Ya Mu

A Basic Primer For the Healing Arts From China

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Reading several threads it became apparent that many posters are not familiar with the therapeutics/healing arts from China. Rather than reply in those threads and interrupt the topic, I created this thread and hope this helps to increase the knowledge.

 

source of article: http://qigongamerica.blogspot.com/

 

I would encourage other practitioners to add to this thread if they wish.

 

Glad to see more people are talking about *classical* Chinese medicine, and waking up to the fact that "traditional" Chinese medicine (TCM) is a contradiction in terms.

 

A short write-up I did on the subject for the hospital website:

 

http://apricotforesthospital.com/classical-chinese-medicine/

 

I provide the link to Professor Heiner Freuhauf's excellent 2009 academic article on the subject below, which *everyone* interested in this topic should read.

 

I think the article itself deserves cutting and pasting here, but it's too long and the formatting is challenging.

 

http://www.classicalchinesemedicine.org/2009/04/chinese-medicine-in-crisis-tcm/

 

Do you yourself a favor and click.

Edited by leandro
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In the end TCM is not even the answer to the cause of suffering (first noble truth). You need to go past that and understand ho emotions, craving, attachment, delusion, etc. all the mental factors are the main cause of disease (aside from the external factors: damp, cold, wind, heat and summer-heat and dryness. But again if your mind/qi is strong and purified none of the external factors will attack you.

 

Everything that is, has been, and will exists rises with the mind and sinks back to it.

 

Tame your mind and cravings and you'll have angry wild elephants bowing at your feet. :)

 

In the meantime TCM is good, but ultimately you need to go past it.

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In the end TCM is not even the answer to the cause of suffering (first noble truth). You need to go past that and understand ho emotions, craving, attachment, delusion, etc. all the mental factors are the main cause of disease (aside from the external factors: damp, cold, wind, heat and summer-heat and dryness. But again if your mind/qi is strong and purified none of the external factors will attack you.

 

Everything that is, has been, and will exists rises with the mind and sinks back to it.

 

Tame your mind and cravings and you'll have angry wild elephants bowing at your feet. :)

 

In the meantime TCM is good, but ultimately you need to go past it.

 

 

 

 

 

I think your missing the point, Ya Mu is presenting the qi arts as a complete system. A person could utilize any of the practises above without having to study the first noble truth. Its nice to let traditions stand up on there own, honour there integrity and contribution to humanity. Buddhists seem to forget that alot.

 

I know you mean well.

 

 

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Very interesting - do you have any suggestions for further reading on the subject?

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With all due respect to Heiner Freuhauf I disagree with quite a bit of his article. I teach the history of Chinese medicine, and know many of the same sources as he does, yet my conclusions are quite different. I have been trained in a "classical" family tradition of Chinese medicine as well as the modern state system.

 

There is a favourite line in the West that "the communists broke Chinese medicine." The creation of modern curriculum and the active removal of some references to certain traditions is often cited as the cause. The thing is that the codification of curriculum and the removal of elements that were considered irrelevant of superstitious is a process that goes back to the foundation of the Taiyi/Imperial Bureau of Medicine in the Song Dynasty 1000 years ago.

 

Is the Huangdi Neijing still the foundational text? Yes. Are other classics like the Nanjing, the Shanghanlun, the Zhouhou Beijifang,or the Shennong Bencaojing still studied? Yes as well. What is missing? Well, its the folk practices that are derived from clinical experiences by particular doctors at particular times. Sometimes these things are clinical pearls, but most of the time, because of misunderstanding, mis-transcription (homonyms are a major problem in transmission of old texts), or just plain wrong ideas, these things were useless or even dangerous practices that needed to be lost.

 

We cannot just wash folk-modelling with a brush of wishful thinking and presume that most of the practices that have been dropped from Chinese medicine should be preserved. It starts to become like apologists for for an idealized view of North American First nations people as all peaceful and at one with the land, ignoring the facts of pre-Columbian environmental degradation or human sacrifice, and so on. Magical thinking that did not stand up to the tests of clinical use often arose and fell throughout the history of Chinese medicine, to say that classical is better is just simple minded.

 

That is not to say that there was not a concerted effort on the part of the Communists to impose the doctrine of dialectical materialism upon Chinese medicine and to modernize it. The thing is that Yin-Yang is so much more solid as a philosophy than dialectical materialism and so integrated into Chinese medicine that it just went back to Yin-Yang anyway. A passage in a teaching text in China may read a bit like Maoist propaganda at first, but the quote they site will, in the end, lead to classic Daoist philosophy and thinking.

 

The integration of science into Chinese medicine is not the hobgoblin it seems to be presented as. It does create challenges and issues to be sure, but it is not an either/or choice. Sure there are people involved with the science of Chinese medicine who use antibiotics and shun traditional formulae, yet there is quite a lot of room within the world of Chinese medicine. There are also many thousands who look at the older methods and pass on much of the wisdom that is not found in a Macciocia textbook or one of Shanghai volumes.

 

The biggest problem is that the basic education that people receive in Chinese medicine is just a start. Its the apprentice level of craftsmanship and it gets confused for being sufficient. What gets called by the critics "Classical Chinese medicine" or "Authentic Chinese medicine" is simply the journeyman and master craftsman level of the training. I say that the wider Chinese medicine is practised the greater likelihood of there being more master level practitioners out there.

 

I have heard the same critique of Taijiquan, yet there are many more high-level players today than there were 40 years ago, and in a large part this is due to Taijiquan's increasing popularity. With more people practising there are more people practising it wrong, but also more people going deeper and trying to figure it out and share it. Sure there are hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of people doing crappy Taijiquan out there, but that means there are more than ever doing good Taijiquan as well. The thing about the basics of Chinese medicine that come from the Communist moulded system is that it is at least competent and not crap. If a practitioner wants to just stay there it is too bad, but not a growing problem that needs to be solved. There are more and better high-level practitioners of Chinese medicine than any time in the last 150 years.

 

The same classics that were used 1000 years ago are the same classics studied today. In fact I teach a third-year class tomorrow which is a character by character analysis of passages from the Neijing that illustrate many of the first instances of core concepts outlined from fundamentals in first-year. I for one know the classics are being taught, I am teaching them myself.

 

Professor Kevin Walllbridge, 東方古典科學院 Academy of Classical Oriental Sciences

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Leandro, thanks for the links. I found the articles interesting and agree with many of the points.

 

Gerard, I am referring to Chinese therapeutics and not self practices, although I did mention qigong as a self-healing exercise. Perhaps I should have left that out as my intention here is to speak of applied therapeutics.

 

Kevin, thanks for your views. Myself I find sharing the views of both yourself and the opposite side of the coin.

For one thing, unlike IMO far too many who get involved in Chinese Therapeutics, I am not anti-western medicine. My view is the concept of what I refer to as "world medicine". Let's take the whole of what the world offers that works and chunk out what doesn't. For purists of any camp I am sure that statement doesn't sit well.

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Hi Ya Mu,

 

I should have stated that my comment was directed to advanced stages of cultivation, in which the concept of disease is viewed from a different perspective. I am not here to nitpick on TCM or your system. It's all good, that's we have an open forum, merely to state our opinions in a civilised manner. Thanks!

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Very interesting - do you have any suggestions for further reading on the subject?

Almost missed your post.

 

Here is the thing, between my wife and I our medicine library is about 6'x50' stuffed full of collections of texts on Chinese therapeutics. At least 15-20 (probably more) different texts on acupuncture alone then corresponding texts on specialized diseases, treatments, Chinese herbal medicine (perhaps 50 books or more). tui na, tui na for babies, specialized moxa treatment , qigong, medical qigong, female problems, male problems, fertility issues, pain specialties, Japanese needling, specialized Chinese needling, Korean needling, etc etc etc And then there is our vast western medicine library...and my homeopathic medicine library... osteopathic medicine library... veterinarian Western/Chinese/chiropractic (how did that get in there?) ...American/European herbal medicine library, Native American herbal medicine Cherokee, Lakota and miscellaneous.

 

Now I am going to say something that will be controversial but you ask about further reading and this is my genuine opinion. And this opinion is based on studying the above mentioned books as well as a l o n g time running and operating a clinic.

 

They are none of them worth reading IMO. I studied all this stuff for more years than most people that post here are aged. And yeah, the therapeutics work.

 

But I learned therapeutics that are written down nowhere (except my own material) that IMO far exceed anything in those books and if someone spends 1-3 weekends with me they can learn the beginnings of a IMO much higher end therapeutic system that will give them far greater efficacy than if they spent 30 years with those books.

 

So, OK, an answer to your question, No, I can't recommend any further reading. Except possibly my book for an idea of high level medical qigong. And that is not worth reading compared to actually learning the medical qigong and Taoist medicine, even though it does list unique, never before published medical qigong treatment methods.

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Here is the thing, between my wife and I our medicine library is about 6'x50' stuffed full of collections of texts on Chinese therapeutics. At least 15-20 (probably more) different texts on acupuncture alone then corresponding texts on specialized diseases, treatments, Chinese herbal medicine (perhaps 50 books or more). tui na, tui na for babies, specialized moxa treatment , qigong, medical qigong, female problems, male problems, fertility issues, pain specialties, Japanese needling, specialized Chinese needling, Korean needling, etc etc etc And then there is our vast western medicine library...and my homeopathic medicine library... osteopathic medicine library... veterinarian Western/Chinese/chiropractic (how did that get in there?) ...American/European herbal medicine library, Native American herbal medicine Cherokee, Lakota and miscellaneous.

 

They are none of them worth reading IMO. I studied all this stuff for more years than most people that post here are aged. And yeah, the therapeutics work.

 

So, OK, an answer to your question, No, I can't recommend any further reading. Except possibly my book for an idea of high level medical qigong. And that is not worth reading compared to actually learning the medical qigong and Taoist medicine, even though it does list unique, never before published medical qigong treatment methods.

 

It's definitely a lot easier to become a collector of books than an experienced practitioner. Before I went to your seminars, I knew very little about Chinese medicine. Since then I've collected a couple dozen books on the subject and I still feel that I learn more in one day of practice than I've learned reading all of them.

 

That said, I do think some are better than others. I really like A Light Warriors Guide to High Level Energy Healing, by Michael Lomax; Power Healing, by Zhi Gang Sha; and Chinese Medical Qigong Therapy, by Jerry Alan Johnson.

 

They are no substitute for real experience and instruction from a master, but they are interesting.

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Is the Huangdi Neijing still the foundational text? Yes. Are other classics like the Nanjing, the Shanghanlun, the Zhouhou Beijifang,or the Shennong Bencaojing still studied? Yes as well. What is missing? Well, its the folk practices that are derived from clinical experiences by particular doctors at particular times. Sometimes these things are clinical pearls, but most of the time, because of misunderstanding, mis-transcription (homonyms are a major problem in transmission of old texts), or just plain wrong ideas, these things were useless or even dangerous practices that needed to be lost.

 

Yup -- and the pearIs were far from lost. E.g. this book,

51WRgNiPzcL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

 

 

which I own, includes a helluva lot of folk medicine meticulously collected from every region of China where its use had been handed down via oral tradition and hands-on practice without ever making it to the classical texts or enriching and socially uplifting a single physician. In fact, Communists had to resort to threats and coercion to force folk practitioners to surrender their secrets that for many generations were being only taught by father to son and mother to daughter and guarded with extreme care. Some of the information therein blew my mind. (E.g. folk herbal contraceptives that are apparently about one hundred percent effective, with no side effects, which are taken once, in one single dose, and work for a whole year -- or a different formula which works for three months, should you change your mind sooner. Neither classical Chinese medicine nor Western have anything even remotely this good for the purpose.)

 

When people realize that the practice of medicine is the practice of power (incidentally, in Native American tongues these words, medicine and power, are interchangeable), they might start understanding what is, was, and will be happening to medicine -- any medicine anywhere. It has always been a power struggle, first and foremost. The winners have always been the most ambitious, not the most talented and compassionate and knowledgeable. Which is one reason we don't have a great medicine anywhere for any purposes, at best we have pockets of mediocre or not-bad medicine here and there, against the general backdrop of atrocious medicine (the most glorified kinds are overwhelmingly in this category). But don't let me digress...

Edited by Taomeow
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Leandro, thanks for the links. I found the articles interesting and agree with many of the points.

 

Gerard, I am referring to Chinese therapeutics and not self practices, although I did mention qigong as a self-healing exercise. Perhaps I should have left that out as my intention here is to speak of applied therapeutics.

 

Kevin, thanks for your views. Myself I find sharing the views of both yourself and the opposite side of the coin.

For one thing, unlike IMO far too many who get involved in Chinese Therapeutics, I am not anti-western medicine. My view is the concept of what I refer to as "world medicine". Let's take the whole of what the world offers that works and chunk out what doesn't. For purists of any camp I am sure that statement doesn't sit well.

Well the very last sentance is correct. When you (specifically) start mixing up Native American methods with your Qi gong.. it's kinda a bummer and sends some people running and screaming the other direction.

 

Does "world medicine" mean you get to take stuff/material from Amerind/FirstNations/Aboriginal traditions and mix it into TCM?

Edited by Aksijaha

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Aksijaha,

 

Yes, I do believe "World Medicine" does allow that. If you look at the post above you, made by TM, you will see a book containing powerful medicine but these teachings are not generally included (really, not at all) in TCM. So your question could be rephrased, "Are TCM practitioners ALLOWED to incorporate these teachings into their practice?" My opinion is YES! Or do you just have something against Native American medicine, which is very powerful?

 

Yes of course I believe, as I stated above, that a "medicine practitioner" should be allowed to take what works into their system and not have their head in the sand about being a "purist". The goal SHOULD be to utilize whatever tool is needed at the moment to achieve the highest efficacy. What occurs in the purist camp, whether that be by choice or by law, is substandard treatment. An example of what I am referring to would be the child who comes into a western medicine office with a sore throat. The western medical doctor examines the child and determines, through their own experience and knowledge, that an herbal tea would be the best approach in this particular case. But instead, due to something called "standard of care" (purist) they must give the child an antibiotic, which the child in this example, doesn't need. And, with another example the antibiotic may be the best choice.

 

First, do no harm, then achieve the highest efficacy should be the goal here and not jealousy or discrimination of any medicine form.

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Chinese medicine, like all things Chinese, due to the pragmatic belief system, is inclusive not exclusive. "Doing whatever is required or needed to help your patient IS chinese medicine." This is what my classical Chinese medicine teacher teachers. The bodywork, needles, herbs etc are simply the time tested therapeutic applications most often used.

 

Kevin is correct in the ststement that the standardisation and stripping of superstition from medicine has been an ongoing and long process, not just a recent thing. However I do disagree that modern TCM teaches the classics in the way that is implied in his post. Yes random quotations are often used to support the theories or views within TCM, but even in China people are not taught from the classics.

 

They are taught from textbooks.

 

In the past the classics WERE the textbooks.

 

 

Now, is the situation simple and straightforward? No, cumon, is it ever !?

 

But the TCM i was taught and have experienced, and that of my missus, both in China and in the West is quite a different animal to the Classical Chinese medicine we've been taught. And yet, why is it that the CCM of three teachers supports and constantly echoes each other, not in method, but in theory and perspective?

 

In line with my teacher, I do not denigrate TCM, I see it as a "school" of Chinese medicine, it will have the same spectrum of good and bad teachers, or practitioners, and or ideas, methods etc that ANY other line or approach of medicine will have.

 

The "classical" label is becoming increasingly popular, I predict more will start using it, like "qigong" teachers suddenly using "neigong" . Well it's all the same anyway... No it's not.

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Out of curiosity and interest I have been checking out various Chinese healers of all sorts from time to time over the years, getting them to work on whatever aches and pains and problems I had at the time. My experience is that the effectiveness and the methods employed etc,, have varied widely. I've visited Chinese healers of all kinds including herb doctors, acupuncturists, acupressure/massage practitioners, and qigong healers. I've never personally had much results with Chinese herbal remedies making any sort of real noticeable difference regarding ailments, but I have seen a little benefit from some Chinese herbal tonics. As for acupuncture and acupressure and massage methods, I personally really haven't seen any noticeable benefit for ailments from trying these other than maybe very minor improvements. It may be however that for these methods to be effective that you just have to go for sessions over a really long time, and although I went to a few of these regularly over periods of a couple of months, I never really saw any large benefit from such practices. A longer period may possibly have brought better results however.

 

As for qigong healers, my experience is that what these people do can vary widely. Out of about six or seven different Chinese qigong healers I have spent some time with, only two seemed to have some real noticeable ability, but the others seemed to have little to no noticeable effect at all. Two of these included one who did body contact qigong combined with massage, and one who emitted qi through acupuncture needles from his finger tips in which I could feel an electric qi sensation from the needle when he emitted qi into the needle. Both of these two seemed to have no real noticeable effect on ailments. Another guy I recall came from a zhineng background, but may have had other teachers as well, emitted qi from his hands at a distance in different ways, but I could feel nothing from this, and he had no effect on my condition as well. About the same for some of the other qigong teacher/healers I tried. I could not feel any effects when they were emitting or manipulating qi, and I saw no real effect on my condition. No doubt for all the different forms of healing, the skill and experience of the practitioner you are seeing is probably an important factor as well, and some conditions will respond to one sort of treatment but not respond too well to another type of treatment.

 

Only two qigong masters I have tried were able to emit qi in a noticeable way, one using no contact and the other using contact, and also have an improvement and noticeable effects on my condition. Based on my own experience with qigong healers then, it would seem that an effective qigong healer should probably be able to produce at least some noticeable effects in you when they are emitting and manipulating qi for you, but that may not really be a strict requirement, but I think you should see at least some noticeable improvement in one way or another either right away or after a short while. The techniques all these qigong healers used were all quite different, so people should understand that there are a lot of different methods and approaches out there, and it is not all the same. Of the two who were able to produce noticeable effects for me, the effects were undeniable when they were emitting qi, and they both were able to produce tangible results regarding my condition. Of these two, their methods of emitting and manipulating qi were also completely different, and the sensations and effects they produced on me felt completely different as well. My experience is that there are widely differing ways of using and emitting qi coming from various different traditions, and the results can be felt differently as well when being on the receiving end. So, I think finding an effective qigong healer or Chinese medicine practitioner may involve some trial and error, unless you can get some recommendations about the effectiveness of a particular practitioner from people you think are trustworthy.

 

In my experience it is also not that uncommon for various qigong teachers/healers to state outright or let on to you that what they are doing is the 'best method' or 'highest level' or 'most authentic' practice etc., and that what other people do is inferior. :D My experience is that in reality this has little to do with their actual skills and what they are practicing. Maybe a possible general rule of thumb would be that the more they go on about such things, the more likely that they or what they are practicing is not so 'high level' or so effective at all. :) When it comes to healing, the main concern is whether a particular practitioner can help you or not.

 

:)

Edited by NotVoid
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First of all NotVoid, you are right when you say that a good healer should be effective. If he/she is not effective, you would not come back or recommend this healer to others. On the other hand, actually having to feel an effect can be tricky as it depends on the quality and vibration of the Qi how much you'll be able to feel. E.g. in the Zhineng community Hunyuan Qi is used which is a very high quality qi with a high vibration. The lower the vibration in my experience, the easier it is to feel. So some people you might meet and think that their Qi is strong are actually quite low in vibration and their Qi is coarse and unrefined and would lead e.g. to mixed results and/or heavy qigong reactions when used for healing.I e.g. was introduced to a healing method that is called Zhen Qi Qigong and it works with high energy information, much like light codes. Sensitive people feel this energy very much or people that have already a higher vibration themselves. People with low vibration do not feel the energy or do even have no effect at times and that is why I carefully choose whom I work with this method. I am also very famiiar with the healing methods in Zhineng Qigong. They teach these healing methods very early to students but as this type of healing is very much connected to the consciousness development of the practitioner (you work with external Hunyuan Qi and strong intent), the results may vary strongly as they depend on the level of consciousness development of the student.

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Hi Pai_Mei. Sure, I did point out that that feeling the qi may not be necessary to seeing results, but that the most important thing is that the healer you are seeing can get actual results for your condition. :) In my view, all talk of higher and lower level and most authentic and best method and all that is really of no concern at all when you go to a healer. What really matters is if the particular healer you are seeing is able to help you or not. Also, I was just mentioning just as an observation that from own direct personal experience, the two qigong healers which I found to actually be effective in helping with my condition were also able to generate quite noticeable effects when they were emitting qi. With the others who were not effective for me, it varied from not feeling really anything to feeling a little, to the one guy who could cause an electric sensation in my body around the acupuncture needle when he emitted his qi into it. The bottom line is whomever you are going to should be able to bring some noticeable results in some reasonable amount of time, and if they can't then a person should maybe discuss with the practitioner if it is worthwhile to continue that particular treatment. That's my view and experience on this sort of thing anyway.

 

:)

Edited by NotVoid
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Fully agreed. I guess that what you describe is what Ya Mu is referring to as a healer without connection to the higher levels. You will only get mixed results or no results at all. It is probably a mixture of proper training, talent, true vocation and higher-level connection that makes a good healer.I'd love to hear Ya Mu's view on this question: What does it take to be a good healer and why do do some healers get only mixed results?

Edited by Pai_Mei

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I would say that any healer or healing method is definitely not always effective, and what effectiveness they can have can vary quite a bit from person to person and condition to condition. There are no doubt many variables in this. :)

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It's definitely a lot easier to become a collector of books than an experienced practitioner. Before I went to your seminars, I knew very little about Chinese medicine. Since then I've collected a couple dozen books on the subject and I still feel that I learn more in one day of practice than I've learned reading all of them.

 

That said, I do think some are better than others. I really like A Light Warriors Guide to High Level Energy Healing, by Michael Lomax; Power Healing, by Zhi Gang Sha; and Chinese Medical Qigong Therapy, by Jerry Alan Johnson.

 

They are no substitute for real experience and instruction from a master, but they are interesting.

"I still feel that I learn more in one day of practice than I've learned reading all of them."

And this was basically my point about the books. They can be good reference material and if I didn't actually like books so damn much I would probably be a lot richer.

 

"When people realize that the practice of medicine is the practice of power (incidentally, in Native American tongues these words, medicine and power, are interchangeable), they might start understanding what is, was, and will be happening to medicine -- any medicine anywhere. "

Thank you for your contribution.

"When people realize that the practice of medicine is the practice of power (incidentally, in Native American tongues these words, medicine and power, are interchangeable), they might start understanding what is, was, and will be happening to medicine -- any medicine anywhere."

I think this statement is going to be one of the most important contributions to this thread. This realization is extremely important to each and every practitioner and it doesn't matter whether we are speaking of allopathic, Chinese, Native American, or any other and it doesn't matter whether the technique is acupuncture, prayer, allopathic drugs, Chinese herbal, European herbal, or ANY modality; this always applies.

 

A quote from the head physician at Guan An Men hospital, "Our acupuncture doctors who practice qigong achieve far better results than our acupuncture doctors who don't."

 

I feel this is the crucial thing here. Combining two systems, separetely mastered, because the situation calls for it. This is very different from intellectually piecing a new system together because "more is always better".

...

Yes, adding techniques just to be a collector does ... not much. Pulling the correct tool out of the toolbox is always the right thing.

A small story here: I saw a licensed western physician tell an old lady who was complaining about a certain ailment to get an egg, go out and bury it during the next full moon (which was coming up that weekend), and say "-particular words-". As I was studying with this physician, with me being a particularly stickler for details and proper clinical approach and experienced practitioner (HA HA), I was quite appalled. Quite appalled and probably full of righteous indignation as I later asked this good doctor why in the hell did he do that. He kinda just looks at me with a grin and I have to wait until the next week to get an answer. Sure enough the lady comes into the office the next week gushing at how well the doctor's cure worked. After the visit the doctor looks at me and said whether or not I believed it made no diifference at all as SHE believed it. And of course a prime example of body-mind medicine.

 

...

The "classical" label is becoming increasingly popular, I predict more will start using it, like "qigong" teachers suddenly using "neigong" . Well it's all the same anyway... No it's not.

I agree that the label is here to stay and think it quite applicable. And, even though I am not a great fan, it is not my purpose to trash TCM, or I wouldn't have made the original post. TCM has a lot to offer.

 

....

As for qigong healers, my experience is that what these people do can vary widely.

...

..., I think finding an effective qigong healer or Chinese medicine practitioner may involve some trial and error, unless you can get some recommendations about the effectiveness of a particular practitioner from people you think are trustworthy.

...

In my experience it is also not that uncommon for various qigong teachers/healers to state outright or let on to you that what they are doing is the 'best method' or 'highest level' or 'most authentic' practice etc., and that what other people do is inferior. :D My experience is that in reality this has little to do with their actual skills and what they are practicing. Maybe a good general rule of thumb would be that the more they go on about such things, the more likely that they or what they are practicing is not so 'high level' or so effective at all. When it comes to healing, the main concern is whether a particular practitioner can help you or not.

 

Yes, efficacy does vary form practitioner to practitioner in qigong healing JUST LIKE IT DOES IN ALL FORMS OF MEDICINE. No different.

But very good point about utilizing trial and error. Again, which of course applies to ALL forms of medicine.

Perhaps not meant that way, but to me your last paragraph sounds like more subtle trashing than anything else. Just how would we know about any particular form if people didn't "go on about it"? Hmm? If you are referring to my post, I gave the person an honest answer.

First of all NotVoid, you are right when you say that a good healer should be effective. If he/she is not effective, you would not come back or recommend this healer to others. On the other hand, actually having to feel an effect can be tricky as it depends on the quality and vibration of the Qi how much you'll be able to feel. E.g. in the Zhineng community Hunyuan Qi is used which is a very high quality qi with a high vibration. The lower the vibration in my experience, the easier it is to feel. So some people you might meet and think that their Qi is strong are actually quite low in vibration and their Qi is coarse and unrefined and would lead e.g. to mixed results and/or heavy qigong reactions when used for healing.I e.g. was introduced to a healing method that is called Zhen Qi Qigong and it works with high energy information, much like light codes. Sensitive people feel this energy very much or people that have already a higher vibration themselves. People with low vibration do not feel the energy or do even have no effect at times and that is why I carefully choose whom I work with this method. I am also very famiiar with the healing methods in Zhineng Qigong. They teach these healing methods very early to students but as this type of healing is very much connected to the consciousness development of the practitioner (you work with external Hunyuan Qi and strong intent), the results may vary strongly as they depend on the level of consciousness development of the student.

Good point about vibration. I think most don't understand why this knowledge is important.

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Fully agreed. I guess that what you describe is what Ya Mu is referring to as a healer without connection to the higher levels. You will only get mixed results or no results at all. It is probably a mixture of proper training, talent, true vocation and higher-level connection that makes a good healer.I'd love to hear Ya Mu's view on this question: What does it take to be a good healer and why do do some healers get only mixed results?

This was basically answered by Taomeow's post, "When people realize that the practice of medicine is the practice of power (incidentally, in Native American tongues these words, medicine and power, are interchangeable), they might start understanding what is, was, and will be happening to medicine -- any medicine anywhere."

 

Hi Pai_Mei. Sure, I did point out that that feeling the qi may not be necessary to seeing results, but that the most important thing is that the healer you are seeing can get actual results for your condition. :) In my view, all talk of higher and lower level and most authentic and best method and all that is really of no concern at all when you go to a healer. What really matters is if the particular healer you are seeing is able to help you or not. Also, I was just mentioning just as an observation that from own direct personal experience, the two qigong healers which I found to actually be effective in helping with my condition were also able to generate quite noticeable effects when they were emitting qi. With the others who were not effective for me, it varied from not feeling really anything to feeling a little, to the one guy who could cause an electric sensation in my body around the acupuncture needle when he emitted his qi into it. The bottom line is whomever you are going to should be able to bring some noticeable results in some reasonable amount of time, and if they can't then a person should maybe discuss with the practitioner if it is worthwhile to continue that particular treatment. That's my view and experience on this sort of thing anyway.

 

Yes, it is all about efficacy. You appear to have a misunderstanding about how I utilize the terms "higher level" and "lower level". PaiMei touches upon it in his post about vibration. But I wholly agree with you that it is all about efficacy and doing the right thing for a client or patient. If a clinician does not have a high efficacy just what the heck are they doing in the (any) field of medicine?

Edited by Ya Mu

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Yes, it is all about efficacy. You appear to have a misunderstanding about how I utilize the terms "higher level" and "lower level". PaiMei touches upon it in his post about vibration. But I wholly agree with you that it is all about efficacy and doing the right thing for a client or patient. If a clinician does not have a high efficacy just what the heck are they doing in the (any) field of medicine?

Hi Ya Mu. I was just commenting from my own experience with this sort of thing with different healers, and my comments were not directed to anyone in particular. Some practitioners or methods may not be as effective at certain conditions, and no doubt results can vary from patient to patient as well, as there can be various factors at play I would think. Someone who may not be able to help with certain conditions may be able to do wonders sometimes with other conditions.

 

:)

Edited by NotVoid

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