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Kokoro

This is a place where learning is fun, spirited and spontaneous. This is a place where kindness is valued, compassion is aplenty, and innovation is explored.

This is Kokoro.

 

Often I'm told it's hard to say, so for a little while I changed the name of this horsemanship I practice. But it kept coming back to Kokoro. Let me try to explain just what Kokoro means:

"..... it unites the notions of heart, mind, and spirit: It sees these three elements as being indivisible from one other. “For example if we say, ‘She has a good kokoro,’ it means heart and spirit and soul and mind all together.”

One of the problems of discussing kokoro ... is that by linking words...with “and,” we imply divisions that simply don’t exist. But in this Eastern culture, the three aren’t intrinsically linked as one:

They are one. "                           -Yoshikawa Sakiko, director of Kyoto University’s Kokoro Research Center.

So essentially Kokoro Horsemanship is any interaction with a horse that encompasses the unification of the heart (compassion), the mind (imagination) and the spirit (connection) in a holistic manner. That can be any horseman, any tool, any technique. Kokoro Horsemanship isn't *our* horsemanship. It's the way we practice. You too are likely someone who practices Kokoro Horsemanship without even being aware ♡☆

And to pronounce it? kor // kor // oh

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