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Choosing Health

11/25/2022

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This has been a busy week, and a week full of choices. The choice my body wants to make, is to get more work done, and deal with the stress and frustration by eating as much unhealthy food as I can cram into my mouth. However, since I also have celiac neuropathy, my body also lets me know, in no uncertain terms, that if I want to be able to walk and live a full and active life, that I cannot under any circumstance miss a session of Tai Chi. Everyone has had those days – I’m beat…let’s just chill today…I’d rather do…    

Tai Chi can be a little different. As a form of mindfulness meditation, it can generate very pleasant mental states during practice, with pretty much no sensation of passing time. But even so, it can sometimes be a big step to push away from the computer, couch, or desk, to get started. In my recent case story posts on my Facebook page, I have been noting that until you get into Tai Chi, or for other reasons, it can help to do Tai Chi while you watch TV. Once you learn a few basic poses, do these over and over for 10 to 60 minutes or more, depending on your health needs, while you watch your favorite show. 
 
Taking a day off is certainly an option, unless perhaps you have a chronic condition. Even then it is still a choice, to choose death or disability, or getting up and doing a needed practice, exercise or routine, to stave off the ill effects of various chronic conditions, depending on your condition. Something to talk with your doctor about. According to the American Medical Association, 26% of men don’t make any kind of lifestyle change after having a heart attack, stroke or other major cardiac event. A Kaiser report stated that more women change unhealthy behaviors, up to 93%. This may be one reason more women than men participate in Tai Chi programs for health. To attract men to Tai Chi, it might be worth targeting the martial aspects of Tai Chi, or to offer Tai Chi sword forms. What man can resist swinging a sword around :  )
 
For healthy people, time for a variety of exercises may be a luxury. It takes a dedicated and possibly time rich individual to do ALL recommended exercise on a daily bases – aerobic, strength conditioning, stretching – and now add to that Metarobic exercise? As a mind/body practice, with many benefits for physical and psychological health, and with options for using Tai Chi for cardio and strength, Tai Chi can still provide options for a nice total body workout. But one which still demands time for both cardio and Metarobic aspects. There is believe it or not, a Tai Chi fast set. And using a heavy sword and/or wrist weights can develop upper body strength while developing cardiovascular health – but at the sacrifice of Metarobic benefits. So for total cellular and cardiovascular health, a person would still need 30 minutes or so of each on a regular basis - slow relaxed breath focused practice, AND faster and/or weight bearing options.
 
But, if you suffer from one of the many chronic conditions which plague society (including cancer, heart, lung and kidney disease, asthma, diabetes, compromised immunity, etc.), particularly those which limit more vigorous forms of exercise, Tai Chi may provide a valuable option. Metarobic and Tai Chi research supports a variety of benefits, which can range from easing symptoms (particularly pain), to completely overcoming the condition. Chronic pain, immobility, and death can be great motivators. The trick is to determine just how much Metarobic exercise you need. For me, it is 30 minutes in the morning and night (or 60 minutes at night), with an additional 20-30 minutes mid-day, if I am having a bad week. Others might get by with once a day, or a few time a week. If facing a particularly severe and life threatening situation, many of the case stories I have collected stated that individuals were practicing three or more hours a day, before noticing significant benefits. One person stated she started doing eight hours a day, when doctors stated her cancer was incurable. And she recovered. Others stated they felt that their one to three hours of daily practice  (depending on the case story) resulted in cancer remission.

Research would need to determine if the recovery was due to tai chi and/or qigong practice, or was a case of spontaneous remission. But such case stories indicate the importance of more detailed research. This is important, since scientific studies on cancer showed minimal effects (except for pain and quality of life). But in these studies, participants were only learning Tai Chi two to three times a week for an hour or so. And learning can be very different from knowing Tai Chi. So the question remains, would an hour a day have made a difference? Or would it take two or three hours a day? Or even eight or more hours a day? Research and supporting case stories are promising for many conditions, and worth a little experimentation with dosage, in discussion with your doctor.


- Dr. Gryffin
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The Zen roots of Tai Chi as a Mind/Body Practice

11/13/2022

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The below is from an old post, which relates to my last post on the alternate prelude to "Journey to the East: An Experiential Book."

Tai Chi is considered a form of mind/body exercise, with many benefits for mental health and development, as well as Metarobic benefits for the health of the body. I had put together the below for a Meetup group, related to Tai Chi as a martial art, rooted in Zen elements which later developed hand in hand with the martial arts in Japan. The article discusses a Zen Koan (Riddle) used to stimulate insight on what constitutes a powerful life.
 
Warrior Koan 100: FREEING THE GHOST
 
Aside from what I have learned from my teachers and my own training, there are many great resources on the traditional elements of the martial arts. Following is the last Koan (Riddle) in Trevor Leggett’s “Samurai Zen: The Warrior Koans,” and my thoughts on how it applies to life and Tai Chi as a mind/body practice. In the early development of Zen, the Samurai made such swift progress, that an early Zen teacher noted that monks might as well give up meditation and study the Way of the Sword. There is something about the Martial Way (Budo, Wu Tao), which particularly focuses the mind. This applies to Tai Chi as much as the Way of the Sword, or any other traditional martial art. Following is Warrior Koan 100: FREEING THE GHOST.
 
FREEING THE GHOST (paraphrased)
Yorisha’s meditation was on the Kegon sutra (in the year of 1374):
 
“If one would know all the Buddhas of the three worlds,
Let him see the nature of the dharma, that all is the creation of the mind alone.”
 
Making no progress, he sat unaware, as the meditation hall caught fire. He perished in the flames. His ghost returned, chanting repeatedly; “All the Buddhas of the three worlds,” until the head of practice (tanto) Karashigawa gave a great shout “Reverence to Buddha Yorisha!” Yorisha promptly vanished.
 
A series of questions follow this Koan, questions asking; What is the nature of the Buddhas (literally "Enlightened Ones") of three worlds (desire, freedom from desire, and beyond desire); Of the dharma-world (world of teachings/knowledge); What is proof of ‘mind alone’ (the conscious mind); and What is meant by dharma-world nature being the creation of the mind alone?

One last final question asks the meditator to set the ghost of Yorisha free “quickly, and show the proof.” There is also a section relating back to another Koan. But to keep it short, I will focus on the Kegan sutra directly, which will give useful background for answering the Zen master’s questions.
 
Buddha literally translates as “enlightened one,” and can apply to all who have achieved realization regarding the nature of Reality and Being (and actually Act on it, transcending it so to speak). The first of the three worlds is the “world” of base desires (Kamaloka) – lust, gorging, greed, fame, arrogance, hate, envy, self-pity, etc.  Somewhat similar to the concept of the seven deadly sins in Christianity.

The second “world” is the world of form (Rupaloka), the physical practices (such as sitting meditation, Tai Chi, Kung Fu, etc.) which can lead to freedom from base desires and negative social influences. To become “the uncarved block” mentioned in Taoism. Which in turn can lead to enlightenment, which relates to the third world (Arupaloka).

This third world is without form, the “Tao which cannot be told.” It is often seen as a spiritual existence beyond life, but from the Zen perspective, it can also be seen as living true to your essential nature, before “you” were formed by peer pressure, social norms, and parental and teacher influence. As stated in a Zen Koan, to discover “your original face, before “you” were born,” the you created by your parents and socialization. Or pushing it back one generation, the Zen Koan "What was your original face before your parents were born."
 
The early Zen Masters had a clear concept of the influence of behavioral psychology on life, over a thousand years before the behavioral psychologist B.F. Skinner. Zen also includes many elements of humanistic and psycho-analytic psychology – The Hierarchy of Needs has many parallels to Zen, and the Id, Super Ego and Ego are similar in many ways to the three “worlds.” Much of socialization is beneficial, and helps shape a person in good ways. But many forms of peer pressure and socialization can also be negative and destructive, twisting us in ways which can lead to depression, stress and even suicide. Zen/Mindfulness Based Practices are designed to increase awareness and freedom from the negative social influences, and trauma in our lives. Mindful/meditative practices can be of great benefit to those suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder, as well as other forms of personal trauma. Learning to focus on what one can control, and what is healthy.
 
The goal of Tai Chi as a Zen practice, is to develop awareness and insights necessary to free you from destructive desires and emotions which sabotage life, using the mental strength and discipline which comes from training (including Tai Chi form training), and using form (the second “world”), to become an unlimited being free from destructive desires and emotions. Mindful practices can lead to clear understanding of self and others, and how to live a powerful life.
 
By seeing the nature of the dharma (teachings/life principles), through meditation and flashes of insight (Kensho - which can occur during moving forms of meditation, as much as during sitting meditation), one comes to realize that the way we live our lives is shaped by our reactions. This can including jobs and relationships, as well as our fears, insecurities, anger, depression, and other issues. By coming to realize how many of our reactions are based in the mind, one can come to mastery over destructive desires, emotions, and responses. Acting with wisdom and power, rather than despair, anger, or desperation.
 
It may be odd to think that martial training (whether Tai Chi, Kung Fu, Swordsmanship or other art) was considered so important in the early development of Zen. But when you think about what a fight it can be to overcome depression, trauma, insecurities and doubt, and the potential negative and destructive influences of others, in many ways it makes sense that the early Samurai united the Way of Zen with the Way of the Sword. Action is the only way to “show the proof.” 

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