Guest guest Posted April 1, 2003 Report Share Posted April 1, 2003 Thank you Anand. I'll look into it. You yourself are Sdney-based, Parramata, that right? Once I thougth I could apply for immigration to AU on " massotherapyst " but it unfortunately went off the " required professsions list " and such formal training as I have in acupuncture here in BR will certainly not stand up to Australian curriculary (? that a word?) requirements. Too bad, we might otherwise get to know each other personally. I also use a lot of exercises along with my clinical practice, but these are all related to gongfu/taijiquan schools. For arm troubles such as typists have, for instance, I use with very good results chansi jin the " silk cocoon unreeling exercise " of Chen school. Can't beat that when it comes to restoring qi (and therefore after a period blood) circulation on the arm. BTW, Chen family number one, Grandmaster Chen Xiaowang, lives in Sidnely, did you know that? He's also a " fellow researcher at Chongqin Institute of Traditional Chinese Medicine " or something like that. He's an expert at " six sounds qigong " besides being a real martial arts monument. Once, to demostrate his ability to sink qi and root himself he had 10 people stand in line, each pushing the other's back, and the 10th pushing his belly. Since I was the shortest guy in the queue, I got to do the actual contact. Master Chen counted to 3 and everyone pushed (nearly reducing me to patée...) and I transferred the force (as well as my 21 years of taiji practice allowed) to his belly. It felt like pushing a sequoia, you know? He didn't resist, exerting contrary force. He simply could't be moved. The i thought to my self, " well, then I may change the force's direction and... " I didn't finish the thought because when i got past " well, then " he had thrown me to the floor (with everyone else falling over in a heap on top of each other. Lots of fun, ha ha). This is one guy who NEVER haves an upflaring-of-qi-headache for sure! Cheers, Daniel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2003 Report Share Posted September 1, 2003 daniel thanks for the message. cn you describe the exercises & silk cotton reeling exercises to me if possible. i know its very hard but if you can describe the details maybe i can get it & try & learn them.aybe i already know them assomething else. await your reply anand --- Daniel Luz <danielluzacupuntura wrote: > Thank you Anand. I'll look into it. You yourself are > Sdney-based, Parramata, > that right? Once I thougth I could apply for > immigration to AU on > " massotherapyst " but it unfortunately went off the > " required professsions > list " and such formal training as I have in > acupuncture here in BR will > certainly not stand up to Australian curriculary (? > that a word?) > requirements. Too bad, we might otherwise get to > know each other personally. > I also use a lot of exercises along with my clinical > practice, but these are > all related to > gongfu/taijiquan schools. For arm troubles such as > typists have, for > instance, I use with very good results chansi jin > the " silk cocoon unreeling > exercise " of Chen school. Can't beat that when it > comes to restoring qi (and > therefore after a period blood) circulation on the > arm. BTW, Chen family > number one, Grandmaster Chen Xiaowang, lives in > Sidnely, did you know that? > He's also a " fellow researcher at Chongqin Institute > of Traditional Chinese > Medicine " or something like that. He's an expert at > " six sounds qigong " > besides being a real martial arts monument. Once, to > demostrate his ability > to sink qi and root himself he had 10 people stand > in line, each pushing the > other's back, and the 10th pushing his belly. Since > I was the shortest guy > in the queue, I got to do the actual contact. Master > Chen counted to 3 and > everyone pushed (nearly reducing me to patée...) and > I transferred the force > (as well as my 21 years of taiji practice allowed) > to his belly. It felt > like pushing a sequoia, you know? He didn't resist, > exerting contrary force. > He simply could't be moved. The i thought to my > self, " well, then I may > change the force's direction and... " I didn't finish > the thought because > when i got past " well, then " he had thrown me to the > floor (with everyone > else falling over in a heap on top of each other. > Lots of fun, ha ha). This > is one guy who NEVER haves an > upflaring-of-qi-headache for sure! > > Cheers, > Daniel > > > ===== Anand Bapat Pain Management Specialist Sports Injury Specialist Blacktown, Parramatta, Punchbowl, & Hammondville 0402 472 897 ______________________ Want to chat instantly with your online friends? Get the FREE Messenger http://uk.messenger./ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.