Energy Gates Dissolving Series

Before you begin the process of dissolving the Energy Gates, you should read Bruce Frantzis' Energy Gates book or get instruction on basic standing alignment from an Energy Arts Instructor. I also recommend that you can stand comfortably for 15-20 minutes using one of the following methods: Just Feeling Scanning and Sinking Asking these 3 Questions ...

January 21, 2014 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

Starting at the Crown of the Head

If you read last week’s post on standing qigong and the Energy Gates book, or better yet, you can stand comfortably “just feeling” for 15-20 minutes, you’re probably ready to embark on the downward dissolving process. This week, I want to help you get started. I recorded a guided practice mp3 to get you through the first workout in the Energy Gates series: Feeling the Gate at the Crown of the Head. ...

January 16, 2014 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

Form Versus Feel in Standing Qigong

When you set out to develop your internal energy using standing postures, there are two main ways you can go about it: by feel or by form. Now, there will be a lot of overlap in these two broad approaches, like aligning your body with gravity without collapsing internally and progressively releasing and relaxing as you stand, but when it comes to the role of the mind, form and feel can be very different. ...

January 9, 2014 · 9 min · Dan Kleiman

Outer Dissolving and The Role of the Mind in Standing Qigong

Next month, we’ll be starting a new Energy Gates course at Brookline Tai Chi, focused on Outer Dissolving and working through the Gates of the body. When you work on dissolving the gates, you will inevitably be fighting the urge to: visualize instead of feel “chase” energetic releases, untethered from the physical body wonder if you are really feeling anything at all In this episode of Qigong Radio, I’ll give my recommendations for avoiding these pitfalls and for setting up the conditions for actual energetic resolution. ...

December 30, 2013 · 1 min · Dan Kleiman

The Itch to Move Your Chi

We tend to think about our energy level like the money we have in the bank. You wake up in the morning, look in your energetic wallet and say, “I’ve got a lot of energy today” or “Man, I need 7 cups of coffee.” Or, to put it another way, thanks to this New Yorker cartoon: In qigong, we think about “having energy” a little bit differently. Often, it’s not just how much or how little, but how well is your energy circulating? ...

December 20, 2013 · 3 min · Dan Kleiman

Energy Gates in Vancouver, BC, Spring 2014

Dan standing in New Mexico, not Vancouver (yet!). Do you live in or near Vancouver? Are you willing to travel to refine your Energy Gates practice? At the behest of a few eager Vancouver locals, I wanted to reach out and see if any of our Northwest-oriented readers would be interested in a spring 2014 Energy Gates seminar. Date and exact location haven’t been nailed down yet, but if there’s enough demand, I would love to come out and do some Energy Gates with you. ...

December 12, 2013 · 2 min · Dan Kleiman

Dust Off Your Tai Chi Mastery Program

It looks like Energy Arts is releasing another set of The Tai Chi Mastery Program. This is a short message to those of you who have the program sitting on your bookshelf, collecting dust, or still pristinely packaged: Let’s open it up and get to work! Now, if you’re not familiar with this program, take a look at this: That’s a lot of DVDs! What’s Inside The Tai Chi Mastery Program? It all started back in 2011 when we spent a month in England training the Wu Style Short Form with Bruce. Everyday for 8 hours or more, we worked on: ...

December 6, 2013 · 1 min · Dan Kleiman

Maintaining the Four Points in Tai Chi

Recently, the question of “should I rotate my spine in Tai Chi” has come up frequently and led to a lot of confusion with some of our students. We are told to maintain the “Four Points” - a sort of internal frame that runs between the shoulders and the hips, forming a box that keeps the spine from rotating or side bending while you practice Tai Chi. Some people hear this rule and think, “but the spine has joints that rotate and bend in more than one plane” or “show me any athletic movement that doesn’t make use of the rotational movement of the spine to generate power.” ...

November 29, 2013 · 4 min · Dan Kleiman

Seminar Recap - Detailed Report from ChicagoTaiChi.org

Checking in with one of my favorite sculptures at the Art Institute I was thrilled to be able to share a weekend of Tai Chi in Chicago earlier this month, thanks to Energy Arts Instructor Chris Cinnamon and his students at Enso Tai Chi. Chris just posted an incredibly detailed report summarizing the workshop here. If you read between the lines a little bit, you can come up with some great ways to structure your own practice. Think of the whole day as a single practice session. Can you: ...

November 17, 2013 · 1 min · Dan Kleiman

The Yin and Yang of Problem Solving

You know how you can be banging your head against a wall, trying to figure something out? Then, you sleep on it, take a shower, or go for a walk and suddenly a solution pops into your head. Have you ever wondered why this happens or how it works? So have I…and I don’t know HOW it works, but I do know that we are practicing the exact same skill in qigong. ...

November 8, 2013 · 3 min · Dan Kleiman