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December 28, 2016 at 7:49 pm #47578StevenModerator
OK thanks.
Then, I’d recommend you get Karin Sรถrvik’s Tao Yin DVD, it would be good for your spine. See: Karin’s Tao Yin DVD. Obviously shipping may be more, given you live overseas, but if you email Karin I’m sure she can work it out with you. She teaches internationally and is used to people from different countries ordering items. Mention my name that I sent you to her to get the DVD. I believe the DVD is region-free.
Also supportive would be Master Chia’s Spinal Cord Breathing exercise (look it up online), and for too much computer work, the Iron Shirt 1 posture of Iron Bridge.
Continuing to do the microcosmic orbit will be supportive.
Change will be in proportion to how much you do vs. how much you continue to aggravate it with poor habits. With excessive bad habits, no amount of support will reverse it, the best you could do would be to slow the worsening. Habit change is the most important part. Then the other items will support and speed positive change.
S
December 28, 2016 at 1:25 am #47574StevenModeratorIs this a recent acute injury or is this a long-term chronic condition?
S
December 20, 2016 at 5:49 pm #47554StevenModeratorIf you are varying by seasons, then it is unlikely that what you are doing is a long-term absolutist change . . . which is good.
The trouble with saying “abnormal ketone count” is who can say precisely what is abnormal. It is likely kidneys will be detoxing more regardless of amount. When you reach a threshold where it is detoxing too much can be difficult to quantify.
I just encourage moderation and an awareness to striving for balance.
S
December 19, 2016 at 10:10 pm #47550StevenModeratorWhile such a diet can have many benefits in the short-term, I would caution about very long-term use. Ketones are toxins that the kidneys try to eliminate, and thus their presence makes the kidneys work more. The presence of ketones is due to the body not being able to properly manage its blood sugar, and it is a problem that diabetics deal with often. It’s well known that it is harmful to the kidneys.
Detoxification protocols are OK if they are short-term.
But a person should NOT be “IN DETOX” all the time.
Being in detox, wears on the kidneys and liver, and you can damage the organs after a period of time. Raw food diet and its damage to liver (and secondarily spleen via control cycle) is also known.After any kind of detox protocol–which should only be short-term–a person should let the body rest and rebuild, because detox is depleting to the body.
Detox can be smart to clear away toxins and reset the body’s natural wisdom, but eventually detox must end and you must let the body rebuild.
MODERATION IN ALL THINGS.
TOO MUCH OF ANYTHING, regardless of what it is, IS BAD.S
December 13, 2016 at 8:40 pm #47539StevenModeratorFor many years I was the bookstore manager of the Healing Tao Summer Retreat Program, so I’m pretty familiar with all of the books, and have kept mostly-up-to-date since then. There is nothing written on anal use of the jade egg to my knowledge.
However, I am indeed aware that some of the men who were buying jade eggs at the retreats were in fact not buying them for their wife/girlfriend, but for themselves for reasons similar to what you mention . . . either general toning for anal sex (gay men), prostate problem assistance, or hemorrhoid problem assistance. In all cases, I suspect it was mostly guided by experimentation and/or reference to the women’s jade egg practice.
I myself do not have any experience using the jade egg in my anus, so I can’t give a personal review or recommendation based on direct experience. Moreover, if you did choose to do this, I think it would have to be with no written sources, completely self-experimentation, and at your own risk. I would recommend in that case that it be kept separate from any girlfriend/wife jade eggs, to avoid bacterial contamination of her vagina.
That said, personally, I would be a little reluctant to use a jade egg in this fashion. In particular, the anus is quite tight, and with the jade egg being retrieved via dental floss, there would be some concern that it could break and the jade egg could get stuck and form an obstruction.
As far as prostate help is concerned, Master Chia does have a book called “Prostate Chi Kung” (Prostate Chi Kung ) As per the book, the recommendations are diet (e.g. fiber, water), herbs, colonics, genital weight lifting (Iron Shirt 3), and direct massage using a lubed finger after a bowel movement.
At one of Master Chia’s workshops last year, a seminar hosted by Master Chia had an endocrinologist strongly recommending direct prostate massage for all men, using a device you insert into your anus that looks like a big dildo, called Aneros (Aneros). I’ve never used this personally either, so can’t give any kind of review. However, given Master Chia’s implicit approval, I’d say it is probably a better choice than a jade egg for male prostate massage.
For me, though, I’d be a little intimidated by the size and the cost of the Aneros. So another alternative would be to try something cheaper and smaller first. Something like this: (See here) or maybe this: (See here)
with some kind of water-based lubricant like this:
water-based lube. Then see how it goes and whether it is something you find beneficial.Sorry, that’s about the best advice I can give.
Qi,
StevenDecember 9, 2016 at 6:40 pm #47515StevenModeratorListening to the Silence of Water
Posted by Lorie Dechar on Dec 8, 2016 in Alchemical Healing, Chinese Medicine
https://anewpossibility.comThe ear retreats from perception deep into its own interior space. The vortex of the ear canal leads to the sensitive tympanic membrane of the eardrum. It then follows a labyrinth of curved, liquid-filled canals until it reaches the nautilus shell-shaped bone of the cochlea. Here, the vibrations from the eardrum become nerve impulses that travel to our brain where they can potentially be transformed into meaning.
All sounds from the external world enter through these intricately curved fluid filled canals. Flowing liquids provide a hidden and mysterious medium through which we can listen to the reflected song of the cosmos.
Sound comes to us through Water and so, in Chinese medicine, the sense of hearing and the orifices of the ears are governed by Water, the Element of the Winter Season.
As we now move with increasing conviction towards Winter, the season of Water, the time of depth, hibernation, gestation and renewal, I find myself wondering ย
ย in the midst of the cacophony of roars, bites, barks and tweets of the modern world, what is truly worth listening to?
the silence of waterWhen I open my soul to the sounds around me, I am often aware of static, a whirr of justifications, assertions and implications. Words pour into me like fractal fruit rushing from an electronic cornucopia.
But if I sit quietly and listen to the sound below the static, I hear something deeper.
I hear the sound of Water.
Beyond the words and the thoughts, beyond question and meaning, beyond the multi-colored lights and dying Gods of this holiday season, beyond the fear and the greed and the hope and the loss, there is a pulse, the strong steady rhythm of the ocean, the sound at the center of me, the sound where the world begins.
In Winter, nature calls us back to this sound, the sound of silence. Nature asks us to rest, to listen carefully to our own breathing and wait for answers to come from emptiness. Begin listening to Water by softening your ears and letting sound come towards you. Open the ears of the Heart and discover what Winter has to teach you.
December 9, 2016 at 6:37 pm #47522StevenModeratorDecember 9, 2016 at 6:36 pm #47525StevenModeratorMost important part is weight-bearing exercise such as standing meditation and Tai Chi, as well as stress to the bones via slapping/hitting techniques ala QF4 and IS3.
I’ve seen studies that have shown that the effect from most supplements is minimal, e.g. Vitamin D, calcium, etc.
It’s why bones deteriorate so rapidly in astronauts. It’s the gravity and pressure on the bones that makes them strong.
S
December 5, 2016 at 5:23 pm #47507StevenModeratorOK thanks.
What is moderate vs. not is entirely subjective. A person can be hooked on a regular, steady low amount of something just as easily as larger quantities. A buddy of mine was once in the habit of drinking a glass of wine before bed each night. It was the only alcohol he drank. However, when he tried to stop, he found he couldn’t. He couldn’t sleep and he felt physically uncomfortable. It might be strange to label a person in that situation as being an alcoholic, especially since most people seeing that situation could easily say “who cares about the one glass of wine”. However, the issue was that he didn’t want to continue, but he no longer had to free choice to make that decision. Alcoholism simply means regular use of alcohol where the person no longer can make a choice to NOT use it. Addiction is defined by lack of free choice, regardless of the amount involved.
Physical symptoms or withdrawal discomfort in the body may not be particularly strong or noticeable–I don’t know what it feels like to you–but it would still fall into the category of physical addiction pathology with wood->fire creation cycle link being broken. It’s why I mentioned in my earlier post that given your situation you were describing, I noticed a susceptibility to physical addictions. Despite the strength of “withdrawal symptoms”, the energy pattern is still the same, and even if you are not experiencing several physical withdrawal symptoms now, that could easily change or progress either with alcohol or other substances.
When it involves addiction to substances, it basically is connected with the wood->fire link. It’s a situation of there being too much wood qi that can’t move, and not enough fire qi. Liver’s got too much and heart not enough. Liver qi feels like it needs to move and flow, but the heart fire isn’t strong enough to take the wood, of which there is typically way too much stagnating in the liver. It’s why the addiction is manifesting. When the addictive substance is consumed, the liver gets occupied with detoxing it, so it is kept busy. After a little while, when the substance runs low, the liver sends alarm signals to the brain saying “we’ve got major problems, we don’t have any more of this to process, send more now!” So for the body, it is quite logical to reconsume the substance. It helps deal with the excessive and hyperactive liver qi, since it can’t escape to the heart. Making the liver just burn up the excess qi right then and there is an easy and quick fix.
This is why “willpower” is not really the solution. It doesn’t deal with the underlying energy problem of “too much wood, not enough fire, and broken flow between”. When this is a big problem, why would the body want to stop clamping down the hyperactive wood with such an easy and quick fix?
*The only real solution to the problem, is to fix the underlying problem.
The too much wood and wood stagnation likely is a combination of high stress (stress attacks the liver), underlying frustrations, feelings of being trapped in a situation you don’t want to be in, unwillingness to make a change out of an unhealthy situation to one that gives your heart joy due to not wanting to move out of your current comfort zone. Connected to this is the low heart fire: feelings of deep loneliness, feelings of lack of self worth, feelings of lack of acceptance of who you are truly are, feeling unhappiness in life tied into this unwillingness to make changes in your life to a way of living that provides happiness.*Realistically a person needs to make RADICAL changes to these outer circumstances which are the root cause for the inner imbalance if they truly want to break a physical addiction. If a person is unwilling to do that, the chances of breaking a physical addiction are next to zero, regardless of other cute tricks.
That said, things that help lubricate the wood->fire flow will be supportive (although not corrective in and by themselves). These would be
1. Brisk walking (30 mins or more daily)
2. Tai Chi 2 fast form
3. Inner Smile meditation, working on self-acceptance
4. Trying to cultivate patience and gratitude as you go through daily life, to nurture heart fire
5. General wood practices, already mentioned, would be helpful for short-term symptom relief.However, for actually solving or correcting the addiction problem, you would have to do (See * above) with a complete radical shift, otherwise it is highly unlikely you will eliminate the problem. Quite simply without doing that, continuing to engage in the addiction is the most logical choice the body will decide on. It might not be what you want to hear, but it is the unfortunate truth.
Qi,
StevenDecember 5, 2016 at 12:28 am #47503StevenModeratorWhat’s the nature of the addiction?
Psychological addictions such as overeating, gambling, shopaholic, sex addiction, are all different than physical addictions and have a different pathology.S
December 4, 2016 at 5:43 pm #47499StevenModeratorNo, Primordial Qigong isn’t Tai Chi, although it is sometimes named “Tai Chi for Enlightenment” for marketing purposes. Although, as an fyi, that in no way diminishes the value of Primordial . . . it’s an excellent high-powered form; I do it every day myself.
Karin’s Tao Yin DVD is great. You can just put it in and follow along; no need to spend time dissecting instruction.
If you have a problem with wood flowing to fire, that speaks to a susceptibility to physical additions, such as alcoholism, smoking, drugs, etc. Be careful with addictive substances as may more easily take root, and you find yourself sucked into a drug addiction. Themes and issues around loneliness are also likely present, weak heart fire. Large amounts of stress inflame the liver and either cause or aggravate such conditions, so best to try to remove root sources.
Brisk walking is still one of the best for this situation. And for Tai Chi, if your interest is on the wood->fire flow, in fact the Tai Chi 2 fast form is very good for this also as it gets the heart pumping through its cardiovascular elements, transfer the activated wood qi from the Tai Chi into the fire of the heart . . . another thing to learn in the future when you explore the Tai Chi line. But for now, recommendation would be to put energies into daily brisk walking.
S
December 2, 2016 at 10:21 pm #47491StevenModeratorMichael has a few tendon exercises in QF4.
Yoga does stretch tendons, but it is usually combined with muscles as well.
I personally prefer things that are more focused specifically on the tendon system.Optimal would be the Iron Shirt 2 exercises, although those are difficult to learn.
Other good tendon options would be to learn some of the exercises specifically geared toward the tendons in the second half of the Tao Yin book, OR to look online for “Yi Jin Jing” forms, e.g. those from the tendon-changing classic.However, without specifically working on the tendons, Tai Chi (any variation) is phenomenal for working on the wood element. Do you know Tai Chi 1?
If you don’t know any of these, one of the most simple and most direct ways to help move congested liver qi, is simply to go on a brisk walk. Walk for at least 30 minutes and do it at a fast pace so it gets the heart pumping. This helps transfer liver qi to the heart (WOOD -> FIRE). This will help not only liver congestion issues but will also help with SAD for reasons mentioned earlier. In fact, since people often don’t move around as much in the winter, I suspect that this all related in your case. Brisk walking is often overlooked because it doesn’t look like qigong, but it is actually an excellent way to move wood qi.
Qi,
StevenDecember 1, 2016 at 7:27 pm #47487StevenModeratorWinter tonifies the water element. Themes of rest and rejuvenation are energetically at work. Rather than it being a time for busy activity and doing hobbies you enjoy, it is more a time for self-contemplation, for rest, for quiet. If you can tune into the energy of rest, quiet, self-contemplation, then winter can feel quite enjoyable to the soul. You can appreciate it and feel joy in what it has to offer. If you can look at it as the time for which you can just rest and relax, with no other meaningful obligations, your spirit can brighten up and learn to enjoy the season, along with its associated darkness. Bear in mind also, that during the height of summer say, it might be light from the time you get up until the time you go to bed, so you only get to experience “day” . . . you are short-changed on the night time experience. In winter, with so much darkness, even subtracting sleep, you can experience BOTH light and dark in your wakefulness. So in some ways, it is even more rejuvenating because you can experience both energies in yin-yang pulsation within your direct consciousness during winter. Perhaps on the occasional clear night, you might even be able to see stars . . . something perhaps difficult to experience in the summer with so much light. In short, I think a lot of it has to do with attitude, and not recognizing all the wonderful aspects to winter and taking joy in them. Rather than resisting its nature, embrace it. With all its glory. Go with the flow, so to speak. Flow like “water”. ๐
Part of this is in changing your thinking (earth element). By supporting the earth element, it can feed your metal element (creation cycle) and your depression can vanish.
Of course, you can also work with your depression directly (Healing Sounds, Fusion).
But putting that aside, some tricks other than changing your thinking (as in the first paragraph) would be other things that nurture either elements of EARTH or WOOD.
Changing your thinking, nurtures EARTH as mentioned above. However, any sitting meditation will do. Doing alchemy meditations will nurture your earth element, and it is the time for it. Winter is the time for self-contemplation and going inward. So the season does support meditation. The benefit of nurturing EARTH is that it will support your METAL so you will have less problems with depression that need to be alleviated. Moreover, by strengthening your earth element, it will control WATER in the controlling cycle. Water element gets tonified during winter, and for some folks it can be too tonifying. Earth element can help diminish this, so it doesn’t get out of hand. Too much WATER can drain the METAL in sedation, aggravating depression.
The other technique would be to nurture WOOD. Things such as (externally) buying green houseplants to remind you of spring and to help you feel growing and rising energy in your home (to help you move too much stuck WATER that could be too tonified for you during winter). Activating WOOD can drain WATER in sedation. Using practices, good choices would be doing Tai Chi forms, tendon stretches (QF4 or IS2), or simply going for a very brisk-paced outdoor long walk in the crisp winter air.
**To sum up:
1. Work on changing your perspective about winter: See paragraph 1.
2. Nurture EARTH ELEMENT with appreciation of winter: sitting meditations, alchemy
3. Nurture WOOD ELEMENT: green houseplants, Tai Chi, tendon exercises, long brisk outdoor walksAs above, I’d recommend #1-2 for mild symptoms. If severe, focus on #3.
#1-2 focus on enjoying, and accepting “what is”, for more joy. #3 is more like a pain reliever if the winter energies are too strong/overwhelming and you need a respite.And obviously Western medicine ideas about taking Vitamin D from lost sunlight and/or full-spectrum light (for SAD) would be worth trying if desperate.
Note: If one did not have any problems with the season, since season is WATER one should do WATER practices (such as standing meditation) if a person wanted to capture the “most amount of energy” from the season. However, this assumes a person is not having seasonal problems and one just wants the most energy. In the case of having seasonal problems, I recommend items #1-3 instead; in particular, there is too much stagnation in the water element and the creation cycle needs to flow better if you are having trouble.
Qi,
StevenNovember 12, 2016 at 6:17 am #47480StevenModeratorNovember 12, 2016 at 6:16 am #47478StevenModerator -
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