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August 31, 2006 at 2:02 am #17155WudangAlienAlchemistParticipant
Shasta is very Lumerian. If you have not visited I suggest it highly.
August 28, 2006 at 10:51 pm #17000WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantAlthough, I am sure that different fish have differing qualities that are not addressed. There is also a mecury issue with fish. If you are taking a supplement fish oil it can be hard to determine where the fish originated. Therfore increasing the difficulty in gauging the mercury content of your supplement. Be assured there is at least a minimal amount.
August 28, 2006 at 10:48 pm #16996WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantHypothetically speaking yes. I would wont to access the quality of whatever oils you are taking. Quite often these kinds of oils are rancid. Normally I would suggest some kind of fish oil for a few weeks with a flax seed oil (unrefined, organic, cold pressed, refrigirated.) and then move them to just the flax oil.
August 28, 2006 at 9:05 pm #16994WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantOranges are considered cooling. Check out Healing With Whole Foods by Paul Pitchford. It is a fabulous textbook which bridges modern scientific nutrition with asian food sciences. Cod Liver oil is awesome, Flax oil tends to work better for folks.
August 28, 2006 at 8:23 pm #17076WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantOk, first of all the planets. How is a planet supposed to feel? Everything feels differently to everyone because our existence and paths are not identical. We have differing metapatterns and outlloks on life. (more hippie garbage, maybe.) but thats your problem now.
Now as far as how anyone would know the shapes or tones of a planet. Apparently you did not do your research. This has been covered for thousands of years. I will list a few points, a single source and you can figure it out yourself. Again this is your experience and your problem.Kepler was a scientist and a Pythagorian mystic. Kepler discovered many laws of nature as well as laws that govern planetary motion. He also contributed theories which had a great impact on the theory of music (polyphony or simultaneity). To a great extent he used pythagorean five solids. (perhaps we should debate the credentials and expertise of Pythagorus as if we were all lawyers.) Kepler discovered the elliprtical paths of the planets, which invalidated the traditional circular teaching.
“In the twentieth century a mathematician and cosmic thinker named Hans Cousto translated the planetary velocities into musical tone.”
Donna Carey, Kairos Institute of Sound Healing.Actually I could go on and on and all the way back to Sumeria but quite frankly I am bored. Do the research. One good source is Acutonics: Theres no place like Ohm sound healing, oriental medicine, and the cosmic mysteries by Donna Carey.
Your inability to glean anything usefull from this group perhaps reflects your unwillingness to go deeper into your own practice. Maybe starting there would be good, and don’t forget to breath.
As for Michaels contribution. He is finishing up several months of intensive trainings. He in fact stated this and the fact that he would not be watching this board for a bit. Why don’t you give him a chance to breathe before bashing him. Or perhaps you should all create your own forum where only those geniuses you see fit can join.
Good Day and Good JourneyAugust 20, 2006 at 11:10 pm #16362WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantSo you studied lightness gong. Would you care to share your training experience in this art? There does not seem to be much data out there.
August 19, 2006 at 2:40 pm #16358WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantYes Fajin, while it is true that every martial style has complete combat training, I have run into quite a few teachers of so called kung fu and taiji that do not teach the martial application. I have even been told by several taichi teachers that the art never had combat applications. Some believe teaching the internal arts for fighting/self-defense as well as health is pointless. I disagree I think both sides are very important. That is why I asked a stupid question.
I am curious Fajin, what was your experience before Wudang and how much time have you spent at Wudang? Forgive me if you stated this in a previous posting that I am not seeing now.August 18, 2006 at 11:32 am #16354WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantThanks for this site. I did not have it. Has anyone we know on this site or otherwise been there. Does anyone know its connection to the Wudang Taoist Kung Fu Academy. Fajin, I think these questions are mostly for you. Also does anyone know how close these schools are to each other? Also Fajin, do they fully teach the martial application at the town school?
Also Jsrit, here is a link for the Norhern Shoalin.
August 18, 2006 at 11:19 am #16568WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantgeminichasm my friend, you need to do more research. In my opinion one should examine as many sources as possible before forming a conclusion about a subject. I have personally done the research, spoken with individuals who worked in the towers as well as those outside the pentagon. The Goverments story in those cases was a load of crap. Why should recent situations be any different. I am not from some hillbillie family. My family is very educated, and my father is very highly placed in U.S. Intel, and still I am not foolish enough to not believe posts such as Michaels. The U.S. Gov. counts on idiots believing anything they tell them. They invoke fear and then utilize that fear. Did you miss the fact that we trained al-qauda and that Bin-Laden and Pres. Bush were friends.
As usual please excuse my dyslexia. I wish there was a spell check on this forum.lolAugust 16, 2006 at 11:39 pm #16348WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantwhy don’t you put a hyperlink to Yuan’s website. There is alot of stuff in your post all run together. The Wudang meditation was actually the microcosmic orbit method that Michael teaches.
August 15, 2006 at 10:07 am #16342WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantGGM Leung Ting’s lineage of Wing Tsun to be exact.
August 15, 2006 at 10:04 am #16340WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantWing Tsun
August 14, 2006 at 10:18 pm #16469WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantI have to second the fact that Bruce Lee did not lose the challenge you spoke of. It took him three minutes and he was winded afterwards. That is why he began stressing physical conditioning. As far as other Wing Tsun Masters good for them, everyone should stick with the practices they love. Bruce Lee changed things to fit himself, which is what we always do in martial arts. No two bodies or philosophy are the same. Do I think Bruce Lee was the greatest fighter ever? I would have to say no, however he had an inquisitive mind and a true heart that I have rarely seen in Masters. Many of his thoughts and practices are very useful, if adapted to the individual. Martial arts is more than becoming a good fighter. There is a spirit and heart that is lacking in almost all schools (at least in the U.S.A). Much of the martial arts in the west was brought back here by military personnel stationed in Asia post war. That is why it is often taught with a soldiers intellect and it is studied by lazy folks who want to have a fantasy of Bruce Lee one or two nights a week. Hum, time for rant to end.
August 14, 2006 at 6:13 pm #16336WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantMy Plan at this point is to go over to Wudang in about 12 months(give or take a few). As far as my previous experience. I started in Shorin Ji Ryu when I was a young child. I kinda graduated to Taijutsu, which I love very much. However Grandmaster Hatsumi refuses to teach the internal portions of the Martial arts, at least publicly. I have been practicing energetic arts most of my life and Chinese Qigong as a life study for the last say seven years. Recently I have begun studying Wing Tsun I do not think overall it is for me but I am training hard and I am enjoying learning about the system.
Yeah a vacation is not what I am looking for. I want to train long and hard everyday. Thats why I want to go to Wudang.
ThanksAugust 14, 2006 at 5:57 pm #16455WudangAlienAlchemistParticipantI would have to agree with snowlion on this topic. There are few martial traditions that teach an evolutionary way of practicing the arts. Bruce Lee did. Also in my experience of the Wing Chun community, those individuals that are not so butt hurt about other styles being effective admire Bruce Lee’s work and speak of him as extraordinary. “Butt Hurt” that is the “our style is the most (or only) effective style syndrome. Also To correct a previous post there are only four forms within the Wing Chun system and Bruce Lee knew them all. He only integrated two into what came to be known as Jeet Kune Do. As far as his Mastery of Wing Chun, I am not sure there are any Wing Tsun Masters here who can properly gauge that point.
On the sparring bit. In truly effective martial arts you cant just spar. Your partners become useless because they have broken bones or worse. This is not a matter of lack of control. Many martial arts folks dont understand the difference between sparing and training hard. Bruce Lee did not teach point fighting.
Just another perspective. -
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