ReturnDragon
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Everything posted by ReturnDragon
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The sage, in the Tao Te Ching, was implied to any higher authority. Lao Tse cannot spell it out in the open to avoid being arrested.
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It was accomplished by the cultivation of the mind and body. The are many things in the cultivation of the mind. Such as to keep one's poise at all times. To have a peace of mind by stay calm and avoid conflicts in general. In addition, to broaden one's wisdom by the acknowledgement of the facts in life. The cultivation of the body is to keep oneself on a state of homeostasis by practicing healthy exercise like Tai Chi and Qigong. Furthermore, it is by eating a special diet.
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I don't know anything about Jainism neither. I have only go by what the video said. It is lines 1 to 4. 01. Heaven and Earth have no mercy,02. Treating all things as straw dogs.03. Sages have no mercy,04. Treating people as straw dogs. "No mercy" are the keywords. This is pure philosophical. When nature strikes like volcano eruption, flood or landslide, it will destroy anything in its path with no mercy. It will not avoid killing a good person in its way nor selectively who is not to be killed. On a human level. Whomever breaks a law will be punished with no mercy. This is what Chapter 5 is all about.
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I don't mean to be sarcastic. If one learned Tai Chi from the masters as you have described, one should not still be asking silly question like that. Peace! It is pity that's how you understood about Qigong on reverse breathing!
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That is quite right. The art of Tai Chi is not learn to fight but it just come with the package. To fight good with Tai Chi is not mainly with the moves rather it was the combination of the "you learn to move in a smart way, developing body's intelligence (call internal power, peng jin(勁). Period.)" I like that, you knew what Tai Chi is all about.
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The way the video described that Taoism is different from Jainism. However, if one study the Tao Te Ching carefully enough, then one will realize that Taoism is the same as Jainism as in this aspect. The way Lao Tze emphasize Wu Wei is take no action to harm nature. In other words, he does not give too much credit to something that was good to nature. If the rat could be saved, a Taoist would have had saved. Otherwise, just leave it alone. Chapter Five may justify that. Chapter 5 1.天地不仁, 2.以萬物為芻狗。 3.聖人不仁, 4.以百姓為芻狗。 5.天地之間, 6.其猶橐籥乎﹖ 7.虛而不屈, 8.動而愈出。 9.多言數窮, 10.不如守中。 Chapter 5 01. Heaven and Earth have no mercy, 02. Treating all things as straw dogs. 03. Sages have no mercy, 04. Treating people as straw dogs. 05. In-between-Heaven-and-Earth 06. Is like a wind box, 07. Vacuous but inexhaustible, 08. Dynamic but invigorating. 09. Excessive words accelerate failure. 10. Prefer to stay being neutral.
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The reason for that is because during the Tang Dynasty there were many conflicts between the three religions. Hence, the emperor put them all in one room to talk things over. So to speak. Hereinafter, these three religions were sharing their philosophies and worship some of the deities. Based to my knowledge, I didn't think that was a very common practice.
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My preference is Taoism, non religious, is because it has only one fundamental principle to be followed which is Wu Wei. Wu Wei is to let nature take its course with no interference. It was suggested just to let things be to avoid many conflicts in life.
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Tai Chi! Does it ring then bell?
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A holistic exercise with breathing.
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Nowaday, yoga is a holistic exercise involves with breathing. The Chinese Buddhist extracted the part of breathing and practiced by the Xiaolin monks. The Taoist might have known the method of Qigong long time ago. At the time, it was called (吐吶)Tu Na.
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Let's do that, my BSmaster! Why didn't you do the research before you post?
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FYI Actually, Qigong was derived from Yoga.
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Perhaps I might say this. The Buddhist chanting is for a peace of mind in present life. Buddhists specialize in funerals is because they think life is miserable with the hardship and bitterness. The chanting is to help the deceased to clear all the sinful commitments in the past. So, the deceased will have a clear soul for the next life. Another thing, the purpose of chanting is to guide the deceased to have a safe journey to arrive in the next world. Edited to add: I am speaking on the philosophy of the Chinese Buddhism.
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Do you think a student will be good if trained by a good teacher? Don't you think that the learning ability and comprehension of the student has to do with the learning curve or achievement?
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Perform Qigong deep breathing. Sit in a semi/full lotus position and breathe softly, smoothly and slowly deep into your abdomen. This a what ancient Chinese Taoist does to maintain the original chi(元氣). If your breath does not go down to the abdomen, then just breathe as deep as you can then exhale. The stop point is your baseline. Eventually, your breath will go down deeper and deeper progressively with you diligent breathing practice.
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nCov19 Development and Prevention Discussion Only
ReturnDragon replied to Earl Grey's topic in The Rabbit Hole
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The Taoist concerns with the present life as opposed to the Buddhist with after life. Therefore, the Taoist would perform chanting in the temple to help people to wash their sins and prolong life. Of cause, the Taoist does that with a ceremonial fee. If one knows the birthday of someone may pay the heavenly master to cause pain on this individual by using a voodoo doll. In addition, someone can pay a heavenly master to place a curse on a person by chanting.
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Hungry All The Time -- Restarted KAP Practices
ReturnDragon replied to Mikey_Power_Up's topic in General Discussion
This is my just opinion is because by observation. It seems to me the practitioner had used lot of energy in the process. I know I am constantly hungry from Taiji practice. My body tells me that I need to eat to replenish my source of energy. -
I believe most people, here at TDB, talked about Buddhism was referring to Tibet Buddhism. They are more complicated than the Chinese Buddhism.
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Limits of the meridians ? Limits of qi flow in body ?
ReturnDragon replied to waterdrop's topic in Daoist Discussion
Something we should know before we go any further. Ref: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5908427/- 36 replies
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- medridians
- flow
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In the ordinary Chinese language, The character 道(tao) has one of the definitions means "principle". Thus there are two different sets of principles between Lao Tze and Confucius. Lao Tze: Tao is the principle of nature. Confucius: Tao is the principle of morality. People are not familiar with the language will be obfuscated with the two tao's .
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According to the Tao Te Jing, Chapters One and Four, Tao is existed before the heavenly god, not God. How can we verify the existence of Tao? Well, Lao Tze is the creator of Tao. Thus we must trace his thoughts, objectively, through the TTJ. TTJ has all the answers that you want. btw I am an atheist also and believe in the principles of Tao but not religiously. Lao Tze created Tao but didn't know what to call it. Therefore, he called it "Tao" arbitrarily. The idea of Tao was originated from the Yijing(易經) based on the yin-hang concept. The way of nature is evolved by the yin-yang concept. The way of nature is Tao. However, this is only one definition of Tao. There are alot more definitions for Tao in the TTJ as described by Lao Tze.
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Let's put it this way. Qigong practitioners may have the same effect as Kung Fu; but Kung Fu might not have to same effect as in Qigong practitioner. The reason is that a Kung Fu practitioner consumes lots of body energy as opposed to Qigong which preserves energy.