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- From: ptcaps@tennyson.lbl.gov (Peter Chan)
- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Subject: Re: Is chi/ ki real?
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 19:31:55 GMT
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley CA
- Lines: 55
- Message-ID: <28695@dog.ee.lbl.gov>
- References: <19930125.103518.366@almaden.ibm.com> <28626@dog.ee.lbl.gov> <YfNMJxX0Bwx28TISh=@transarc.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 128.3.12.117
-
- In article <YfNMJxX0Bwx28TISh=@transarc.com> Stephen_Y._Chan@transarc.com writes:
-
- > Well, if we go by the "qi is the animating force of life"
- >definition that gets thrown out every now and then, then by
- >definition, everyone uses qi. Just like you don't have to believe in
- >hemoglobin for your body to use it.
- > In any case, I get the tinglies, hands drifting in invisible
- >currents, and other people have (on occasion) told me they can feel my qi
- >projection, blah blah blah...
- > But is it real, or virtual? I don't have an answer, but I have
- >a different question: Does it really make a difference?
- >
-
- What difference does it make?
- That's a good question and it provides a clue as to why some
- people would swear by chi while others would not. Since chi is
- kind of connected to breathing, let's take a look at breathing.
- I am sure everyone understands the importance of breathing in your
- training. It is as important to coordinate your breathing with your
- movements in soft styles like Tai Chi as in hard styles like Karate.
- With proper breathing control or technique, you can relax better and
- strike harder, or take a blow without withstanding much damage.
- You can say that you know everything about breathing (since any animal
- can breath) and disregard it as trivial, or you can use it to improve
- your skill.
-
- The same can be said of chi. The tingling feeling and hands drifting are
- only one form of chi manifestation amongst many. It can help you to know that
- it is there. If you cannot apply it in your training, it becomes irrelevant.
- But, what you would apply is not the tingling feeling, etc.
- What you would apply is the principle behind chi e.g.:-
- Move chi around your body (I am not talking about doing so in meditative chi
- kung, but in real martial arts like Hung Gar or Tai Chi),
- To generate more power with abundance of chi,
- To integrate chi with 'sheng' and 'yi' (remember in chi kung, chi and the mind
- are always connected, whether it is visualization or being in a state of
- no-mindedness).
- .... (maybe someone can help to add to the list)
-
- All I what to say is that one needs to integrate chi with one's training.
- If you isolate chi and study it by itself, it loses all its significance.
- There is a very popular chi kung practised in China in the recent year,
- call the 'aromatic kung' (Don't ask me why it is called that!). The literature
- says it is enough to practise it for 15 minutes a day (a surprisely short
- period when compared to the time it takes in other chi kung practice). The
- rationale being that the principle behind the chi kung should be integrated with
- and practised in your daily life and everyday activities. If you can
- do that, you will be practising hours a day, not only the 15 minutes that you
- are doing the movements. (An interesting counter-example is when someone who claims
- to be practising a soft style that stresses yielding and deflecting in the
- fighting application came out blunt and rude in their attacks during a
- flame war :) )
-
- Peter Chan
-
-