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experiencelifemag.com
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Serenity Search
A centuries-old Chinese system for cultivating health, vitality and enlightenment, qi gong is now gaining a reputation here in the West - as one of the most effective stress-busters around.
By Steven Karageanes |
July-August 2002 |
Into the Limelight
Free and Easy
Practice Makes Perfect
Medicinal Purposes
Magical Mystery Tour
Resources
Once just a shadowy suspect in ill-health, stress has now become public enemy
No. 1. It’s a major risk factor in cardiac disease, hypertension and cancer, and
according to the National Center for Health Statistics, stress contributes to
all five leading causes of death: heart disease, cancer, stroke, chronic lower
respiratory disease and accidents. As surveys across job markets show stress
levels worsening and as the aftermath of September 11th is still sinking in,
stress has even spawned yet another newly diagnosed malady — Acute Stress
Disorder (ASD). Scary stuff. Stress is something that happens to us, but it
is also something we do to ourselves. Surrounded by wireless email, instant
messaging, faxing, cell phones and two-way radios, we live in a 24/7 consumer
culture obsessed with instant gratification. It’s a world where it sometimes
seems that everyone is screaming like Veruca Salt to Willy Wonka: “I want it
all, and I want it NOW!” It’s mindsets like that that drive many to go in
search of antidotes like Qi Gong. And for most, Qi Gong delivers — fast relief
from stress and anxiety, and often a great deal more. That was the case for
John Du Cane, a Cambridge-educated Englishman who has been practicing and
teaching Qi Gong for decades. Although Du Cane was originally drawn to the
2,000-year-old Chinese art for its spiritual and meditative aspects, he says
that as soon as he began practicing Qi Gong (pronounced “chee gong,”) he knew he
had found a tool for self-healing — something that would change his life
forever. That was 25 years ago. Today, Du Cane makes his home in the U.S.,
and is one of the nation’s leading Qi Gong experts. He teaches Qi Gong and also
runs a publishing company that produces a variety of health, fitness and
martial-arts materials, including a whole line of Qi Gong books and videos.
According to Du Cane, interest in this serene and calming art has been steadily
climbing over the past decade, both here and abroad. Why? “In my 25 years of
looking,” says DuCane, “it’s the most powerful antidote to stress I’ve ever
encountered.”
Into the Limelight
Qi Gong got its first round of U.S. publicity in 1993
when Bill Moyers presented it as part of the PBS television series Healing and
the Mind. Then, in 1998, the practice got an even bigger publicity boost when
the conservative Chinese government attempted to shut down Falun Gong, a highly
popular Qi Gong sect, fearing it might pose a populist threat. After the
incident was featured in the U.S. news, Western interest in Qi Gong exploded.
Apparently a lot of people figured — rightly — that any mind-body practice
spectacular enough to raise political ire had to be worth checking out. In
recent years Qi Gong and Tai Chi (one form of Qi Gong) have become increasingly
popular with all kinds of mainstream consumers, especially
fitness-oriented baby-boomers and stressed-out executives. Worldwide, it’s
estimated that Qi Gong is practiced by more than 100 million people. Part of
Qi Gong’s popularity is that it can be practiced by virtually anyone, at any age
and in any physical condition. The motions of Qi Gong mostly involve slow, fluid
gestures matched with visualizations, breathing patterns and subtle shifts of
weight. It’s a pleasant, serene experience, and a marked departure from the
harder, faster pace of many traditional fitness efforts. According to Du Cane,
nearly everyone who practices regularly can expect to derive significant health
benefits — stress-relief not least among them. The Chinese believe that
physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellness all depend on cultivating the
healthy movement of Qi, a universal energy force that flows constantly within
and around us. According to Chinese medicine and philosophy, any disruption or
imbalance in the flow of Qi causes disharmony in the mind, body and spirit,
leading to disorder and illness. Qi Gong removes blockages and redistributes Qi,
causing it to flow more evenly and freely. Qi Gong also facilitates blood
and lymph circulation by combining a series of fluid movements — each designed
to massage and stimulate specific areas of the body — with simple, but highly
effective, breathing techniques.
Free and Easy
“When you learn Qi Gong,” explains Du Cane, “you relearn a
childlike manner of abdominal breathing.” By employing this deep-belly breathing
instead of the more shallow chest breathing to which we’ve become habituated, Du
Cane asserts, we release tension and rebalance the energy centers in our
stomach, heart and head while oxygenating our tissues and enlivening our senses.
Both mentally and physically, the result is a restorative one. In addition to
helping the individual balance his or her own system, Qi Gong also seeks to
strengthen and balance the individual’s connection with nature. In fact, many Qi
Gong techniques take their inspiration from plants and animals. One group of Qi
Gong exercises, called the Five Animal Frolics, is a series of techniques that
incorporate visualizations and movements based on the crane, monkey, tiger, deer
and bear. “The Five Animal Frolics are wonderful because they bring a lot of
ease and playfulness into the practice,” says Nancy Herzberg, an Oregon-based Qi
Gong, Tai Chi and yoga instructor, who has been doing Qi Gong for more than 20
years. She learned the Animal Frolics while studying with Du Cane years ago, and
now enjoys teaching them to others. “It is fun to stop being human and act like
an animal for a while.” Fun and frolics aside, though, Qi Gong is serious
medicine for stress, which studies have shown can inhibit both wound healing and
immune response. In the presence of stress, hormone levels shift, breathing
becomes constricted, joints stiffen, muscles tighten, colds and flus become more
common. Psychologically, stress sets up a vicious cycle of addiction to the
excitement and euphoria of the “adrenaline rush.” Although some people are inspired to perform at their best under stressful
conditions, they can also become so dependent on those highs and lows that
breaking free requires not just relaxation, but a deliberate relaxation
strategy. “Qi Gong gets you off that addictive roller coaster,” Du Cane
asserts.
Practice Makes Perfect
Although on the surface, Qi Gong looks incredibly
simple, when you first try it, you may be surprised to find yourself challenged
in unfamiliar ways. Simultaneously focusing on breath, balance, posture,
gesture, visualization and intent requires intense concentration, and yet the
whole purpose is to maintain utterly at relaxed and ease. For many Americans,
this proves tough, but weirdly pleasing at the same time. “When you practice Qi
Gong,” explains Du Cane, “you reach a place that is at the same time comfortable
and stimulating, like looking into a lover’s eyes or slipping into a warm bath.”
Happily, it’s not just while you are practicing Qi Gong that you get to reap
its benefits. “Once you have established the feeling of balance and harmony,
your body begins to integrate and remember it,” DuCane notes. “Then, when stress
occurs, rather than automatically accepting and falling into the old patterns of
‘dis-ease,’ your system recognizes the imbalance as unnatural, and wants to
return instead to that healthier, more comfortable feeling.” Qi Gong is not a
magic pill or a one-time shot. Achieving balance in mind, body and breath takes
both will and desire, and staying in balance requires discipline. Although
you can learn the basics of Qi Gong from a book or video, the best way to get
started is to simply sign up for a class and start doing the techniques. You can
start with a few minutes a day, and work your way up to whatever practice feels
best. A daily Qi Gong practice is ideal, Du Cane asserts, because stress is
daily too, and it just keeps on coming. “Like dust on a mirror,” he notes, “you
need to keep wiping it away.” Steven Karageanes is a sports medicine physician at Henry Ford Hospital in
Detroit, Mich. He is a team physician for the Detroit Tigers, a consultant for
USA Gymnastics, and a fellow of the American Osteopathic Academy of Sports
Medicine. He is also a freelance journalist.
Medicinal Purposes
Wayne English, D.O., has been practicing sports medicine in Texas for more
than 30 years. About 10 years ago, while looking for ways to help his patients
stay healthier and enjoy life more, he began integrating Qi Gong principles into
his medical practice. Qi Gong medical philosophies and osteopathic
sports-medicine principles are closely aligned, says English, in that both
assume that proper energy flow is essential to wellness. “It just makes sense
to holistically incorporate the whole body in maintaining energy and function,”
says Dr. English. “We are built to be in motion. The Qi is always in motion, and
Qi Gong optimizes that.” Dr. English’s son, Jeff, a Tai Chi instructor and
tennis pro, now regularly integrates Qi Gong methods into his tennis lessons.
Because it helps players learn to generate power at the core of the body instead
of the arm, he says, the technique is proving highly successful. Dr. English
says that he, too, has found the results to be excellent. “There are four major
benefits of Qi Gong,” English explains. “One, it makes possible the integration
of mind, body and spiritual healing. Two, it bridges the gap between passive
healing procedures and progressive, resistive exercise. Three, it teaches focus,
balance and movement of energy through the body. And four, it helps prevent
long-term pain and disability.” Qi Gong is reputed to lower stress hormones,
enhance toxin clearance, improve healing rates and immune function while
countering many aging-related health challenges. For example, Qi Gong proponents
say the practice can help you … - Boost metabolism
- Lower blood
pressure
- Flush lymph system
- Support nervous
system
- Improve balance and fluidity of movement
- Massage organs
and glands
- Lubricate muscles and joints
- Oxygenate
tissues
- Increase energy and vitality
- Improve mental
clarity
- Increase peace of mind
Some experts suggest that part of the reason Qi Gong proves so effective for
so many purposes is that it may help to rewire our neurological system — away
from our overused sympathetic nervous system (responsible for regulating our
“flight or fight” responses) and toward the parasympathetic nervous system,
which is more attuned to feelings of pleasure, relaxation and harmony.
Magical Mystery Tour
Qi Gong has many schools, many forms and many uses — from medical sciences to
mystical spiritual practices and even lethal fighting arts. Generally though, Qi
Gong can be thought of as any set of breathing, meditative and
circulation-enhancing techniques that are capable of improving health,
preventing illness and strengthening the body. At once practical and esoteric,
simple and endlessly complex, this ancient Chinese art invites us to examine and
cultivate our own intimate relationship with the natural, universal energy force
called Qi. In Qigong Empowerment: A Guide to Medical Taoist Buddhist Wushu
Energy Cultivation, Master Shou-Yu Liang and Wen-Ching Wu describe Qi as “the
intrinsic substance or vital force behind all things in the universe,” —
“the medium between and within all material substances.” The term gong, they
say, “refers to the power to produce an effect, an attainment of, or an accomplishment that is achieved with steady practice.” Loosely, they say, Qi
Gong can be translated as “the attainment of qi.” The basic idea is, if you
are seeking self-mastery or attainment in any area of your life — from health to
career to spiritual development — then you need to get your Qi in gear. And
depending on your objectives, there are probably one or more forms of Qi Gong
that can help you do that, from self-healing massage and meditative practices,
to challenging physical training sessions. While the views and training
approaches of the various forms of Qi Gong are diverse, say Liang and Wu, “all
bring to mind the importance of self-awareness, self-reliance and being
responsible for our own physical and spiritual well-being.”
Resources
BOOKS The Way of Qi Gong by Ken Cohen (Ballantine Wellspring,
1999) Qi Gong Empowerment by Master Shou-Yu Liang and Wen-Ching Wu (The Way
of the Dragon, 1996) The Healing Promise of Qi by Roger Jahnke, O.M.D.
(Contemporary Books, 2002) Chi Kung: Cultivating Personal Energy by James
MacRitchie (Element Books, Ltd., 1997) Chi Self-Massage: The Taoist Way of
Rejuvenation by Mantak Chia (Healing Tao Books Inc., 1986) WEB www.qigong-chikung.com Features
Roger Jahnke’s work, includes good explanation of both Tai Chi and Qi
Gong. www.dragondoor.com Vast
collection of books and videos on Qi Gong, plus background information on the
art’s origin, philosophical basis and practice. www.qi.org Qi Gong Association of America offers
articles, FAQs, book and CD recommendations, plus help locating a teacher. www.learningstrategies.com/qigong Information
a health-and-healing oriented personal-learning course (video series) from
Master Chunyi Lin, a renowned Qi Gong healer and instructor.
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Serenity Search
A centuries-old Chinese system for cultivating health, vitality and enlightenment, qi gong is now gaining a reputation here in the West - as one of the most effective stress-busters around.
By Steven Karageanes | Renewal Department, July-August 2002 |
Into the Limelight
Free and Easy
Practice Makes Perfect
Medicinal Purposes
Magical Mystery Tour
Resources
Once just a shadowy suspect in ill-health, stress has now become public enemy
No. 1. It’s a major risk factor in cardiac disease, hypertension and cancer, and
according to the National Center for Health Statistics, stress contributes to
all five leading causes of death: heart disease, cancer, stroke, chronic lower
respiratory disease and accidents. As surveys across job markets show stress
levels worsening and as the aftermath of September 11th is still sinking in,
stress has even spawned yet another newly diagnosed malady — Acute Stress
Disorder (ASD). Scary stuff. Stress is something that happens to us, but it
is also something we do to ourselves. Surrounded by wireless email, instant
messaging, faxing, cell phones and two-way radios, we live in a 24/7 consumer
culture obsessed with instant gratification. It’s a world where it sometimes
seems that everyone is screaming like Veruca Salt to Willy Wonka: “I want it
all, and I want it NOW!” It’s mindsets like that that drive many to go in
search of antidotes like Qi Gong. And for most, Qi Gong delivers — fast relief
from stress and anxiety, and often a great deal more. That was the case for
John Du Cane, a Cambridge-educated Englishman who has been practicing and
teaching Qi Gong for decades. Although Du Cane was originally drawn to the
2,000-year-old Chinese art for its spiritual and meditative aspects, he says
that as soon as he began practicing Qi Gong (pronounced “chee gong,”) he knew he
had found a tool for self-healing — something that would change his life
forever. That was 25 years ago. Today, Du Cane makes his home in the U.S.,
and is one of the nation’s leading Qi Gong experts. He teaches Qi Gong and also
runs a publishing company that produces a variety of health, fitness and
martial-arts materials, including a whole line of Qi Gong books and videos.
According to Du Cane, interest in this serene and calming art has been steadily
climbing over the past decade, both here and abroad. Why? “In my 25 years of
looking,” says DuCane, “it’s the most powerful antidote to stress I’ve ever
encountered.”
Into the Limelight (Back to Top)
Qi Gong got its first round of U.S. publicity in 1993
when Bill Moyers presented it as part of the PBS television series Healing and
the Mind. Then, in 1998, the practice got an even bigger publicity boost when
the conservative Chinese government attempted to shut down Falun Gong, a highly
popular Qi Gong sect, fearing it might pose a populist threat. After the
incident was featured in the U.S. news, Western interest in Qi Gong exploded.
Apparently a lot of people figured — rightly — that any mind-body practice
spectacular enough to raise political ire had to be worth checking out. In
recent years Qi Gong and Tai Chi (one form of Qi Gong) have become increasingly
popular with all kinds of mainstream consumers, especially
fitness-oriented baby-boomers and stressed-out executives. Worldwide, it’s
estimated that Qi Gong is practiced by more than 100 million people. Part of
Qi Gong’s popularity is that it can be practiced by virtually anyone, at any age
and in any physical condition. The motions of Qi Gong mostly involve slow, fluid
gestures matched with visualizations, breathing patterns and subtle shifts of
weight. It’s a pleasant, serene experience, and a marked departure from the
harder, faster pace of many traditional fitness efforts. According to Du Cane,
nearly everyone who practices regularly can expect to derive significant health
benefits — stress-relief not least among them. The Chinese believe that
physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellness all depend on cultivating the
healthy movement of Qi, a universal energy force that flows constantly within
and around us. According to Chinese medicine and philosophy, any disruption or
imbalance in the flow of Qi causes disharmony in the mind, body and spirit,
leading to disorder and illness. Qi Gong removes blockages and redistributes Qi,
causing it to flow more evenly and freely. Qi Gong also facilitates blood
and lymph circulation by combining a series of fluid movements — each designed
to massage and stimulate specific areas of the body — with simple, but highly
effective, breathing techniques.
Free and Easy (Back to Top)
“When you learn Qi Gong,” explains Du Cane, “you relearn a
childlike manner of abdominal breathing.” By employing this deep-belly breathing
instead of the more shallow chest breathing to which we’ve become habituated, Du
Cane asserts, we release tension and rebalance the energy centers in our
stomach, heart and head while oxygenating our tissues and enlivening our senses.
Both mentally and physically, the result is a restorative one. In addition to
helping the individual balance his or her own system, Qi Gong also seeks to
strengthen and balance the individual’s connection with nature. In fact, many Qi
Gong techniques take their inspiration from plants and animals. One group of Qi
Gong exercises, called the Five Animal Frolics, is a series of techniques that
incorporate visualizations and movements based on the crane, monkey, tiger, deer
and bear. “The Five Animal Frolics are wonderful because they bring a lot of
ease and playfulness into the practice,” says Nancy Herzberg, an Oregon-based Qi
Gong, Tai Chi and yoga instructor, who has been doing Qi Gong for more than 20
years. She learned the Animal Frolics while studying with Du Cane years ago, and
now enjoys teaching them to others. “It is fun to stop being human and act like
an animal for a while.” Fun and frolics aside, though, Qi Gong is serious
medicine for stress, which studies have shown can inhibit both wound healing and
immune response. In the presence of stress, hormone levels shift, breathing
becomes constricted, joints stiffen, muscles tighten, colds and flus become more
common. Psychologically, stress sets up a vicious cycle of addiction to the
excitement and euphoria of the “adrenaline rush.” Although some people are inspired to perform at their best under stressful
conditions, they can also become so dependent on those highs and lows that
breaking free requires not just relaxation, but a deliberate relaxation
strategy. “Qi Gong gets you off that addictive roller coaster,” Du Cane
asserts.
Practice Makes Perfect (Back to Top)
Although on the surface, Qi Gong looks incredibly
simple, when you first try it, you may be surprised to find yourself challenged
in unfamiliar ways. Simultaneously focusing on breath, balance, posture,
gesture, visualization and intent requires intense concentration, and yet the
whole purpose is to maintain utterly at relaxed and ease. For many Americans,
this proves tough, but weirdly pleasing at the same time. “When you practice Qi
Gong,” explains Du Cane, “you reach a place that is at the same time comfortable
and stimulating, like looking into a lover’s eyes or slipping into a warm bath.”
Happily, it’s not just while you are practicing Qi Gong that you get to reap
its benefits. “Once you have established the feeling of balance and harmony,
your body begins to integrate and remember it,” DuCane notes. “Then, when stress
occurs, rather than automatically accepting and falling into the old patterns of
‘dis-ease,’ your system recognizes the imbalance as unnatural, and wants to
return instead to that healthier, more comfortable feeling.” Qi Gong is not a
magic pill or a one-time shot. Achieving balance in mind, body and breath takes
both will and desire, and staying in balance requires discipline. Although
you can learn the basics of Qi Gong from a book or video, the best way to get
started is to simply sign up for a class and start doing the techniques. You can
start with a few minutes a day, and work your way up to whatever practice feels
best. A daily Qi Gong practice is ideal, Du Cane asserts, because stress is
daily too, and it just keeps on coming. “Like dust on a mirror,” he notes, “you
need to keep wiping it away.” Steven Karageanes is a sports medicine physician at Henry Ford Hospital in
Detroit, Mich. He is a team physician for the Detroit Tigers, a consultant for
USA Gymnastics, and a fellow of the American Osteopathic Academy of Sports
Medicine. He is also a freelance journalist.
Medicinal Purposes (Back to Top)
Wayne English, D.O., has been practicing sports medicine in Texas for more
than 30 years. About 10 years ago, while looking for ways to help his patients
stay healthier and enjoy life more, he began integrating Qi Gong principles into
his medical practice. Qi Gong medical philosophies and osteopathic
sports-medicine principles are closely aligned, says English, in that both
assume that proper energy flow is essential to wellness. “It just makes sense
to holistically incorporate the whole body in maintaining energy and function,”
says Dr. English. “We are built to be in motion. The Qi is always in motion, and
Qi Gong optimizes that.” Dr. English’s son, Jeff, a Tai Chi instructor and
tennis pro, now regularly integrates Qi Gong methods into his tennis lessons.
Because it helps players learn to generate power at the core of the body instead
of the arm, he says, the technique is proving highly successful. Dr. English
says that he, too, has found the results to be excellent. “There are four major
benefits of Qi Gong,” English explains. “One, it makes possible the integration
of mind, body and spiritual healing. Two, it bridges the gap between passive
healing procedures and progressive, resistive exercise. Three, it teaches focus,
balance and movement of energy through the body. And four, it helps prevent
long-term pain and disability.” Qi Gong is reputed to lower stress hormones,
enhance toxin clearance, improve healing rates and immune function while
countering many aging-related health challenges. For example, Qi Gong proponents
say the practice can help you … - Boost metabolism
- Lower blood
pressure
- Flush lymph system
- Support nervous
system
- Improve balance and fluidity of movement
- Massage organs
and glands
- Lubricate muscles and joints
- Oxygenate
tissues
- Increase energy and vitality
- Improve mental
clarity
- Increase peace of mind
Some experts suggest that part of the reason Qi Gong proves so effective for
so many purposes is that it may help to rewire our neurological system — away
from our overused sympathetic nervous system (responsible for regulating our
“flight or fight” responses) and toward the parasympathetic nervous system,
which is more attuned to feelings of pleasure, relaxation and harmony.
Magical Mystery Tour (Back to Top)
Qi Gong has many schools, many forms and many uses — from medical sciences to
mystical spiritual practices and even lethal fighting arts. Generally though, Qi
Gong can be thought of as any set of breathing, meditative and
circulation-enhancing techniques that are capable of improving health,
preventing illness and strengthening the body. At once practical and esoteric,
simple and endlessly complex, this ancient Chinese art invites us to examine and
cultivate our own intimate relationship with the natural, universal energy force
called Qi. In Qigong Empowerment: A Guide to Medical Taoist Buddhist Wushu
Energy Cultivation, Master Shou-Yu Liang and Wen-Ching Wu describe Qi as “the
intrinsic substance or vital force behind all things in the universe,” —
“the medium between and within all material substances.” The term gong, they
say, “refers to the power to produce an effect, an attainment of, or an accomplishment that is achieved with steady practice.” Loosely, they say, Qi
Gong can be translated as “the attainment of qi.” The basic idea is, if you
are seeking self-mastery or attainment in any area of your life — from health to
career to spiritual development — then you need to get your Qi in gear. And
depending on your objectives, there are probably one or more forms of Qi Gong
that can help you do that, from self-healing massage and meditative practices,
to challenging physical training sessions. While the views and training
approaches of the various forms of Qi Gong are diverse, say Liang and Wu, “all
bring to mind the importance of self-awareness, self-reliance and being
responsible for our own physical and spiritual well-being.”
Resources (Back to Top)
BOOKS The Way of Qi Gong by Ken Cohen (Ballantine Wellspring,
1999) Qi Gong Empowerment by Master Shou-Yu Liang and Wen-Ching Wu (The Way
of the Dragon, 1996) The Healing Promise of Qi by Roger Jahnke, O.M.D.
(Contemporary Books, 2002) Chi Kung: Cultivating Personal Energy by James
MacRitchie (Element Books, Ltd., 1997) Chi Self-Massage: The Taoist Way of
Rejuvenation by Mantak Chia (Healing Tao Books Inc., 1986) WEB www.qigong-chikung.com Features
Roger Jahnke’s work, includes good explanation of both Tai Chi and Qi
Gong. www.dragondoor.com Vast
collection of books and videos on Qi Gong, plus background information on the
art’s origin, philosophical basis and practice. www.qi.org Qi Gong Association of America offers
articles, FAQs, book and CD recommendations, plus help locating a teacher. www.learningstrategies.com/qigong Information
a health-and-healing oriented personal-learning course (video series) from
Master Chunyi Lin, a renowned Qi Gong healer and instructor.
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