Qigong / Qi Gong / Chi Gong
Qigong / Qi Gong / Chi Gong (Simplified Chinese: 气功; Traditional Chinese: 氣功; Pinyin: qìgōng;
Wade-Giles: ch'i4 kung1) is an increasingly popular aspect of Chinese
medicine involving the coordination of different breathing patterns with various
physical postures and motions of the body. Qigong is mostly taught for health
maintenance purposes, but there are also some who teach Qi gong as a therapeutic
intervention. Various forms of traditional qigong are also widely taught in
conjunction with Chinese martial arts, and are especially prevalent in the
advanced training of what are known as the nei chia (internal martial arts).
There are currently more than thirty three hundred different styles and schools
of qigong. Qigong relies on the traditional Chinese belief that the body has an
energy field generated and maintained by the natural respiration of the
body, known as Qi or Chi. Qi
/ Chi means breath or to breathe in Mandarin Chinese, and by extension the
energy produced by breathing that keeps us alive; gong means work or technique.
Qigong is then "breath work" or the art of managing the breath to achieve
and maintain good health, and especially in the martial arts, to enhance the
leverage and stamina of the body in coordination with the physical process of
respiration.
Attitudes toward the basis of qigong / chi gong vary markedly. Most Western medical
practitioners, many practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine, as well as
the Chinese government view qigong / chi gong as a set of breathing and movement exercises,
with possible benefits to health through stress reduction and exercise. Others
see qigong in more metaphysical terms, claiming that breathing and
movement exercises can influence the fundamental forces of the universe. An
extreme form of the latter view was advocated by some participants in the
Chinese Boxer Rebellion of the late 19th century who believed that breathing and
movement exercises would allow them to ward off bullets.
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Qigong under various names has a long history in China. The written
records referring to qi and its effects are as old as 3,300 years (Shang dynasty
oracle bones, Zhou dynasty inscriptions). Numerous books have been written about
qi gong during the subsequent history of China. The development of Chinese qigong
can be divided into three periods:
In ancient China, people came to believe that through certain body movements and
mental concentration combined with various breathing techniques, they could
balance and enhance physical, metabolic and mental functions. These movements
were worked out over time by exploring the natural range of motion through the
joints, as well as drawing on motions in imitation of various animals. This
research was passed down and refined according to teacher-disciple relationships
of lineage or apprenticeship. This accumulated body of traditional knowledge is
known as Chinese traditional qigong.
In later centuries, these
chi gong practices became more standardized, very often associated with religious
practitioners. For example, incense burning was originally used to measure time
and also to repel insects during qigong practice, and eventually became an
important part of the meditative process itself. Over time, new forms of
qigong were created and passed down through various schools;
Taoist,
Buddhist, Confucian,
Neo-Confucian, Chinese medicine, and the traditional Chinese martial arts.
In the 1950s, researchers began studying qi gong using the scientific method,
with peer-reviewed and controlled studies of various techniques to provide a
scientific evaluation of claims for the efficacy of qigong. Scientific study of
this topic is still active, with particular emphasis in eastern countries,
although research into the medical benefits of chi gong is also active in western countries.
Now various medical universities issue Bachelor's and Master's degrees in
Qigong, or include Qigong in their curriculums.
Today millions of people in China
and around the world regularly practice qigong as a health maintenance exercise.
Qigong and related disciplines are still associated with the martial arts and
meditation
routines trained by Taoist and Buddhist monks, professional martial artists and
their students. Formerly much more closely guarded, in the modern era such
practices have become widely available to the general public both in China and
around the world.
Medical qigong treatment has been officially recognized as a standard medical
technique in Chinese hospitals since 1989. It has been included in the
curriculum of major universities in China. After years of debate, the Chinese
government decided to officially manage qigong through government regulation in
1996 and has also listed qigong as part of their National Health Plan.
Dr. Yan Xin (嚴新), a doctor of both Western and Chinese medicine as well as
founder of the relatively popular Yan Xin Qigong school, suggests that in order
for qigong to be accepted by the modern world it must pass the test of
scientific study. Without such studies, Yan maintains that qigong will be
dismissed as "superstition". In the mid-1980s he and others began systematic
study of qigong in some research institutions in China and U.S. More than 20
papers have been published. Taijiquan, a martial art imbued with qigong,
appears to be a potent intervention to prevent falls in elders and improve
balance measurement.
Qigong and its intimate relation
to the Chinese martial arts are often connected with spirituality. They
have thereby been considered the province of religious practitioners in the
popular imagination for many centuries. This link is much stronger than with
other techniques in traditional Chinese medicine. Qigong was historically
practiced extensively in Taoist and Buddhist monasteries as an adjunct of
martial arts training, and the claimed benefits of martial qi gong practice are
widely known in East Asian martial traditions and popular culture. As
well, the traditional teaching methods of most qigong schools (at least in
Asia) descend from the strict teacher-disciple relationship conventions
inherited in Chinese culture from Confucianism.
In some styles of qigong, it is taught that humanity and nature are inseparable,
and any belief otherwise is held to be an artificial discrimination based on a
limited, two-dimensional view of human life. According to this philosophy,
access to higher energy states and the subsequent health benefits said to be
provided by these higher states is possible through the principle of cultivating
virtue (de or te 德, see
Tao Te Ching).
Cultivating virtue could be described as a process in which one recognizes that
one was never separated from nature (a Taoist metaphor for this is the "uncarved
block" - which refers to a primal, undifferentiated state of being free of
artificial discrimination), a process made possible with the energy made
available to the qigong student after they sincerely choose and implement what
they are taught as positive lifestyle choices, which will include practicing
specific qigong techniques for ameliorating the effects of previous choices seen
as less virtuous (see karma).
It is claimed by some that the level of an individual's qigong accomplishment is
fundamentally dependent upon the level of their virtue. Therefore in qigong, the
practitioner's focus on virtue is an extremely important technical requirement,
especially in the advanced levels. Without such continuous cultivation of
virtue, one will not be able to achieve a highly relaxed and tranquil mind/body
state.
Adapted from
Wikipedia
with permission
Further Reading: