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Articles
KEN COHEN'S PERSONAL THOUGHTS
ABOUT QIGONG & WORLD PEACE
Qigong was originally called yang
sheng, "nurturing life." Acts of violence are the opposite of
qigong. A qigong practitioner should ask him or herself about
the wider implications of qigong. "How can I live in a way that
more fully nurtures life?" Let's put our minds and hearts together
to make the world a better place for our children.
All of the qigong masters advise
focusing on yi, not on qi. Yi means intent, mindfulness, and awareness.
If a person does qigong mechanically, repeating movements without
awareness, the movements have little benefit. They might exercise
the muscles, but they won't cultivate qi. Yi leads qi. Yi is also
essential for inner peace and interpersonal peace. A person who
is aware looks within before pointing a finger (or a gun) at anyone
else. When you point a finger at someone, look where the other
fingers are pointing!
Qigong practice helps people make
better decisions. It enhances creativity and intuition. It also
reduces greed and selfishness and helps people appreciate what
they share with the rest of humanity.
Pollution and aggression start
in the mind. The outer world is a reflection of the inner world.
As author and shaman Sandra Ingerman shows in her book Medicine
for the Earth, when a person feels empowered and at one with both
nature and the Divine, his or her mind can actually affect physical
reality. People can use their spiritual awareness, love, and power
to change the acid or base levels in a cup of water. However,
when this "remote healing influence" was tested under laboratory
conditions, it only worked when a group of healers tried to
influence the water. A single "influencer" was ineffective.
We need each other to heal and to survive.
We cannot avoid stress, but we
can use qigong to lessen the harmful effects of stress. Did qigong
practitioners cry when they saw the terrorist attacks of 9/11/01?
I hope so. I certainly did. However, when practitioners are faced
with tragedy, they do not have heart attacks, develop anxiety
disorders, or become vindictive.
Try to correct injustice through
education, counseling, negotiation, and, when necessary, shaming
a person in front of family and peers to re-establish accountability.
Punishment must always be the last resort. Yet we should not hesitate
to use force when necessary in self-defense. Qigong does not advocate
"no force," but, rather, intelligent and ethical use of force
and the least effort necessary to accomplish a goal.
Ancient Taoist hermits withdrew
from society and "quit the world's dust." This is no longer a
possibility. Even a recluse in a cave has to deal with noise pollution
from overhead jets and water contaminated by agriculture, overpopulation,
and industry. Do not use qigong as an excuse to avoid involvement
with life, including peaceful political action. Vote!
Qigong integrates techniques from
all of China's great spiritual traditions. Daoism is the root
of qigong and the source of the oldest literature and techniques.
Confucianism emphasized using qigong to cultivate character and
virtue. Buddhism added a strong meditative component and emphasized
the importance of compassion. The Muslim Hui minority created
some of the so-called "Shaolin" martial arts such as Cha Quan
and Tan Tui. Other Muslim masters furthered the evolution of internal
martial arts (especially Xing Yi Quan) and their associated qigong.
Qigong is an example of the importance of all spiritual traditions.
We can all learn from each other.
A SPIRITUAL RENAISSANCE:
REFLECTIONS ON A QIGONG LIFE
BY KENNETH S. COHEN
It is hard to believe that I ever began Qigong-- it is so much
a part of my life. Nor can I conceive of a time when the practice
will end or-- God forbid-- when the learning will stop. I was
first exposed to Chinese culture through a "mistake."
In 1968, a friend recommended a book called Sound and Symbol by
a German musicologist. As I rode home on the subway that afternoon,
I realized that in my haste I had mistakenly purchased another
book of the same title but by a different author. Instead of a
book about music, I found myself reading one of the rarest and
finest introductions to the Chinese language, Sound and Symbol
by Bernhard Karlgren. Before the subway ride was ended, I was
hooked. I realized that by studying a truly foreign language I
could learn how language and concept influence one's perception
of reality. Perhaps I could, in the process, free myself of the
preconceptions hidden in my own language, English, and learn to
perceive the world silently and thus, more truly. Within a few
months, I began to study the Chinese language and, not long thereafter,
Qigong.
As I reflect on this story, I realize that it explains not only
how I began Qigong but why I have continued. Foreign language
study can clear the mind of culture-bound assumptions. Similarly,
Qigong liberates the student from preconceptions held in the body:
the immature and inappropriate strategies for living embodied
in posture and breathing. To stand straight is to give up the
burden of insecurity. To breathe slowly is to take life as it
comes, without allowing memory or expectation to interfere. As
the body becomes quiet, the mind becomes quiet. The qi flows not
only within the body, but between oneself and Nature. In breathing,
the external world becomes you. Yet you do not own it, you let
it go and return breath to its source-- what Chinese people call
the Tao.
I had another beginning, a renaissance of Qi, several years later.
I was teaching my first seminar at a growth center in Amherst,
Massachusetts. One evening, during a break, I decided to take
a walk outside; snow was falling and hanging heavy on the pine
trees. Wouldn't it be wonderful to practice Qigong in this setting?
As I began practicing, something very odd happened. Normally,
I experienced Qigong movements as arising from deep within, seemingly
generated by the breath and by the slow shifting of the weight.
But this time I disappeared; I felt that I was not doing Qigong.
Rather, the falling snow, the trees, the air, the ground itself
were unfolding through the various postures. I became a sphere
of energy whose center was everywhere. This was a kind of spiritual
rebirth in Qigong; I learned that mind and body could become truly
empty, that inside and outside could become a unified field of
awareness. I cannot claim the experience as my own, because the
experience was without "I". But I do know that Qigong
has never been the same. Thus, another key to my motivation and,
I hope, to your motivation: practice qigong to learn that you
are part of Nature. When you breathe, it is the wisdom of nature
that breathes you!
Finally, I have continued practicing because of the dramatic effect
Qigong has had on my own health. I was a weak and sickly child
and a victim of the poor medical practices of the time. Antibiotics
were prescribed for every cold and scratchy throat, leading to
a downward spiral of poorer and poorer health. Qigong cured my
chronic bronchitis, weak immune system, poor sleep, and low energy.
I look for ways to bring these same benefits to my students.
I applaud the scientists who are looking for the mechanism of
Qigong-- how it works-- and who are designing experiments to validate
Qigong's efficacy as a form of complementary medicine. Science
has already demonstrated Qigong's powerful healing effects on
cancer, heart disease, and chronic pain. However, people who practice
Qigong with an open mind do not need proof to know that it works.
They experience it. Science has yet to prove that the sun exists.
Yet this does not prevent us from enjoying its light and warmth.
Yes, trust science. But trust yourself even more.
TAIJI QUAN
THE WISDOM OF WATER
An earlier version of this essay was published in T'ai Chi:
The International Magazine of T'ai Chi Ch'uan, September 1997
© 1999 Kenneth S. Cohen
All natural things curl, swirl, twist, and flow in patterns like
flowing water. Thus we sense something similar in clouds, smoke,
streams, the wind-blown waves of sand on the beach, the pattern
of branches against the sky, the shape of summer grasses, the
markings on rocks, the movement of animals. Even solid bones have
lines of flow on their exterior and in their spongy interior.
Spiders build their webs, caterpillars their cocoons in water-like
spirals. The rings in an exposed log look like a whirlpool. And
looking up in the night sky we can see a river of stars. Alan
Watts once remarked to me, "In nature, the shortest distance
between two points is never a straight line, but a wiggle."
One need only follow a deer through the woods to verify this;
animal trails meander like dried stream beds.
The Chinese call this water-like pattern which is everywhere different,
yet everywhere the same, li. Li originally meant the natural markings
on jade. By extension, the Chinese character came to mean the
asymmetrical pattern and order of nature, an order that grows
from the inside-out, the way a tree grows from a seed. Artistic
creations may also express li-- for instance a sculpture that
incorporates the natural shape and texture of stone or a hand
shaped pottery bowl on which the glaze has dripped into beautiful
random patterns. The opposite of li is zi, the rigid order of
logic or of things that are clearly the result of human manipulation,
such as an automobile. A perfectly round bowl with a symmetrical
design along its circumference demonstrates zi and soon bores
the eye.
I learned about the difference between li and zi the first time
I tried to draw a bamboo with a Chinese brush. My teacher gazed
at my work and frowned, "This is not a bamboo, but a lamp-post!
Have you ever seen a bamboo straight up and down or with exactly
the same number of leaves on each side?" The teacher took
my brush and dipped it in the inkwell. Then he lifted the brush
and immediately pressed it onto the rice paper. He asked himself,
"What is it? Ah, I think it is a sparrow." Adding a
few brush strokes the "splotch" turned into a marvelous
sparrow, ready to fly off the paper! My teacher remarked, "The
mind must be natural!"
Human beings are part of nature and are thus capable of manifesting
the natural beauty of li. The philosopher Lao Zi (fourth century
B.C.) says, "People follow the earth; earth follows heaven,
heaven follows Tao, Tao follows its own nature." Li is inborn;
zi is acquired -- unfortunately it is too easily acquired in a
society that urges us to follow clocks rather than the cycles
of nature. Rushing about from one place to the next, spending
more time reading or thinking about life than living it, we lose
the grace of our animal-nature. "Slowness is beauty,"
declared the artist, Rodin.
The flowing, graceful exercises of Taiji Quan help us to slow
down and pay attention, to recapture and express that part of
ourselves that we share with the animals and the rest of nature.
Even the mind becomes supple and more alive. Flowing internal
energy creates flowing consciousness, the mind freed of ruts.
River Flow
Taiji Quan has been compared to a great river because each posture
flows smoothly into the next without break. More precisely, Yang
and Wu Style Taiji Quan are like a river or stream, but the ancient
Chen Style is like the ocean, with changing rhythm and power,
like crashing waves and slow retreating tides. Confucius said,
"Could one but go on and on like this, never stopping day
or night!" Rivers are the veins of the earth, carrying nutrients
from one place to the next, dissolving and reforming the elements
of nature. Similarly, as long as our inner streams -- veins that
carry blood, meridians that carry qi -- remain open and flowing,
we enjoy vibrant health.
The Taiji Quan master may not have large muscles. His or her strength
is concealed within, like a steel bar wrapped in cotton. Suppleness
is necessary to develop strength. The more relaxed you are, the
stronger you can become. Tension constricts the blood vessels
and qi meridians, resulting in impeded circulation, malnourished
tissues, and weakness. Lao Zi says, "People are supple and
soft while alive, but hard and stiff when dead. Grass and trees
are supple and pliant while alive, but dried and withered when
dead." A living tree has sap and water flowing through it.
Similarly, a living person has blood and vital breath (qi) flowing
through the body.
Taiji Quan cultivates "internal strength" (nei jing),
the supple power of flowing water. When attacked, the martial
artist moves out of the way, "neutralizing" the opponent,
like water flowing around a rock. The attacker is frustrated as
he discovers that the object of his attack has disappeared. His
strike lands on empty space. But when the Taiji Quan fighter counters,
his power is amassed like a tidal wave. His whole body strikes
as one unit, his fist hitting like the end of a battering ram.
If his punch is blocked, he slips around the block, again like
flowing water, and strikes again.
Water has no fixed shape of its own, but rather takes the shape
of the terrain over which it flows or of the container that holds
it. It adapts itself to both season and place: freezing in winter,
dissolving in summer, becoming mist and dew in the heavens, springs
and lakes on the earth. Similarly, the Taiji Quan student is flexible
and adaptable. Her mind is empty of preconceptions and able to
understand without the filter of belief systems. She greets life
without rehearsal or fixed strategy.
While practicing Yang Style Taiji Quan, the body moves on a plane,
with little up or down motion. Hips, shoulders and eyes are level,
as though the pelvis is a basin of water filled to the brim --
any inclining or bobbing up and down would spill the water. Level
movement stills the waves of the mind. The mind becomes like a
quiet pond, the surface reflecting things just as they are, without
prejudice or partiality.
Water is also a symbol of humility. It seeks the lowest ground,
following the path of least resistance. There is a Chinese saying,
"Going with gravity is wisdom." Thus, while practicing
Taiji Quan every part of the body should relax (song) and sink
(chen), seeking its lowest level, like water flowing down hill.
It is important to note, however, that sinking does not mean collapsing
or slouching. Rather, the body should feel like a tall, graceful
tree with deep roots. The shoulders are dropped, the chest relaxed
with the ribs just hanging effortlessly; the lower abdomen is
allowed to protrude naturally; the knees are bent so that the
weight of the body can be felt dropping down through the legs;
the feet adhere to the ground. Even the breath feels as though
it is "sitting" in the lower abdomen. As you inhale,
the lower abdomen and lower back expand gently; as you exhale,
they contract naturally. This way of breathing massages the internal
organs and allows more efficient gaseous exchange. The breathing
rate slows down, and the heart beat becomes more regular.
Quality, Not Quantity
Taiji Quan emphasizes quality rather than quantity. How can you
move more intelligently, with less wasted effort? Where can you
let go? How do you feel? Rather than: how far can you stretch,
how many repetitions can you perform, how quickly can you move?
Not that speed, flexibility, and power are unimportant for a martial
artist! A boxer who can deliver two punches in a second is superior
to one who is only halfway to the target in the same period of
time. However, the primary way to achieve quantitative improvement
is by paying attention to small qualitative factors. The rule
in Taiji Quan is wu wei, "non-striving, no unnecessary force."
The practice of Taiji Quan teaches you to tense only those muscles
needed for any given task, and with only the exact amount of tension
required. If four ounces of force is required, do not use five!
That one extra ounce is stress, resulting in loss of fluidity,
impaired coordination and reaction time, and a break in your defenses
that can be taken advantage of by a sparring partner.
The Power of the Circle
Taiji Quan movements imitate the circular and coiling shapes found
in ponds, clouds, dewdrops, and meandering streams. The circle
conserves and circulates energy within the body. Because of circular
movement, the Taiji Quan student feels more energized after practice
than before.
The circle is also the strongest shape, the most resistant to
external force. Hold your arm in front of your chest, with the
elbow bent at a 90 degree angle. If someone pushes against your
bent arm, he can easily topple you. But if your arm is held in
a circle in front of your body--as though embracing a sphere--it
is difficult to push. This is called peng jing, resilient or buoyant
force. Qi fills a rounded shape and creates peng jing, like water
flowing through a rounded hose. If the hose is sharply bent, the
"energy" become blocked.
If you push against someone who has mastered peng jing, you rebound
with doubled force, as though hitting a tightly inflated basketball,
or as though buoyed up by a deep well of qi. The fuller the body's
supply of qi, the more weight it can float, that is, the more
powerful an incoming force it can repel. Peng jing is one of the
secrets behind the ability of Taiji Quan masters to withstand
injury from falls, flying objects, or fists! Peng jing prevents
or lessens the likelihood of injury during the practice of any
sport.
Cultivating the Spirit
Water is the most impressionable natural element. Throw a pebble
in a lake and watch the ripples. A slight breeze will send a wave
of vibration through even a puddle. Water is sensitive to heavenly
energy as well. The heat and light of the sun cause fluids to
rise and fall in trees, creating the seasonal changes. We all
know that the moon determines the ocean's tides. Lumberjacks find
it difficult to control logs on a river during the full moon,
as the logs tend to get washed ashore. However, during the new
moon, logs flow towards the middle of the river. Similarly, the
moon controls the tides of blood in the human body, causing menstruation
to synchronize with a particular phase of the moon and affecting
the thinking and dreaming of both men and women.
This impressionable quality of water allows us to see and know
the world. Water forms a transparent film through which light
enters the eyes. It transmits sounds through the inner ear. As
mucous and saliva, it allows smell and taste. Without water to
help carry messages across the synapses, there would be no sense
of touch. When the whole body moves like water, as in the practice
of Taiji Quan, we cultivate sensitivity and permeability to the
qi of heaven and earth. We becomes aware of what the Lakota Indians
call the wochangi, "the spiritual influences of nature."
To move like water is to return to the source of being. Mankind
evolved from a watery environment. The human embryo looks like
a fish during its early development. The first crawling movement
of an infant is an undulation, like a tadpole learning to swim.
According to most religious traditions, water is the first element
(in both importance and order of creation). "God breathed
over the face of the waters." Brahma, the world creator,
floats on a lotus in Vishnu's abdomen. In the Buddhist Lankavatara
Sutra, the "universal mind" (alaya-vijnana) is compared
to a great ocean.
Perhaps the most important message of water is change itself.
"Everything flows," said Heraclitus, "You can't
step twice into the same river." The human body, like the
body of the earth, consists mostly of water and is therefore in
a state of constant flux. The intellect creates an illusion of
permanence; we freeze the changing processes of life into concepts.
But for health of body and mind, we must learn to flow with life,
to ride the currents. We discover that the Buddhist principle
of "impermanence" presents not a reason for despair
but an opportunity for more sensitive and intelligent living.
Taiji Quan can help us to, in the words of the Diamond Sutra,
"Awaken the mind without fixing it anywhere." Through
Taiji Quan practice we discover that "Go with the flow"
is more than a metaphor. It is a spiritual practice and a way
of life.
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