Qigong

I’ve been intrigued by qigong for a long time, but until a couple of months ago, had serious doubts about whether it was really possible to manipulate one’s energy.

In late August, Justine and I went to visit some friends at East-West Wing Chun in Oakland. Their eskrima master, Sultan Uddin, was visiting from L.A. and giving some demos and guidance at the school that evening. At one point he mentioned that controlling energy could make techniques more effective. I asked him if he was talking about something similar to tai chi or qigong, and he offered to demonstrate. He did three demonstrations.

In the first demo, he had me stand with my arms straight out in front of me, hand over hand, at shoulder height. He pushed down on my hands while I resisted. The first time, I was able to resist slightly but he’s way bigger than I am, and was able to push my arms down. The second time, he pushed them down immediately, claiming that he disrupted my energy. Surely he could have simply pushed harder and more suddenly, but I didn’t say anything. The third time, he first told me to relax as he slowly ran his palm up my spine, about an inch away. I didn’t feel anything. When we did the exercise again however, I was able to resist easily. I could tell he was pushing harder than before, leaning on my hands with his body weight. It was unreal. After a few seconds, something popped in my shoulder and my arms finally fell. He said that he had given me energy with which I was able to resist. I was shocked by what I had just experienced.

For the second demo, my memory is hazy but I think he first did something similar to the first demo to fortify me with energy. He then had two people stand behind me, feet planted and arms propping me forward to keep me from being pushed back. With two fingers, he pushed just to the side of the gap below the sternum. Seemingly without much effort, he pushed me and the two people behind me back a few feet despite that they were pushing as hard as they could in the opposite direction. I suppose the key point is that I was completely unhurt by a fairly large force concentrated into a single point on my chest.

For the third demo, he had Justine stand facing me with her left arm outstretched, palm a few inches away from my chest. He stood behind her with his palms a couple of inches away from her back. I just stood there not knowing what was happening. After a little while he finished and I asked what was supposed to have happened. He told me to ask the people watching. I did, and they said that I was swaying back and forth. I guess he was supposedly controlling me by sending his energy through Justine.

The second and third demos were questionable; I can see how they could easily be faked. But the first one blew my mind. Resisting with my arms that last time definitely felt different. He had definitely done something to me. I asked him if this was part of eskrima and he said not really; it’s something you can develop by practicing anything for a really long time. He joked that you could even gain such power through gardening. He added that he had only shown me the kind of energy manipulation used for fighting, and that healing was much different. During the drive home, Justine and I were both wired. It was amazing to see that this was real, and of course I had many questions. Unfortunately, Master Uddin only visits every couple of months, so it would be impossible to train with him regularly.

A couple of weeks later, I searched for qigong teachers near Mountain View and found Unison Health Connection, an accupuncture and qigong healing practice owned by Master Philip Yang. He was offering a class that started in a few weeks, so I stopped by after work one evening to talk to him. He seemed very genuine and gave satisfactory answers to my questions, so I decided to go for it despite the high price.

The bulk of each class covers principles of qi, with a bit of technique at the end of each session. The techniques form a 16-part sequence of movements and meditation which we’re supposed to practice each day if possible. It’s only 30-45 minutes to go through the whole thing, but it’s hard to keep this up during the work week. I’m averaging about 4 sessions a week, and the only way I’ll realistically do this every day is if I wake up earlier and make time for it in the morning (which is when it’s optimal anyway).

I think I’ve made decent progress. For the first couple of weeks I couldn’t feel anything, but during the third class he had us emit qi from the fingers of one hand into the palm of the other. I could definitely feel it. I’ve since tried sending qi into Justine’s palm a few times and she can also feel it almost every time. At this point I can usually send qi into my hands at will. It feels like a very subtle internal pressure, like my hand is being inflated slightly. If I send a lot of qi, my hands will start to tingle. I think I can also draw qi out of other things through my hands and into my body, but this would be harder to confirm.

We’ve covered a lot in the class, some of which is difficult for me to believe, such as contacting ancient masters or gathering qi from things that are thousands of miles away. Each class seems to cover more fantastic things, but I’m trying to keep an open mind. For the moment I’ll keep practicing and will post again if there are breakthroughs :]

Comments (6) to “Qigong”

  1. hi phil, just visiting your site for the first time in ages. you really write some interesting stuff.
    With this last entry though, some of the things you wrote in the end sounded a lot like falun gon, ’such as contacting ancient masters or gathering qi from things that are thousands of miles away’. well, i guess i’m writing you this message because it’s just a bit disconcerting to me.

  2. I did a bit of reading about Falun Gong and parts of it do sound similar. The style I’m learning is called Yuan Gong, and like Falun Gong, it’s based on Buddhist and Taoist practices. While the focus for this class is healing, there are indeed spiritual elements, but I believe they’re in line with Buddhist and Taoist beliefs. Falun Gong seems to wildly deviate from both, and it seems much of the controversy behind it stems from this. Regardless whether Yuan Gong and Falun Gong are related, although I’m trying to keep an open mind for the benefit of my practice, I am wary of the spiritual implications, especially reconciling them with my Christian beliefs. I think the majority of qigong practitioners use it strictly for health benefits, and this has been my plan all along :]

  3. I’m not exactly well read on Falun Gong, but from what I gather its one of the thousands of styles of Qigong, except it became very political and therefore was persecuted by the PRC. Actually, there was a very popular style called “White Crane Qi-gong” in the 1980s which millions of people were practicing. It encouraged not just the proscribed movements in most styles, but also *spontaneous* uncontrolled movements of energy manifest in the body - many observers said it looked like people were possessed. According to one scholar, alot of these spontaneous releases of energy have to do with repressed emotions from the Cultural Revolution - the somatization of mental energies. Anyways, that was banned by the government as well because its hard to control people who are doing sponaneous movements.

    But on the “Is Qi real?” issue, I have a good story! When I was twelve, my uncle (a lifetime karate practioner) told me that one time his master came to visit his home in Hawaii. He did a few rather interesting ‘demos’. One involved touching 5 points on my cousins bare back, causing 5 large welts to form. Apparently this can be fatal, but the master wipped them away with his “Qi” soon after they had formed. The second stunt is even harder to believe. Apparently he *disappeared* by using his Qi to hide himself from observers. The third was, of course, levetating objects which my uncle testifies he saw first hand. As they say, when you get to the higher levels of any martial art, it becomes energy manipulation more than physical movements. Well, that’s what I hear anyways! Oh, my uncle also taught us to make “qi-balls” as kids, so I guess I’ve been open to that possibility from a young age.

    Lastly, how does doing qigong influence your religious beliefs?

  4. How does doing qigong influence my religious beliefs? Good question. I believe our minds are capable of more than we can understand. I see qigong as a practice of controlling the mind, using movements and breathing to make it easier to focus. This doesn’t conflict with Christianity, and actually, I don’t think anything Master Yang covered goes against what’s in the Bible, factually at least. I think calling upon ancient masters for help would be frowned upon, but Master Yang considers Jesus to be an ancient master as well. A couple of the meditations we learned are very similar to prayer, except that the benefit supposedly comes as you are meditating (healing for example) rather than at some point in the future. I’d say that qigong doesn’t make my Christian beliefs any stronger or weaker because I only think of it in terms of wellbeing.

  5. I’ve read and done a bit of exploring around this issue. For a while now, I’ve been able to form the so called ‘qi balls’ between my hands. I did a bit bit of research on this too and seems like almost all religious/spiritual traditions refer to this energy manipulation in one way or another. Reiki and sufism are a couple of such examples.

    Though,like phil, I feel that this is more just a capacity of the mind that we don’t really understand right now. Not really sure what all is possible through this energy.. hope to continue experimenting with this though… its quite fun :-)… what about you phil? had any other conclusive experiences?

  6. This is probably completely irrelevant but I ran into this article right after posting my comment above… for your reading pleasure :-)

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/10/science/10princeton.html

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