• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Healing Tao USA logo title 480x83

Medical and Spiritual Qigong (Chi Kung)

  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn โ€“ Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • โ€ขโ€ขโ€ข China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES โ€ขโ€ขโ€ข
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager โ€“ Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search
  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn โ€“ Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • โ€ขโ€ขโ€ข China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES โ€ขโ€ขโ€ข
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager โ€“ Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search

zen and taoism

by

Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › zen and taoism

  • This topic has 48 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 1 month ago by adel.
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 49 total)
1 2 3 4 →
  • Author
    Posts
  • February 21, 2012 at 1:42 pm #38944
    adel
    Participant

    Is there a simple way
    to explain the difference
    of the destinations of
    the zen and taoist paths?

    Adel

    February 21, 2012 at 3:06 pm #38945
    Steven
    Moderator

    Hi Adel,

    You are opening up a huge can of worms, because
    there is no overall agreement in the community.

    ON THE ONE HAND:

    If you talk to some “Zen Daoists”,
    you will hear the refrain that both Zen
    and Daoism point to exactly the same thing.

    Zen points to the joy of being alive, in
    this very moment, and points to the core existence
    that lives behind the thoughts and fantasies
    of the mind. Then, they argue that Daoism,
    as referenced in the Dao De Jing, points to
    the exact same thing, and that there is nothing
    more to say. In this context, alchemy is nothing
    more than another fun tool to help you accomplish
    this realization. There is no need to think that
    you need to cultivate anything to be immortal,
    because you are immortal already. Alchemy just
    helps you realize it.

    If you read the Healing Tao USA Goal (pink box
    in the left column strip on the bottom if you scroll down),
    it says:

    “Healing Tao USA Goal:
    To unfold Tao, the Natural Way–the deep, embodied
    Natural Truth. To assist all beings experience their
    Whole, True, Original, and Immortal Self.”

    So this advertised goal would tend to confirm this view.

    ON THE OTHER HAND:

    There is a perspective in Alchemical
    Daoism (say the Healing Tao), where the idea is that
    you are trying to create an immortal body through alchemy
    that you can deposit your fused shen into, otherwise
    your shen scatter after death and you are recycled.
    This is in disagreement with what some Zen Daoists say,
    which says that you are immortal already, and you just
    need to realize it. Here you better get busy cultivating
    and transforming, so that you can be an immortal in the
    hereafter. This is what longevity training is for . . .
    to give you enough time to create your immortal body
    before you expire in short of achieving this. Often
    people that subscribe to this view, say that not only
    is Zen different from Daoism, but they are therefore
    clearly at odds. [As an aside, people that subscribe
    this viewpoint also have some funny ideas about Buddhism,
    and most of them are completely wrong.]

    TO MY UNDERSTANDING:

    Both are wrong.
    That is, they do NOT point to the same thing
    AND they are NOT at odds.

    The simple fact is that AS FAR AS ZEN is concerned,
    any cosmological questions about what happens after
    physical death is not even up for discussion. You
    can not say you are mortal. You can not say you
    are immortal. Anything that is outside of the
    right-here-right-now and experiencing life as it is,
    IN THIS VERY MOMENT is not Zen. There is no destination
    with Zen. You are already here. Therefore any
    cosmological perspectives that one might adopt in Daoism
    (either the “need to cultivate an immortal body” or
    the “you are already immortal” perspective) are
    COMPLETELY INDEPENDENT of what you are trying to
    accomplish with Zen. They don’t have anything to do
    with Zen, and never did.

    Therefore, in my view, one can adopt both systems
    and have them be completely independent from each other.
    As far as Healing Tao is concerned, you can believe what
    you want (either immortal already, or
    “mortal and need to cultivate”), and yet adopt Zen
    in full-force and have that be merely an add-on.

    In that context, Zen teaches you to be more fully engaged
    in the present moment; to allow you to experience life
    directly and unfiltered (from preconceived ideas),
    to provide more insight into “who you really are”;
    to allow you to see that you are something other than
    “your ideas and thoughts”, to create more peace and
    calm internally; to help decrease certain “negative”
    behavior traits (purely for your own peace-of-mind,
    not as a moral judgment) i.e. arrogance, egotistical
    behavior, judgmental thinking; increase empathy, compassion,
    and loving-kindness. How Zen does this is through
    Zen meditation primarily, but can also come from other
    add-ons: such as dharma talks, chanting, adopting the
    Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Path of Buddhism, etc.
    In any case, these things (whichever are taken) can be
    completely independent from any Daoist/Alchemical Daoist/
    Healing Tao considerations.

    It is my view that you use a fork for steak and a spoon
    for soup, and you don’t try to apply one for both. ๐Ÿ˜‰

    I’ve linked at the end of this post, a four-part series
    of posts on Zen Buddhism that I posted a couple of years ago
    to provide more food for thought.

    In any case, I’ve given you several different perspectives
    on this issue, but ultimately it is up-to-you to decide
    what you feel resonates with you.

    Best,
    Steven

    http://forum.healingdao.com/philosophy/message/21111%5C

    February 21, 2012 at 4:11 pm #38947
    adel
    Participant

    !!!!WOW GREAT POST!!!!

    Everything I’ve experienced with Zen (mostly
    from living for 13 yrs in Japan) has mostly
    been about actions in daily life, very little
    to do with “temple practices”. I’ve found
    there to be no difference with the Taoist
    practices. EXCEPT:

    >The simple fact is that AS FAR AS ZEN is concerned,
    >any cosmological questions about what happens after
    >physical death is not even up for discussion.

    The only time I feel there to be a difference is as
    you’ve stated above. With my Japanese family we
    agree upon everything until I mention something
    in regards to shen dispersing at death and then
    everyone looks at me with total empty faces. Going
    that far is akin to the Westerner who is trying to
    conquer or force the flow of nature.

    Both views feel true to me though they seem to
    oppose each other.

    By the way I eat both my steak and soup with
    chopsticks ๐Ÿ™‚
    Best, Adel

    February 21, 2012 at 5:13 pm #38949
    Steven
    Moderator

    >>>Both views feel true to me though
    >>>they seem to oppose each other.

    How they can oppose each other really only
    comes about if you let whichever Daoist
    cosmological storyline you choose to adopt
    pull you out of your full enjoyment of
    experiencing life in the Zen sense.

    If hope or fear enters into the equation,
    your mind can cause you to trail off into
    delusion, paranoia, or fantasy. This can
    work cross-purposes to Zen.

    If, however, you can treat it just as a storyline;
    one possibility of many; and not imbue with it
    with any craving, then there is no disagreement.
    Because in particular, metaphysical/cosmological
    issues are not the concern of Zen.

    >>>By the way I eat both my steak
    >>>and soup with chopsticks ๐Ÿ™‚

    LOL!!!!
    Somehow, I knew that would be case. ๐Ÿ˜‰

    Best,
    Steven

    February 21, 2012 at 5:38 pm #38951
    bagua
    Participant

    Hello Adel:

    The idea the shen or souls can disperse at death is not an agreed upon toast view. You will see no reference to this from Lao Zi or Chuang Zi. Only certain traditions believe in this or promote this and they believe a lot of other things that some ignore, they take what they want from every tradition and construct their own teachings.

    Koan training is also a valuable training in chan, equal to zazen. Unlike taoism, koan training is a test of one’s insight, ones experience and ones ability to express it. Taoist practices have nothing to compare to that training and feedback method.

    Zen is about living our life, being aware of all our experiences, whether fear, anger, sadness or joy and love. Its an awareness of everything and an understudying what is our essential nature and what is created by other things: conditioning, etc. Being aware of what is our true nature free us from what is not and releases us from that influence.

    regards,

    February 22, 2012 at 12:33 pm #38953
    adel
    Participant

    Hi,

    I think I’ve locked into some fear about
    dispersing, losing myself, losing clarity.

    I actually just read a book about chi kung
    practicing thru Lao Zi and basically it was
    about what you are doing in this moment, in
    this life. It had a very zen like feel to it.

    The past couple of weeks have been a little
    tough, although I am doing a lot of standing I
    tend to lose my trust of the center.

    Thank you for taking the time,
    Adel

    February 22, 2012 at 12:39 pm #38955
    adel
    Participant

    Right, I am at a time in my life
    where patience is the key word.

    Hope and fear is exactly what is
    pulling me. Doing a lot of standing
    practices that are really helping.
    Can’t even imagine what I would be
    going thru if I wasn’t.

    Many many thanks, Adel

    February 22, 2012 at 2:17 pm #38957
    bagua
    Participant

    Hello Adel:

    I feel Lao Zi is the guiding work for us, we don’t really need much more. It can be applied to qi gong, nei gong, tai chi, etc. Fear relates to the kidneys and the kidneys do not like cold. Maybe you can explore what “freezes” you up and try to warm it up to allow the kidneys to transform from frozen water to fluid flowing water. I suggest you do not look at what is going on as losing yourself, but actually gaining your true self. You may want to shift your thoughts/feelings and let go of having to have trust in the center. Sometimes we may want to follow the guidance of practitioners dating back thru time to Lao Zi, that the center is your true nature. We may want to have faith that those that have walked the path before us have valuable things to share, to assist us. One of those things is the center is our core, our yuan shen, the place we will realize our true nature.

    It is my experience we are all fundamentally good people, with loving hearts and minds. Much of what we do is clear the layers of thoughts, emotions, patterns and influences to realize this part of ourselves that has always existed, has always been there. Our practices help us do this.

    We all share this center together, when you are in your center and i am in my center, we share center. This is the unity of heaven, humanity and earth. If we have this intellectual clarity, it will move to include all of our being: jing/qi/shen: body/mind/spirit.

    Smile, practice and your will reap the harvest of your practice. This is what I try to do daily too.

    Big Hug,

    David

    February 22, 2012 at 2:21 pm #38959
    bagua
    Participant

    Hello Adel:

    I feel Lao Zi is the guiding work for us, we don’t really need much more. It can be applied to qi gong, nei gong, tai chi, etc. Fear relates to the kidneys and the kidneys do not like cold. Maybe you can explore what “freezes” you up and try to warm it up to allow the kidneys to transform from frozen water to fluid flowing water. I suggest you do not look at what is going on as losing yourself, but actually gaining your true self. You may want to shift your thoughts/feelings and let go of having to have trust in the center. Sometimes we may want to follow the guidance of practitioners dating back thru time to Lao Zi, that the center is your true nature. We may want to have faith that those that have walked the path before us have valuable things to share, to assist us. One of those things is the center is our core, our yuan shen, the place we will realize our true nature.

    It is my experience we are all fundamentally good people, with loving hearts and minds. Much of what we do is clear the layers of thoughts, emotions, patterns and influences to realize this part of ourselves that has always existed, has always been there. Our practices help us do this.

    We all share this center together, when you are in your center and i am in my center, we share center. This is the unity of heaven, humanity and earth. If we have this intellectual clarity, it will move to include all of our being: jing/qi/shen: body/mind/spirit.

    Smile, practice and your will reap the harvest of your practice. This is what I try to do daily too.

    Big Hug,

    David

    February 22, 2012 at 6:27 pm #38961
    Steven
    Moderator

    You are not alone.
    We are all in it together.
    S

    February 23, 2012 at 12:27 am #38963
    adel
    Participant
    February 23, 2012 at 12:57 am #38965
    adel
    Participant

    Hello David,

    Thank you for the beautiful words.

    A lot is coming from my new job.
    A position that I took on because
    it entails all that I am afraid
    of. I have been having to face
    many situations from which I have
    previously been able to hide from.

    I can’t hide now. I just need to
    move forward every day now. I
    think that and practice will
    lead somewhere…

    >We may want to have faith that those that have walked the path before us have >valuable things to share, to assist us. One of those things is the center is our >core, our yuan shen, the place we will realize our true nature.

    Faith that I will flow,
    Adel

    February 23, 2012 at 7:26 pm #38967
    ribosome777
    Participant

    since “you” are a verb, you change pending what you do..

    this does not mean just as some sort of solid anthropomorphic hominid(s), it means as primordial force field contelligence pluralities

    this may be the highest level of true infinite samadhi.. there is no object in true samadhi…

    IMHO:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dzogchen
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samadhi

    February 25, 2012 at 8:56 am #38969
    c_howdy
    Participant

    That proud tradition began, at least according to legend, in the fifth century B.C. with the poet Simonides of Ceos standing in the rubble of the great banquet hall collapse in Thessaly. As the poet closed his eyes and and reconstructed the crumbled building in his imagination, he had an extraordinary realization: he remembered where each of the guests at the ill-fated dinner had been sitting. Even though he had made no conscious effort to memorize the layout of the room, it had nevertheless left a durable impression upon his memory. From that simple observation, Simonides reputedly invented technique that would form the basis of what came to be known as the art of memory. He realized that if it hadn’t been guests sitting at the banquet table, but rather something else-say, every great greek dramatist seated in order of their dates of birth-he would have remembered that instead. or what if, instead of banquet guests, he saw each of the words of one of his poems arrayed around table? Or every task he needed to accomplish that day? Just about anything that could be imagined, he reckoned, could be imprinted upon one’s memory, and kept in good order, simply by engaging one’s spatial memory in the act of remembering. To use Simonides’ technique, all one has to do is convert something unmemorable, like a string of numbers or a deck of cards or a shopping list or Milton’s Paradise Lost, into series of engrossing visual images and mentally arrange them within an imagined space, and suddenly those forgettable items become unforgettable.
    -JOSHUA FOER, Moonwalking with Einstein

    I have impresion that if one wants to be serious practioner one shouldn’t use too much time for these old teachings or if one anyway is doing that, one should find right method to do that.

    And for that to learn mnemonic art of the modern mental athletes.

    HOWDY

    Ps. Sorry for this long list of Youtube videos but I had gathered them into my personal memory palace and used them to compose this message. Sorry also for my English, but I am still at the level of learning lists of words and haven’t yet reached grammar level, because parts of speeach need special treatment imaginatively.





    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHzOG4mJ0PA
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFLjF8yp7

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rywUS-ohqeE&ob=av2e

    March 21, 2012 at 5:19 am #38971
    zoose
    Participant

    I think they do point to the same thing. The more energy you have got the harder it becomes to not live in the moment. That is unless you are purposely forcing the energy in any particular channels, but in energy work we should never force anything right?

    And as the energy builds up more and more it enters more and more channels, not just the ones you learn to run thru with chia’s fusion I, II & III, great regulator and whatnot i forget the names. There are hundreds of little channels running off all those channels you get taught to circulate and further more than run off them, so when you let all that build up energy just go where it wants to go then you get pulled into the NOW, the zen experience. Just in zen you sink into it slowly deeper and deeper and with energy work you get pushed into it and come out of it as your energy subsides, until you can live connected to enough earth & universal energy to keep you in the NOW

    Some interesting maths i saw on tv the other day about inifinity, and i think it fits this because anyone can infinately be deeper and deeper into the NOW. There are different sizes of infinity and i think zen is the superset, the biggest infinity. With energy work there is lots of different infinities, subsets of energy channels that finally all merge into the zen super infinity.

    Generally the proof that there are different sizes of infinity is that an infinity number starting with .11 is a different subset of numbers than an infinity subset starting with .12 and then the superset containing both infinity numbers can be an infinity number starting with .1 , it would contain both .11 and .12 ….. So they are all infinity but there are different sizes of infinity. zen slowly brings us into the NOW more and more and energy work brings us also into the now more and more but by concentrating on a small part at a time which is easier to do and easier to feel the progress because it is in small jumps we travel down the path to the NOW.

    …Just my thoughts.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 49 total)
1 2 3 4 →
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Log In

Primary Sidebar

Signup for FREE eBook โ€“ $20 value

Inner Smile free eBook with Signup to Newsletter

Way of the Inner Smile
130 page eBook

+ Qi Flows Naturally news

+ Loving the Tao of Now blog

Enter Email Only - Privacy Protected

Qigong Benefits โ€“ Michael Winn

Michael Winn Qi Products:

Best Buy Packages »
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1 & 2
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 3 & 4
  3. Fusion of Five Elements 1, 2, 3
  4. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  5. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  6. Inner Sexual Alchemy Kan & Li
  7. Sun-Moon Alchemy Kan & Li
  8. Inner Smile Gift
Individual Products
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 2
  3. Qigong Fundamentals 3
  4. Qigong Fundamentals 4
  5. Fusion of Five Elements 1
  6. Fusion of Five Elements 2 & 3
  7. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  8. Tao Dream Practice
  9. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  10. Deep Healing Qigong
  11. Internal Alchemy (Kan & Li Series)
Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA

Michael Winn, Pres.
Healing Tao USA

Use Michael Winn's Qi Gong products for one whole year โ€” I guarantee you'll be 100% delighted and satisfied with the great Qi results. Return my product in good condition for immediate refund.

Guarantee Details

OUR PROMISE: Every Michael Winn Qi gong & meditation product will empower you to be more relaxed, smiling, joyful, and flowing in harmony with the Life Force.

yin-yang

Each Qigong video, book, or audio course will assist your authentic Self to fulfill worldly needs and relations; feel the profound sexual pleasure of being a radiant, healthy body; express your unique virtues; complete your soul destiny; realize peace โ€“ experience eternal life flowing in this human body Now.

© 2025 Healing Tao USA ยท Log in ยท built by mojomonger