Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Friday, November 13, 2015
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Soaring Crane Qigong
Maintaining a consistent qigong practice helps youthful vitality and speeds recovery from illness. In addition, qigong reduces high blood pressure and increases balance and equilibrium. What is qigong?
Gathering Qi from the Six Directions
Penetrating the Sky and the Earth
Crane's Head Carrying Qi
Crane Touching Water
Mingling with the Source of All Qi
Penetrating the Sky and the Earth
Crane's Head Carrying Qi
Crane Touching Water
Mingling with the Source of All Qi
Saturday, August 15, 2015
18-Form Qigong
Awakening the qi
Opening the heart
Waving the rainbow
Separating the clouds
Repulse monkey
Rowing the boat
Holding ball in front of shoulder
Turn body and look at the moon
Turning waist and push palms
Waving hands in the clouds
Pull the water and look at the sky
Bending back and push forward
Pigeon showing its wings
Stretching arm and fist
Wild geese flying
Turning wheel
Bounce the ball
Quieting the qi
Sunday, August 2, 2015
T'ai Chi's Eight Truths
Tai Chi Truths
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Most people think of tai chi as a form of gentle exercise, but technically, it’s a martial art. It’s also a way of meditation, and a way of life.
Tai is “great.” Chi does not mean “energy” or “life force” (ch’i, qi, ki) as one might expect, instead it refers to yin and yang (two polar forces in the universe) fused into the Great Ultimate, represented by the Tai-chi (taiji) symbol to the left. The Great Ultimate is fundamentally the Non-Ultimate, or the Ultimate of Non-being.
The health benefits of tai chi are pretty well documented now. Many studies have determined that tai chi has a positive effect on mental health, cardiovascular fitness, high blood pressure, muscle strength, flexibility and aerobic capacity. A new study by the Korea Institute of Oriental Medicine in Daejeon, South Korea and the University of Exeter (UK), published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, concluded that while tai chi offers little help in easing the symptoms of cancer or rheumatoid arthritis, “tai chi, which combines deep breathing and relaxation with slow and gentle movements, may exert exercise-based general benefits for fall prevention and improvement of balance in older people as well as some meditative effects for improving psychological health.”
Here are the so-called Eight Truths of Tai Chi, translated by Waysun Liao* from “early manuscripts by unknown masters.” I don’t know if “truths” is the right word, for they are not facts, but rather principles, ones that apply not only to tai chi but also to meditation itself, and for that matter, daily living.
The Eight Truths of T’ai Chi
1. Do not be concerned with form. Do not be concerned with the ways in which form manifests.
2. Your entire body should be transparent and empty. Let inside and outside fuse.
3. Learn to ignore external objects. Allow your mind to guide you, and act spontaneously, in accordance with the movement.
4. The sun sets on the western mountain. The cliff thrusts forward, suspended in space. See the ocean in its vastness and the sky in its immensity.
5. The tiger’s roar is deep and mighty. The monkey’s cry is high and shrill. So should you refine your spirit, cultivating the positive and the negative.
6. The water of spring is clear, like fine crystal. The water of the pond lies still and placid. Your mind should be as the water and your spirit like the spring.
7. The river roars. The stormy ocean boils. Make your ch’i like these natural wonders.
8. Seek perfection sincerely. Establish life. When you have settled the spirit, you may cultivate the ch’i.
* Waysun Liao, T’ai Chi Classics (Random House, 1977)
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Meditation increases vagal nerve tone
Why the Vagus Nerve is so Important
'Vagus' is Latin for 'wandering' and indeed this bundle of nerve fibers roves through the body networking the brain with the stomach and digestive tract, the lungs, heart, spleen, intestines, live and kidneys, not to mention range of other nerves that are involved in speech, eye contact, facial expressions and even your ability to tune into tother people's voices. It is made of thousands and thousands of fibers and 80% of them are sensory, meaning that the vagus nerve reports back to your brain what is going on in your organs. The vagus nerve is the longest of the cranial nerves, the vagus nerve, is so named because it 'wanders' ... sending out fibers from the brainstem to visceral organs. The vagus nerve is literally the captain of the body's inner nerve center - the the parasympathetic nervous system - overseeing a vast range of crucial functions, communicating nerve impulses to every organ in the body.
New research has revealed that it may also be the missing link to treating chronic inflammation, and the beginning of an exciting new field of treatment that leaves medications behind. Here are nine facts about this powerful nerve bundle.
1. The vagus nerve prevents inflammation.
With a vast network of fibres stationed like spies around all your organs, when the vagus nerve gets wind of the hallmarks of inflammation—cytokines or the inflammatory substance tumour necrosis factor (TNF)—it alerts the brain and elicits anti-inflammatory neurotransmitters via the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway. A certain amount of inflammation after injury or illness is normal. But an overabundance is linked to many diseases and conditions, from sepsis to the autoimmune condition rheumatoid arthritis.
2. It helps you make memories.
A University of Virginia study showed success in strengthening memory in rats by stimulating the vagus nerve, which releases the neurotransmitter norepinephrine into the amygdala, consolidating memories. Related studies were done on humans, opening promising treatments for conditions like Alzheimer’s disease.
3. It helps you breathe.
The neurotransmitter acetylcholine, elicited by the vagus nerve, literally gives you the breath of life by telling your lungs to breathe. It’s one of the reasons that botox—often used cosmetically—can be potentially dangerous, because it interrupts your acetylcholine production. You can, however, also manually stimulate your vagus nerve by doing abdominal breathing or holding your breath for four to eight counts.
4. It’s intimately involved with your heart.
The vagus nerve is responsible for controlling the heart rate via electrical impulses to the sinoatrial node of the heart, where acetylcholine release slows the pulse. The way doctors determine the “tone” or “strength” of your vagus nerve (and your cardiac health) is by measuring the time between your individual heart beats, and then plotting this on a chart over time. This is your “heart rate variability.”
5. It initiates your body’s relaxation response.
When your ever-vigilant sympathetic nervous system revs up the fight or flight responses—pouring the stress hormone cortisol and adrenaline into your body—the vagus nerve tells your body to chill out by releasing acetylcholine. Its tendrils extend to many organs, acting like fiberoptic cables that send instructions to release enzymes and proteins like prolactin, vasopressin, and oxytocin, which calm you down.People with a stronger vagus response may be more likely to recover more quickly after stress, injury, or illness.
6. It translates between your gut and your brain.
Your gut uses the vagus nerve like a walkie-talkie to tell your brain how you’re feeling via electric impulses called “action potentials". Your gut feelings are very real.
7. Overstimulation of the vagus nerve is the most common cause of fainting.
If you tremble or get queasy at the sight of blood or while getting a flu shot, you’re not weak; you’re experiencing “vagal syncope.” Your body, responding to stress, overstimulates the vagus nerve, causing your blood pressure and heart rate to drop. During extreme syncope, blood flow is restricted to your brain, and you lose consciousness. But most of the time you just have to sit or lie down for the symptoms to subside.
8. Electric stimulation of the vagus nerve reduces inflammation and may inhibit it altogether.
Truly breaking new medical ground, neurosurgeon Kevin Tracey M.D. was the first to prove that stimulating the vagus nerve can significantly reduce inflammation. Results on rats were so successful, he reproduced the experiment in humans with stunning results. The creation of implants to stimulate the vagus nerve via electronic implants showed a drastic reduction, and even remission, in rheumatoid arthritis—which has no known cure and is often treated with the toxic cancer drug methotraxate—hemorrhagic shock, and other equally serious inflammatory syndromes. Tracy hit upon the idea that the brain might be using the nervous system - specifically the vagus nerve - to tell the spleen to switch off inflammation everywhere.
9. Vagus nerve stimulation has created a new field of medicine.
Spurred on by the success of vagal nerve stimulation to treat inflammation and epilepsy, a burgeoning field of medical study, known as “bioelectronics,” may be the future of medicine. Using implants that deliver electric impulses to various body parts, scientists and doctors hope to treat illness with fewer medications and fewer side effects.
http://mentalfloss.com/uk/health/30807/why-the-vagus-nerve-is-so-important
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/29/hacking-the-nervous-syste_n_7469526.html
http://drsircus.com/medicine/function-vagus-nerve
http://mentalfloss.com/uk/health/30807/why-the-vagus-nerve-is-so-important
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/29/hacking-the-nervous-syste_n_7469526.html
http://drsircus.com/medicine/function-vagus-nerve
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
The Neuroscience of Self-Regulation
The Neuroscience of Self-Regulation
Posted by Josephine Coury '15 / In Biological Sciences, Uncategorized /
A number of activities are associated with improved outcomes in medicine such as yoga, tai chi, and qigong. The question is do these activities simply make people feel good or do they make changes in the neurologic, endocrine, and immune systems that influence the course of disease, healing, and wellness?
Self-regulation is defined as “an action a person can take to help restore or maintain their mental, physical, or physiological health.” In other words, it is how to regulate or balance ourselves. The key stimulation that puts this system out of balance is stressors and stress responses.
There are a variety of different stressors: physical (such as cold, heat, noise, injury), physiological (such as infection, toxins, sleep deprivation), genetic DNA abnormalities, affect (emotion), and cognitive (negative thoughts or beliefs). Getting rid of a stressor is different from getting rid of stress. Stressors you can run away from, go on a vacation, or have a surgery. A stress response is what our bodies do in reaction.
There are three typical responses to these stresses. The first is the acute, typical response. A well-regulated system responds appropriately to these stressors to preserve balance. The response system will alternate between the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems so that every stress can be balanced and the body can relax once again. The second is chronic stress; the stress will keep coming so there is no time to come back to a balanced situation. The thirds is traumatic stress, a stress that is too extreme, too fast, and too soon. This activates the fight or flight reaction so intensely that the parasympathetic and sympathetic systems will both increase, rather than balance out as usual, and the subject will feel numbness. This can sometimes resolve itself, or lead to wild fluctuates of on and off, like in posttraumatic stress disorder. Other stress related diseases caused by this are FMS, IBS, migraines, depression, OCD, PTSD, and a compromised immune system.
Researchers have studied when meditation helped with these stress-related diseases. The first study showed that meditation training enhanced the immune system’s respond to the flu vaccine. The participants were trained only for eight weeks in meditation and show significant antibody responses to the vaccine. The second study pertained to a process called “interoception,” which is when internal sensation information is brought to our consciousness. This process is necessary for emotion and hunches; it essentially connections physiological factors and emotion. A study showed that meditation increased the capacity for interoception and physiologically gave the meditators more connections between posterior and anterior parts of the brain. In the experiment, subjects watched a series of sad films and those who underwent an eight week meditation course felt just as sad during the film, but less depressed afterwards.
Some of the methodologies of self-regulation are: posture, movement, breathing, interoceptive stimuli, and mindfulness. Ties between posture, movement, and breathing were found to have positive effects on testosterone levels, cortisol levels, chemical balance, and Parkinson’s disease. Interoceptive stimuli were a more complicated effect of meditation to explore. A study of Tibetan Monks showed that when meditating on the image of a fire, they were able to raise their body temperature to the fever range. Another study with the Tibetan monks showed that if they meditated on a physical exercise to strengthen their pinky finger verses actually doing the exercise, the muscle was strengthened equally.
The last of the three methodologies was mindfulness or regulation of the mind. The majority of these studies explored the concept of rumination, when our mind aimlessly wanders, or the automatic churning of semi-conscious thoughts. Rumination has been identified as a significant factor in anxiety, depression, and stress. This is the default state of the brain 50% of the day. Specific regions of the brain have been shown to be active in this default mode, like the Wernicke and Broca areas where language is processed, since we are talking to ourselves. During meditation training this pattern shifts. Instead of the default mode, there is a whole different pattern with more involvement in different areas, more in the interoceptive system. Because of this, long-term meditators have a new default mode where they are far more present. Meditators have less continuous mind wandering, which is known a risk factor for depression.
In summary, researchers believe that there are substantial indications that the techniques of conscious self-regulation used in Asian (qigong, yoga) and western (somatic) systems are amenable to explanation by neuroscience. Posture, movement, breathing, imagery, and attention may help regulate and affect autonomic activation and immune responses through known pathways. These methods offer a much better alternative to the usual methods of self-blame and the struggle for self-control. They hope to continue to create and find studies more specific studies to validate these claims, particularly studying the effects of qigong on disease. ~~ Dartmouth University Research.
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Relax, slow down. . . allow ideas to emerge naturally
Stress usually causes the mind to speed up, become erratic and produce jangled, disassociated thoughts. The Chinese call it the “monkey mind.” The more you relax, the more your conflicting thoughts slow down and lose their force. You can then see things with more clarity and less frustration according to Energy Arts: http://www.energyarts.com/benefits-learning-tai-chi
Mental relaxation will help you:
- Settle down and become calm, allowing you to focus on the task at hand.
- Multi-task without mental tension and distraction.
- Connect your brain to your body without strain.
- Become aware of single or multiple thoughts without becoming tense and feeling yourself pulled in different directions.
- Gain deeper insight and allow ideas to emerge naturally.
Monday, June 15, 2015
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Qigong 18 forms
Qigong 18 Forms
1. Awakening the Qi
2. Opening your heart
3. Painting the rainbow
4. Separating the clouds
5. Cycling the arms
6. Paddle a boat on a calm lake
7. Lifting the sun in one hand
8. Turn upper body - look at moon
9. Push the palms
10.
Rolling the energy ball
11. Lift
and spray the water
12. Push
the waves
13. Let
the dove free
14. Grab
eggs and put them in mud
15.
Flying wild goose
16. Hug
and swing the Sun
17.
Bounce the ball
18. Quieting the Qi
18. Quieting the Qi
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Qigong Mastery ~ Swimming Dragon
Recently I attended a group practice at Rochester's Valley Manor Apartment with Carmen Ramos where we did "Swimming Dragon Qigong" which is a uniquely fluid movement form. Mr. Ramos teaches for residents of Valley Manor, the Jewish Home, St. Ann's Home and the Unitarian Church. His background is in tai chi and qigong having taught at Greece CSD's Continuing Education Program.
Qigong is an ancient Chinese health care system that integrates physical postures, breathing techniques and focused intention. The word Qigong (Chi Kung) is made up of two Chinese words. Qi is pronounced chee and is usually translated to mean the life force or vital-energy that flows through all things in the universe.
Qigong is an ancient Chinese health care system that integrates physical postures, breathing techniques and focused intention. The word Qigong (Chi Kung) is made up of two Chinese words. Qi is pronounced chee and is usually translated to mean the life force or vital-energy that flows through all things in the universe.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
William CC Chen in Rochester May 30-31, 2015
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
7
Ways Meditation Can Actually Change The Brain
http://www.forbes.com/sites/alicegwalton/2015/02/09/7-ways-meditation-can-actually-change-the-brain/
The
meditation-and-the-brain research has been rolling in steadily for a number of
years now, with new studies coming out just about every week to illustrate some
new benefit of meditation. Or, rather, some ancient benefit that is
just now being confirmed with fMRI or EEG. The practice appears to have an
amazing variety of neurological benefits – from changes in grey matter
volume to reduced activity in the “me” centers of the brain to enhanced
connectivity between brain regions. Below are some of the most exciting studies
to come out in the last few years and show that meditation really does produce
measurable changes in our most important organ. Skeptics, of course, may ask
what good are a few brain changes if the psychological effects aren’t
simultaneously being illustrated? Luckily, there’s good evidence for those as
well, with studies reporting that meditation helps relieve our subjective
levels of anxiety and depression, and improve attention, concentration, and
overall psychological well-being.
Meditation Helps
Preserve the Aging Brain
Last week, a study from UCLA found that long-term
meditators had better-preserved brains than non-meditators as they aged.
Participants who’d been meditating for an average of 20 years had more grey
matter volume throughout the brain — although older meditators still had
some volume loss compared to younger meditators, it wasn’t as
pronounced as the non-meditators. “We expected rather small and distinct
effects located in some of the regions that had previously been associated with
meditating,” said study author Florian Kurth. “Instead, what we actually
observed was a widespread effect of meditation that encompassed regions
throughout the entire brain.”
Meditation Reduces Activity in the Brain’s
“Me Center”
One of the most interesting studies in
the last few years, carried out at Yale
University, found that mindfulness meditation decreases activity in
the default mode network (DMN), the brain network responsible for
mind-wandering and self-referential thoughts – a.k.a., “monkey mind.” The DMN
is “on” or active when we’re not thinking about anything in particular, when
our minds are just wandering from thought to thought. Since mind-wandering is
typically associated with being less happy, ruminating,
and worrying about the past and future, it’s the goal for many people to dial
it down. Several studies have shown that meditation, though its quieting effect
on the DMN, appears to do just this. And even when the mind does start to
wander, because of the new connections that form, meditators are better at
snapping back out of it.
Its Effects Rival
Antidepressants for Depression, Anxiety
A review study last year at Johns Hopkins looked
at the relationship between mindfulness meditation and its ability to reduce
symptoms of depression, anxiety, and pain. Researcher Madhav Goyal and his team
found that the effect size of meditation was moderate, at 0.3. If this sounds
low, keep in mind that the effect size for antidepressants is also 0.3, which
makes the effect of meditation sound pretty good. Meditation is, after all an
active form of brain training. “A lot of people have this idea that meditation
means sitting down and doing nothing,” says Goyal. “But that’s not true.
Meditation is an active training of the mind to increase awareness, and
different meditation programs approach this in different ways.” Meditation
isn’t a magic bullet for depression, as no treatment is, but it’s one of the
tools that may help manage symptoms.
Meditation May Lead to
Volume Changes in Key Areas of the Brain
In 2011, Sara Lazar and
her team at Harvard found that mindfulness meditation can
actually change the structure of the brain: Eight weeks of Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction (MBSR) was found to increase cortical thickness in the
hippocampus, which governs learning and memory, and in certain areas of the
brain that play roles in emotion regulation and self-referential processing.
There were also decreases in brain cell volume in the amygdala, which
is responsible for fear, anxiety, and stress – and these changes matched the
participants’ self-reports of their stress levels, indicating that meditation
not only changes the brain, but it changes our subjective perception and
feelings as well. In fact, a follow-up study by Lazar’s team found that after
meditation training, changes in brain areas linked to mood and arousal were
also linked to improvements in how participants said they felt — i.e.,
their psychological well-being. So for anyone who says that activated
blobs in the brain don’t necessarily mean anything, our subjective experience –
improved mood and well-being – does indeed seem to be shifted through
meditation as well.
Just a Few Days of
Training Improves Concentration and Attention
Having problems
concentrating isn’t just a kid thing – it affects millions of grown-ups as
well, with an ADD diagnosis or not. Interestingly but not surprisingly, one of
the central benefits of meditation is that it improves attention and
concentration: One recent study found that just
a couple of weeks of meditation training helped people’s focus and
memory during the verbal reasoning section of the GRE. In fact, the increase in
score was equivalent to 16 percentile points, which is nothing to sneeze at.
Since the strong focus of attention (on an object, idea, or activity) is one of
the central aims of meditation, it’s not so surprising that meditation should
help people’s cognitive skills on the job, too – but it’s nice to have science
confirm it. And everyone can use a little extra assistance on standardized
tests.
Meditation Reduces
Anxiety — and Social Anxiety A lot of people start meditating
for its benefits in stress reduction, and there’s lots of good evidence to
support this rationale. There’s a whole newer sub-genre of meditation,
mentioned earlier, called Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), developed
by Jon Kabat-Zinn at the University of Massachusetts’ Center for Mindfulness
(now available all over the country), that aims to reduce a person’s stress level,
physically and mentally. Studies have shown its benefits in reducing
anxiety, even years after the initial 8-week
course. Research has also shown that mindfulness
meditation, in contrast to attending to the breath only, can reduce anxiety –
and that these changes seem to be mediated through the brain regions associated
with those self-referential (“me-centered”) thoughts. Mindfulness meditation
has also been shown to help people with social
anxiety disorder: a Stanford University team found that MBSR brought about
changes in brain regions involved in attention, as well as relief from symptoms
of social anxiety.
Meditation Can Help
with Addiction
A growing
number of studies has shown that, given its effects
on the self-control regions of the brain, meditation can be very effective
in helping people recover from various types of addiction. One study,
for example, pitted mindfulness training against the American Lung
Association’s freedom from smoking (FFS) program, and found that people
who learned mindfulness were many times more likely to have quit smoking by the
end of the training, and at 17 weeks follow-up, than those in the conventional
treatment. This may be because meditation helps people “decouple” the state of
craving from the act of smoking, so the one doesn’t always have to lead to the
other, but rather you fully experience and ride out the “wave” of craving,
until it passes. Other research has found that mindfulness training,
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT), and mindfulness-based relapse prevention (MBRP)
can be helpful in treating other forms of addiction.
Short Meditation Breaks
Can Help Kids in School
For developing brains,
meditation has as much as or perhaps even more promise than it has for
adults. There’s been increasing interest from educators and researchers in bringing meditation and
yoga to school kids, who are dealing with the usual stressors inside school,
and oftentimes additional stress and trauma outside school. Some schools have starting implementing
meditation into their daily schedules, and with good effect: One district in
San Francisco started a twice daily meditation program in some of its high-risk
schools – and saw suspensions decrease, and GPAs and attendance increase. Studies have confirmed the cognitive and
emotional benefits of meditation for schoolchildren, but more work will
probably need to be done before it gains more widespread acceptance.
Worth a Try?
Meditation is not a
panacea, but there’s certainly a lot of evidence that it may do some good for
those who practice it regularly. Everyone from Anderson Cooper and congressman Tim Ryan to
companies like Google GOOGL -1.31% and Apple AAPL +2.71% and Target TGT -0.23% are
integrating meditation into their schedules. And its benefits seem to be
felt after a relatively short amount of practice. Some researchers have cautioned that
meditation can lead to ill effects under certain circumstances (known as the
“dark night” phenomenon), but for most people – especially if you have a good
teacher – meditation is beneficial, rather than harmful. It’s certainly worth a
shot: If you have a few minutes in the morning or evening (or both), rather
than turning on your phone or going online, see what happens if you try
quieting down your mind, or at least paying attention to your thoughts and
letting them go without reacting to them. If the research is right, just a few minutes of meditation may make
a big difference.
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