www.taichido.com
Newsletter issue 29 May 2004
Hi, and a hello from the May edition of the Taichido Newsletter,
hot on the heels of the (very late) April one. This month
continues Gary's discourse from last month about breathing
within tai chi, and an interesting discussion I had last
week about the use of chi energy within the National Health
Service prompts me to transcribe some text from acupuncturist
Susan Woodhead.
Not much else has happened since the last issue, which
was only a couple of weeks ago, so I shan't ramble and
just let you read on!
all the best, Mark
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chi and acupuncture
The same chi energy which is used as a fundamental base
for tai chi and chi ung is what drives acupuncture. The
body is seen as a network of channels connected to the
major organs and systems within it. These channels are
called meridians and they are mapped on the surface of
the body. Along the meridian lines there are acupuncture
points, places where we know that we can contact the ch'i
to work creatively with the body and its healing process.
Ch'i is perfect. Ch'i knows what to do and how to do it.
From the very second of conception ch'i flows.
On the radial arteries of both arms we read twelve pulses
that relate to the major organs and functions of the body.
The pulses are ch'i. We read the quantity and quality
of the ch'i in the different parts of the body. It is
an amazing and profound thing to do. Every person has
their own individual picture revealed through the pulses.Changes
in the ch'i can be measured by taking the pulses.
The acupuncture points are tiny places. When you touch
them you feel a tiny sensation under your finger that
is hard to find words to describe. Perhaps the ch'i of
the acupuncturist knows the ch'i of the other person?
A tiny sterile needle, the thickness of a couple of hairs
on your head, is inserted into the acupuncture point.
At that split second I feel the ch'i from my end of the
needle and I know that it has connected with the life
force of the body. Reading the pulses the changes in the
ch'i can be felt in detail. For certain energy states
moxa is indictaed as being more suitable than needles,
or can be combined with needle treatment if that is what
is required. Moxa is a herb, one of the Artemesia plants:
ARTEMESIA VULGARIS LATIFLORA, also known as Mugwort. Moxa,
dried leaves and stem of the plant, is burned over the
acupuncture points, either directly on the skin or on
the end of an inserted needle according to what is required
by the ch'i.
Generally people seek acupuncture treatment when they
are ill. Illness is a manifestation of an imbalance or
lack of ch'i within the person. If we understand that
ch'i should be balanced, harmonious and flowing within
us, then we can see that health is a positive state of
being. If we are unwell it follows that the ch'i must
be disrupted in some way, all ills of body and mind can
be understood as a negative energy state. The work of
the acupuncturist is to stop the deterioration, stabilise
the energy and then build the ch'i to a balanced and abundant
state. When you deal with the cause of the problem, the
place where the imbalance started, then the body can heal
itself.
Susan Woodhead
Susan's full article on chi and acupuncture can be found
at http://www.soton.ac.uk/~maa1/chi/taichi/acupuncture.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Breathe with me again...
Last issue Gary tackled breathing within tai chi, by
looking at it from a martial aspect. This issue continues
the discussion:
Fundamentally, every in breath occurs when a defensive
posture is assumed and every out breath marks a strike
or block. This is the form of breathing formulated to
promote the smooth flow and accumulation of Chi ... and
if you do not follow that pattern, you are not really
doing Tai Chi. But the good news is, as long as you are
doing the form in the right order (of postures) you don't
really have to think about all of this or calculate every
movement. No, on the contrary. If you just breathe in
and out when it feels natural (having mastered the art
in the practice of Grasp the Sparrows Tail) the Form will
reveal itself to you as a body, mind and spirit experience.
There are - like Grasp the Sparrows Tail: the image of
a sparrow that flies out of one hand to be then grasped
by the tail as it passes the other - more picturesque
ways of 'viewing' every phase of every posture of the
form. Birds, by the way are symbolic of "communion
between heaven and earth". These traditional visualisations
and ancient symbolic meanings do help reveal the Form
in mind and spirit; however it is the appreciation of
its martial roots and the application of the postures
helps reveals it in the body and provide necessary Yin
to Yang boundaries. If the martial aspect is wholly absent
from an individual's study and practice of Tai Chi, that
individual's practice is not balanced and too soft. This
is not all said so as to promote the martial of Tai Ch
above the spiritual, but to simply try to answer the question
fully; not only explaining why you breathe in and out
when you do, and why also your feet and hands are where
there they are and why - and where they will next be -
and why.
The broader the boundaries and the more facets any practice
has ... the more complete that practice. The practitioners
familiarity and level of development of Yin qualities
should be proportionate to the familiarity and level of
development of Yang qualities. Intimacy with one and ignorance
of the other, whichever way around, amounts to no more
than a shallow practice.
Relatively, and especially in comparison to conventional
workout regimes, Tai Chi is Yin. But even just in comparison
to the Tai Chi of a generation ago, let alone a hundred
generations ago, the Tai Chi that we westerners encounter
these days is very yin and inevitably becoming more so
as teaching in the appreciation of martial aspects is
diminished. This is not 'our fault', its jus the way it
is, and what we now expect or desire from Tai Chi is not
what the average terrorised peasant farmer wanted before
the invention of a police dialling number! Nevertheless,
to stay true to the tradition one should acknowledge the
martial applications of Tai Chi as intrinsic to it and
inextricably involved in its formulation and origins.
Tai Chi and Chi Kung are INTERNAL practices, formulated
to promote the accumulation and unimpaired (internal)
distribution of Chi - for health and well being. Breathing
'into the circle' is therefore one of the fundamentals
of all 'internal development' exercises.
Another way of breathing is a recognised method of development
of chi - but in this case these exercises are classified
as "Yi Jin Jing" and used to develop 'external'
chi and encourage the development of muscles and tendons.
Yijinjing is a set of limbering up excersises for the
tendons, to strengthen them. They are gentle excersises,
but also involve vigourous will - using one's will to
direct the exertion of muscular strength. Like Chi Kung,
it is coordinated through breathing. - breathing is used
to force the will, and in a natural tai chi form this
may feel uncomfortable to you. In a 'complete' practice,
Tai Chi Form is really just the middle ground used to
develop the 'spirit' and accumulate internal chi. Martial
application and Yi Jin Jing becomes then the Yang aspect
which is used to develop the externals and the body. The
third and most Yin aspect is meditation which is used
to develop and control the mind. So, breathing 'into the
circle' is OK (and called Yi Jin Jing) but it will have
the opposite effect and encourage hardness as opposed
to softness.
Gassho, Gary Robinson
|