flyinghigh
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Everything posted by flyinghigh
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Thank you. Do you have any more info on Xiao Yao and any reference to Chunyi Lin studying with him?
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Sounds interesting. Can you share any details on his lineage?
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Interesting. Thank you. I actually made the tea yesterday according to your explanation. I only had Assam at home. I normally prefer both my black tea and coffee with milk. However, this tasted also great without milk. Softer than my normal tea brews, of which I can only drink one or two cups. This one, I think I had four cups. I also had some in the late afternoon. That I could feel when I went to bed and couldn't fall asleep The problem with corn syrup apparently is, that it is mostly fructose and might lead to a fatty liver. Also for the HFCS I don't think it is produced in a traditional way.
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I think, that's how it's served in most Arabic and Turkish restaurants. Do you put the tea leaves loosely into the pot or use a filter? What do you think of Assam and Darjeeling? Do you add milk or sugar at all? I try to avoid sugar as much as possible put will sometimes use jaggery or palm sugar which allegedly has a lower glycemic index.
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Yi Jin Jing (muscle/tendon changing classic)
flyinghigh replied to konchog uma's topic in General Discussion
Interesting. Can you provide a bit more details on the school of these guys? -
Yi Jin Jing (muscle/tendon changing classic)
flyinghigh replied to konchog uma's topic in General Discussion
In the Little Nine Heaven system they call it XiSuiGong. They are a Daoist school. But it seems, that in Chinese history there has always been an exchange and mixing of Buddhist and Daoist techniques. Besides the famous iron crotch swinging, they seem to have some kind of qigong warmup with these iron brushes. -
Whatever happened in Cologne never never happened
flyinghigh replied to shanlung's topic in The Rabbit Hole
Well, I never heard of it from people who went there. I just wouldn't rule it out that some drunkard might touch a woman. But it's probably not more than what one would see in discotheques/bars in other countries where people are close together and have drunk one too much. -
Whatever happened in Cologne never never happened
flyinghigh replied to shanlung's topic in The Rabbit Hole
Yes, at the Oktoberfest also grabbing of women's butts, etc. happens, but the difference is that here groups of men (eight to twenty mostly) got together and formed circles around single women, and then attacking them. I've never heard of this happen at the Oktoberfest. Also, there are hundreds of festivals, raves, concerts with thousands of guests with no sexual assaults reported. The Cologne mayor really messed up with her recommendation to keep an 'arm's length' away from people. Also the Cologne police leaders (not the individual policemen who were doing their job well) don't look good. First of all, on the New Year's day they issued the news that New Year's Eve went with no problems. Now news is coming out that policemen on the scene asked for more men to come but nothing really happened. There will probably be resignations about this. The general media doesn't look good here either. For a few days there were no articles on these incidents. Also, while it is correct, that gangs of North Africans have been active at the Cologne train station for some time, selling drugs and stealing things, there is now more information coming out that also refugees mostly from Syria were involved in these events. Now that is of course very sad as the few 'bad apples' put the majority of the refugees who are peaceful and friendly in a bad light. And interesting point to ponder here which hasn't really been discussed anywhere is the issue of alcohol. In North African countries hashish is avaiable freely. In EU countries it is for the most part still illegal. Most of the perpetrators were drunk. Alcohol is of course freely available. I'm sure, had they been smoking pot the situation would have been different. Another good reason to legalize cannabis and allow mature citizens to decide for themselves. -
Mirin Dajo - Man with ability to withstand swords pushed right through his body
flyinghigh replied to NotVoid's topic in General Discussion
From the skepticblog: " Professional magicians have offered explanations of their own. They believe it’s real, and that Dajo had simply learned a mental technique for coping with the trauma. Dajo often told of having visited India and learned from fakirs, mystics who perform similar but much less dramatic feats. Generally speaking, performers who do self-mutilation are actually doing what they appear to be doing; they’re just well practiced, well disciplined, and used to it. But nobody had ever heard of a case as dramatic as Mirin Dajo. Studying from the fakirs was as plausible an explanation as anyone could come up with. And though it has the sound of a bogus cover story, it may indeed be the way he learned how to do what he did. Some fakirs would pierce their own bodies in the same way that westerners pierce their ears or other body parts. When you do this, it creates what’s called a fistula, a tunnel of scar tissue. So long as you keep the fistula open by having something inserted through it, like an earring, it won’t close up. Modern doctors and bodypiercing professionals agree that’s probably how Dajo did it. Little by little, he and his assistant would drive a sharp object a little further into a hole in his abdomen, leaving it in place, letting it heal, and then driving it in a little further. Photos of Dajo’s back show it riddle with scars and holes, which are probably failed fistulas where their efforts were blocked by bones, nerves, major organs, or something too painful to get past. Eventually Danjo had at least four fistulas that went all the way through. He probably lived with metal bars inserted through them all the time, and when it came time for a performance, these were removed. His assistant had only to carefully slide the fencing foils through the fistulas at the proper angles, as they’d practiced together many times. And thus were the doctors fooled, the magicians stumped, and the audiences thrilled. It was perhaps not the best career choice, though, as Dajo died at age 35 from an aortic rupture, resulting from swallowing a long steel needle. Guess the fakirs hadn’t clued him in on that one." -
Mirin Dajo - Man with ability to withstand swords pushed right through his body
flyinghigh replied to NotVoid's topic in General Discussion
I read about this some time ago. Apparently he put these rapiers always through the same spots. Some kind of scar tissue tube had developed. So while very remarkable feats, I'm not sure that this has got anything to do with energetic or spiritual cultivation. But I might know only a part of the story. -
What is the background of his system? I couldn't find any info on the site. And why do you state the cost as $4000+? This weekend seminar is $350. http://www.taichitaocenter.com/sections/seminar.php Is the advanced stuff pricier?
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Very interesting. Do you know about the origin of his system? Can you tell us more about his electric qi? What did he do, when you felt it? How does he explain it? Does he teach this? Do you know about his brother's school in Taiwan?
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Thanks. So, you weren't making your comment in general, but only with regard as advice to the general, possibly unconditioned public, right?
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Flowing Hands, thanks for your comment. But I've heard of many martial arts masters/neigong/qigong masters that they had to practice horse stance for quite a long time, one hour up to four hours, like is written about John Chang in Kosta's first book.
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Are you talking about a low mabu horse stance here or the normally more upright zhanzhuang? What do people think is the main difference between mabu and zhanzhuang?
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Very interesting. Can you talk a bit further what ailments the people who were healed were healed from? And how was it done? Probably cupping to extract the stagnant blood and taking in qi infused herbal dan, right? Or any other treatments?
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Mabu is undoubtedly a great basic exercise. Also about Master Wang we learn that he had to stand in horse stand. However, Master Wang has never taught horse stand in a class, that I know of. So, it might not be that necessary a preperatory practice. Or you could argue that the practice with the tree serves a similar function. Not sure.
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Well, we're talking levels 1 and 2 here. Since there are 72 levels, these are the very basics. So this would be more akin to learning how to measure a pulse or blood pressure than doing the surgery which would be the culmination of such studies.
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Can you guys expand on the info of what Zou Huo Ru Mo is? How does John Chang define it? What happens in the body with the qi? Why is it so dangerous? You say on the one hand that one should stop (or correct one's technique) , but then also that you cannot expect people not to practice. I thought, the ancestors had consented to non-Chinese (however that is defined) learning levels 1 and 2. So, if the techniques, that are circling around, often miss a very crucial detail, couldn't you out of compassion for your fellow men and to avoid more and longer suffering give some information what should be corrected? You guys and I guess your school could still rest assured that no non-Chinese would ever achieve more than level 2, but suffering of the people who are now following apparently incomplete techniques leading to, as you say, life threatening conditions, can be avoided.
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"All CLAN AFFILIATIONS (not people) are treated like STRAW DOGS""
flyinghigh replied to Harmonious Emptiness's topic in Daodejing
Very interesting. I'd just like to add that in my understanding it is not that the character fu can be read upside down to mean to read arrived. It is more a play in that the sentences "luck has fallen down (up side down)" and "luck has arrived" are the same in Chinese pronunciationwise "fu dao le".- 54 replies
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I can't remember this being discussed so I'm posting on it. I hope I didn't overlook a previous thread on it. Has anybody tried Reconnective Healing? I just recently heard about it. It was found by Eric Pearl. I don't know much about it yet except that practitioners tune into some energy and then like in some qigong and similar style's treatments the client's body parts will move involuntarily according to the movements of the healer's ends. It seems to have some similarities to the marketing and organization of schools of Reiki, etc. in that initiation costs money. I think normally 333$. Also there are some 'brand extensions' like Reconnective Yoga. Here's a short clip with Eric Pearl.
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Hello! I am a student from 99 Iron Crotch Qi Gong
flyinghigh replied to 99IronCrotch's topic in Welcome
Hi, welcome to the forum. Very interesting to have someone herewho is learning from Master Tu. I have a few questions: 1. Is there any difference between the system that Master Tu is teaching in the US and what his brother is teaching in Taipei? 2. Where is the art coming from? 3. Are there any connections to the XiShuiGong of the Little Nine Heaven school? Would be great to hear from you.- 12 replies
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Nice thought, but again might be differences in digestive systems plus calculate how many hours of the day they spend eating. Possible for you to do that?
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Difficult for us to eat grass like a cow. They have the proper digestive system for this. We don't.
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Released: Seeking the Master of Mo Pai: Adventures with John Chang by Jim McMillan
flyinghigh replied to Thunder_Gooch's topic in General Discussion
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