02.26.08

The Quest for Power (Part 2)

Posted in Health, Martial Arts, History, Daoism at 3:22 pm by Scott P. Phillips

The Orthodox Daoist take on the quest for power that I related in the previous post likely grew out of a context in which Shamanic and Trance-medium practices were the dominant form of religious expression.

Shaman and mediums use a long list of techniques to reach an altered state which takes them on a journey, or entices a deity to take over their body. Dancing frenetically or for a very long time, altered breathing patterns, chanting and singing, drinking or taking drugs, fasting or eating extreme foods, staying outdoors in bad weather; these are all used by Shaman and Mediums to enter altered states of consciousness, often to the point of passing out.

Shaman and Mediums come back from these performance “trips” with special knowledge, and often special powers which appear to be conferred on them through these experiences.

Orthodox Daoists came to view these practices as journeys toward death. These practices deplete qi, and tend to dramatically shorten life-span. The quest for this type of power entails giving up a part of yourself, a self-sacrifice in exchange for power.

Orthodox Daoists then began to see parallel characteristics in all quests for power. Power begets sacrifice.

A great deal of exercise is framed as a quest for power, they tell you to give up something now for a super body in the future. Push yourself through the difficulty and the pain, put your money down, and you will be rewarded with beauty, recovered youth, or superior abilities.

Often times, quests for power are remedies for the side effects of other quests for power. Working too hard at a job 60 hours a week? Try yoga! That back hurting from the long commute and the all the time in front of the computer? Join our fitness club and we’ll not only fix your back, we’ll even improve your sex life!

This happens to be the way people are, so the first covenant of Orthodox Daoism is to not get in the way of peoples pursuit of power unless it involves the direct taking of life (blood sacrifice).

Daoism does not reject the pursuit of power. The first line of the Daodejing, (sometimes translated “The Way of Power”) suggests that we can have an experience which is unmediated by words, ideas, images, or metaphors. Like power, words are not rejected.

Recognition of the mechanism by which words define and limit our experience does not stop us from appreciating them. The mechanism by which we accumulate power is a fascinating part of human experience, even though it limits our experience and has a tendency to shorten our lives. We have the option of putting on those “power” shoes or going barefoot.

02.25.08

The Quest for Power (Part 1)

Posted in Health, Martial Arts, Daoism at 4:41 pm by Scott P. Phillips

The quest for power in the martial arts is a strange one. From an Orthodox Daoist point of view, the quest for power arises from inappropriate conduct.

Some of the most common forms of inappropriate conduct are arguing with someone who isn’t interested in learning, pushing yourself to physical exhaustion, drinking too much, or over eating. All of these actions result in loss of qi, they create a deficiency. Historically, starving may have been the most common cause of qi deficiency.

Qi deficiency simply leads to conflicting emotions. Of course this is a natural process, so for instance, if you get in a bad argument and then you go home and take a bath and go straight to bed, you will completely recover. The problems arise when your conflicting emotions combine with someone else’s, and it’s already past midnight and you have a meeting early in the morning, so you don’t have time to replenish your qi.

After a few days of this people start thinking about how they can get more power. Deep conflicting emotions probably arise from fear of death. I think the quest for power is part of our hard wiring. It is triggered when our survival feels threatened, and it arises so that we will be able to survive extreme hardship.

02.23.08

Butterflies or Six Inch Knives?

Posted in Fighting, Health, Martial Arts at 3:00 pm by Scott P. Phillips

One of the basic ideas of internal martial arts is that joints can open and close (kaihe). I talked about this in these two posts from last September. Joint Pulsing 1 and Joint Pulsing 2.
The elbow, like all joints, opens and closes quite easily.   In order to think about something it really helps to have words and metaphors which describe it.  Since the elbow is something we rarely talk about, we also rarely think about it, and so for most people the opening and closing of the elbow joint is a completely unconscious process.

When I gained awareness of my elbows opening and closing my martial arts power tripled.  Now you might think I’m exaggerating, you wouldn’t be the first, but honestly–before I had this awareness life was gray, after gaining this awareness opponents started flying off of my arms.

Here are two ways to practice that may help you gain awareness of your elbows:

First imagine that you have butterflies on your elbows, happy, light, delicate and beautiful.  Practice moving about, do the form, even gentle push-hands, with out knocking the butterflies off your elbows.

Second, imagine you have six inch long double edged knives projecting out of your elbows; happy, light, sharp, and beautiful.  Go straight to push hands and imagine you are joyfully cutting your way through your opponent.  Be generous with your cutting techniques.

Here is a link to an article I just re-wrote about wearing Compression Straps on your elbows.  

02.22.08

Monkey Swings

Posted in Health, Taijiquan, Bagua zhang, Shaolin at 2:14 pm by Scott P. Phillips

BaihuiLast month I was at a family gathering and there was a five month old girl who was crying. Her aunt, who has several wild children of her own, tried rocking her and then bouncing her, but the baby was still crying. Then with a big grin she announced, “We are going to have to try Monkey Swings.” I can now verify from my observations that monkey swings are an effective crying control mechanism.

The standard Taijiquan, Xingyi and Bagua zhang instructions tell us to lift up our heads from the Baihui point on the very top of the head. Some Shaolin and meditation schools say to lift from a point a little further back so that the chin comes in slightly. Further, I have heard lift from the roof of the mouth, lift from the base of the skull and even lift from a point in the air about one foot above your head.Monkey Swing 2

All of these instructions are useful gates. It is vitally important to develop awareness of head position, centerline, dingjin (upward power), and zhengqi (upright, self-correcting vigor). However, I think these instructions alone will not produce a high quality final product.

I’ve now spent way too much time looking at baby pictures on google images, I may need some time to recover my manliness. Unfortunately I could not find a single picture of a monkey swing so I’ll have to describe it. Here is how you do a Monkey SwingTM:

While sitting down place the baby on its back in your lap with the its feet facing you. Take hold of an ankle and a wrist in each of your hands. Then lift up and swing the baby’s bottom toward your face and then it’s head out and away, using your forearms as the pivot. Continue swinging until the desired results are achieved.

BabyAs you are imaging this, you might think that the baby’s head would flop backwards like that of the child on the swing above. But it didn’t. The baby’s head stayed right in line with its torso. This was a five month old I was watching, a younger baby probably would have had a floppy head. An older child would certainly be able to do this, but in most cases it would be obvious that they were using voluntary neck muscles.

The baby I watched did all this automatically. Her head was inside her dantian!

The highest level martial artists put their head inside their dantian.

Here is:
A baby development site.

02.21.08

Slow Down?

Posted in Taijiquan at 3:01 pm by Scott P. Phillips

You would think, that Taijiquan being known almost universally as the “slow motion” martial art, that actual taijiquan push-hands practitioners would consider slowing-down a self-evident method. But most don’t.

I could make a long list of all the reasons for practicing Taijiquan slowly, but I’m not going to do that. I’m just going to talk about one reason.

There are probably a hundred ways of practicing push-hands. Judging from Youtube videos, most people use push-hands to practice applications. I think that’s fine, but applications can just as easily be taught as a separate subject. Push-hands is better understood as a competition.Yun Yin Sen

There are many continuous linking set routines in push-hands, the main purpose of which is to make sure both people have continuous power (jin) while moving through various ranges of movement. When one person’s power is broken they lose; however, if their partner compensates for them, then the routine can continue repeating itself. If either person is trying to win, it is not possible to do a continuous linking routine because as soon as one person’s power is broken, the other must act.

In spontaneous push-hands, there is no routine, just a set of rules or parameters. The two most common rules are no punching and no moving your feet.

Anyway, last year I took a workshop with Master Yun Yin Sen and George Xu together. At one point about 6 of us were taking turns pushing hands with Yun Yin Sen. These were all people who had being practicing for years. He was pushing with each person for about 20 seconds and then he would push them out and call for the next one. But when I pushed with him he never tried to push me out. Like 5 minutes past and I started to feel guilty that I was monopolizing him so I just stepped out. Then everybody got another 20 second turn and it was my turn again. The same thing happened.  We pushed for about 5 minutes until I gave up, in order to give someone else a chance.

What was happening? Every time my fellow students got in a tight spot, they tried to get out of it by adding something; either speed, technique, power or aggression. Every time I got in a tight spot I simply slowed down. Master Yun Yin Sen would always respond by also slowing down and giving me a way out. We could practice forever like that.

bull fighterEven if you are practicing with a superior opponent who wants to beat you, still the appropriate response when you get in a losing situation is to slow down and give all your attention to understanding/feeling what your opponent is doing.

I don’t think I need to point out that this might be a good strategy for living, in general. When things are challenging or full of conflict sometimes it is a good strategy to slow down. Obviously that doesn’t hold when you’re crossing the street and the light changes color.

If any of my readers have ever tried bullfighting, I’d be curious to know if they think slowing down could be a good strategy there.

02.19.08

Shaped by the Sea

Posted in Martial Arts, Taijiquan, Bagua zhang, History, Shaolin at 3:13 pm by Scott P. Phillips

The way martial traditions are shaped by the environment is an interesting topic at many levels. In a hundred years Californian martial arts will have been re-formed by and for people who spend lot’s of time in cars, drinking coffee, and typing on computers.

Southern Shaolin, like Choy Li Fut, seems like it was formed by people familiar with fighting in confined spaced, narrow corridors, and tight corners.

Northern Shaolin, on the other hand, seems like it was formed for wide open fields of battle, spear training particularly.

Liuhe (Six Harmonies) style of Xingyi seems like it might have developed on narrow rice paddy pathways.

Baguazhang is harder to place, but from my experience walking in the mountains, I would say there is a strong case to be made that carrying something around on narrow or steep mountain ledges is a likely possible origin.

Taijiquan comes out of the water.

Willem de ThouarsYears ago I had the opportunity to meet Willem de Thouars who, as a child in Indonesia, studied Silat. After achieving a significant level of martial skill at an early age, his family told him to ask the Chinese people living down the road if they would teach him.

The man he ended up studying with eventually taught him Baguazhang, Taijiquan and other arts. The teacher’s first condition for allowing young Willem to become a student was for him to go to the river and jump off of the bridge onto the slippery floating logs that were part of a local logging operation and balance there. He said it took a long time to learn and it was very brutal.

(If you are not going to try this method yourself, at least think about what it would feel like. How relaxed do your legs need to be? How much mobility do you need in your torso?)

If you’ve watched all my Youtube videos you know that I have a little experience fighting on fishing boats in Alaska. The first couple of times I went to sea, I got seasick, but with a little coaching I learned. To avoid seasickness first you have to keep your eyes gazing out on the horizon. Looking at the boat or the water will make you sick. This is very simular to the kind of vision we use in Taijiquan, we soften our focus and gaze way off into the distance.
The second part of not getting seasick is just relaxation. If you try to “hold” your balance, or “hold” your internal organs in place, you will vomit. You have to just let your whole body move around on its own. Trust the rolling of the sea– again, very simular to taijiquan practice.
We worked 20 hour shifts on one of the worst fishing boat in the fleet (worst because the skipper’s brain wasn’t equipt with the re-evaluation process). All the guys got sore knees, except yours truly.

The secret to my knees not hurting like everyone else’s was that I was rolling my dantian and keeping my knees bent the whole time I was on the boat. At that time, when I wasn’t working 20 hours, I was doing about 4 hours a day of Chen Style Taijiquan Chansijin (silk reeling exercises).

When I came back to San Francisco my teacher at the time said to my fellow students (probably hoping another student would use his words as an excuse to challenge me to a fight), “You all have been practicing here with me all Summer, the Priest (that’s what he liked to call me) has been away in Alaska and he has progressed more than any of you have.” (Yikes, competitiveness encouraged.)Stern Oar River Boat

The last thing I want to say about water is that if you’ve ever poled a boat through the water or used a Chinese style stern oar, you might have noticed that it is a lot like the Taijiquan movement, “Grasp the Birds Tail.”

Oh, O.K., one more thing. If the founders of Taijiquan were actually fisherman, then it would explain how the modern day practitioners’ picked up the habit of exaggerating (the size of the fish that got away).

02.16.08

Summer Training Camp

Posted in Fighting, Martial Arts, Taijiquan at 5:07 pm by Scott P. Phillips

George Xu just put up new information about the Summer Camp he co-teaches every year with a different Chinese Martial Arts Master. The Camp is held in the woods in a place called La Honda, near Santa Cruz California. Here is the scoop on his co-teacher this year:

Master Yu Chen Yong Born in 1943 Tian Jing, China. Started his training as a wrestler in 1953 then moved to Tai Ji in 1957 with famous Master Wu and Master Niu. He also studied Ba Gua with famous Master such as Gao Yi Sheng and Yang Ban Hou large frame Tai Ji with Master Niu Lian Yuan and Zhao Bao Style Tai Ji with Master Hou and Master Yue. One of his teacher is the very famous master Han Mu Xia whom defeated the Russia champion wrestler in 1930, which he then went on to win 10 gold metal from 10 different countries. The metals are now in the China National Historical Museum. In 2000, the master performance in Tian Jing master Yu got 1st place for the title of “best Master performance”. In 2005, Master Yu acquired famous master Zhao Bao Tai Ji title from Wu Dang Mountain.

Master Yu will be teaching all his secrets in this year’s summer camp in California

02.15.08

Keep Your Fingers Straight

Posted in Health, Martial Arts, Taijiquan, teaching, Shaolin at 2:05 pm by Scott P. Phillips

I have a friend of a friend who, last I checked, has been studying Shaolin and Taijiquan with the same teacher for nearly 20 years. This friend is convinced he is becoming the greatest of fighters. This particular teacher claims an important lineage and has both nurturing qualities and a fierce temper.Ju Ming Single Whip

There is a shadow side to the previous discussion about metaphorically passing through difficult gates or crossing over bridges of unnecessary practice.  That shadow is the sometimes desperate pathos of the student-teacher relationship.

Perhaps if you are a teacher you’ve thought to yourself, “Why are so many of my students lesbian vegetarians? Is it something about me?” Perhaps if you are a student you’ve wondered, “Why do I keep accidentally calling my gongfu teacher MOM instead of shirfu? He doesn’t look or act anything like my mom!”

When I think about it, I doubt that the younger me would have studied martial arts at all if my teachers had been the sort of people that expect me to call them “Master.”Ju Ming Single Whip

There are many teachers out there that make good second mommies or daddies. In the South Asian traditions they just go right ahead and call the teacher some version of Ma, or Dada.

I find it hard to resist having a little laugh at this phenomenon, but in all honesty I have great respect for people who provide this kind of support to the emotionally needy. I have known a great many people who have attached themselves to a teacher who really cared about them, and through that particular type of intimacy made disciplined and rewarding changes in their lives.

Some people need a fierce father figure in order to thrive. Others need a nurturing mother figure to give them the confidence to face decisions the rest of us see as routine. I’m rarely fierce or nurturing, so students that come to me looking for those qualities tend not to hang around.Ju Ming Single Whip

But we digress. I have this friend of a friend I mentioned at the begining. The teacher he studies with has been very exacting and demanding and has truly nurtured him in a way that brings out his better qualities. As far as martial arts goes, he gets posture corrections and that is it! He has gotten one Taijiquan instruction in 20 years, the same one over and over, “Keep your fingers straight.” He keeps expecting that some day he is going to get to learn push-hands, and many other secrets too.Ju Ming Single Whip

It would all be sad and pathetic if not for two factors. The posture corrections are good, so his Shaolin and Taijiquan forms, which he practices without fail everyday, are pristine. The second factor is almost funny. The instruction, “Keep your fingers straight,” is wrong by most accounts. But because he believes in it and practices it so diligently–because he uses it as a measure of everything he does– he has actually made it mean something true. Every millimeter of his body movement is calibrated to “keep the fingers straight,” what ever that even means.Ju Ming Single Whip

He has no knowledge of functionality or applications, no subtle power or push-hands experience. But I have to admit, his form looks good!

And on that note, here is a quote from Henry David Thoreau, (from memory of course)

Why are we in such desperate haste to succeed, and in such desperate enterprises?  If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps if is because he hears the beat of a different drummer, let each step to the beat which he hears, however measured, or far away…

02.13.08

1000 Times a Day!

Posted in Martial Arts, Qi Jocks at 5:05 pm by Scott P. Phillips

Mountain BridgeI heard a story about a guy who wanted to study martial arts from a Master who lived up in the Mountains in Taiwan.

Just getting to the cave where this guy taught his few dedicated students was a dangerious rocky slippery climb. He found the Master teaching outdoors and went up and begged the Master to teach him. The master shouted some garbled expletives and signaled for him to put his arm out so he could show him some technique. Upon making contact the student was promptly thrown to the ground. Disgusted, the Master shouted, “WHY ARE YOU SO WEAK?”

The student jumped to his feet and again begged the Master to teach him, and again the Master shouted, “WHY ARE YOU SO WEAK?” And then he shouted at all of his students, “WHY ARE YOU ALL SO WEAK?”

No one had an answer but the student again begged to be taught. The Master then sank down in to a horse stance, stretched his arms out to the sides and began opening and closing his hands, stretching his fingers wide apart and then squeezing them into fists in rapid succession. He then said, “Go away and do this 1000 times a day for a month. If you come back in a month and you haven’t done what Sifu has told you, SIFU WILL KNOW, AND SIFU WILL KILL YOU!”

The master then moaned, “Why are you soooooo weak? Get out of here!”

A month later the student came back, having done what he was told and began his studies.

I wrote a great post (if I do say so myself) about the difference between Gates and Bridges just before Thanksgiving. I’m linking to it now because I’m not sure anyone saw it then, and because Formosa Neijia had a funny link that is related.

02.10.08

Journal of Asian Martial Arts

Posted in Health, Martial Arts, Taijiquan, History, Daoism, Books at 6:09 pm by Scott P. Phillips

Zhang DaolingI was excited to see Douglas Wile, one of the heavies in terms of martial arts scholarship, writing an article in the Journal of Asian Martial Arts.

Fifteen years ago when this magazine first came out I was ecstatic. Imagine a martial arts magazine which insists on footnotes and bibliographies in every article! I thought it was a dream come true after years of wishing I was still 10 years old so I could appreciate martial arts writing.

The current addition has 13 contributors. There are two without degrees, two have M.A.’s, one has an M.S., one is an Acupuncturist (M.A.), and eight have Ph.D.’s. Wow, and still most of the writing leaves me wishing for younger days. To be fair, most academic writing is genetically predestined to be boring. At least this stuff is mostly written by people involved in the arts, not by “objective outsiders.”

I guess I am a child of the Internet, because I’m finding it harder and harder to read full length books and articles. I still love old media, but it takes so long to get to the point. I mean this stuff should have one of those “Don’t operate heavy machinery” warning labels. Again, to be fair, I’m addicted to pithy blog posts and I needed to catch up on some sleep.

Zhang SanfengDouglas Wile’s article is called “Taijiquan and Daoism; From Religion to Martial Art–and Martial Art to Religion.” To really do it justice I would have to read the whole thing again. Honestly, I’m in one of those deep practice phases where a few hours of profound internal training makes me want to sleep– y’all will have to settle for my vague dream like memories.

The gist of Wile’s article is that facts about Taijiquan prior to 1900 are really hard to come by but that hasn’t stopped lineage holders and historians from freely making sh-t up and pretending it’s factual.

One can easily understand why a lineage holder would want to make stuff up. It makes them seem like they have the only key to the chest of treasures while at the same time allowing them the (false) modesty of claiming that their teacher’s teacher’s teacher was like, dude, really, really good.

It’s harder to understand why historians would make stuff up. In America if we catch a historian making stuff up, we use their books for compost. But then again, the various “wings” of the Communists and the Nationalists, were in a propaganda war to prove that only their (death cult) ideologies and allegiances would make Chinese people better and stronger.

Even though Wile spends a lot of time explaining what all these 20th Century scholars thought, I have the feeling he would agree with me when I say, taijiquan has picked up so much baggage we ought to throw out all the books and start over.

Wile dances around the question: Why in light of so little direct evidence for Taijiquan’s Daoist roots, are there so many people trying to prove a connection? He writes about Taijiquan’s “inventor,” the magical dreamer Daoist immortal Zhang Sanfeng:

For sheer contentiousness, the Zhang Sanfeng case can only be compared to issues of racism, sexism, abortion and homosexuality in American culture. At the dawn of the 21st century, the pendulum has once again swung towards the myth-makers. Western practitioners of taijiquan, with their monotheistic, atheistic, or “only begotten son” backgrounds are apt to view Zhang Sanfeng as simply an historical figure with some innocent Daoist embellishments. They are not likely to understand China’s culture wars, polytheism, or embodied immortality…”

In summary, his point is that Taijiquan never really had much to do with Daoism, until 20th century people started mixing in a lot of Neidan (inner alchemy), TCM jargon, some quotes from the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi, and claims about health. Oh yeah, and some stories. And then a bunch of fake modern scholars said none of that is true– but what they said wasn’t true either (so there!). Now that running a business isn’t banned in China, there is this new feel good, feel strong, feel Chinese, feel Taijiquan-is-part-of-Daoism, marketing ethos. No real content.

And Wile gets kind of mad about it,

“Daoist Chauvinism should never be underestimated, and we need only remind ourselves that some Daoist apologists have claimed that Buddhism sprang from seeds planted by Laozi when he rode westwards on his ox.”

True LoveThem’s figtin’ words. Bumper stickers have all but disappeared from San Francisco (which I attribute to uniformity of thought); however, I spotted one today. It read, “Lighten Up!”

For the record, those Daoist “apologists,” were not writing history, they were writing secret scripture. The name Laozi means “old seed,” but if we are talking about the Santianneijing (3rd Century), then it was Laojun (the inspiration behind the Daodejing) which actually incarnated as the Buddha so that the western barbarians would have their own version of “The Way,” and would thus have their own home grown basis for mutual cooperation and understanding. Never mind, that’s an argument for another day.

I respect Wile’s contribution to understanding the history of Taijiquan, I thank him for letting us know it’s all a bunch of lies!

My argument with him is this: Orthodox Daoism never claimed Taijiquan as a Daoist art and I doubt it ever will. Monastic Daoism has of late decided that Taijiquan is part of its shtick. Since the 1980’s is has also decided that gongfu movies are part of its shtick, big whoop. Monastic Daoism never really had a central authority, from the sidelines it kinda seems like Buddhism with a little inner alchemy for the “we must appear to be loyal Chinese” set. All this means very little.

If you want to know what the origins of Taijiquan are, you are going to have to soften your definitions, and blur your categories. Taijiquan only came into being because it was able to obscure it’s origins in religion, popular culture, and secret societies. By the start of the 20th century participation in trance cults or exorcistic and processional dance, was considered politically dangerious and ideologically backwards. That’s why they invented and then tried to tack on the suspicious label, “purely philosophical” Daoism.

Likewise, some combination of fear, modernity, and ideology led people to strip down their communal ritual performance traditions into pure “Martial Arts.”

People over here were arguing about why they took the Fajing (power issuing?) out of Yang and Wu styles of Taijiquan. I’ll tell you why. Fajing is a way to strike terror into your audience, a way to let people know the god has taken possession of the dancer.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go put the Fajing back in my form!

02.08.08

Happy New Year

Posted in History at 12:11 am by Scott P. Phillips

rat in holeWell after making it through that very twisty tail of the pig, I’m already enjoying the soft sensitive pillow nose of the rat! (Because I live in a Chinese city, I only had one class this morning and I spent the rest of the day in bed.)

Gong Hay Fat Choi (which means: Congratulations, Get Rich!)

Here is my prognostication:

Rats are the smartest of the twelve animals. They like to tear and chew things into tiny pieces and put them in piles. If you haven’t throw it away already, you might as well wait until the ox year. Rats are not actually good organizers, but they save everything and know how to find it again by sheer mental prowess.

So it’s a great year for beginning a course of study, for taking exams, and in depth research, starting a collection, or adding a room onto your house (for storage).

After the pig, and the snake, the rat is the most sexy year. This being an Earth Rat year it is good for partnerships, nesting, and babies. Rats like company so it’s a good year for people in businesses that thrive on social activity.zodiac Chinese

If you are a tiger, be particularly careful of over-eating, rats make easy meals but too much of a good thing will lead to lethargy by the summer months.

If you are a dragon it could be a tough year, get people to help you with the small stuff, the normally grand plans of the dragon are likely to get bogged down in minutiae. Ditto for the horse.

It’s a good year for monkeys, rabbits and oxen.

The nose and whiskers of the rat are extremely sensitive, so the first part of the year is great for planning and seeking out new solutions to old problems. Look for new sources of income and new markets.

The rat year is great for experiments. Heightened sensitivity makes intuition more reliable. And even if you botch things up rats are always good at getting out of a corner or squeezing through a tight spot.

Start preparing now for next Winter. It’s likely to be a long, tough one where things (like the rat’s tail) get strung out. If you get a chance to finish projects in October or November, take it and then go into retreat, otherwise you may find yourself working on the never ending project–lingering into the ox year.

The key to a good rat year is knowing that rats are very flexible about what they eat, as long as they don’t bite off more than they can chew.rat

02.06.08

Continuum

Posted in Health, Flexibility at 5:07 pm by Scott P. Phillips

bodies and cultureI’m old enough, and was born in the right place, to remember the real New Age. The basis of the New Age movement was the hippy idea that we could change the metaphors we live by. If we changed the games children played from competitive ones to cooperative ones, and we change the stories–the mythologies– our society perpetuates, we could bring about a new way of being, a New Age. Frankly, it was a fun time to be a kid, even if putting my Cheerios underneath a pyramid didn’t really change the taste and even the most cooperative game can be made competitive if there are enough eight-year-old-boy hormones to go around.

Super New Age BabeThat experience was still not enough to stop me from cringing at the New Age bravado apparent in these videos and web-links about the bodywork system known as Continuum. (I recommend watching the “research” video first.)

Still, I think it is one of the cooler bodywork ideas out there. They take the Chinese ideas of huntun (totally undifferentiated chaos) or hunyuan (original chaos?) and really make them tangible. And while I doubt I’ll ever say it quite like Emilie Conrad, I find myself agreeing with most of what she says about fear, change and the nature of human movement. (Her book.)

« Previous entries ·

OnToplist.com ranking: Martial Arts Blogs Add to Technorati Favorites
what is folic acid acyclovir prescription hydrocodone aspirin buy tramadol online cod folic acid for acid reflux pictures of roxicet synthroid lawsuittadalafil soma babes what is folic acid for coreg 25mg metrogel topical gel restoril no prescription buy adderall no prescription birth clomid multiple vermox overnight fedx estradiol level search phentermine mescaline cactus zyrtec allergy medicine treating vicodin withdrawl discount propecia buy fioricet w codeine temazepam 15 mg oxycodone 15mg discounted adipex imitrex oral generic ionamin side effects of adderall buy generic sertraline vicodin purchase side effects of ultram glyburide side effects no prescription ionamin vicoprofen buy pepcid ac chewable adderall xr phendimetrazine online aldara ulcer nasacort aq nasal spray coreg side effects buy adderall now fioricet line what is pcp hyzaar drug zanaflex online free nicotine patches tetracycline hcl alternative viagra fexofenadine side effects withdrawal from sarafem search for fioricet hydrocodone overdose buy proscar fluconazole and dangerous valtrex online glyburide oral buy temazepam online without a prescription miacalcin more drug uses macrobid use in pregnancy phentermine side effects dangers nexium online what is generic viagra softtabs snorting prozac the drug furosemide vicodin cod online phentermine buy adderall valacyclovir dosage protopic side effects nexium pills adipex online prescription adipex no imprint viagra softtabs melttabssoma buy renova drug test psilocybin cephalexin uses gemfibrozil 600 mg effects of phencyclidine side effects of advair order patanol ambien overnight pravachol drug interactions buspar medication fioricet addiction phentermine without a prescription where to buy viagra pravachol side effects klonopin wafers buy hyzaar without prescriptionibuprofen losartan potassium tabletslotensin sertraline hcl side effects testosterone boosters psilocybin effects drug actonel levothroid side effects generic coreg bodybuilders on steroids imitrex generic imitrex cheap miralax side effects buy hydrocodone without prescription levoxyl and breastfeeding tamsulosin prices purchase soma buying vicodin online zyloprim tablets buy flonase usa aciphex side effects acyclovir buy low cost adipex phentermine yellow marijuana buy adderall maximum dose flomax tamsulosin estradiol cream buy flonase no prescription proscar discount free prescriptionprotonix temovate online ultram pain medicine vardenafil hcl macrobid antibiotic ultram more drug uses motrin overdose ambien dosage buy eunlose atenolol pregnancy order phendimetrazine online valtrex without prescription soma prescriptions fluoxetine in canada flovent side effects buy amoxicillin steroids anabolic phentermine yellow 30 mg marijuana buds buy tetracycline online no prescription doxazosin propoxyphene without a prescription buy clomid online medication singulair doxazosin medications ativan withdrawal addiction what is atarax accupril altace buy generic ultram buy india captopril avandia lawsuit amoxycillin plus buy cephalexin lorcet no prescription buy ambien online clonazepam without prescription valtrex alcohol imitrex coupons discount lamisil no prescription homemade roofies rohypnol side effects when taking gemfibrozil isosorbide mononitrate what is levitra information on prednisone adipex cheap tamiflu relenza online levothroid ecstasy restoril temazepam claritin buy buy lamisil online no prescription cheap sibutramine women steroids levitra online paxil and pregnancy lanoxin side effects clonazepam anti anxiety norco high metformin more drug side effects restoril without prescription lorazepam more drug uses ativan withdrawal symptoms levitra cialis remeron more drug side effects buy fluoxetine altace 5mg cefzil buy aciphex medication side effects online prescription for hydrocodone vioxx news snorting ultram flexeril side effects clomid buy what is symmetrel synthroid weight loss buy celexa ultram tramadol cheap proscar retin a gel retin a for wrinkles celebrex medicine online triphasil rosiglitazone maleate buy provigil and online pharmacyprozac buy bontril steroids for sale singulair overdose cheap bontril carisoprodol xr order vaniqa cheap ritalin side effects naproxen overdose nardil without prescription esomeprazole magnesium nexium oxycontin picture side effects of effexor purchase ultram atrovent nasal spray famvir more drug side effects buy zoloft ativan and alcohol adipex online prescription approved discount fioricet cipro buy depakote 500 mg aciphex rebate soma on line what is temovate no prescription lorazepam pictures of generic oxycontin meridia information folic acid pregnancy temazepam tablets buy oxycontin ultracet pills drug impotence levitra lsd trip suprax side effect buy ambien online fast serzone withdrawal fioricet cod side effects of propranolol side effects of mircette buying tretinoin zestoretic buyzestril viagra for women compazine and side effects hydrocodone pills symmetrel amantadine ceftin order online no prescription fulvicin ointment nicotrol gum plavix lawsuit ortho flex saddle what is phentermine what is propranolol acyclovir herpes cold sore protonix more drug interactions drug valium generic for plavix online lortab biaxin antibiotic online vicodin penicillin injection buy soma next day cod buy seroquel online online pharmacy gemfibrozil aldactone spironolactone buspar side effects serzone increased energy order propecia buy generic ritalinrohypnol coumadin and alcohol esgic buy ultram online atarax brand serzone drug tetracycline hydrochloride lipitor generic carisoprodol and acne hydrocodone withdrawal ceftin antibiotic pictures of xanax where to buy steroids dicount lamisil no prescriptionlanoxin what does oxycodone look like pioglitazone dosing buy temazepam online without prescription prevacid side effects adderall vs ritalin buy cheap xenical lanoxin buy evista concerns marijuana pipes prescription for vicoprofen anxiety tablets lorazepam vicodin generic mircette online what is butalbital lorazepam side effect xanax prescription generic serevent pravastatin buyprednisone penicillin side effects minocycline hcl online consultation for lorcet gemfibrozil without prescription buying vicodin prozac pms generic aricept retin a treatment fulvicin price what is prozac imitrex overnight motrin sinus buy lorcet without prescriptionlortab selsun blue whiteheads cheap famvir acetaminophen dosage buy triphasil without prescription celebrex side effects keflex more drug side effects medication butalbital plendil buypravachol fulvicin fish tramadol drug evoxac medicine diovan generic buy floventfluconazole ortho tricyclen viagra buy online purchase viagra sildenafil cheap buy benicar vaniqa online tenuate tablet buy hyzaar without a prescription levitra versus cialis mononitrate buy valtrex prescription sumatriptan buy heroin addiction what is pantoprazole sodium valium online bupropion sarafem weight loss no prescription xanax levitra dosage aldactone side effects sumycin 500mg what is tamiflu klonopin withdrawal symptoms protonix more for patients diovan buy nasacort buy bupropion amoxicillin and elderly temazepam cap prescription avapro levitra vs cialis review phentermine overnight fluoxetine withdrawal buying xalatan online without a prescription vaniqa without prescription valium pills effects of heroin zithromax online where can i purchase amphetamines buy diethylpropion purchase propoxyphene amitriptyline side effects provigil cheap no perscription fast delivery free viagra fluconazole pregnancy nortriptyline oral delganex sibutramine buy didrex online no prescription needed what is finasteride lexapro withdrawal symptoms generic fluoxetine provigil more drug uses cozaar medication online nordette omeprazole more drug interactionsopium alkaline lanoxin flexeril medication ciprofloxacin hcl lotrel low pulse rate nexium esomeprazole buy sildenafil citrate side effects of diazepam what is ic butalbital vermox no prescription cheap phentermine rohypnol recipe temovate shampoo and demodex minocycline hyperpigmentation buy glucophage vermox buy thyroid levothroid losartan cozaar acyclovir medication avandia vs actos fioricet information the drug keflex relafen side effects cefzil antibiotic dovonex buy www soma xanax buy cheap prevacid premarin withdrawal motrin abuse order relenza aldactone what is relafen tobradex side effects female testosterone tussionex with codeine buy adipex no prescription temazepam without prescription ambien without prescription verapamil buy retin a micro celexa and acne online pharmacy temazepam valium flextra pregnancy protopic medicine medicine evista remeron mirtazapine propecia without prescription tramadol cod ortho tri-cyclen macrobid oral terazosin side effects miralax powder what is tramadol used for nasonex pregnancy adderall mexican pharmacy suprax injection naprosyn relative buy hydrocodone with free consult toprol medicine buy ambien overnight gemfibrozil buyghb coreg order vermox online order viagra online renova cream buy celebrex buy soma cheap atenolol side effects of prilosec side effects of tamoxifen evista more drug side effects side effects of provigil restoril side effects pioglitazone side effects buy phentermine no prescription clarinex compared to claritin effects of rohypnol clomid pregnancy buy proscar without prescription tetracycline side effects buy imitrex ghb drug cheap renova without a prescription anabolic steroids buy discount zyrtec nexium rebates vicodin online antibiotic suprax neurontin 300mg famvir coupons how to use steroids cialis and levitra viagra order phentermine cephalexin for dogs sexual side effects hyzaar fioricet for sale serzone withdrawal symptoms clonazepam side effects order zithromax online buy relafenrelenza levoxyl side effects histex capsules propranolol side effects about fioricet lsd acid marijuana plants synalar cream online tamiflu valtrex 500mg tramadol pill dog steroids premarin and estradiol allopurinol side effects provigil generic what is ultracet xanax prescriptions buy temovate ointment avapro interactions is ativan addictive order xenical online propecia finasteride online prescription for adipex lipitor versus pravachol clonidine sales didrex no prescription needed cheap tenuate no rx miacalcin info elavil medicine no prescription propecia cyclobenzaprine flexeril condylox paroxetine withdrawal symptoms snorting valium paxil side affects adult dosage of flexeril flexeril abuse side effects of hyzaar propecia vs rogaine oxycodone abuse tylenol overdose ciprofloxacin prostrate natural steroids buy patanol ditropan furosemide no prescription effects of ketamine tazorac without prescription buy zyprexa alprazolam zoloft keflex antibiotic ovral tabletsoxazepam hydrocodone buy marijuana factsmdma alprazolam no prescription cialis generic levitra viagra buy online valium ativan for anxiety diltiazem propecia pill buy elavil preven antibacteriano preven ca capsules buy nortriptyline viagra for sale valium for sale order norco online buy fluoxetine without a prescription buy fulvicin allegra vs clarinex rabeprazole sodium ultram dosage flonase ingredients buy tramadol now buy generic didrex no prescription zestril pregnancy celecoxib celebrex serzone lawsuit what is cyanocobalamin price of nasonex histex tramadol for dogs buy viagra cheap prevacid pregnancy motrin side effects premarin buy hydrocodone order side effects protopic symmetrel cheap viagra pill propecia loss tamsulosin side effects mononitrate legalization of marijuana about tramadol what is synthroid side effects of singulair generic renova what is metformin prescription steroids augmentin actonel patient reviews alprazolam online without prescription spironolactone medication fulvicin dose symptoms fioricet withdrawal generic premarin pantoprazole sodium xanax oral oxazepam on drug screen aciphex rabeprazole buy nardil on line tylenol codeine sarafem 10mg actonel generic prilosec more drug side effects lorazepam alcohol withdrawal finasteride propecia clonazepam overdose proctocream hc what is ceftin order phentermine online selsun shampoo nicotine buy clomid success stories phentermine purchase buy zyrtec lortab withdrawal symptoms buy condylox adipex ingredients fioricet pharmacy trazodone hcl buy famvir naproxen more drug uses lipidos orlistat buy cialis online buy diclofenac phentermine side effects levitra 20 mg tobradex sales without perscription skelaxin dosage generic evista macrobid capsules provigil weight loss carisoprodol withdrawal vaniqa canadian pharmacy adipex no prescription hydrocodone no prescription lexapro information keppra buy side effects naproxen 500mg nasonex generic macrobid cap cialis compare levitra viagra suprax antibotic fda protopicprovigil snorting provigil orlistat xenical discount nexium furosemide medication for animals generic aciphex flexeril pregnancy vaniqa online without prescriptionvardenafil paxil cr side effects fluoxetine 20mg no prescription celexa propecia pharmacy overnight zithromax hyzaar medication cyclobenzaprine effects fosamax more drug side effects buy cheap lescollevaquin tricor drug valtrex cost microzide forum cheapest rabeprazole sodiumramipril adderall online pharmacy is tramadol a narcotic what is fioricet lortab ingredients cardura side effects macrobid pregnancy actonel dosage and side effects nexium dosage ionamin prescriptions zyrtec actos evista fioricet withdrawal starting klonopin zithromax without prescription withdrawal sertraline renova without a perscription dosing levothroid injecting steroids celecoxib cheapest sibutramine adipex testimonials diclofenac potassium buy naltrexonenaprosyn generic lexapro pictures of ketamine ibuprofen and pregnancy order meridia online tetracycline online kenalog spray tramadol ultracet buy vaniqa ionamin diet pills glyburide in pregnancy what is fioricet used for alprazolam dosage what is prinivil order lortab buspar ativan dosages buspirone hydrochloride cheap nizoral shampoo levitra generic glipizide side effects where to buy synalar cream without prescription depakote and alcohol fosamax drug lasix more drug uses buy zyban online generic skelaxinviagra softtabs methylprednisolone more drug side effectsmetoprolol discount tramadol oxycontin pain relief side effects benicar yasmin birth control phentermine 37.5mg cheap pfizer viagra nifedipine oral famvir oral viagra sildenafil promethazine codeine bontril sr viagra levitra alprazolam 2mg diazepam injection viagra vs cialis tetracycline oral diazepam overnight what is trazodone orlistat oral buy morphine without a prescriptionmotrin pantoprazole side effects generic dovonex generic valacyclovir online antabuse long term use pioglitazone hcl buy adipex online saturday delivery amaryl diabetic medication ultram withdrawal climara patch proscar 5mg imitrex coupon glyburide during pregnancy valium pictures buy zoloft online purchase tetracycline desloratadine ativan data cheap flonase meridia price ortho tri cyclen veterinary drug depo medrol generic drug propecia lotensin without prescription what is glyburide nizoral cream buy adipex online what is skelaxin kenalog injections risperdal information nortriptyline hcl cheapest tramadol benicar perscription what is neurontin used for accupril viagra sale terbinafine tablets lotrisone cream medroxyprogesterone oral flomax tamsulosin canada protopic adverse effects nexium more drug side effects effects of lsdmacrobid 75mg diclofenac what is norvasc didrex mexico side effects of plendil metformin and pcos trazodone oral cephalexin 500mg lorcet plus buy cheap phentermine oxazepam drug information purchase phentermine sumatriptan apotex purchase famvir mexico generic fioricet what is naproxen where to buy proctocortproctocream side effects of plavix topical steroids vaniqa prices alprazolam xanax morphine sulfate tramadol apap