kakapo Posted Tuesday at 12:11 AM 3 hours ago, Cobie said: What does that mean “sung”? I think he is referring to mental massage, letting the tension from every muscle and joint go, and completely relaxing the mind and body. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kakapo Posted Tuesday at 12:30 AM 3 hours ago, Cobie said: Why? Why make yourselves unbalanced? Let's think about what it actually means to be in perfect balance with your environment. Picture a rock floating through deep space. Eventually, that rock will cool down until its temperature is close to absolute zero. At that point, the rock is perfectly balanced with its freezing surroundings, but it certainly is not alive. To be alive is to constantly fight against being in balance with your environment. Think about how energy flows to make this happen. Plants harvest sunlight and store it as chemical energy. Then, we eat those plants to borrow that stored energy for ourselves. We put that energy to work in all sorts of active ways: To repair old cells and build new ones. To keep our bodies warm. To fuel our brains and muscles so we can think and move. If we ever reached perfect balance with our environment, all of that active work would stop. Just like the rock in space, we would have no energy left to keep going. Imagine pushing this idea even further and pulling in vastly more energy than a normal organism ever could. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted Tuesday at 12:31 AM 3 hours ago, Cobie said: What does that mean “sung”? **"Sung the body"** (often just "sung") refers to a core principle in Tai Chi and Qigong, where "sung" (鬆, sōng) means a deep, controlled release of tension throughout the body.[1][3] ## Core Meaning Sung goes beyond surface-level relaxation; it's about loosening joints from within, stretching tissues like rubber for elasticity without limpness or stiffness. This creates space for qi (energy) to flow freely, maintaining upright posture while feeling energized and alert.[2][5][1] ## In Practice Visualize elongating your spine, opening elbows, wrists, hips, and knees outward to release bound tension down to the bones. Practitioners describe it as yielding to gravity and heaven, mentally and physically, like a baby's natural softness.[3][1][2] ## Benefits Achieving sung improves flexibility, balance, and internal power (like "peng jing"), while reducing stress that blocks qi. It's foundational, practiced in stages from limbs to full-body-and-mind integration. 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
justjoseph Posted Tuesday at 08:36 AM 7 hours ago, Apech said: **"Sung the body"** (often just "sung") refers to a core principle in Tai Chi and Qigong, where "sung" (鬆, sōng) means a deep, controlled release of tension throughout the body.[1][3] ## Core Meaning Sung goes beyond surface-level relaxation; it's about loosening joints from within, stretching tissues like rubber for elasticity without limpness or stiffness. This creates space for qi (energy) to flow freely, maintaining upright posture while feeling energized and alert.[2][5][1] ## In Practice Visualize elongating your spine, opening elbows, wrists, hips, and knees outward to release bound tension down to the bones. Practitioners describe it as yielding to gravity and heaven, mentally and physically, like a baby's natural softness.[3][1][2] ## Benefits Achieving sung improves flexibility, balance, and internal power (like "peng jing"), while reducing stress that blocks qi. It's foundational, practiced in stages from limbs to full-body-and-mind integration. You don't visualise anything, it is physical, if you visualise then you use the mind and you don't achieve song. The body should be put in the correct position then constantly released within that position. That is what song is. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted Tuesday at 09:28 AM 50 minutes ago, justjoseph said: You don't visualise anything, it is physical, if you visualise then you use the mind and you don't achieve song. The body should be put in the correct position then constantly released within that position. That is what song is. That was from AI I confess. Yes I agree no visualization. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
justjoseph Posted Tuesday at 12:03 PM (edited) 14 hours ago, Apech said: That was from AI I confess. Yes I agree no visualization. Good man for being honest. Rely your brain Apech lest you lose it. Edited yesterday at 12:18 AM by justjoseph 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted Tuesday at 12:14 PM 10 minutes ago, justjoseph said: Good man for being honest. Use your brain Apech lest you lose it. You haven’t seen the state of my brain. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
justjoseph Posted Tuesday at 01:13 PM 58 minutes ago, Apech said: You haven’t seen the state of my brain. I haven't seen the state of my own. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChiDragon Posted Tuesday at 08:11 PM 23 hours ago, Cobie said: What does that mean “sung”? It means try to relax with no tension on the muscles. 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted Tuesday at 08:34 PM 22 minutes ago, ChiDragon said: It means try to relax with no tension on the muscles. With no tension you would collapse onto the floor. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted Tuesday at 11:58 PM (edited) Edited Tuesday at 11:59 PM by Taomeow 2 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChiDragon Posted yesterday at 05:55 AM (edited) 14 hours ago, Apech said: With no tension you would collapse onto the floor. Yes, you would be a genius, that was why I said try. Edited yesterday at 11:09 AM by ChiDragon Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kakapo Posted 23 hours ago (edited) 6 hours ago, ChiDragon said: Yes, you would be a genius, that was why I said try. Edited 23 hours ago by kakapo 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kati Posted 16 hours ago On 17.2.2026 at 7:28 AM, Gerard said: Grounding as in keeping the Qi down and making sure Earth Qi is rising (digestive processes and to counter act Wood controlling the Earth ---> Wu Xing theory) and to prevent Liver Yang Rising. My previous post is to illustrate Kati what grounding really means. guess what i made some progress with grounding. my feet and legs feel like three trunks- when i do qigong and in general. of course some days it is a bit stronger or weaker. but now i wonder, what can i do to feel the grounding also hip upwards? you guys seem to know a lot about this, do you have any ideas? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kati Posted 16 hours ago On 21.2.2026 at 10:26 PM, markern said: Springforest includes visualization does it not? That in itself can be somewhat ungrounding. I would just drop the spring forest practices until this issue is resolved and temporarily focus on getting the grounding sorted first. Consider if maybe you need some psychological work/therapy to help with this issue. My observation has been that for some people energetic solutions aren't always sufficient if the imbalances are caused by strong underlying psychological issues. Then it is often necessary to always work in a more psychological way. Talk therapy, bodywork or more self enquiry types of practices or nervous system regulation practices. Human connection is often needed to make things move. Say for example that the reason you got ungrounded initially was because childhood trauma made you dissociate from the body or have a fight response in your nervous system (which is also ungrounding). If you then start doing grounding techniques that may sometimes be sufficient and can even help resolve the trauma but it may also be insufficient because the wounded parts of you simply refuses to let go of its protective strategies just because you do exercises that bring energy down. Those parts of you may not feel safe enough to allow you to get back into the body unless they feel more safe. And that feeling of safety may require talking to another person. Or at least looking directly at the psychological knot causing the ungroundedness. Not saying this is the case but I think it is worth checking in with yourself about. If you want to get the grounding sorted you could do something like this: Do an internal martial art like Tai Chi. It is very grounding. It both gets you deeply in contact with your feet and your stability on the ground and with your dan tien. Do standing meditation. I find it to be supremely grounding. Do deep earth pulsing. A very simple and gentle grounding qigong you can find instructions for on YouTube. Do Damo Mitchells anchoring the breath practice. It is meant to really anchor your awareness and energy and breath in the dan tien. Which grounds you. He has two videos on YouTube with instructions. Maybe add some squats and walks in the forrest. Maybe do walking meditation. You could also maybe add some more general practices like the eight brocades and five animals. They are not especially grounding but more overall balancing (which also means somewhat grounding). Just so not everything you do is super earth focused but a bit more "even". You could also consider trying Primordial Qigong/Wuji Gong/Tai Chi for Enlightenment (different teachers have different names for it). I find Primordial to be both extremely grounding while also gradually awakening higher energy centers. It kinda awakens one to deep witnessing states and more "heavenly" aspects of practice while integrating that into the body and into life instantly. wow amazing thank you for taking time to share all this helpful ideas 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark Foote Posted 13 hours ago (edited) On 2/24/2026 at 12:34 PM, Apech said: With no tension you would collapse onto the floor. Moshe Feldenkrais observed that people often hold their breath when they get up out of a chair. He saw the restriction of the movement of breath as a failure to realize physical equilibrium as the basis for movement; he explained how the movement of standing follows from a state of equilibrium and a shift in the center of gravity: …good upright posture is that from which a minimum muscular effort will move the body with equal ease in any desired direction. This means that in the upright position there must be no muscular effort deriving from voluntary control, regardless of whether this effort is known and deliberate or concealed from the consciousness by habit. …When the center of gravity has really moved forward over the feet a reflex movement will originate in the old nervous system and straighten the legs; this automatic movement will not be felt as an effort at all. (“Awareness Through Movement”, © 1972, 1977 Moshe Feldenkrais, p 76, 78) To help his students learn how to stand without holding their breath, Feldenkrais taught three simple exercises that could be done while seated on a chair: first, he said, lean the upper body forward and backward; second, tip the upper body from side to side; and third, with the torso, neck and head held in a straight line, circle the top of the head around the base of the tailbone. (D. L. Bartelink, “No Special Effort”, and the “Best of Ways”) The thing about Tai Chi is that it is a single-weighted art. The weight in a given pose in the form should be through one leg to the floor, and in the opposite arm and hand. Each movement shifts the weight to the opposite leg and arm. Coordinated-bilateral exercises are specifically designed to use both sides of the body and more body parts simultaneously to perform bilateral movements while crossing the midline of the body [2, 28]. Coordinated-bilateral movements engage both hemispheres of the brain and may facilitate cognitive development of cerebellum and prefrontal cortex [29, 30]. Budde et al. [2] found that the coordinated-bilateral exercise in physical education (PE) lessons led to significant improvements in children's attention assessed with d2 Test of Attention. (Impact of Coordinated-Bilateral Physical Activities on Attention and Concentration in School-Aged Children; Heidi Buchele Harris 1, Kai Schnabel Cortina 2, Thomas Templin 1, Natalie Colabianchi 1, Weiyun Chen) A thing which I have found helpful, and which you might try: when you feel that you are rooted in one leg and weighted in the opposite arm, open that opposite arm as though pulling the body around a pole. Doesn't take much pull, to cause a Feldenkrais-like "reflex movement" turning the body in the opposite direction, to the next pose. It's a lot like pressing the arm against the wall, and then when you step away, the arm rises without willing it to rise. Sometimes I feel that opening that opposite arm is pulling me into the ground of the leg with the weight, before the turn. Edited 13 hours ago by Mark Foote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites