Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

tuina - yi zhi chan

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Hi Doc,

I was recently training in a Qi Gong form when my teacher along with some

other people in the group talked of a master visiting from China,at his

group in Sydney.

The visiting master was challenged by some students who did not know him and

so he had them stand in a row one in front of the other, in front of him.

The visiting master picked up the shirt sleeves only of the front person and

lightly shook them. He then dropped them and simply said " GO " at which time

all 5 people where thrown back to a great degree. I also did not witness

this directly but 4 people at my group did.

Best Wishes

Anita

-

" Doc " <Doc

<Chinese Traditional Medicine >

Thursday, September 23, 2004 10:39 AM

Re: tuina - yi zhi chan

 

 

>

> I have seen/experienced practitioners simply touch a person and

> knock them over

>

>

> I have knocked a total stranger -who believed i could not- back 20' with a

very slight tap

>

> (in front of twenty thousand witnesses)

>

> I break wood and cinder block with a relaxed hand and no physical

> force to speak of

>

>

> I watched Sifu Chen break roof tyle by simply touching it and with

> the tiniest of movements

>

> but

>

> doing these things without touching

> i relegate to legend

> everyone who has told me that they know of it happenning

> says

>

> I was told by *** who saw it

>

> but never

>

> I Saw it

>

> as for remote healing

> East West Journal (i think but might have been New Age) did a study a few

years back and found

> Ch'i Kung effective

> Ch'i Kung without touching no effect

> and Reiki

> no effect

>

> I had a patient die from cancer not long ago (I was helping with

> pain only since cancer is ouside my competence to treat)

> This patient had been pronounced cured by her Reiki Practitioner

> who often treated over the phone

>

> Doc

>

 

>

> Read only the mail you want - Mail SpamGuard.

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Speaking of tuina, when i was in school i learned tuina from a teacher from

Shanghai. She

had studied under a master of yi zhi chan - one thumb meditation was how she

translated

it. It was basically a stationary technique using gentle pressure with a slight

rhythmic

rocking motion. The key was to establish a meditative state of mind and spend

some time

on the point one was treating. I learned all the other techniques she taught,

like guan

(rolling), etc. But I used the yi zhi chan more than anything else.

 

When I taught at the school in Miami, the tuina teacher was also from Shanghai.

He taught

the techniques such as guan in a very similar way as i had learned. But the yi

zhi chan was

very different -- it still used the thumb and a slight rocking motion but was

vigorous, quick and mobile, almost like a combination of dotting and guan but

done with

the thumb. Seemed much less meditative.

 

I found this difference intriguing. Did anyone else here learn yi zhi chan and

if so from

where and how was the technique performed?

 

robert hayden

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My tuina instructor in acupuncture school (a chiropractor, orthopedic

surgeon & TCM doctor from china, don't remember which part)

emphasized the more aggressive form. It was one of the more difficult

techniques for the students to get the hang of, although he would

teach it slower in the beginning and have everyone speed it up later.

He said that practitioners used to strengthen their thumbs by forming

the fist and standing upside down balancing themselves on the tip of

one thumb.

 

> Did anyone else here learn yi zhi chan and if so from

> where and how was the technique performed?

>

> robert hayden

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi All, & Brian,

 

> Phil, I must say I continue to be surprised by the sheer wealth of

> information you present. You bring up an issue of debate amongst

> taiji / qigong enthusiasts which is still unresolved for me. ...

 

Brian, its is not my info! I I am an avid Googler! One can find an

incredible amount of info on Google, especially if one uses the

features available on the advanced Google search engine:

http://www.google.com/advanced_search

 

Colleagues, if YOU have NOT used the Google advanced search

facilities, you might take a few minutes to explore them. They help

one to refine a search dramatically.

 

Google also accepts inputs in Hanzi, Korean, Japanese and

Russian script. So if you have oriental language dictionaries on CD

or online, or a copy of Wenlin or NJStar, you can input oriental

characters (such as Hanzi script) for herb names, formulas,

syndromes, etc and come up with data from the far east. Of

course, one then has the problem of translating that!

 

My problem is to know what info on Google one can TRUST,

because so much of it is commercial drivel.

 

But I AM interested in the possibility of Gigong / Yi effects at a

distance. Clearly, if that is possible, it could have amazing uses in

both Dx and Tx of human and animal subjects.

 

 

Best regards,

 

Email: <

 

WORK : Teagasc Research Management, Sandymount Ave., Dublin 4, Ireland

Mobile: 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

 

HOME : 1 Esker Lawns, Lucan, Dublin, Ireland

Tel : 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

WWW : http://homepage.eircom.net/~progers/searchap.htm

 

Chinese Proverb: " Man who says it can't be done, should not interrupt man doing

it "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi All, & Brian & Robert,

 

Robert wrote:

> Did anyone else here learn yi zhi chan and if so from where and

> how was the technique performed?

 

Brian replied:

> My tuina instructor in acupuncture school (a chiropractor,

> orthopedic surgeon & TCM doctor from china, don't remember which

> part) emphasized the more aggressive form. It was one of the more

> difficult techniques for the students to get the hang of, although

> he would teach it slower in the beginning and have everyone speed

> it up later. He said that practitioners used to strengthen their

> thumbs by forming the fist and standing upside down balancing

> themselves on the tip of one thumb.

 

See: http://tinyurl.com/5pszw

 

See also: http://www.hokkian-siauwlim.com/qigong.html

 

It says!!:

 

A Qi Gong master who has attained the apex of Nei Yang Gong

can kill a person from a distance of three meters without touching

him. Use of lesser Qi force will merely stun a person or knock him

down. This exceptional art is called Yi Yang Zhi (sun-ray finger)

better known as Yi Zhi Chan (one-finger art). However, the time of

day is an additional factor that must be considered in healing. The

best hours for medical treatment and for Qi Gong exercises, are

the early morning hours between 0300-0500h. The use of one-finger

art recognizes that acupuncture points respond differently at

various hours of the diurnal cycle, and if the time of application is

not right for the organ or area of the body associated with that

particular acupuncture point, the treatment may not be effective.

 

When a Qi Gong master can jump up from the ground and suspend

himself in the air with only his hands touching a wall, this is called

Bi Hu Gong, (the tiger climbing up the wall).

 

 

 

Best regards,

 

Email: <

 

WORK : Teagasc Research Management, Sandymount Ave., Dublin 4, Ireland

Mobile: 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

 

HOME : 1 Esker Lawns, Lucan, Dublin, Ireland

Tel : 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

WWW : http://homepage.eircom.net/~progers/searchap.htm

 

Chinese Proverb: " Man who says it can't be done, should not interrupt man doing

it "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Robert and Brian,

 

I have observed several tuina practitioners and each certainly has

their own style and preferred techniques - which I think is quite

natural.

 

I have never seem my current practitioner use " single finger

meditation " . His tuina preferences are deep circling techniques as

well as firm grasping and pushing. I think there is a practical aspect

to this. His bodywork protocol addresses all parts of the body in each

session - muscles, tendors/ligaments, bones, joints, fascia, etc. On

top of this he is clearing the energetic body using qigong and

applying qigong energy where necessary. This all has to be completed

within 50 minutes. So I do not think his Mind is in a framework to

" meditate " on individual points. However, he does spend some time when

he uses qigong - but this is an entirely different technique.

 

I on the otherhand can spend as much time as I like with someone, so

sometimes I will spend 1.5 - 2 hours. With this time allotment

available to me, I can use different techniques. Sometimes the

variation single finger techniques are very appropriate and I natural

use them. Usually, it is when I sense that there is a small blockage

that " needs " softer and deeper attention. While " deep and vigorous "

may in the short-term have the same effect as " slow and meditative " , I

think that over the longer term, the slower and more meditative

approach has a more profound effect on the Mind of the " receiver " . The

effects are therefore possibly more long-lasting. But I certainly

wouldn't say this is true in all cases.

 

One of the teachers at a TCM school that I attended was a simply

wonderful tuina/gigong teacher. She loved the single finger meditation

techniques because it went so well with her qigong. She is really

adored by the students at that school.

 

Regards,

Rich

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine , " kampo36 "

<kampo36> wrote:

> Speaking of tuina, when i was in school i learned tuina from a

teacher from Shanghai. She

> had studied under a master of yi zhi chan - one thumb meditation was

how she translated

> it. It was basically a stationary technique using gentle pressure

with a slight rhythmic

> rocking motion. The key was to establish a meditative state of mind

and spend some time

> on the point one was treating. I learned all the other techniques

she taught, like guan

> (rolling), etc. But I used the yi zhi chan more than anything else.

>

> When I taught at the school in Miami, the tuina teacher was also

from Shanghai. He taught

> the techniques such as guan in a very similar way as i had learned.

But the yi zhi chan was

> very different -- it still used the thumb and a slight rocking

motion but was

> vigorous, quick and mobile, almost like a combination of dotting and

guan but done with

> the thumb. Seemed much less meditative.

>

> I found this difference intriguing. Did anyone else here learn yi

zhi chan and if so from

> where and how was the technique performed?

>

> robert hayden

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Phil,

 

I must say I continue to be surprised by the sheer wealth of

information you present.

 

You bring up an issue of debate amongst taiji / qigong enthusiasts

which is still unresolved for me. This topic of knocking people

down / killing them without touching them is still difficult for me.

Certainly one doesn't need to touch the body to illicite qi

sensations, but knocking someone over from a distance has been

difficult for me to buy, perhaps because I haven't seen it or

experienced it myself.

 

I once went to a seminar in xuan kong (empty force) which the

instructor was manipulating his students from a far and knocking them

down, but wouldn't try it on anyone in the audience because he didn't

want to mess up their qi. My response is, if you're so advanced, why

wouldn't you be able to undo any damage that might happen? The

qigong he taught was certainly very good but this manipulation from a

distance seemed to be more for show.

 

Ken Cohen wrote an article in taiji magazine a while ago which he

referenced this and said it can happen as a scare tactic and only

works for the instructor on his students because the students tend to

have a natural fear / respect for the instructor. The strike has an

accompanying yell with it that shakes them up and they fall down. The

one person I know who has seen this happen falls into this category.

 

So the question is, has anyone ever seen someone knock over another

person that is unrelated to them and not looking at them. Well, this

isn't exactly an ethical thing to do (similar to what superman does

when he's drunk) so it may have to continue to be undecided in my

mind.

 

brian beard

 

>

> A Qi Gong master who has attained the apex of Nei Yang Gong

> can kill a person from a distance of three meters without touching

> him. Use of lesser Qi force will merely stun a person or knock him

> down. This exceptional art is called Yi Yang Zhi (sun-ray finger)

> better known as Yi Zhi Chan (one-finger art). However, the time of

> day is an additional factor that must be considered in healing. The

> best hours for medical treatment and for Qi Gong exercises, are

> the early morning hours between 0300-0500h. The use of one-finger

> art recognizes that acupuncture points respond differently at

> various hours of the diurnal cycle, and if the time of application

is

> not right for the organ or area of the body associated with that

> particular acupuncture point, the treatment may not be effective.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rich,

 

So could you elaborate on what the single finger techniques are

you're referring to?

 

--brian beard

 

> variation single finger techniques are very appropriate and I

natural

> use them. Usually, it is when I sense that there is a small blockage

> that " needs " softer and deeper attention. While " deep and vigorous "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Brian, Robert, et al.,

 

> Rich,

>

> So could you elaborate on what the single finger techniques are

> you're referring to?

>

> --brian beard

 

I have tried and seen many variations. It is all very natural

depending upon the nature of the blockage.

 

Sometimes, while I am doing bodywork, I will come across a very small

and deep blockage. It can be in the hands, in the arms, in the legs,

the the neck are - pretty much anywhere. Usually it is painful to the

receiver. Sometimes it is hard (stagnated).

 

It doesn't feel " right " to me to use large circular motions or deep

penetrating ones. It feels like it is a little " stuck " and just needs

to be nudged a bit to move - kind of letting the receiver's Mind know

that it is a good idea to release the blockage " right there " .

 

So I will stop and " connect " and meditate on it with my finger

touching it and gently vibrating. I try not to " do " anything. I think

it is up to the receiver to figure things out and release it, if

he/she is ready. Sometimes, I will use a little push or pull. Just

trying to nudge the blockage along. These blockages, though small, are

often the key " emotional " blockages and release themselves only when

they are good and ready. Sometimes, actually quite often, if I try to

" get it out " , it will simply move to some other part of the body -

often a mirrored part, and the receiver will right away tell me that

something moved " over there " . :-)

 

This can also be done without touching, as long as there is an

energetic feel. I prefer to touch at this point with my level of

experience. The practitioner who I am learning from, can use qi like a

acupunture needle - but he rarely does this. He just goes " at it " . :-)

 

I am looking forward to hearing other people's experiences and

thoughts on this.

 

Regards,

Rich

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A very well known British illusionist Derren Brown demonstrated the " no

inch " punch on television.

 

Essential he used the same technique that most pretend Qigong masters use to

perform this amazing demonstration........hypnosis!

 

Maybe it can be done.....certainly Qi can push you back or pull you forward,

but I believe it is usually more subtle than a punch.

 

Kind regards

 

Dermot

 

> So the question is, has anyone ever seen someone knock over another

> person that is unrelated to them and not looking at them. Well, this

> isn't exactly an ethical thing to do (similar to what superman does

> when he's drunk) so it may have to continue to be undecided in my

> mind.

>

> brian beard

>

> >

> > A Qi Gong master who has attained the apex of Nei Yang Gong

> > can kill a person from a distance of three meters without touching

> > him. Use of lesser Qi force will merely stun a person or knock him

> > down. This exceptional art is called Yi Yang Zhi (sun-ray finger)

> > better known as Yi Zhi Chan (one-finger art). However, the time of

> > day is an additional factor that must be considered in healing. The

> > best hours for medical treatment and for Qi Gong exercises, are

> > the early morning hours between 0300-0500h. The use of one-finger

> > art recognizes that acupuncture points respond differently at

> > various hours of the diurnal cycle, and if the time of application

> is

> > not right for the organ or area of the body associated with that

> > particular acupuncture point, the treatment may not be effective.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

 

I don't believe in the distance killing of Yi Zhi Chan at all. I've spent a

lifetime in the martial arts and this is not possible.

 

The technique of Yi Zhi Chan is to strengthen the fingers so much that you

can kill a person with a strike with your index finger. The last master of

this technique was monk Hai Deng from the Shaolin temple and this was

captured on tape.

 

As for healing, that may be possible with Wai Qi Zhi Liao (emitting qi

treatments). Don't believe all the poo-poo one reads.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

> " " <

>Chinese Medicine

>Chinese Medicine

>CC: mMMeeting

> Re: tuina - yi zhi chan

>Tue, 21 Sep 2004 18:54:47 +0100

>

>Hi All, & Brian & Robert,

>

>Robert wrote:

> > Did anyone else here learn yi zhi chan and if so from where and

> > how was the technique performed?

>

>Brian replied:

> > My tuina instructor in acupuncture school (a chiropractor,

> > orthopedic surgeon & TCM doctor from china, don't remember which

> > part) emphasized the more aggressive form. It was one of the more

> > difficult techniques for the students to get the hang of, although

> > he would teach it slower in the beginning and have everyone speed

> > it up later. He said that practitioners used to strengthen their

> > thumbs by forming the fist and standing upside down balancing

> > themselves on the tip of one thumb.

>

>See: http://tinyurl.com/5pszw

>

>See also: http://www.hokkian-siauwlim.com/qigong.html

>

>It says!!:

>

>A Qi Gong master who has attained the apex of Nei Yang Gong

>can kill a person from a distance of three meters without touching

>him. Use of lesser Qi force will merely stun a person or knock him

>down. This exceptional art is called Yi Yang Zhi (sun-ray finger)

>better known as Yi Zhi Chan (one-finger art). However, the time of

>day is an additional factor that must be considered in healing. The

>best hours for medical treatment and for Qi Gong exercises, are

>the early morning hours between 0300-0500h. The use of one-finger

>art recognizes that acupuncture points respond differently at

>various hours of the diurnal cycle, and if the time of application is

>not right for the organ or area of the body associated with that

>particular acupuncture point, the treatment may not be effective.

>

>When a Qi Gong master can jump up from the ground and suspend

>himself in the air with only his hands touching a wall, this is called

>Bi Hu Gong, (the tiger climbing up the wall).

>

>

>

>Best regards,

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi All, & Brian,

 

> Phil, I must say I continue to be surprised by the sheer wealth of

> information you present. You bring up an issue of debate amongst

> taiji / qigong enthusiasts which is still unresolved for me. ...

 

Brian, its is not my info! I I am an avid Googler! One can find an

incredible amount of info on Google, especially if one uses the

features available on the advanced Google search engine:

http://www.google.com/advanced_search

 

Colleagues, if YOU have NOT used the Google advanced search

facilities, you might take a few minutes to explore them. They help

one to refine a search dramatically.

 

Google also accepts inputs in Hanzi, Korean, Japanese and

Russian script. So if you have oriental language dictionaries on CD

or online, or a copy of Wenlin or NJStar, you can input oriental

characters (such as Hanzi script) for herb names, formulas,

syndromes, etc and come up with data from the far east. Of

course, one then has the problem of translating that!

 

My problem is to know what info on Google one can TRUST,

because so much of it is commercial drivel.

 

But I AM interested in the possibility of Gigong / Yi effects at a

distance. Clearly, if that is possible, it could have amazing uses in

both Dx and Tx of human and animal subjects.

 

 

Best regards,

 

Email: <

 

WORK : Teagasc Research Management, Sandymount Ave., Dublin 4, Ireland

Mobile: 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

 

HOME : 1 Esker Lawns, Lucan, Dublin, Ireland

Tel : 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

WWW : http://homepage.eircom.net/~progers/searchap.htm

 

Chinese Proverb: " Man who says it can't be done, should not interrupt man doing

it "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My tuina teacher is from Shenyang in Liaoning province, in northern China. The

standard Tuina up

there is vigorous and often looks quite rough, even brutal! my teacher's style

is much more fluid and

soft than some of his countrymen, but still the YiZhiChan that he has taught us

is quite vigorous: three

versions, using the tip, side, or the " whorl " (pad, fingerprint area) of the

thumb fixed on a point, and

applying rapid oscillations of the distal interphalangeal joint with firm

pressure. the rate of oscillation

and level of pressure will vary depending on the effect desired. In my

experience this technique works

incredibly well for dispersing stagnation (breaking up fixed tight areas), but I

haven't yet worked out

how to use it effectively for tonifying.

 

On the " empty force " topic, there are a couple of good books called " warriors of

stillness " by a guy

called Jan Diepersloot, on the standing meditative traditions of the internal

martial arts, one on Taiji and

one on Yiquan. In the Yiquan book he mentions that of the two or three teachers

he's met who

practiced it, the two whose attitudes he preffered thought of it as an exercise

in sensitivity: students

who were sensitive enough were able to perceive the teachers intent/force from a

distance and react to

it. thus it probably wouldn't work too well on someone who wasn't sensitive or

wasn't really paying

attention to their sensations. the other teacher who did it apparently allowed

his students to believe that

it was a kind of irresistable force that could send them flying whether they

liked it or not.

 

Hmm...

 

Simon Thakur

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dr Greenstien and Sifu Chen (my two major teachers) each had a slightly

different approach when i was taught this technique.

One used rapid movement one as you describe.

Both had me do finger tip push ups and then thumb only push ups and use rice

jars and sand bags to strenghthen my hands and thumbs. They also had me work

with two 5lb steel balls which i rolled around in first one direction and then

the other.

 

Doc

kampo36 <kampo36 wrote:

Speaking of tuina, when i was in school i learned tuina from a teacher from

Shanghai. She

had studied under a master of yi zhi chan - one thumb meditation was how she

translated

it. It was basically a stationary technique using gentle pressure with a slight

rhythmic

rocking motion. The key was to establish a meditative state of mind and spend

some time

on the point one was treating. I learned all the other techniques she taught,

like guan

(rolling), etc. But I used the yi zhi chan more than anything else.

 

When I taught at the school in Miami, the tuina teacher was also from Shanghai.

He taught

the techniques such as guan in a very similar way as i had learned. But the yi

zhi chan was

very different -- it still used the thumb and a slight rocking motion but was

vigorous, quick and mobile, almost like a combination of dotting and guan but

done with

the thumb. Seemed much less meditative.

 

I found this difference intriguing. Did anyone else here learn yi zhi chan and

if so from

where and how was the technique performed?

 

robert hayden

 

 

 

 

 

http://babel.altavista.com/

 

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being

delivered.

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Chinese Medicine , Doc <Doc@s...> wrote:

 

> Both had me do finger tip push ups and then thumb only push ups and use rice

jars and

sand bags to strenghthen my hands and thumbs. They also had me work with two 5lb

steel balls which i rolled around in first one direction and then the other.

>

>

 

interesting. i hear a lot of this kind of thing with tuina teachers. seems to

me the

exercises would be good for building strength and stamina but would eliminate a

lot of

tactile sensitivity and even proprioception could be affected. so one could

conceivably

lose a lot of palpatory information that might prove useful -- seems to me

anyway. then

again maybe i'm just a wimp.

 

rh

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi All, & Hi Robert

 

Robert Chu wrote:

> I don't believe in the distance killing of Yi Zhi Chan at all. I've

> spent a lifetime in the martial arts and this is not possible. The

> technique of Yi Zhi Chan is to strengthen the fingers so much that

> you can kill a person with a strike with your index finger. The

> last master of this technique was monk Hai Deng from the Shaolin

> temple and this was captured on tape.

 

I doubted the claim that Qigong alone could kill but I remain

openminded to that possibility. Voodoo / black magic certainly

CAN kill, according to aunts of mine who were nuns in Africa and

Malaysia and who came accross it several times.

 

> As for healing, that may be possible with Wai Qi Zhi Liao

> (emitting qi treatments). Don't believe all the poo-poo one reads.

> Robert

 

I have first-hand experience (as a receiver) that Qi can be

transmitted (for example as a sensation of intense heat) over

distance from a sender to a receiver. The claim that Yi Zhi Chan /

Qigong can kill prompted the question: " Can sufficient Qi be

discharged that it can kill the receiver? "

 

But a much more important question for therapists is: " Can

sufficient Qi be discharged that it can help the receiver's adaptive

systems to heal him/herself? "

 

Robert, have you first-hand experience of emitted Qi being useful in

healing?

 

Best regards,

 

Email: <

 

WORK : Teagasc Research Management, Sandymount Ave., Dublin 4, Ireland

Mobile: 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

 

HOME : 1 Esker Lawns, Lucan, Dublin, Ireland

Tel : 353-; [in the Republic: 0]

WWW : http://homepage.eircom.net/~progers/searchap.htm

 

Chinese Proverb: " Man who says it can't be done, should not interrupt man doing

it "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Simon,

 

Chinese Medicine , " wackname "

<wackname> wrote:

> My tuina teacher is from Shenyang in Liaoning province,

 

My tuina teacher is from the same province - city of Tieling. Very

vigorous tuina also but rarely, if ever, does he use the thumbs other

than to press certain points like L1. Also, as I mentioned in other

posts, he never thinks in terms of tonifying - just breaking up

stagnation. He does talk about " getting qi moving again " , by using his

own qigong but that is different.

 

Nice to hear about your experiences.

 

Regards,

Rich

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Robert,

>

> interesting. i hear a lot of this kind of thing with tuina

teachers. seems to me the

> exercises would be good for building strength and stamina but would

eliminate a lot of

> tactile sensitivity and even proprioception could be affected. so

one could conceivably

> lose a lot of palpatory information that might prove useful -- seems

to me anyway. then

> again maybe i'm just a wimp.

>

> rh

 

I would agree with you. I saw some pictures of Ohashi doing thumb

exercises, but my teacher recommends against it. What he does is tell

us to hold our thumb in such a way that it is at " right angles " and

well supported by the bones and joints. Any kind of exercise, as you

suggest, would probably stiffen up the muscles and create some

stagnation in themselves - thereby reducing sensitivity. So overall, I

would say that my thinking is along the same lines at yours.

 

Regards,

Rich

Link to comment
Share on other sites

RH and Rich,

As one who has a reputation for being more able than most to feel the D'Ch'i I

must beg to differ. Your theory sounds correct, your argument is well stated. In

practice you are not correct. :)

I was trained with thumb pushups, finger tip push ups etc - and I break 20 " of

cinder block (some on the list have seen me do so) with my open relaxed hand.

No stagnation, no loss of sensation,no loss of tactile sensitivity or

proprioception, or ability. no stiffness of muscles.

BUT It must be done correctly with proper guidance and excersizes to counter

balasnce the external training.

Doc Rosen

 

seems to me the

> exercises would be good for building strength and stamina but would

eliminate a lot of

> tactile sensitivity and even proprioception could be affected. so

one could conceivably

> lose a lot of palpatory information that might prove useful I would agree with

you. I saw some pictures of Ohashi doing thumb

exercises, but my teacher recommends against it. What he does is tell

us to hold our thumb in such a way that it is at " right angles " and

well supported by the bones and joints. Any kind of exercise, as you

suggest, would probably stiffen up the muscles and create some

stagnation in themselves - thereby reducing sensitivity. So overall, I

would say that my thinking is along the same lines at yours.

 

 

 

" The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil,

but because of the people who don't do anything about it. "

-- Albert Einstein

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thanks for the clarification doc, i try to keep reminding myself that the most

important

anatomical structure involved in palpation is the brain.... still i'll leave

smashing cinder

blocks to you :)

 

rh

 

Chinese Medicine , Doc <Doc@s...> wrote:

>

> RH and Rich,

> As one who has a reputation for being more able than most to feel the D'Ch'i I

must beg

to differ. Your theory sounds correct, your argument is well stated. In practice

you are not

correct. :)

> I was trained with thumb pushups, finger tip push ups etc - and I break 20 " of

cinder

block (some on the list have seen me do so) with my open relaxed hand.

> No stagnation, no loss of sensation,no loss of tactile sensitivity or

proprioception, or

ability. no stiffness of muscles.

> BUT It must be done correctly with proper guidance and excersizes to counter

balasnce

the external training.

> Doc Rosen

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Phil,

 

Yes, I do Qi Gong treatments in my clinic when patients request them, or

when I don't have any needles on my person at a place outside the clinic.

 

With regards to sending Qi over a distance for healing, I believe it might

be possible. I have had numerous occassions where friends have sent me

" healing qi " . Since I have also studied Reiki as well as Buddhist healing

arts, this is a part of their traditions as well.

 

Emitting Qi is no secret and out in many books. I learned from several

masters and at first I did not believe it, until I practiced it and saw the

clinical results. After I learned various systems, I combined and saw the

commonality of their approaches. Basically, there are various important

training methods:

 

1) developing the " Qi ball "

2) cultivating yourself through meditation, visualization, purification,

qigong, mantras, mudras, etc.

3) Sweeping off the wei qi field of the patient and sending Xie Qi to a

disposal site

4) Replenishing the Wei Qi field

5) Tonifying and sedating specific acupoints with the Yi (intention) based

on different ailments

6) Balancing and relaxing the body

 

Of course, I prefer acupuncture - I can insert needles in a few minutes and

can see more patients. But Wai Qia nd acupuncture go hand in hand. If you

have specific questions, feel free to email me.

 

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

 

> " " <

>Chinese Medicine

>Chinese Medicine

>CC: mMMeeting

>RE: Re: tuina - yi zhi chan

>Wed, 22 Sep 2004 12:46:54 +0100

>

>Hi All, & Hi Robert

>

>Robert Chu wrote:

> > I don't believe in the distance killing of Yi Zhi Chan at all. I've

> > spent a lifetime in the martial arts and this is not possible. The

> > technique of Yi Zhi Chan is to strengthen the fingers so much that

> > you can kill a person with a strike with your index finger. The

> > last master of this technique was monk Hai Deng from the Shaolin

> > temple and this was captured on tape.

>

>I doubted the claim that Qigong alone could kill but I remain

>openminded to that possibility. Voodoo / black magic certainly

>CAN kill, according to aunts of mine who were nuns in Africa and

>Malaysia and who came accross it several times.

>

> > As for healing, that may be possible with Wai Qi Zhi Liao

> > (emitting qi treatments). Don't believe all the poo-poo one reads.

> > Robert

>

>I have first-hand experience (as a receiver) that Qi can be

>transmitted (for example as a sensation of intense heat) over

>distance from a sender to a receiver. The claim that Yi Zhi Chan /

>Qigong can kill prompted the question: " Can sufficient Qi be

>discharged that it can kill the receiver? "

>

>But a much more important question for therapists is: " Can

>sufficient Qi be discharged that it can help the receiver's adaptive

>systems to heal him/herself? "

>

>Robert, have you first-hand experience of emitted Qi being useful in

>healing?

>

>Best regards,

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have seen/experienced practitioners simply touch a person and

knock them over

 

 

I have knocked a total stranger -who believed i could not- back 20' with a very

slight tap

 

(in front of twenty thousand witnesses)

 

I break wood and cinder block with a relaxed hand and no physical

force to speak of

 

 

I watched Sifu Chen break roof tyle by simply touching it and with

the tiniest of movements

 

but

 

doing these things without touching

i relegate to legend

everyone who has told me that they know of it happenning

says

 

I was told by *** who saw it

 

but never

 

I Saw it

 

as for remote healing

East West Journal (i think but might have been New Age) did a study a few years

back and found

Ch'i Kung effective

Ch'i Kung without touching no effect

and Reiki

no effect

 

I had a patient die from cancer not long ago (I was helping with

pain only since cancer is ouside my competence to treat)

This patient had been pronounced cured by her Reiki Practitioner

who often treated over the phone

 

Doc

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read only the mail you want - Mail SpamGuard.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...