrecy', tracing it back to Hayashi and Takata in Hawaii. Ideally, Reiki is taught in its entirety – as one organic package. Internet practices shouldn't distract from the original teaching.

Arjava rejects the term ‘secrecy’ for Reiki, explaining that it stems from a mistranslation. He refers to Hayashi’s visit to Takata in Hawaii, where a new language was developed to communicate with ‘white people’.

The fragmentation of Reiki levels has contributed to misunderstandings; according to Chiyoko Yamaguchi, the practice should be transmitted as a complete whole.

Arjava is not concerned about Internet practices – his priority is staying true to what one has learned, rather than being swayed by what others are doing.

53. Too Much Standardisation, Too Little Reiki

Arjava supports minimal standards but warns against overregulation. A code of conduct and simple curriculum – more risks distorting the inherent simplicity of the practice.

Arjava pushes back against excessive standardisation, arguing that Reiki’s simplicity is not a technique. While he acknowledges the value of basic standards, he warns that too many rules can stifle freedom and lead to fragmentation — often following the death of an influential master.

He and René explore how to responsibly integrate Reiki into mainstream society. They agree on essentials: a shared code of conduct and a basic curriculum, while cautioning against rigidity that loses sight of Reiki’s essence.

54. Unity Without Uniformity: The Role of Reiki Associations

Although such participation does not align with his own character or purpose, Arjava encourages involvement in inclusive Reiki associations.

Arjava reflects on the value and limits of inclusive Reiki associations. Though he feels uncomfortable to be a member himself, he recognises the value of collaboration across traditions and encourages his students to engage. Some became, for example, cofounders of ProReiki in Germany.

With René, he explores how associations can support the development of Reiki. Both men are sought after speakers in such organisations even though neither is a member anywhere.

The conversation touches on politics, evolution, and the natural interconnectedness that transcends labels. Inclusion, Arjava concludes, isn’t a goal – it is already part of who we are.

55. Trademark – Not Again!

René questions Arjava about rumours of Jikiden trademarking Reiki in China, seeing paradoxical parallels to the 1990s. Arjava dismisses this but clarifies that the institute has registered 'Jikiden Reiki' as a defensive move.

In the 1990s, Phyllis Furumoto stirred controversy by attempting to trademark Reiki. René now confronts Arjava with rumours that Jikiden Reiki might be doing something similar in China – a paradoxical echo of history? Arjava laughs – not in disbelief, but because he’s actually been asked not to teach in China.

He clarifies that while the name Jikiden Reiki has indeed been trademarked, it’s solely a defensive measure against extortion.

Arjava sidesteps conflict rather than engaging in it.

56. East meets West: Rifts to be healed everywhere

Japanese Reiki tensions mirror the West's past division. Willingness for dialogue is necessary – despite legal entanglements. Arjava's controversial 2017 statement is discussed. Also, we get an insight into his role in Jikiden Reiki's unfolding.

Confronted with a photograph, Arjava reflects on the tension between the Yamaguchi family and Hyakuten Inamoto. He candidly discusses his controversial 2017 statement and the resulting legal entanglements.

René observes that the current conflict within the Japanese community echoes past divisions in the West. While acknowledging cultural and personal complexities, he challenges the idea of leaving it solely to them. Arjava agrees in essence but emphasises that reconciliation requires mutual willingness.

Over the course of this conversation, Arjava’s crucial role in the unfolding of Jikiden Reiki comes into clearer focus.

57. The Absurdity of Old Grudges

Letting go of ancestral trauma does not mean agreeing or forgetting. Healing fateful past encounters – like Arjava's imagined meeting with Phyllis Furumoto – reveals the absurdity of old grudges.

Reading his grandfather’s racist colonial diary made Arjava realise how free he is from such prejudice. René reflects on his SS father and the complexity of love and horror coexisting. We do not need to carry ancestral burden to honour the past.

Reconciling means healing the wounds of fateful past encounters. Through an imagined meeting with Phyllis Furumoto, Arjava reveals the absurdity of old grudges.

58. The Rumour Stops Here

A persistent rumour confronts Arjava: that Hyakuten Inamoto forced him to sign a legal document. He categorically denies it, preferring to end the conflict with peace over retaliation.

A rumour persists that Hyakuten Inamoto obtained a legal injunction forcing Arjava to sign a document silencing him after his contested 2017 statement*. Arjava firmly denies it – no paper was ever signed.

Guided by The Art of War, he favours resolution over retaliation: open the door and avoid casualties. Even when revenge beckons, choose peace – closing chapters cleanly.

* Video A56: East meets West – «Rifts to be healed everywhere»

59. «As Learned», Not «Better»

Reiki is one, names differ. Jikiden remains unchanged, says Arjava, though its structure evolved. He diffuses insinuations from both sides and urges: name your changes (like e.g. Gendai).

Western Reiki and Jikiden Reiki are examined through the lens of authenticity and change. Arjava insists Jikiden’s teaching remains unchanged, though its organisation has evolved. He recognises the choices others make and cites Hiroshi Doi’s contemporary Gendai Reiki as an example.

Arjava and René unpack the Western feeling that Jikiden looks down on other styles. Arjava disagrees, explaining that ‘Jikiden’ is simply an adjective meaning «as learned.»

60. No Judgment. Just My Way.

Reiju and initiation are clarified as practices in both Western and Jikiden traditions alike. Arjava shares his affinity and encourages practitioners to trust their path – without judgment or comparison.

The two speakers clear up confusion about Jikiden practices like Reiju and group treatment, recognising that both exist in Western and Jikiden traditions alike.

Arjava explains that his path suits him due to his affinity with the East – not because it’s ‘better’. He encourages practitioners to follow what resonates and avoid moralising or comparing.

61. «Without Takata, No Reiki Today»

Debunking a grave myth, Arjava honours Takata's pivotal role in Reiki's expansion to the West and transmigration back to Japan. He also embraces conflict as spiritual polish.

A photo of Takata at Usui’s alleged grave on Mount Hiei prompts Arjava to clarify facts grounded in Buddhist tradition.

He honours Hawayo Takata’s legacy and life while questioning historical accuracy – without personal criticism.

Disagreement, he says, sharpens awareness, and conflict isn’t a threat but part of the path toward enlightenment–very much in the spirit of Reiki’s founder, Mikao Usui.

62. The Promise of Peace

Arjava honours Usui's wisdom and courage in not making Reiki a religion, thus opening a path to universal peace. A moving tribute to Don Alexander opens this episode.

On the topic of religion, Arjava Petter praises Usui’s genius for not founding a religion – making Reiki accessible to all: Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, Jews. This universal approach holds the promise of peace and reconciliation across all divides.

The episode opens with a heartfelt tribute to Don Alexander, a man whose spirit of generosity touched both speakers deeply.

63. The Time is Right Now

Arjava explains why he once rejected the project: concern for others and wrong timing. Behind unread emails lies care, not rejection. Krishnamurti's thoughts on love.

René and Arjava reflect on how this interview almost never happened. At one time, Arjava felt people were in danger in his presence and chose retreat. Now, the time is right.

He speaks candidly about personal limits, digital silence, and the need for recovery. It’s not rejection – it’s survival. The episode closes with a powerful quote from Krishnamurti.

64. Rivalry: Krishnamurti vs Osho(German with English subtitles)

A humorous tale of synchronicity and spiritual rivalry. Arjava recalls Osho's sharp yet respectful jabs at Krishnamurti – two giant spiritual teachers with clashing styles.

A surprising synchronicity: while René brings up Krishnamurti, Arjava reveals he’s reading him at bedtime. What follows is a hilarious tale of rivalry and reverence between Osho and Krishnamurti — two giants with sharp tongues and deep mutual respect.

Arjava recalls Osho urging students to always go see Krishnamurti live – first row, dressed in red.

A light-hearted episode in German, with English subtitles.

65. You Are His Hands(includes a collective meditation)

A shared silent meditation and a thank you all round. Arjava reminds us Reiki is a tool – our true task is to spread love and heal the world.

In a heartfelt closing, Arjava invites a shared moment of silence: «Sit like a mountain» – no goals, no striving, just presence. It’s a collective meditation marking the end of a deep and meaningful conversation.

Afterwards, he expresses gratitude to René, the crew, and the sponsors. Reiki, he reminds us, is only a tool – the real task is to become better humans, beautify the world, and spread love.

66. 6 … 5 … 4 … 3 … 2 … No-One!

Arjava reveals Usui's radical humility – placing himself below an empty top level. True mastery lies in openness, vulnerability, and students who excel the teacher.

Arjava recounts the traditional six levels of Reiki, where Shodan and Okuden (Reiki 1 and 2) are considered one unit. Usui placed himself on the second level, leaving the highest degree symbolically empty.

Lifting students beyond yourself is the mark of a good teacher. Vulnerability, openness, and learning from everyone – even clients – are signs of mastery.

67. Exclusive: Bert Hellinger’s Reiki Constellation

Exclusive footage: Bert Hellinger explores Reiki's divisions and 'vicious fighting' with his family constellation method. Profound insights, emotional responses–and a surprising personal discovery for Arjava.

Tokyo 2000: The legendary Bert Hellinger conducts a family constellation, selecting representatives for Usui, Hayashi, Takata, Furumoto, and Weber Ray. Arjava seeks insights and healing for the «vicious fighting» and splintering of the Reiki world.

Through role-play and feedback, participants reveal subtle dynamics of power, abandonment, longing, and connection. Emotional responses range from rage to reverence.

This exclusive footage is shown here with the permission of Frank Arjava Petter.

See also Video A01 ‘Resignation from Jikiden – Why and What Now?’ and A33 ‘Constellation Reveals: Usui is Done – Hayashi Reverberates.’

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