Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vitality. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vitality. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday 13 January 2016

Vitality and Force

全神貫注
To concentrate one's attention on

神清氣爽
A clear mind in a calm state

聚精會神
To concentrate one's attention on

心馳神往
One thoughts fly to (a place or a person)




Similarly as to the difference between fascias elasticity and muscle contraction, it may be interesting to try to first determine what belongs more to vitality. Of course, since vitality is mainly invisible, contrary to muscle mass, the noticeable differences lie more in effects than on visible or touchable things on one's body.

Friday 15 January 2016

Vitality and Strength


眼無神, 拳無魂
Eyes with no expression, boxing without spirit

氣發若風行, 氣納吞百川*
Vapours are emitted like the wind, vapours receive, swallowing a hundred rivers

夫內勁寓於無形之中,接於有形之表,而難以言傳**
The inside strength is in the incorporeal, connecting with a corporeal expression, thus very hard to convey in words




Chinese arts differentiate strength from just body force. In Chinese, force is 力, which originally was a representation of human tendons or connective tissues***, "筋也。象人筋之形". Strength is 勁, the "underground river", 巠, of force, 力.

Friday 26 May 2017

Full and Keeping One's Cool

內實精神,外示安儀。

內 inside, inner part, internal
實 full
精 essence
神 spirit
精神 vitality
外 outer, external
示 show
安 peaceful, at ease, undisturbed
儀 appearance, bearing

Saturday 4 June 2016

The Sleeper Must Awaken


心平氣和
A stable heart for harmonised vapours

擊敵有用形,用氣,用神之遲速*
The speeds of one's body, 
vapours and spirit, all have to be considered when fighting an opponent 

故每一勢之操縱手法,心先,命門為次,頭又次之,手足之次而又次之**
Therefore, when executing each posture technique(s), the heart comes first, the Life Gate (Mingmen) second, then, after, the head, hands and feet being even more ancillary




If one's body speed issues seem complex, the internal part, organs, vitality, mind and their relation to the body is even more challenging in internal arts. Before explaining the impact of the different training speeds on the internal side, it may be useful to first explain, or recall, how the mind and the vitality can influence speed. Indeed, speed is not only a question of going fast in martial arts, it is also a question of having swift reactions. Hence, mind, through its clarity, improves one's reflexes while vitality makes someone more reactive.

Monday 4 July 2016

Still, Keeping at Bay


神寧氣靜
A mind at ease and calm vapours

神非其所宜而行之,則昧*
If one's spirit does not operate properly, it looses its clarity




Following the feminine and masculine principles theory**, the body (the external), and the mind (the internal), should compensate each other, meaning if one is fast, the other should be slow. If this seems quite easy, it gets complex if the concept of vitality and its materialisation (vapours) and the issue of the organs are added.

Thursday 3 December 2015

Sweet Sweat


汗流浃背
Sweat streaming down and drenching one's back

二、周身發汗:體溫增高,熱能可通達全身,暢及四肢,周身皮膚毛孔開,透出微汗,出汗不宜過多,以汗透毛皮為度,初步可治療傷風感冒,經常煉功者能遍燒全身,汗流如雨,濕透衣褲,可永絕感冒
Second, the whole body perspire: the body heat increases, a heat that can go through the entire body, smoothly reaching the four limbs, all the body pores open, slight sweat passing through, but too much would be inadvisable, just allowing the sweat to penetrate the skin pores, which can in the beginning cure from a cold or the flu, and if often trained shall heat up the entire body, dripping with sweat, clothes fully drenched, keeping away flu for ever.*




In internal practices, sweat is a cornerstone of one's training, a way to check one's practice and general health. It is also quite a complex matter as nervousness or tiredness can often produce the same results as the ones looked for in training.

Saturday 16 September 2017

Shape, Vapours and Spirit


布形候氣,與神俱往
Deploying the body and awaiting the arrival of vapours, entirely bound for the spirit

布 to spread, to deploy, to disseminate, to dispose, to arrange, cotton cloth
形 form, shape, body
候 to await, to attend, to wait upon, to inquire after, to serve (by extension, in 伺候)
vapours
與 used to introduce 神 the recipient of the action, with, to follow, to assist
神 spirit
俱 all, entirely, without exception
往 in the direction of, towards, bound for, to go




From a basic understanding, such statement can be expanded or modified to decipher even more out of it.

Sunday 27 September 2015

Foggy Heart


心靜气動
A still heart for moving vapours

二振气,三安和
Second rouse vapours, third calm and at peace*


The two main pillars of internal arts are the heart and the Qi, emotions and vitality. If one was to describe a high internal level, even though martial arts have little to do with meditation, it would be through two lotus postures. The first one would be a Martist at noon in the middle of a very hot summer in a very stuffy room.

Friday 30 December 2022

Flat Stomach Improved Vitality, Production&Insulation

 

五臟六腑,各安其位,各司其職
The five viscera and six internal organs, each in its place, each in its function.

肛門不提,丹田氣散,内中空虚,元氣1虧損
When the anus is not pulled up, the vapours around the cinnabar field disperse, the inside becomes empty and one’s vitality depletes.



A flat stomach is not only an issue linked with the body verticality, it is also an even more important one which concerns our capacity to correctly produce and maintain vitality. As mentioned earlier in this blog, the main machinery used to generate vitality are the organs, hence the first quote. The concept of  in its original writing refers to a process between fire and water which creates vapours.

Monday 19 September 2016

Back to the Fascias I, New but Old


然而練筋易而練膜难*
However, it is easy to train the tendons but harder to train the membranes

筋有十二經絡**
The fascias are twelve net channels

足太陽之筋***
Fascias of the Foot Great Masculine




Internal practices centre themselves around three notions: fascias, vitality and breathing. If fascias seem to deal with the body power, the external force, vitality with its internal aspect and breathing with rhythm, they are actually intertwined. Indeed, the work on fascias improves one's organs, hence one's vitality, and regulates one's breathing. Vitality, through swifter moves, improves fascias resistance and stronger organs allow a deeper and uninterrupted breathing. Breathing, through relaxation, improves fascias stretching and saves vitality by keeping the emotions under check. One could say the bones, our frame, should be also mentioned as a very important issue. Still, they are a byproduct of vitality through the kidneys and thus included in this one. Since training is often about repetition, it seems opportune to revisit those three concepts from time to time.

The concept of fascias, or connective tissues, which seems to have appeared around the 19th century in modern medicine and became more and more known recently**** is a notion very close, if not alike, to what one of the best known book of Traditional Chinese Medicine, the Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic, describes as 經筋, the fascia channels (a modern fascia line compared to an old Chinese fascia channel). Still, 筋, which is often taken in its meaning "tendons" for a lot of martists, is and has not been the only term used to describe connective tissues. Therefore, it seems necessary to first deal with the terms covering the concept of fascias in Chinese.

Tuesday 3 May 2022

Flat Stomach Improved Vitality, Introduction

 

五臟六腑,各安其位,各司其職
The five viscera and six internal organs, each in its place, each in its function.

喜怒哀樂之未發,謂之中
When happiness, anger, sorrow and joy have not appeared, this is called equilibrium1.


A great part of improving and keeping vitality comes from the organs/emotions duo. Simply put, organs produce vitality when we exercise but lose some when faced with emotions. Hence, internal arts do not consider that post-training and post strong emotion/stress fatigue are the same. One is healthy (building vitality) and more external (moving the body) while the other is harmful (losing vitality at a high pace) and more internal (the organs are ‘moving’, not the body).

Friday 15 July 2016

Taking One's Time


故形氣盛而能縱橫,精神斂而能飛騰*
Therefore one finds great ease when his/her vapours flourishes, may soar when he/she has collected vitality

鬆則活變**
From relaxation comes lively changes

且夫乘物以遊心,託不得已以養中,至矣***
Further still, let your mind find its enjoyment in the circumstances of your position, nourish the central course which you pursue, by a reference to your unavoidable obligations. 




Once one's form and heart were fixed through stillness, moving could be contemplated, normal speed being the first step since it allowed the student to remain relaxed. Deep and uninterrupted relaxation being one of the most important principles in internal practices, adding any kind of pressure had to be done with method and in a progressive way. Therefore, learning motion by beginning at a normal and relaxed pace was the preferred method for internal practices. Normal speed was not only a way to going beyond just memory but also to learn how to use one's vitality.

Tuesday 19 April 2016

Light Heavyweight


無力優力
No force is the better force

重裏觀輕勿梢留*
Watching lightness inside heaviness, leaving no extremities

練重不如練輕
Training heavy cannot match training light




Weights used to be a very important part of martial trainings, it was, after all, already part of the military exams during the reign of the first Chinese female emperor, Wu Zetian (AD 624–705), as well as later for higher levels examinations when military exams were taken seriously. Therefore, in the old days, training with weights would never have been an issue, just regular practice. Furthermore, it was also a way to further understand some of the meanings of the oxymoron of the first quote, being powerful without using force.

Tuesday 2 August 2016

All Along the Watchtower


故氣雖結而神自揚*
Therefore the mind naturally expands itself even though the vapours bind themselves

百拳之法,以眼為網**
All the boxing methods have the eyes as a key link




Moving extremely slow, taking half an hour to execute just one move, was made to further train one's heart capacity to endure by having one's mind even more awake. This is actually the essence of the peeping thief technique.

Tuesday 24 May 2022

Flat Stomach Improved Vitality, The Method Behind It, Intertwined But Body Comes First


玲瓏變化布周身

Exquisite changes arrange the whole body.


法是功能之基

Method is the foundation of capability.


脾藏營,營舍意,脾氣虛則四肢不用,五臟不安,實則腹脹經溲不利

The spleen stores the reconstruction, in which abides the will. When the vapours of the spleen are empty, the four limbs are then of no use. When the five organs are not at ease, it makes the stomach distended and inhibits urine and defecation1.



As far as the machine, the body, was concerned, deep transformations were sought after in internal practices. The goal was to make it more efficient and better suited to the needs of combat. The nurturing of vitality targeted the former. The method acknowledged the fundamental intertwinement between the body and the mind, the former actually being the lead. 

Monday 22 February 2016

Hold On


令,氣為旗,腰為纛
The heart commands, vapours are the flag and the waist the banner


肛門不提,丹田氣散,内中空虚,元氣*虧損
When the anus is not pulled up, the vapours around the cinnabar field disperse, the inside becomes empty and one's vitality depletes







A lot of Chinese practices consider the waist to be the most important part of the body, 腰为主宰, the waist dictates. For those practices, the waist refers not only to the anatomical part of the body, but can also point out specific vertebras or extend to the whole part below the navel to the crotch, the pelvic area. Since it is not only the centre of one's body, where the legs and the chest connect, but also the most important place for vitality, most of the organs being more or less located around it, keeping a correct structure in the area is key to a fruitful training. Among the many requirements one stands out, the necessity to literally pull up the anus that you find in a lot of practices (or its symmetrical version, to pull up the bladder) and hang the stomach (or its symmetrical version, to pinch the sacrum vertebras).

Sunday 21 May 2017

Don't Open the Door!


開門閉戶,陰衰陽興。


開 to open
門 door(s), outer door(s)
閉 to close
戶 door, inner door
陰 Feminine principle
衰 to decline, to become weak
陽 Masculine principle
興 to prosper, to flourish 

Sunday 17 December 2017

And There Was Light


追形逐影,光若彿彷
Chasing after shapes and pursuing shadows, a light as if resembling seemingly

追 chase (or run) after; pursue
形 form; shape
逐 pursue; chase; one by one
影 shadow; reflection; vague impression
光 light; ray; brightness; naked; nothing left
若 as if, like
彿 seemingly
彷 seemingly,: resembling




Definitely one of its hardest to understand statements, the second part meaning being obscure for the least. A first understanding coming to mind is, of course, the necessity to be fast. But the text is also about method, how to address the search of knowledge. Indeed one shall first find answers in the shape, then understand what is more and more hidden or obscure to finally reach real knowledge or Enlightenment.

Saturday 7 April 2018

Closing the Doors


肛門不提,丹田氣散,内中空虚,元氣*虧損
When the anus is not pulled up, the vapours around the cinnabar field disperse, the inside becomes empty and one's vitality depletes.




As it has been mentioned in the previous post, one could compare training teenagers and adults to fixing new or already used cars. Hence, when training adults, one has to consider the body deterioration, a thing teenagers have not yet undergone. As far as internal alchemy is concerned, it is mainly about the organs and their capacity to generate heat. Hence, their place, size and insulation are important matters to deal with when training adults. Right place and size are determined by the capacity to keep the stomach flat and insulation is working on the sphincters so that the sex and the anus are kept as closed as possible most of the time. Both issues are mainly solved by working on the pelvis and the perinea.

Thursday 31 January 2019

Cycles, Versatility


一层功,一层理
One level of skills, one level of principles




Old methods teachings are often compared to a spiral, repeating the same training but at a different level, hence the quote. As to demonstrate such method, the present blog has reached a time to start over, review some of the basics of internal practices with a deeper understanding.