EFS White

Question about Falun Dafa / Falun Gong

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I came across a manual describing the teachings, and touting the benefits of Falun Dafa / Falun Gong and thought it sounded like a very intriguing branch of cultivation practice.

 

If anyone has worked with this approach I would greatly appreciate to hear your opinion on this path and methodology, and any additional resources you can point me to.

 

If also anyone may offer further insight as to the "Falun" and its activation, I'll appreciate your input. Is it possible to create (?) and activate (?) the Falun in solitary study and cultivation training?

 

My best regards!

Edited by EFS White
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Years ago I was interested in Falun Dafa, but was recommended against practising it because I had trouble with mental illness in the past. I remember there was trouble/controversy with this practise, and googling it now, it also is symbolized with a swastika. Although this wasn't always a troublesome symbol, perhaps there is some sort of link there with the controversy and why I wasn't encouraged to start with it.. It may be a very good practise for many people, but I wanted to be on the safe side..

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I know next to nothing about them,  but I didn't care for the sectarian push in their public dance concert presentation which I went to thinking it would be based purely on Chinese history of a non-sectarian kind... (other than some references to ancient schools of religious Taoism and old mythology)  which to me it seemed they were co-opting to give credence to their school.? 

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I looked into Falun Dafa many years ago. Bought and read the book, attended a group practice which was very vague and shallow ... and quickly decided that it was a little too cultish for my tastes. Subsequently,  I had heard that the Chinese government was very suspicious of the movement ... rather, I should say more suspicious than normal. The group seemed to want to elevate the founder to more than just a figurehead. He grew large crowds that seemed a little too political from what I had read.

 

Anyway, I bailed out and never looked. That was many ... 30ish ... years ago. Maybe they got better. I dunno.

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If you would like to improve your health, there are many Qigong available, and some of them are translated to English.

http://ihqfo.org/en/index.php?p=news_list&lanmu=10

 

FLG showed up after 1992. It did not have a long history and did not have a respectful linkage.

Based on the book of FLG and people's experiences, I did see any advantages of it compared with other Qigong.    

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  On 4/7/2019 at 5:21 PM, thursday said:

Years ago I was interested in Falun Dafa, but was recommended against practising it because I had trouble with mental illness in the past. I remember there was trouble/controversy with this practise, and googling it now, it also is symbolized with a swastika. Although this wasn't always a troublesome symbol, perhaps there is some sort of link there with the controversy and why I wasn't encouraged to start with it.. It may be a very good practise for many people, but I wanted to be on the safe side..

I don't know what they practiced, but there are many Buddhist qigong out there. Swastika is common in Buddhism so there is nothing surprising if it's used in China, India or Japan. It becomes an evil symbol when combined with evil beliefs.

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  On 4/7/2019 at 1:19 PM, EFS White said:

 

and any additional resources you can point me to.

I believe there were two books, Falun Gong and Zhuan Falun(?). 

And a series of free lectures. 

 

And some ranting about yellow foxes and weasels, later on there were the interview where the aliens entered the discussion. 

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  On 4/12/2019 at 6:43 AM, kondensation said:

I don't know what they practiced, but there are many Buddhist qigong out there. Swastika is common in Buddhism so there is nothing surprising if it's used in China, India or Japan. It becomes an evil symbol when combined with evil beliefs.

 

If one feels neutral about seeing a swastika or is inclined to only remember the positive history consciously, then that's all good for me. How did you mean: "it becomes an evil symbol when combined with evil beliefs"?

Edited by thursday
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  On 4/12/2019 at 12:08 PM, thursday said:

If one feels neutral about seeing a swastika or is inclined to only remember the positive history consciously, then that's all good for me. How did you mean: "it becomes an evil symbol when combined with evil beliefs"?

 

It was used positively for thousands of years, negatively for only two decades or so and that happened almost exclusively in European cultural sphere. In Asian countries people mostly aren't aware of the evil that you associate with the symbol when they use it in their religious symbolism for millenia.

 

 

Edited by kondensation
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Falun Dafa is/was a cult, with a delusional teacher and teaching. It strikes me energetically as messing up people's qi, but that's just my personal impression of it.

Unfortunately, the Chinese government was killing a lot of Falun Dafa practitioners. Very horrible. I don't know if that still happens today. This is a really strange thing to think about in our enlightened information age, when we come from societies in which we're free to practice any religion. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Falun_Gong

The swastika was an Eastern symbol long before the Nazis used it. The Nazi version is often reversed and on its edge (like in the shape of a diamond), whereas the real version is often on its side (like in the shape of a square)...but not always. It's a symbol that has something to do with the big dipper revolving around the pole star, and it signifies good fortune among other things. It doesn't stop meaning what it does just because the Nazis used it, but it is problematic if it's viewed by the uninformed, and is misunderstood.

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  On 4/12/2019 at 5:16 PM, kondensation said:

 

It was used positively for thousands of years, negatively for only two decades or so and that happened almost exclusively in European cultural sphere. In Asian countries people mostly aren't aware of the evil that you associate with the symbol when they use it in their religious symbolism for millenia.

 

 

 

That is true of course. Apparently it's not even the same symbol, I was uninformed. Moving on.

Edited by thursday

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  On 4/12/2019 at 5:38 PM, thursday said:

That is true of course. Apparently it's not even the same symbol, I was uninformed. Moving on.

 

I wasn't calling you uninformed, my friend...I meant people who would call qigong practitioners Nazis.

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  On 4/12/2019 at 6:39 PM, Aetherous said:

 

I wasn't calling you uninformed, my friend...I meant people who would call qigong practitioners Nazis.

 

Thank you for the clarification my friend, I wasn't completely sure what you meant. I meant no disrespect towards either Buddhist or qigong or Falun Gong practitioners or teachers.

Edited by thursday

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I practiced it for over 10 years. Gave it up a couple of years back to focus on Buddhist practices.

 

It's not in any way a cult. It is an extremely safe, healthful practice but at its root is l the idea that your spiritual breakthroughs are tied to the cultivation of your heart - how well you embody the characteristics of truthfulness, compassion and forbearance. It teaches you to turn the other cheek when being abused by others. Not only remaining calm when being attacked but remaining compassionate toward others. 

 

It's completely free - there's no membership, fees or mandatory group attendance. You can literally download the book and videos and practice on your own without ever meeting another practitioner.

 

I stopped practicing because I got stuck at a certain level and felt like I wasn't progressing anymore. I still have a bunch of friends who practice and get loads from it. 

 

I won't get into a debate about it here. It was banned in China because there were 100 million people practicing it in the 90s. Which is utterly terrifying for the communist leadership, as the founder wasn't a party appointee.

 

The cult propaganda came later and included loads of coerced testimonies and falsified footage. A good friend of mine was tortured for about three months before finally agreeing to give a false testimony to the tv station about how it ruined his life.

 

The reality is a innocuous, peaceful practice. 

 

 

 

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  On 4/13/2019 at 7:57 AM, Vajra Fist said:

The reality is a innocuous, peaceful practice. 

 

I recall the books by Li Hongzhi being very culty and weird. It was more like a religion than a form of qigong.

Here's what looks to be an official summary of Falun Dafa.

No offense meant to people like you who enjoy practicing this, but when things involve unique beliefs rather than simply a physical exercise (such as belief in an intelligent entity called a Falun, which is implanted into your lower abdomen by the master, Li Hongzhi), it can be defined as a "cult" by some people.

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Curious as to the back story of Falun Gong, the origins... like How did Mr Li come to the practices? Were they channeled or did he claim to invent them or learn them somewhere? Anyone know?

 

 

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  On 4/15/2019 at 2:29 PM, Fa Xin said:

Curious as to the back story of Falun Gong, the origins... like How did Mr Li come to the practices? Were they channeled or did he claim to invent them or learn them somewhere? Anyone know?

 

 

 

Interview with Li Hongzhi:

 

TIME: When did you learn about qigong?
Li: I started to learn when I was four years old. I was very young, and my teachers taught me aspects that were very simple.

TIME: Who were your teachers?
Li: I do not wish to have their names known. I had masters in two schools. Prior to the Cultural Revolution people enjoyed quite a bit of religious freedom. Chinese were quite used to such things. It was like going to church in the West.

TIME: When did you start teaching?
Li: I am more than 40 years old, and I have been practicing qigong for many years. When qigong became popular, I did not come out in the public. I did not want to teach about stopping illnesses or keeping fit.

TIME: What made you finally come out?
Li: When these masters asked me to come out. At the time I said that there were too many people practicing qigong, and I said that I did not want to cure illnesses or to help people keep fit. They said, What you do will be different. These people who are teaching how to cure illnesses and teaching fitness, are paving the road for your coming out.

TIME: Where were these masters?
Li: They were in the mountains.

 

 

  Reveal hidden contents

 

Edited by KuroShiro
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The confusion between cultivation practices and the phenomena of Falun Gong is "programmed".

 

100 million people doing this  - you know any Qigong style that ever had that many?

 

This was subsidized to happen.

 

It is not about the technical aspect or details of Qigong.

 

It's not about whether the system practiced is "good" or not.

 

It's not even about Qigong.

 

It could have been a knitting party and same things would have happened.

 

 

 

 

 

 

-VonKrankenhaus

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  On 4/15/2019 at 2:23 PM, Aetherous said:

 

I recall the books by Li Hongzhi being very culty and weird. It was more like a religion than a form of qigong.

Here's what looks to be an official summary of Falun Dafa.

No offense meant to people like you who enjoy practicing this, but when things involve unique beliefs rather than simply a physical exercise (such as belief in an intelligent entity called a Falun, which is implanted into your lower abdomen by the master, Li Hongzhi), it can be defined as a "cult" by some people.

 

I guess it's each to their own. In certain daoist practices they talk about the establishment of an energy mechanism in high level transmission. Like the master establishes aetheric 'training wheels' so the refinement of internal alchemy doesn't go wrong at high levels. My understanding is that it's a similar principle with the falun, it's not so much a sentient entity, but something to help refine virtue and qi developed through the cultivation and qigong into higher level energy.

 

It's either something that you believe exists or you don't. To call it a 'cult' because you don't believe in it is slightly disingenuous.

 

I did my university thesis on cults and brainwashing. That was about 15 years ago, but I vaguely remember the characteristics to look out for.

 

1. Separation from society or from influences that contradict the group's teaching

- there is nothing of the sort in Falun Gong. People practice in their daily life. (The drummer in David Bowie's band practiced Falun Gong)

 

2. High financial demands, often linked to progression in the group. Or else payment for higher level teachings through labour.

- you see this in Scientology. However everything is free in Falun Gong. All the materials, practices and everything are available to download for free online. There is no 'inner circle'.

 

3. Coercion or manipulation into following the group's teachings.

- it's a purely internal practice. You cultivate yourself and you have no accountability for that. Similarly no disconnect for leaving the group. I still have many good friends who practice and I meet up with them now and then.

 

4. An authority figure in the main founder

- Falun Gong does have this, admittedly. But then, most qigong schools do. Look at Chunyi or Wang Liping. Or that guy in the 90s who used to give six hour qigong transmissions. The schools are built around their authority. Moreover they often charge thousands of dollars for their teachings, whereas FG is all free. Plus Li Hongzhi is something of a recluse. I only saw him once in the decade that I practiced, and that was when I went to a seminar he gives once or twice a year.

 

Anyway, no offence if you disagree and still want to call it a cult. I don't practice any more so I have no vested interest. Just wanted to set the record straight as I see it. 

 

 

Edited by Vajra Fist
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As I shared a few years ago about Falun Gong, famous Kung Fu master George Xu brought out an almost identical form before Falun Gong was made public. He learned it from an old master in Shanghai. He calls it Wu Wei. I had it tested by Eric Isen and Wu Wei tested as more powerful and beneficial than Falun Gong. He saw that it also results in an energy wheel being installed but it is shaped slightly different than the wheel from Falun Gong but the wheel is more powerful from Wu Wei. The only thing I did not care for when I was doing Wu Wei was the eerie music that plays during the form. 

Edited by tao stillness
punctuation correction and spelling error
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  On 4/12/2019 at 6:43 AM, kondensation said:

I don't know what they practiced, but there are many Buddhist qigong out there. Swastika is common in Buddhism so there is nothing surprising if it's used in China, India or Japan. It becomes an evil symbol when combined with evil beliefs.

The swastika is a symbol of contentment and prosperity in the Indic cultures. Most traditional Indian homes have the swastika drawn on their front doors. 

 

It literally means “that which is  auspicious”. 

 

One of my kungfu friends spent many years practicing Falun Gong. He claims the negative press it got was due to communist Chinese government’s propaganda. Apparently lot of terrible things have been done to falungong practitioners in China — such as being sent to prison camps simply for practicing it. 

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The wife of the Premier of China was a Falun Dafa practitioner before it was banned, as were some members of the government. The story is that some official created a paranoid perception of Falun when he realized that the membership in Falun Dafa outnumbered the membership in the Communist Party so therefore if these people ever organized as a political group then it could be a threat to the government. That is at least one story that I read about. 

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Tao Stillness, how long does that version take to complete daily? Also, is full lotus mandatory like in Falun Gong? Thank you!

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The Falun Qigong postures are held as long as possible which makes a typical session usually last 90 minutes. When I did it just for 3 months I was up to holding a posture for 20 minutes and could have held it longer but have other things to do in life. Fortunately, with Wu Wei, it is suggested that a posture is held just 5 minutes. So I think the form could be done in 45 minutes. There is no need to sit in lotus. 

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  On 10/3/2019 at 7:23 PM, tao stillness said:

The Falun Qigong postures are held as long as possible which makes a typical session usually last 90 minutes. When I did it just for 3 months I was up to holding a posture for 20 minutes and could have held it longer but have other things to do in life. Fortunately, with Wu Wei, it is suggested that a posture is held just 5 minutes. So I think the form could be done in 45 minutes. There is no need to sit in lotus. 

Thank you brother.

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