Don't Run on Empty

Nobody moves through life with exactly the same amount of energy. Do you know how much you have to draw on? Do you know how to replenish your reserves? In chi gung, the energetic reserves you are born with are called your “pre-birth chi”. What you cultivate as you go through life, using practices like chi gung, is called “post-birth chi”. You use the combination of what you are born with and what you develop to run your body and your mind. ...

August 1, 2011 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

Week 2 of the Short Form Instructor Training

Here’s my Week 2 update. Some big milestones this week: group 1 finished the form and group 2 has been languishing in the purgatory that is holding static postures. Check it out: Inner Form vs. Outer Form In the two groups, we’re doing very different things. The group one just finished the form this week. So on Thursday after they finished it, we came in Friday, and it was a really interesting dividing line. Bruce made the big distinction between, on the one hand, on Thursday we finished the shape and the form, that’s sort of the container. He said, “Now, everything that we’re going to do has to do with internal content.” So he made this distinction all the time. He talked about the bottle versus the wine you put inside it and we even have an article at Brookline Tai Chi that we put out from, I think, it’s from 1989 Tai Chi Magazine. The title of the article is “The Inner Form is the Key to Health.” And in the article, Bruce talks about all the different internal content things that should be going on that to be Tai Chi form. ...

July 30, 2011 · 5 min · Dan Kleiman

What I am Learning at the Wu Tai Chi Instructor Training

We’re a week into the Wu Tai Chi short form instructor training in Brighton, UK, with Lineage Holder Bruce Frantzis. So far we’ve been completely rebuilding our forms, working on Tai Chi leg power, and exploring the meditative aspects of the art. Check it out: On Rebuilding Your Form: It’s crazy when you come at these things, you’re completely rebuilding your Tai Chi form. We’re about two-thirds of the way through the form and it feels so different. When you run through the whole thing one time, you get up to what we’ve done so far and it feels brand new, like a completely different moves. And then you get to the last thing we’ve done, you come around to the last move that you finished and you go back to your old form and it has a totally different feeling. ...

July 26, 2011 · 3 min · Dan Kleiman

How Does Qigong Work?

In class the other day, a student asked me what kind of chi gung (qigong) we study. She said a friend of hers had been learning a different form and they wanted to compare notes. This is always an interesting conversation, because the term “qigong” covers a lot of different forms of exercise. Literally, it means “energy development” or “energy cultivation”. The chief aim of any qigong practice is to develop your natural energy levels, making your energy, or chi, smoother, increasing your capacity to move it through your system or using it for specific applications, like martial arts or meditation. ...

July 25, 2011 · 5 min · Dan Kleiman

How Breathing, Qigong, and Meditation Improve Quality of Life

I asked my friend and fellow qigong practitioner Catherine Chenoweth to talk a little bit about her experience using qigong to manage a chronic health condition. Here’s what she had to say: When I was released from the hospital in 1996, it was after three months, and with a diagnosis of LAM (Lymphangioleiomyomatosis), a rare, progressive, untreatable and often fatal lung disease. I asked a friend who was well versed in alternative treatments what I should do for my health, and his response, immediate and emphatic, was “You need to do qigong!” ...

July 20, 2011 · 3 min · Dan Kleiman

How to Practice Qigong According to My Wife

I learned everything I know about practicing qigong from my wife. Or I should say, from watching my wife make magic in the kitchen! If you saw us cooking together, you’d see her doing everything right and me doing everything wrong. When I started to practice qigong the way she cooks, my whole qigong world changed. Let me tell you how. ...

July 18, 2011 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

How Xingyi Saved My Butt

In 2005 I started running Brookline Tai Chi. It was a big jump in responsibilty and workload, so I needed a practice that would match the new intensity. In turned to Xingyi for energy, drive, and focus:

July 14, 2011 · 1 min · Dan Kleiman

Tai Chi on the Beach

Practicing Tai Chi or Chi Gung on the beach feels great, once you get past the funny looks and comments from passers-by! If you want to make the most out of your practice time on the beach, or in any other natural setting, you have to practice a little differently than you do during indoor practice. Here’s how: Take Extra Time to Settle In: Start by doing a little more quiet sitting or standing, “listening” to what’s going on inside you. Like turning the knob on a radio scanner, you’re waiting until you come across the right frequency. Don’t be surprised if this takes longer than normal if you’re used to practicing in a quiet, private space. Not only are you surrounded by more activity, but everyone is there because it feels great to be near the ocean – you’re listening for the energy of the ocean too. ** ** ...

July 11, 2011 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

How to Treat Lower Back Pain

Lower back pain can be a frustrating experience whose source may be hard to pin down and whose remedy may seem elusive. I hope that as you read through this article, you can start to understand the nature of pain a little differently. I’ll also show you some tai chi concepts that can help you unravel your lower back pain, and more importantly, how to search for a solution for your individual situation. ...

July 6, 2011 · 7 min · Dan Kleiman

30 Day Better Breathing Challenge

Recently, I’ve been talking a lot about two things, improving your breathing to give you a major energy/relaxation boost and developing tools that help you follow-through on your home practice. I’ve even created an online course with all the information you need to cultivate better breathing habits: Better Breathing. The biggest lesson we learned as we talked to BTC students was that the best time to use reminders to trigger your practice was when you were invested in learning a new skill. When you’re going through a period of sustained practice, integrating stuff you’ve learned before, you need external tools less. However, when you shift back into learning mode and set a specific training goal, getting extra, regular motivation from an outside source can push you over the line from wanting to learn something to ingraining it as a habit. ...

July 4, 2011 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman