GrahamB wrote:Neigong is very important if you have lots of books and videos to sell.
Amazing how many sketchy instructors (ones with marketing) have vague lineages, or not clear on who they learned it from.
GrahamB wrote:Neigong is very important if you have lots of books and videos to sell.
GrahamB wrote:Neigong is very important if you have lots of books and videos to sell.
Doc Stier wrote:Rhen wrote:Hu had the first Qigong clinic in Beijing, taught Wuji acupuncture and martial arts.
What is Wuji acupuncture?
MiaoZhen wrote:Yes, the Hunyuan Qigong set is good, although it is a simplification of the Neigong that Feng learned from Hu. Hu originally taught a much wider curriculum to Feng, including his Stick/Ruler sets, as well as seated exercises and meditation. Hu also wrote a few books of course with a wide range of material, although he left a lot of things out. Early on in his teaching Feng taught this larger curriculum to his early disciples (some of whom are still teaching the same), but in his later years simplified things for more mass teaching.
Rhen wrote:In reality there is no dan tien, only lower diaphragm breathing, there is no Du or Ren channel, only the spinal cord.
Rhen wrote:just playing devil's advocate. I'd be curious if they ever find a "Tan T'ien" in the cadaver of trained qigong monks or something. It is a energy body thing. Nothing but flesh, muscle, intestines, mesentery in the abdomen, oh and lymph nodes, nerves, etc.
robert wrote:Rhen wrote:just playing devil's advocate. I'd be curious if they ever find a "Tan T'ien" in the cadaver of trained qigong monks or something. It is a energy body thing. Nothing but flesh, muscle, intestines, mesentery in the abdomen, oh and lymph nodes, nerves, etc.
Is wind real? Is there an object you can point to that is wind? Wind is a function. Wind is a function of pressure differentials - yin and yang.
Return to Xingyiquan - Baguazhang - Taijiquan
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 44 guests