96 Common Principles of the Chinese Internal Martial Arts Styles of Baguazhang, Taijiquan, Xingyiquan, and Chu Shong Tin Wing Chun

There is some redundancy and overlap here, and some of the principles apply to only one or two internal styles, but in general there is a marked commonality in approach, which segregates these arts from more external Chinese styles such as Shaolin Gongfu, White Crane, Praying Mantis, and Ip Man Wing Chun. Of course, many other internal styles exist, such as Aikido, Liuhebafa, and Yiquan, but my familiarity with these is either limited or non-existent.

The essence of an internal style is an emphasis on mind-state, intention, sensitivity, structure, softness, internal connection, expansiveness, circles & spirals, a balance of interoception and exteroception, standing post practice, mind-breath-body integration, and body-method over technique (not that techniques are absent). The difference between internal and external can be felt most palpably by stepping into a class and comparing the training methods.

Oh, and being a Baguazhang enthusiast, I felt obliged to make the total number of principles divisible by eight!

  • The intention is forwards & focused
  • Mind-state is open, calm & clear 
  • Awareness expands in all directions to the periphery
  • Awareness soaks into the soft tissues and organs
  • Both mind and body are alert and supple
  • Breathing is soft, smooth and deep, moving the diaphragm naturally and freely 
  • Breathe into the back and the bowl of the pelvis, or into the sides, or use reverse abdominal breaths
  • Breathe through the pores of the skin, gently squeezing and relaxing the whole body
  • The crown (Ding) is suspended, as though from a thread
  • The tongue connects to the upper palate
  • Eyes are level and the face is relaxed
  • Use intention (Yi) rather than muscular/mechanical power (Li)
  • All parts are independent yet interconnected 
  • Release the pelvis & lower back 
  • Sit into the hips and raise the perineum
  • Spread the lower back (Mingmen, Du-4) by allowing the sacrum to release downwards with gravity
  • Support the torso by the inner thighs & perineum (Kua)
  • Relax the outer hips & glutes 
  • Soften & open the joints 
  • Keep the fists loose
  • Keep open palms cupped like a baseball mitt
  • Relax the muscles, especially the biceps & triceps 
  • Develop elastic internal unity by connective chains and pressurisation through breathing
  • Rise up through the spine & crown (Tai Gong / Yang Qi)
  • Lengthen the cervical spine to slightly tuck the chin
  • Release Tiantu (Ren-22); don’t expand the chest
  • Shoulders & elbows are heavy 
  • Align the body with gravity to remain upright with minimal effort
  • Give your weight to your partner, without leaning
  • Maintain sound, triangular skeletal structure in the limbs
  • Keep the spine (Du Mai) stretched and the anterior torso (Ren Mai) relaxed
  • The skeleton rises; the flesh hangs from the shoulders & occiput so the soft tissues sink
  • The shoulders push the elbows; the elbows push the wrists
  • Hands & feet, elbows & knees, and shoulders & hips move harmoniously
  • Keep the upper back broad, relaxed & upright 
  • Sink the scapulae towards the elbows
  • Transfer power to the hands through the spine and trapezius
  • Squeeze the lower abdomen between Mingmen, Huiyin (Ren-1), and Qihai (Ren-6): Xiatian
  • Pressurise the interior of the body, especially the lower abdominal cavity (Xiaofu)
  • Compress/sink (Chen) and stretch/release (Song) internally like a spring to express power (Jin)
  • Release upwards from the feet
  • Feel for spaciousness between soft tissues and bones
  • Move the waist (Yao) to direct power to the hands
  • Arms move in continuous circles or spirals, containing the energy
  • When released, the energy arrives (is expressed) all at once (Fa Jin)
  • Attack the centreline and take your partner’s centre of mass
  • Uproot and destroy your partner’s balance
  • Sense, yield, follow, and stick (Tui Shou & Chi Sau)
  • The mind leads the movement
  • Continually coil and flow: “the most important thing is through
  • Use torsion not tension
  • Gather energy like pulling a bow; project (Fa) like releasing an arrow
  • Find stillness in movement, and movement in stillness
  • Keep the feet at shoulder width (with exceptions, such as Santi Shi & Xiantien palms)
  • Distribute weight evenly under the feet (centred over Yongquan, K-1)
  • Move the thighs as though wading through mud
  • Spread the fingers and open the centre of the palms (Laogong, P-8)
  • The connective tissues are slightly stretched
  • The feet are rooted by sinking the mass, not by bracing against the floor
  • Steps are careful and powerful, like a prowling tiger’s
  • Fingers are like an eagle’s wingtips or talons, trailing or curving 
  • Shoulders are like a bear’s
  • The body moves and coils like a dragon’s 
  • The arms drill and recoil in snakelike spirals, driven by the Lower Dantien
  • Keep the mind peaceful, and the body at ease but ready, like a resting cat’s
  • Skin and mind are sensitive to your partner’s intent (Ting)
  • Connect with your partner’s mass 
  • Feel your partner’s feet and centre of balance
  • Clear internal blockages (at the joints)
  • Release all unnecessary tension
  • Stretch and connect the body internally like a wet suit through the fascia (Huang)
  • Free the fascia to move and slide
  • Direct incoming force through the spine to the ground (“lead the force to emptiness”)
  • Don’t push with the arms; turn the waist or move the centre of mass forwards
  • Don’t respond to contact/force with tension; keep the arms soft and heavy
  • Don’t overextend or lock the joints
  • Don’t use momentum, but an elastic twist like wringing a wet towel
  • Twist around the centre of the body (Chong Mai) rather than around the spine
  • Twist using the abs, lats, and trapezius, rather than by loosely spinning the shoulders counter to the hips
  • Attack and counterattack relentlessly; act, don’t react
  • Force is directed through, not at, the opponent
  • Inflate the body in all directions with a springy resilience; buoyant and unstoppable like the ocean (Peng)
  • The power is smooth, flowing, continuous, and capable of changing vector at any time
  • Power and intention are brimming, yet contained
  • Be neither floppy nor stiff; be like dough 
  • Movements are natural, efficient, precise, and contralateral
  • Cultivate a chewy quality to your movement
  • The body and spirit (Shen) are alive and present, with both a fierce readiness and gentle sensitivity
  • Develop whole-body power and mind-body integration through standing post practice (Zhan Zhuang)
  • The body should first be made strong and supple before softness or internal power is trained
  • Practise strengthening (Neigong), loosening (Fang Song Gong), and stretching/mobilising (Daoyin)
  • Emphasise core principles and fundamental movements over external forms
  • Besides fitness and explosive power, train proprioception/interoception, balance, and sensory integration
  • The central nervous system should become efficient and responsive
  • Harmonise mind, breath, and body (Qigong)
  • Find ways to apply these principles appropriately to everyday life beyond the martial arts

Put your back into it! Structure in the Chinese internal martial arts

Common to all the internal arts is an emphasis on sound posture and physical structure as a core foundation. You start with the external, and then move inwards, in through the layers of the body… and the mind. But, just for emphasis, you start with the external.

Many devote hours to Zhan Zhuang, or “standing post” practices, whilst others disregard such “boring” elements of training, or just pay them lip service, in favour of more exciting and enjoyable dynamic forms and partner work. Sure, it is certainly possible to train forms while remaining mindful of maintaining good posture. And it’s a lot of fun moving through the forms and playing with others. (Just moving in any manner that isn’t the customary “walk, sit, or lie down” is joyful – something that children intuitively know, but adults swiftly forget.)

But is that posture really going to be ingrained in quite the same way. What happens when you get pressed or tested?

When we stand, we soak our awareness in through the body. We sense, adjust, relax, tweak, stretch, relax, tweak some more. We get to know our bodies and feel how the parts are connected, and how moving one part influences the whole, like waves spreading out from a raindrop falling in a still pond.

Before any internal power can be developed, which arises largely through creating this whole-body interconnection through the fascia and connective tissues, and through an internal process of relaxation and release, a basically sound physical structure must be found. If that underlying framework has not been established, power cannot be generated, and any application of technique will be easily undermined.

At very high levels of skill, it would appear this is no longer the case, and power can be returned even from some very awkward or compromised positions, but certainly for the novice or intermediate practitioner, good structure is a crucial foundation.

Despite some very different emphases, techniques, footwork, and movement principles, the fundamental physical alignments are very similar, if not identical, for Taijiquan, Xingyiquan, Baguazhang, and Wing Chun. Stances can vary between shoulder-width and narrower, but in all four the leg joints are kept lightly flexed and the hips dropped, relaxing the lower back muscles to allow the pelvis to posteriorly rotate and the lumbar spine to lengthen.

The shoulders and elbows are sunk to maintain connection between the abdominal centre and the arms and hands. A distance is kept between elbows and torso, and the shoulder and elbow joints are opened and extended to allow force to be transferred through them, and not get caught in the joint itself. Fingers are gently stretched and enlivened to engage and connect the sinews, and the back of the head is drawn gently up and back to keep the integrity of the upper spine. The eyes are soft, the mind quiet, the senses listening, the breathing deep.

And thus do many practise the forms of their chosen art, with perfect structure and appropriate state of mind, calm and aware, slowly developing internal relaxation and power through years of dedication. But all too often, as soon as an opponent is placed before them, whether that be in sparring practice, or more cooperative play such as Chi Sau or push-hands, all structural integrity is swiftly forgotten.

Why should this be? The focus has shifted. The attention has moved from inside to outside. They are focused on what their opponent or partner is doing, and how to overcome them or defend themselves, rather than being aware of their own internal state. Two things can break: the mind or the body… or both.

The mind can become perturbed, anxious, angry, or proud, and this tension can translate into muscular tension and haste of movement that disrupts the body’s integrity and leaves it open to manipulation. Or the body can lose its structure, severing its connection to the ground and its own internal connectivity. When the relationship between the parts is unbalanced, the whole body is disharmonious and susceptible to external pressures.

For someone who has practised, tested and played for years or decades, this should be less of an issue, as the fundamental structure should be fully integrated and unconsciously always present. Even so, the unpredictable actions of a training partner, and especially those of an aggressive opponent, are highly likely to disturb the mind, induce muscular tension, or disrupt the basic skeletal alignments.

When the physical geometry is correct, the internal connections established, and the mind and muscles sufficiently relaxed, an incoming force can be directed through the body to the floor. It can even be returned into the body of the opponent if the practitioner is skilful enough, and can stay more relaxed than their opponent.

Keeping the muscles relaxed allows power to be transferred through the body from the abdominal core and turning waist. But this can be difficult to maintain when receiving pressure from an opponent. Tension can arise before you are even aware it is there, both in body and mind. One of the most effective ways to keep this from happening is to return to the physical structure, and in particular the back.

The spine is the keystone of our structure. If we can keep the crown lifted, and maintain a feeling of rising up through the spinal column, this provides integrity to the rest of the body. With an opponent in front of us, it is very easy for the upper back and shoulders to round, or for the neck to crane forwards as we keep a forward-moving intention or become acutely focused on our opponent’s movements.

But if we can keep the gaze soft, feeling our opponent more than we watch them, and not have our attention drawn inwards in this way, our own power is hugely increased. Staying relaxed and vertically aligned, we can find Peng: that soft, inflated power that makes it very difficult for an opponent to fold our joints or otherwise destroy our alignments.

Simply by keeping our awareness partially inside, sitting the shoulders and scapulae neutrally, and rising up through the back, we can make a massive difference to our ability to generate power, and to resist incoming forces. When somebody is moving towards you with Peng, it feels like an unstoppable force that cannot be resisted by direct muscular opposition, no matter how many kilos you can bench press. You can’t stop the tide.

I have felt this integrity of structure in my own Taijiquan and Xingyiquan teachers. One in particular is female and has a much smaller frame than my own, and yet when I apply pressure against her Ward Off posture, or indeed any posture, all of my strength is absorbed without effort. She never loses that relaxed expression of body and mind, and simply redirects my power through her body, as though she is not there at all: “taking the force to emptiness”.

Likewise, I have felt this in certain Wing Chun practitioners, and particularly those who have trained in schools following the lineage of Sigung (Grandmaster) Chu Shong Tin. A very relaxed power flows into the arms through the rising energy in the spine, and the external structure is absolutely solid. Neither dense nor tense, but light and springy like an inflated ball. And utterly unrelenting. Yes, the power of internal martial arts is “soft”, but it is also preternaturally strong. Water is soft. But the tide…

There is something in the Yi, as well; a relaxed yet unyielding intent, which reminds me of the forward-moving principle of Xingyiquan, to attack and move forwards without regard for whatever your opponent is doing. But a mind-intention is no use without effective body mechanics. A whole-body forwards movement, driven from the legs, hips and centre of mass, harnesses much more power than the isolated mechanical movements of a disconnected limb. This can be seen very clearly in forms like Five Elements Xingyi, but of course is equally present in the other internal arts.

The positioning and flow of energy within the thoracic spine is key. Here is the conduit of power from the sacrum, up the spine and out to the arms. It is an interesting exercise to find space between the vertebrae, and to seek a sense of openness in this area, without sticking out the chest or introducing any tension.

How much can you draw up the crown, and how much can you sink the pelvis away from the ribcage, without distorting the natural curve of the spine? This is a process of release, not of effort. Once tension manifests, internal power is lost. Unless of course that tension is the kind of torsional power we seek in Baguazhang, where deliberate internal twisting and releasing adds energy to our movements.

Whether in Cheng Bao, San Ti Shi, Dragon Palm, Ward Off, or just moving very, very slowly through Siu Nim Tao (or indeed any internal martial arts Tao Lu), paying attention to the upper back can bring a coherence and connection to the body, and profoundly affect the way in which the entire body moves. With the head upright, the spine aligned with gravity, and the soft tissues sunk and relaxed, we can move not only with great power and strength, but also with grace, unity, efficiency, and ease.

This is something we can train all the time, in our everyday lives. Most of us slouch or drop the head forwards, particularly in this age of comfy sofas and screen addiction. By staying aware of our spinal alignments and the position of the skull, as well as the relaxation of the trapezius and other back muscles, good martial posture can become a natural habit for daily living. And by regularly practising gentle stretching and loosening exercises, and mobilising the joints and spine, we can keep our spines supple and healthy and our lives healthy and long. To paraphrase Joseph Pilates, we are as young as our spines.

What’s more, practising this upwards extension of the spine directly translates into our mental state, too, helping us to be more relaxed, confident, and aware; more graceful, easeful and unified not just in body, but in mind and spirit, too.

Remember all those times your mum nagged you not to slouch? Well, maybe she really knew what she was talking about…

The medicine of posture

Baguazhang is a curious beast. Grounded in the philosophy of the Yi Jing, the eight trigrams and sixty-four hexagrams, it lays claim – at least in some schools of thought – to a profound relationship with the channels and flow of Qi within the body.

And yet, for all its surface appearance as something ancient and tribal – a primitive shamanic circle dance – it is actually a modern phenomenon. Can it really be so meaningful, then? Can it really be so profound? Or are its ties with the oldest book in the world, that classic Book of Changes, of divining the great flow of all things, just a pretext, a ruse?

Dong Haichuan is credited with devising Baguazhang in the early nineteenth century, although of course there are the obligatory legends about it having much earlier roots. The Yi Jing has been around since the start of the first millennium BCE, by some accounts. There are Daoist circle-walking meditation practices, and (more distantly) whirling dervishes, ecstatic dances… wheeling birds and spinning hurricanes…

Taijiquan, with slightly earlier origins (which hazily wobble around the seventeenth century) also heavily correlates certain postures with opening particular lines of energetic release within the body. Single Whip and Roll Back relate to the Heart; White Snake Creeps Down through the Lungs…

But let’s go much further back. In 1973 in Hunan Province a silk painting was found in a tomb dating 168 BCE: the Dao Yin Tu. Dao Yin is a more active precursor to modern Qi Gong – more about release and enlivenment than about nourishing and calming, although probably that too. Essentially, it depicts 44 figures in various postures – Daoist asanas.

And who knows about Yoga? At least another 500 years before the Dao Yin Tu. But it seems likely, I would surmise, that we have been experimenting with posture for millennia; since beginningless time, in fact. From being babies we play with posture, naturally. We experiment. We explore our bodies and their relationship to the world. I suspect humanity has been exploring the significance of posture since its infancy.

Hunched in our tilting, rotating office chairs, and slumped in our sofas, in our own modern era we have lost some connection with the significance of posture. But we can’t escape it. When we grieve we round our shoulders and close and protect our hearts. When we feel connection to others we open up our hearts, we open wide and embrace. Soldiers stand to attention, chests thrust forward. When we are fearful or threatened we curl up, present our bony backs, hug our vulnerable bellies. These things are instinctive. But we can utilise them if we understand them.

In meditation practices – Hindu, Daoist, Buddhist, and no doubt others – there is much emphasis placed on hand position. Certain mudras express certain qualities of mind. If we place our hands near our abdomen we draw downwards and stabilise. If we turn our palms face up on our knees we are open, receiving. Place the palms together, we connect and balance, find harmonious union. And things get complex – a contortionist science in its own right. Although many modern minds ridicule it, of course. But I’m not so sure…

A little exercise might be instructive. Stand with your arms in an embracing posture. Stand there for a good while. Try to relax into it and be still. Let your mind settle into the posture. Listen to what your body feels. Then ask yourself, what is my quality? What has changed? Now turn the palms out. How does that feel? Raise the palms up, overhead. Press them downward. Out to the side. Palms forward; palms back, resting in each one for a while. Each posture has a different quality. It’s subtle, but it’s there, and with a bit of guidance – suggestion if you like – it can be much more profound.

The first of the Eight Silk Brocades (Ba Duan Jin) lifts the sky to harmonise the Triple Heater (San Jiao) and stabilise the Pericardium, or Heart Protector. As the hands rise up and the lungs inhale there is an internal movement that follows, spreading through the cavities of the body and helping its disparate parts to communicate, to become one whole, integral entity. As the hands circle down we exhale and wring out anxiety and defensiveness, and we find stability and external connection. With this in mind, the practice becomes even more powerful. We express ourselves through out bodies, through their movements.

Mind, breath, body, emotion, energy. All moving together. One session might not make much difference. But a daily practice over years…? It takes time for the body to open, for stuck emotions to release, for energy to move. I wonder – maybe the claims that Bagua circle walking postures relate so closely to our internal workings are not so fanciful after all?

In his book, Bagua Circle Walking Nei Gong (Outskirts Press, 2012), acupuncturist and Baguazhang practitioner Tom Bisio draws a very direct parallel between certain postures and their effects. Upholding the Heavens opens the Stomach channel and benefits digestion, for example. At first I thought this was a bit of a leap of faith, to say this palm cures this, and this palm cures that. Postures aren’t medicine… are they?

A skilled acupuncturist can run their fingers along a channel and feel the blockage. Their diagnosis is guided by palpation as much as by interrogation, observation, and intuition. The gutter is blocked, so we’ll clear out the mulch that’s gathered here, and water will flow again. Energy will flow. In Nei Gong we stretch open the palm and physically open Lao Gong. It’s not so vague and ‘spiritual’ as some people might assume. At least not in the beginning. We work with something we know, or should know – our bodies.

And so, by walking the circle with arms raised in Spear Holding posture, we connect with the Kidney and Heart channels, with rising Fire. By Downward Pressing the palms we stretch Du Mai and Ren Mai. We sink to Earth; to ultimate Yin. And so on, each mother palm carefully constructed to work with a particular energy, with a particular organ meridian in the body. A sophisticated and complete system.

Is this medicine? In a sense, yes, it is. Particularly when you consider preventative medicine. Try walking hunched for a year and see how you feel. Feel how you contract, stagnate – physically, emotionally. By lengthening and aligning with gravity, finding ease in body and mind, walking with precision and gracefulness, moving with fluidity and power, we promote vitality, flow, organ function, internal connectivity. When these qualities manifest it’s hard for illness to get a foothold. It is simply washed away.

By walking the circle we create the correct conditions in the body for healing. We lengthen the tendons, relax the tissues, work the spine, open the relevant sinew channels in the body, suggest something to the mind, and walk. Trancelike, we walk. Alert, aware – but mesmerised, absorbed – we walk.

For millennia mankind has known the power of posture. Perhaps in some dark cave of prehistory primitive man was walking the circle, arms outstretched. Shadows dancing, drums beating. Or in silence, bar his beating heart and his rhythmic, echoing steps. Walking, walking – absorbed into his inner being. A walk of health, of life, of vitality. Perhaps not so primitive

Internal Concepts

The underlying concepts of the Chinese internal arts can seem opaque, esoteric, or even just a little fuzzy, to anyone looking from a Western perspective. Not only must we penetrate the Chinese language, but also the Chinese cultural mindset and patterns of thinking. You only have to look at the holistic perspective of Chinese medicine, as opposed to the reductive approach of modern Western medicine, to see there is a fundamentally different way of conceiving reality.

Or is there? Arts such as Qigong, Taijiquan, Baguazhang, and Xingyiquan, can seem mysterious, soaked with poetic metaphors that cloak and obfuscate. These metaphors not only encode principles within the sets and martial forms, but also protect them from the prying eyes of the uninitiated. But the underlying concepts are far from incomprehensible. Rather, they are simple and logical, and follow a sequential development of skill. To be truly understood, however, they need to be integrated through practice.

What follows is a brief discussion of some key concepts that need to be grasped in order to make sense of what is meant by an “internal art”. As you will see, they move from the mundane to the sublime, and perhaps even the divine…

Frame

We align the body in a certain way in order to maximise its efficiency and optimise its structure. So, as a general rule, the spine is kept vertical in order to align with gravity and reduce muscular effort. Of course, this doesn’t mean the torso can never be inclined, particularly in transitional movements; every rule can be broken when the situation demands.

The shoulders sink and are aligned with the hips; the elbows sink and are aligned with the knees; and the hands and feet are coordinated and arrive simultaneously. These are known as the “six external harmonies”: shoulders-hips, elbows-knees, and hands-feet.

The chin is slightly tucked to protect the neck and align with the spine. The tongue connects with the palate, and the eyes are softened to encourage peripheral awareness. The chest is not stuck out; the legs are not locked. The arms and fingers are stretched but relaxed. The perineum is lifted and the inguinal joints of the hips softened.

All of this is practised in order to become a natural way of moving for the body. We do not adopt the posture; we acquire it and adapt it. It is not a fixed frame, but a centre from which we can depart and then return to, according to what is appropriate. (An optimal seated meditation posture is very similar in its basic principles, except that of course movement is replaced by a profound stillness.) Once this structural, skeletal frame is internalised, then we can move on to the next principle…

Chen

Sinking. Without allowing the frame to collapse, or losing any of the external qualities mentioned above, we allow the soft tissues of the body to relax and sink under the weight of gravity. Like a child that doesn’t want to be picked up off the floor, we become heavy and rooted to the ground – a dead weight.

This is achieved not by simply imagining ourselves to be heavy, but by standing for prolonged periods in certain postures, searching for and releasing muscular tension. Once a layer of tension is released, we search for deeper layers. We absorb our awareness thoroughly into our own bodies, looking inwardly rather than outwardly, and allowing that awareness to sink along with our physical flesh. Such static postures have various names in the Chinese arts, including Ding Shi and Zhan Zhuang. Baguazhang has its Bamuzhang (Eight Mother Palms), and Xingyiquan is widely known for Santishi (Three Pillar Posture). They all serve the purpose of quieting the mind, fortifying the will, reconnecting and realigning the body, and finding movement within stillness.

Dantian

With our awareness absorbed into our body in this way, sinking down away from the head, we allow our breath to deepen, too. Rather than breathing into our upper chest and shoulders, we begin to consciously breathe into the lower abdomen and lower back – for this reason it is sometimes known as “kidney breathing”. On the inhalation, there is a slight contraction; on the exhalation, a relaxation and sinking.

As our breathing stabilises low down in the body, we find ourselves in a relaxed, parasympathetic state, abiding calmly and silently, entirely focused on a point in the centre of the lower abdomen. Our breathing and awareness combine with our physical centre of mass. We have a sense of our consciousness residing within the whole body, rather than in the head. This encourages a very peaceful and restful state of mind, and body. Through mental and physical stillness we can begin to build Yin energy in a specific region of the lower abdomen, a process known as “filling the cauldron” of the Xia Dantian – the lower field of the elixir.

Through practising meditation, Qigong and martial forms, we can begin to learn how to harness the energy we build and direct it through the body for various purposes, whether that be for health, fighting, or spiritual development and internal alchemy (Nei Dan). This skill with internal energy is broadly known as Nei Gong.

Ting

Listening. From this centred, rooted, peaceful place, we can improve the quality of our awareness. Listening is a good translation, as opposed to observing, because it implies a passive and non-judgemental kind of awareness. As our thoughts become quieter, and our emotions more stable and less distracting, we learn to experience the world in a fuller and more refined way. We draw less of a distinction between inner and outer, between self and other, giving equal weigt to internal and external stimuli. We learn to watch with equanimity whatever goes on both interoceptively, within our own bodies, and that which is brought within us through our external senses.

Through physical practice, we improve our proprioception also, as we become more aware of our own bodies moving through space. We learn where our hand is, how our arm is moving, and how to follow and generate these movements naturally and efficiently. We become more balanced. We move with greater coordination and fluidity. We become sensitive to pressures upon our bodies, and we learn how to deflect, absorb and redirect incoming forces by moving and turning our centre. Ting is a fundamental quality of the internal arts, developed most effectively through exercises such as pushing hands practice in Taijiquan, or Chi Sau in Wing Chun.

Li

None of this is going to be of any use without a baseline of physical fitness. Li refers specifically to power, but not the sort of power built by exponentially increasing muscle mass. Intensive weight training only builds tension and blockages to our internal energetic flow. That said, there needs to be a good degree of core strength, which might be established through something like bodyweight training, yoga, swimming, running, or purging exercises such as Dao Yin (leading and guiding), as well as through practising the forms and specific fundamental exercises (Jiben Gong) of the individual arts.

Chinese wisdom exhorts us to exert ourselves up to the point of just breaking sweat, but not to the point of breathlessness or exhaustion. The idea is to build energy, not to expend it. By engaging in cardiavascular exercise, we can increase our Yang energy, circulate our body fluids and optimise the function of our internal organs. We improve mental function by increasing blood supply to the brain, and prevent areas of the body from becoming sluggish and stagnating. This follows the principle of movement within movement. But of course, if we overdo it, we can end up with waning energy levels, depleted immune systems, and injury.

We can help ourselves further by ensuring we get adequate sleep and rest, practising mindfulness and meditation, and by observing a balanced and sufficient diet. The principle of Yin and Yang dictates that we should also balance exertive exercise with more restorative exercises. These might include loosening exercises (Fan Song Gong), nourishing exercises (known by the umbrella term of Qi Gong, where energy is regulated by finding stillness within movement), simple stretches and asanas, joint mobilisation, and self-massage, whether by foam rolling, massage balls, or acupressure (Zhiya).

This kind of holistic health practice is known in Chinese as Yangsheng Fa: methods for nourishing life. By practising daily and not excessively, we can maintain our health and suppleness and extend our power into later life. Verse 76 of the Dao De Jing makes the parallel between the pliability and moistness of growing plants, compared to their rigidity and dryness in death. When we ourselves grow stiff and congealed, that is a sign of death growing near.

Jin

The internal martial arts employ a kind of soft, pliable, and sometimes torsional power. This arises not through muscular contractions moving the skeleton, but through developing a subtle control of the internal tissues. Through persistent mindful practice, the web of fascia and connective tissues are physically altered in such a way that power lines can be built within the body, the whole body can be connected together, and energy can be directed along these lines at will. This energy is known as Jin, and can be expressed in many ways. One thing is common, however: Jin is not released through external tension, but through internal relaxation.

Song

Song is the method by which Jin is released. Like a drawn bowstring that is suddenly let go, energy can be passed through and out of the body by releasing tension. The quality of Song can be practised by using Ting (listening awareness) to find and unbind habitual tension in the muscles. It is crucial to maintain the frame while relaxing, however, so that the soft tissues unwind from the bones, rather than the skeleton itself losing structure.

Yi

Yi has been translated as “the thought before a thought”. It is the movement of mind before we become aware of it. As such, it is sometimes said to be our “intent”, but it can also refer to our focus, in the sense of attention and concentration, to our insightful or intuitive application of experiential knowledge and expertise, and to our clarity of perception. In Chinese medicine, it is associated with the Spleen, and disharmony in the energetic network of the Spleen can lead to unclear thinking, rumination, disembodiment, and fatigue. The quality of our Yi is a measure of our unity of mind and body, and through developing our Yi we improve both our reactions and our ability to react consciously.

Many of our problems in life arise from acting unconsciously. From stubbing our toe when unaware, or lashing out when angry, or simply being swept away by the current of our own thoughts, we arrive at a place – mentally, emotionally, physically, or all three – that we did not intend. When we learn to make our unconscious processes conscious, then we can live with clarity, intention and awareness.

Our Yi is also the coordinator of our mind-body interface; it is the means by which we can Song completely and direct our Jin effectively. And a strong Yi is decisive, effective, and committed – all highly important qualities for the martial arts. Yi is the rising Yang to the sinking Yin of Chen.

Peng

“Ward off” energy is a kind of Jin that is highly prominent in Taijiquan, but I would say it is a common in some form to all the internal martial arts. Through Peng energy, we establish our boundaries. This can be at arm’s length, or close in. In advanced practitioners, it can expressed through any surface of the body. It is a soft and bouncy quality achieved through long hours of mindful standing practice; a whole-body, relaxed strength that is difficult to overcome through brute force. Where Song is empty, Peng is full.

In the Ward Off posture of Taijiquan, the forward arm is not held rigid, and nor is it floppy, but rather it maintains a barrier through slow-twitch, interior muscles and an internally connected network of fascia and sinews. By turning the waist, Peng can be used to redirect pressure, much like turning a ball, or to return pressure, like a beach ball being pushed underwater and rebounding. It has an inflating, expanding feeling, as though a water hose were running through the limbs and torso and connected to the tap of the lower Dantian.

On a physical level, Peng is soft and pliable, yet virtually irresistible so long as the practitioner remains more relaxed than their opponent. By remaining relaxed, incoming force does not get stuck in the body, but instead travels through as though the body were hollow. Peng feels like resistance, but really it is acceptance. Thus comes the phrase “lead the enemy into emptiness”. You defeat your opponent by not being there. Of course, you are there – you do not step aside, retreat or turn; rather, you let their power through your body as though you were not there, and they find themselves pushing against the earth itself, against their own power. They lose their centre, and they are defeated by their own strength.

Xin

On a more esoteric level, Peng could be thought of as our aura – the electromagnetic energy field that surrounds each of us. In this sense it is a measure of our presence, our charisma, and our capacity to reach out and touch others, and to be touched. It is our connection to the outside. Our defensive boundary, and our membrane of communication. Where the lower Dantian is associated with our Kidney channel, our Zhi (willpower), our adrenal and autonomic nervous system, spine, reproductive system, and internal fire (Ming Men), Peng could be said to be associated with our Heart and all its correspondences to love, acceptance, generosity, gratitude, and courage – our Xin.

Xin is the quality of our spirit associated with the Heart in Chinese, but really it refers to the mind. When our hearts are open and truthful, our minds are clear and full of potential. With an open heart, our minds move easily. We have a capacity for lightness, playfulness, and contentedness. We can realise that we do not need anything to be happy. We already have all we need; it is just a question of clearing away our layers of confusion and delusion. We can do this by living virtuously – the De of the Dao De Jing, which I have written about in another article. By living simply and honestly, without a strong attachment to our own selves, we can align ourselves effortlessly to the Dao, to the true nature of things, to the unfolding flow of life itself. So we come full circle, or perhaps that should be full spiral. From our original frame, aligning ourselves to gravity and finding our internal structure, we come to align ourselves with the whole cosmos.

Kong

“Why would I want to abandon my own self?” It’s a fair question. We have strong instincts to keep ourselves safe and thrive. But on close examination, our notion of self is only a concept. A useful fabrication, and little else. In fact, when held on to too tightly, it becomes a source of great suffering and discontent. When we do suffer, our sense of self seems to intensify. When we are joyful, it expands and evaporates. The delusion of self-nature is a tenant central to every religion and spiritual tradition around the world, so far as I can see. It is like a greasy lens that we can take away and see tings more clearly as a result. When we can experience life without such a close grasping to our own identity and preservation, without the constant narrative of our own being, of “me” as opposed to “not me”, then we are closer to our true natures.

Through meditation it is possible to arrive at an experiential understanding of the dissolution of self and other, of subject and object. Our experience becomes simply “experience”, and the possessive pronoun is dropped. It is not something that can be understood by words; it has to be perceived directly. And when it is, we find a natural rising of compassion, as our eye of wisdom is opened to see all the impermanence, interconnectedness, dependent arising and fundamental selflessness of all existence.

Yogic traditions call this sunyata, or emptiness. In Chinese it might be termed Kong. But this emptiness is far from nihilistic. In Chinese philosophy it is depicted by an empty circle: Wuji, the fundamental nothingness, the infinite and limitless potential through which everything can be created. From Wuji comes Taiji, the axis of polarity. From Taiji, the separation of Yin and Yang, and from this separation the emergence of the “10,000 things”, by which is meant the limitless manifestations of existence.

Shen

This immersion and dissolution of self into emptiness, or giving over of ourselves to God, in the language of Abrahamic religions, is the ultimate spiritual realisation we can attain, and by attaining it we lose ourselves, and gain everything. The late Korean Zen master Seung Sahn was famous for his exhortation: “Only don’t know”. This simple statement encapsulates a very profound state of being – a release from suffering, and from death, even. It is the pinnacle achievement of our spirit, the most pure state of our Shen.

The Shen is our spirit, and this includes our Zhi, Yi and Xin, as well as our Po (our mortal, corporeal spirit, which is tied to our breath and our Lung channel) and our Hun (which might be equated to our dream-body, spirit-body or immortal soul, and is tied to the energetic network of our Liver). In meditation, and, more specifically, in Daoist alchemical practices, we can arrive at a place of stillness within stillness, and begin to work with our energetic body to move towards both health and spiritual realisation, by converting and circulating our internal energies. It is important to understand that mindfully sitting in silence is not in itself meditation. Rather, it is a practice through which we can reach a state of meditation. Meditation practice is something very many of us do regularly; realising meditation, however, is achieved by very few.

Qi

Shen is a highly refined quality of energy, but of course it is not the only kind of energy in our bodies. Our most condensed form of energy is our Jing, which is the Essence that drives our growth, development and eventual decline. It is our finite source of energy, which we can supplement only through conservation of energy, good diet, clean air, and moderate exercise.

Through internal practices we can refine our Jing into Qi. Qi is a subtle form of energy somewhere between Jing and Shen, and it is our vital force. Acupuncture is the manipulation of Qi, altering its flow through the energetic channels of our bodies by stimulating accessible “wells”, or acupoints. By physically connecting to specific points and combinations of points, we can instruct the body to move towards a state of harmony, to dissippate energetic blockages, and encourage a free-flowing system that is the foundation of health.

Qi is also the expression of our power in the internal martial arts. There is an internal equivalent to the external harmonies referred to above. The six internal harmonies are:

Xin – Yi

From our heart-mind our clear intention is consciously expressed. We must be centred, relaxed, sunk, aware and peaceful for our Yi to be strong. Moreover, we need to be well-practised and familiar with the inner process and mind-state. This sets up a chain reaction of the following two stages.

Yi – Qi

Directed by our Yi, our vital energy is mobilised as Jin.

Qi – Li

Our energy is finally released as course, physical power.

Whether practising Chinese martial arts, Qigong, or meditation, these fundamental ideas provide a conceptual framework by which we can navigate our development of internal skills. They are what separate the internal arts from other martial arts, and give them their intriguing, mysterious and poetic character. Moreover, they provide a profound means of integrating these arts into every aspect of life, from the mundane and everyday, to the philosophical and spiritual. Not only are they far-reaching, they are also bottomless. Many lifetimes could be spent exploring the internal arts; they only ever grow deeper.

Internal circles

Of all the Chinese internal martial arts, it’s Baguazhang that relates most closely to Chinese Medicine. But how and why does a (relatively) modern martial art find itself so entwined with Chinese Medicine and Daoist philosophy?

There are a number of parallels that I’m going to explore, but first, it might be helpful to think about just what an internal martial art is.

There are a few, including Water Boxing and White Ape, but the most well-known are Taijiquan, Xingyiquan and Baguazhang. Xingyi is trained mostly as a pure martial art; Taijiquan, while practised by a small number of people as a combat art, is mostly associated with health and well-being these days – which is a shame because there’s been an unfortunate resultant dilution there and much has been lost. There are still some good teachers around who understand Tai Chi fully, but sadly they’re few and far between.

Baguazhang lies somewhere in between Xingyi and Tai Chi. The Hou Tien linear forms explicitly codify its combat applications, but these are relatively more hidden in the Xian Tien circular forms. Circle walking has a meditative aspect to it that’s comparable to the slow forms of Tai Chi, except that it’s generally practised at a faster pace.

Theories abound about the roots of Baguazhang. The accepted legend is that Dong Hai Chuan learnt it from a Daoist sage, thus insinuating that it has a firm grounding in Daoist theory and lending it an air of ancient tradition.

But it’s actually very recent, relatively speaking – the youngest of the three main internal arts. Dong Hai Chuan lived in the nineteenth century. But people like to think things have deeper roots, and so you’ll find theories relating Bagua to Chinese ritual plays, Hindu shamanic dances, eight-armed Tibetan incarnations of Tara, and even the Egyptian creation myth.

There is something very ritualistic about circle walking, though. Something about walking round in a circle speaks of tribalism and trance.

So what is internal? Commonalities to the internal arts include a certain way of aligning and connecting the body, releasing power through the connective tissues, and keeping the bones stacked up in line with gravity. There is a sense of containment, and a body method that develops lines of communication so no part of the body is ever disconnected or overcommitted.

Internal arts emphasise smooth, soft movements and relaxation, coordinating the whole body to generate maximum and efficient power, never using more energy than necessary. Like many other martial arts they rely on exploiting an opponent’s weaknesses and using their own force against them, or neutralising attacks, but there is a preference for suppleness and litheness over strength and brute force-against-force.

This characteristic of softness and flexibility is reminiscent of the Dao De Jing, where it speaks of being rigid and brittle as the way of death, and being soft and supple as the way of life.

Of course, there are huge distinctions separating the internal arts, too. Xingyi is very direct and hard by comparison. The movements are relaxed still, but like Wing Chun there is a whiplike quality makes the strikes very powerful. It has a philosophy of hit fast and hit hard, and doesn’t worry too much about defence or what the opponent is doing. There’s a relentlessness to it; an indefatigable quality of “push through no matter what”.

Where Xingyi is hard and straight, Taijiquan is rounded and giving. Many techniques rely on accepting force and returning it, of absorbing and rebounding. There is an inflated quality to the body, organised around the Lower Dan Tian region of the lower abdomen. Stepping is grounded, as the heels root first, and there’s a strong emphasis on close quarter grappling as exemplified by push hands practice.

And Baguazhang? Bagua uses fluid, fast movement, twisting the upper body like rope and using spiralling attacks and light, circling steps that are designed to find angles and ways in through an opponent’s defences. The sure but agile “mud-wading” steps grasp the floor and the quick, unexpected changes of direction allow the practitioner to attack the flanks and take or destabilise the opponent’s centre.

Bagua’s techniques are varied and comprehensive: chokes and joint locks, throws and leg sweeps, a few kicks and stomps, and, particularly in Gao style, which steals a little from Xingyi, fist strikes, too.

But there’s a whole lot more to Bagua. It has strong links to Qi Gong, especially to Dao Yin, which are forceful exercises to lead and guide the Qi. As I’ve already alluded to, there are meditative elements to circle walking that encourage a non-discriminatory multi-directional awareness, and a calm, quiet clarity of mind that facilitates a clear perception of the situation.

Bagua has its own set of fundamental exercises (Ji Ben) and exercises for building the movement patterns and physical coordination (Nei Gong), and it can easily be incorporated into life nourishing (Yang Sheng) practices that seek to prevent illness (just as Chinese Medicine does) through good diet and eating habits, sleeping patterns, sufficient rest and exercise, and methods to regulate the mind and emotions.

Circle walking itself mirrors the ever-changing flow between Yin and Yang, seeking to balance Yin and Yang within the body through smooth palm changes, fluid turning and twisting movements, and combinations of hard and soft techniques.

Its eight mother palms, or frames, of Xian Tien (circle walking) practice correspond to the eight trigrams (the Ba Gua) of the Yi Jing (I Ching), which is the most ancient of the Chinese classics. The Hou Tien (linear forms) number 64 and relate to the 64 hexagrams (that are derived from combining two trigrams), which are used for divination.

The trigrams are fundamental to Daoist philosophy and so play an important role in both Baguazhang and Chinese Medicine. On the macrocosmic scale their three lines represent Earth, Humans and Heaven respectively.

Within the human body they represent Jing (essence), Qi and Shen (spirit), growing more refined as we move from Earth to Heaven. Made up of solid Yang lines and broken Yin lines, they combine to explain the one overarching constant of life: the process of change.

The eight trigrams can be arranged in two ways: the Pre-Heaven (Xian Tien) and Post-Heaven (Hou Tien) arrangements. In medicine, our Post-Heaven state is our postnatal being, necessarily sullied by impure air, foods and disturbances of the mind.

Yang Sheng practices look to restore us to our prenatal state of health and purity. And Baguazhang itself places importance on its health-giving benefits as much as it’s martial elements. By practising Baguazhang we can experientially understand the process of change within the body.

Of course, Chinese Medicine also works by balancing Yin and Yang and restoring the body and mind to a place of unity and harmony. The eight trigrams can be integrated with five phase (Wu Xing) theory or used directly in Yi Jing styles of acupuncture by imaging the Ba Gua on to the body and balancing the trigrams.

This can be done contralaterally, which relates well to Baguazhang as many of its techniques, as well as its fundamental Hou Tien posture of San Ti Shi (three-body standing post), are contralateral too. Why? Because that is our natural walking gait, and it makes sense to move in natural ways as they have evolved over millennia to be the most efficient.

Baguazhang and Chinese Medicine share another common thread in their emphasis on the Yi. Yi is basically our intention, our precognitive awareness and understanding of a situation arrived at through a combination of practised skill, learning and intuition.

In the internal arts we talk about the six harmonies. Three are external: coordinating hand and foot, elbow and knee, and shoulder and hip. The other three are internal: mind-intent (Xin-Yi), intent-energy (Yi-Qi), and energy-power (Qi-Li). A clear intent leads our moving energy in martial arts, just as a clear intent guides the needle and exchange of energies in acupuncture.

Both the practitioner and, to some degree at least, the patient, need an intention directed clearly towards healing, being tuned into the needles and to their own internal landscape. The acupuncturist gives clear somatic instructions, and the patient’s body listens and receives those directives.

Yi is more than just impulse or intuition. It’s a holistic grasp of the reality at hand, undistorted by the emotions and lending awareness equally to subject, object and environment.

How do we purify the Yi, then? Through meditation. Through practising virtue. Perhaps even self-hypnosis or visualisation. Think of an athlete preparing for a race, systematically enacting their idiosyncratic rituals to clear their minds and focus on the task at hand. Entering a state of readiness.

Perhaps it’s fair to say that the Yi has a different quality, or at least carries more or less weight, in different disciplines. In Xingyiquan, Yi is literally central. In meditation, I would argue it’s less so. Whereas attention must be full and undistracted, intention is likely to raise the body’s energy and stir the mind, preventing it from absorbing into the body and sinking and settling into stillness. But some intent is still needed – some gentle nudge to simply sit.

But is this intention conscious? Or does it arise before conscious thought? Does thought simply justify, in hindsight, the movement from intention to action? Again, I suspect it depends on the discipline. A highly trained and experienced physician might be able to operate successfully on the level of instincts and intuition, although it’s crucial to recall that this innate seeing has been arrived at through decades of study and dedication. Most cannot operate at this level, and must employ various conscious models to reach a satisfactory conclusion about what is appropriate for the individual patient.

As an aside, I think it’s interesting that Chinese Medicine works using several models that readily coexist; sometimes supporting one another, and sometimes contradicting. Yin Yang theory, Five Phase theory, Eight Principles, Nine Palaces (used in pulse-taking), Ten Celestial Stems, Twelve Earthly Branches…

It’s only Western science that insists so irrationally upon finding The One Theory of Everything. Life is messy. What makes us so sure one theory can ever describe everything? Chinese Medicine’s organic, flexible approach of using whatever models fit the scenario best seems to me to be not so much inconsistent as aligned with the reality of Nature.

Returning to Yi, then – it describes our inherent ability to harmonise with a situation. An impetus of the heart to engage fully and properly with reality. It is our Earth aspect; the spiritual manifestation of a healthily functioning Spleen system. It leads to efficiency and efficacy. There’s a proverb from the Tai Chi Classics that, to paraphrase, says: when your opponent moves, you are already there. This, to my mind, is a description of a well-developed Yi – so tuned, refined and present that a changing situation can be grasped completely and instantaneously. As one of my TCM tutors succinctly put it, Yi is “the thought before the thought”.

So both Chinese Medicine and Baguazhang require a degree of stillness, openness and relaxation such that a clear and strong Yi can manifest. Meditation and Qi Gong practices can facilitate this peaceful state of being, and, in the case of Bagua, it is incorporated directly into the practice.

Circle walking is Qi Gong, from one perspective. And, like meditation, Qi Gong brings us out of our all-too-habitual fight or flight mode and engages our parasympathetic nervous system. In this mode of relaxation, everything flows smoothly and appropriately. Our organs and our whole being benefit because everything becomes tempered and functions optimally.

The reverse abdominal breathing technique common to both internal martial arts and Daoist meditation brings the breath deeper into the body and improves lung function, as well as having a tranquillising effect on the mind. It increases blood flow to the brain and heart, aids digestion and peristalsis, lowers blood pressure, and increases stamina, lung capacity and lung health. And it calms and soothes the frayed nerves of modern living. How many people carry around their stress in their shoulders and necks, and breathe with only the tops of their lungs?

I stated above that Yi can be trained by practising virtue (De). What I really meant by that is that virtuous conduct creates the conditions for a calm and healthy state of being. By living truthfully and uprightly we strengthen our immune and nervous systems, ameliorate our cognitive functions and reduce excessive stress, tension, anxiety and depression. (I say excessive stress because some small amount of stress is beneficial – a life without any pressure would soon become dull and fruitless.)

Wu Shu (the Chinese term for martial arts) literally means “stop fighting”. Japanese martial arts in particular place great importance on the cultivation of virtue in the fighter – we’ve all seen The Karate Kid! Aikido’s whole philosophy is based around non-violence. And in The Art of War, SunZi describes subduing the enemy without fighting as “the supreme excellence”. Fighting is ugly and should be avoided at all costs. There’s a parallel with Chinese Medicine here, too. We don’t isolate and directly combat pathogens, but seek rather to restore harmony.

The Yang Sheng approach is one of moderation. Good health lies at the state of equilibrium. We must move from balance all the time, of course, as exemplified by the never ending exchange of Yin and Yang, but we should always seek to return to it. Lu Buwei advocated moderate exercise, without over-straining, and the walking practice of Baguazhang fits this attitude perfectly. Its long, deep postures and constant movement are challenging and make for a comprehensive exercise, but they don’t push the body beyond what is healthy and comfortable. They don’t exhaust us and leave us depleted.

Walking itself has been shown to carry all kinds of benefits (most of which we intuitively know). Here are some: it benefits our mood, longevity, cardiovascular health, strength, mobility, flexibility, balance, fascial health, memory, immunity, sleep quality, bone density, overall life quality, emotional health and our tendency towards healthy choices. Walking is detoxifying, encourages enzyme and hormone production, lowers our risk of cancer, and helps with hypertension, cholesterol and cortisol levels, fatigue, pain, reliance on medication…

You get the idea!

Moreover, when we practice Baguazhang we’re not plugged into music or podcasts like we are at the gym. Our awareness is directed both outwards and inwards.

The various palms of Bagua have specific effects within the body, such as Downward Pressing Palm, which helps to open the Ren, Du and Chong Mai. Why do we want these channels open? Because blockages lead to ill-health, and open channels mean freely circulating Qi, strong, healthy organs and a body that has good internal communication between its parts. Openness leads to wholeness.

Certain palms can even be emphasised to help rectify particular imbalances. So Uphold the Heavens, for example, being linked to Yang Ming (Yang Brightness) and the Stomach and Large Intestine channels, can aid with digestive disorders. Here again, we see a fundamental link between Baguazhang and Chinese Medicine.

So Bagua is more than just a martial art. It is a health practice too, that blends seamlessly with Yang Sheng methods. It integrates Yin Yang theory and the wisdom of the Yi Jing. It gives us a deep understanding of change. It trains the Yi and calms the spirit. It unites body and mind. It trains our breathing, exercises the body, helps to engender a virtuous mindset, and goes deep inside to open up and mobilise the whole body from within. It is an internal art.

All that from going round in circles! Well, it figures, I guess. After all, “walking is man’s best medicine” (Hippocrates).

Expect the unexpected

New beginnings…

It would appear to be an auspicious time, if you believe in auspices, that is. The vernal equinox has ushered in the Spring and the first new moon of Aries has risen. There is much excitement among the astrologically inclined with regard to the coming of the Age of Aquarius. Although it would appear nobody can agree on whether it has already arrived, it seems likely to me that it would approach more like a slow-rising tide than a tsunami. A gradual transition as the Age of Pisces slips away.

We hear tell of a new era of rationalism, of humanitarianism and an opening of consciousness. We turn our backs on religion and worship and embrace science and self-direction. Perhaps it found root in the Age of Enlightenment, and sent out green tendrils with the smog and oil of the Industrial Revolution. We fly rotorcraft on Mars; Voyager 1 still hurtles away from us, 14 billion miles distant, having turned and shown us how fragile we are as a pale blue dot in the vast ocean of space.

We wake up slowly to the devastation of carbon dioxide and plastic. We look upon stranded, emaciated polar bears and strangled whales with empathy. It becomes apparent that our role is not to yoke Earth to our needs and desires, but to harmonise with it. Not to stand separate, but to be within it. To be with it.

Finding harmony and balance is of course one of the fundamental principles of Chinese Medicine. It is the essential character of healing. With regard to emotional dysfunction in particular, the mind is required to reintegrate with the body – to harmonise with it. Not to stand separate, but to be within it. To be with it.

There is an implicit need for acceptance here. A willingness to exist as an embodied entity. Not to push away the parts of us that we dislike, but to acknowledge, embrace, and move beyond. Too often we try to separate out the mind, placing egg white and yolk in isolated containers that no longer communicate. And that way lies disharmony and suffering. We can’t live as disembodied minds. Only when mind and body mix thoroughly can we function as integrated, realised beings.

This mixing of body and mind is a central aspect of Daoist meditation practices, for only when the mind is absorbed into the body can transformation occur. It’s also a key characteristic of Qi Gong, whereby mind, breath and body move as one, and in Taijiquan, whereby the postures and movements reflect the continual exchange and transformation between Yin and Yang.

Within each of these opposing and mutually supporting forces we find the seeds of the other. Within Yang, there is a seed of Yin; within Yin, a seed of Yang. When one reaches its fullest expression, it is inevitable that the other will find a chink and begin the cycle anew.

New beginnings…

As part of my Chinese Medicine studies we were invited to try a divination using the Yi Jing. My Baguazhang practice had already led me to this ancient text, which I viewed with cautious interest. I’d stopped short of an actual reading, though. The college tutor suggested we use a website to attain our reading, but this kind of impersonal, computerised randomisation seemed to me to be at odds with the Daoist outlook. Despite their commonality in binary language (1, 0 or solid line, broken line), there is no awareness, no mind, involved in a computer-generated result.

A decade or so ago I would have been highly sceptical of this kind of “woo-woo”. But my understanding has changed. A clear mind is a powerful and perceptive entity. It has huge potential for insight and intuition. If an open awareness, not occluded by desires, aversions or false ideas of itself, is mixed with a perception of reality in the present moment, something very special can result.

I had no yarrow stalks so I used some feng shui coins and cast those to determine the hexagram, with an open question in mind about my venture into Chinese Medicine. Number 52: Ken – mountain over mountain. With two transforming Yin lines, leading to number 50: Ting – fire over wind. I have to confess I hadn’t really entered this exercise with any great faith or hope; I was mildly curious but had no real expectations. Yet there it was: a result I could only interpret as highly auspicious and meaningful.

There was a journey laid before me, from a state of stillness, meditation, wu-wei, bodiless repose, to a state of rejuvenation, alchemical transformation, self-sacrifice and supreme good fortune. Here before my eyes was the process of Nei Dan – from silent meditation to the cauldron of inner alchemy.

Which leads the cynical side of me to question: what if the result had been something that seemed irrelevant or ambiguous? Would I have dismissed the whole thing as nonsense? Probably, yes. But intention is a powerful force. It is capable of forcing through circumstances to see the fruition of our will, often to disharmonious and harmful outcomes. Only when intention is light and aligned with the natural unfolding of things does it yield a bountiful harvest. A non-forceful, gentle intent can lead to an experience of gliding easily through life. Things happen for you, not to you. Too little intent, or too strong an intent, and stuff gets in the way. Life becomes a struggle as you try to walk against the current, or drift helplessly at the mercy of fickle winds.

In Chinese acupuncture, too, the correct, gentle but prudent intent of the practitioner in selecting and needling points is crucial to the treatment’s success. Along with the mind-state of the patient in being receptive to the suggestions of the needles, to respond and heal. Was my own mind mixing with reality in the correct way? Was my detached ambivalence just the right kind of unforced intention? I can’t answer that, but the results of the divination nevertheless resonated with me.

The power of intent is very much a part of Xingyiquan – it is the Yi in its name. Our intention is a crucial and determining factor in how we interact with substantial reality. In meditation, the intention should be delicate, like an hypnotic suggestion. If it’s too powerful, the mind is stirred up and cannot settle in the body. It can cause tension and disturbance where we seek relaxation and stillness. But without any intention, there is no instruction to be still. We sit and our attention is pulled around helplessly by our random thoughts, emotions and memories. With a subtle intent towards meditation, we can enter a process of quieting and subduing the mind so that it can sink with the breath and begin to form the lower Dantien – the keystone to opening the channels, unblocking locations of habitual stagnation, and restoring the body to its natural, flowing state of health.

New beginnings…

And so with great optimism did I regard the Spring of 2021. In the internal martial arts there is the metaphor of the dragon awaking and leaving his cave, meaning that the inside of the body mobilises in the correct way for the Jin to be expressed and released. Hence my choice of the Azure Dragon, the Chinese symbol of power, rebirth and vigour, in naming this blog. He is a representation of my own new beginnings in the three pillars of medicine, martial arts and meditation. Altogether, they are a potent elixir for change, touching every aspect of being from posture, to organ health, to peace of mind, to will and creativity. Apparently diverse and unrelated parts of our being reorganise and interrelate as we move towards wholeness.

This all sounds very promising. But then I sprained my ankle.

A stupid, seemingly random, accident. Not even a dramatic one. Just a humdrum but nevertheless painful sprain. Suddenly, unexpectedly, I find myself feeling frustrated. I can’t work (my current job involves a lot of hiking and physical activity). I can’t go running. Can’t do yoga. Can’t circle walk. Can’t practise tai chi. Can’t do turning forms in Wing Chun. Can’t even go for a stroll in the warm, sunny weather that has heralded the passing of winter and, hopefully, the end of the worst ravages of the coronavirus pandemic.

Sure, I can still practise meditation and Qigong. I can still study. But it’s still a shock to have everything else just… stop.

Acutely, as I hobble about the house, wincing, I am reminded that I am not in control. I should expect the unexpected. And, slowly, I begin to realise that there is wisdom to be found in these apparently unfortunate circumstances. There is a Chinese parable about a Daoist farmer, known widely as “Bad luck? Good luck? Who knows?”, in which a series of connected events bring a farmer alternately good results and bad results, such that he can never agree with his peers’ assessments of his good or bad fortune. “Maybe,” is all he replies, unwilling to assign any notion of good or bad.

Likewise, here I stand (slightly lopsidedly), faced with an instruction from the universe not to get carried away by my own notions of how things are unfolding. Like John Snow from A Song of Ice & Fire, I know nothing. Moreover, I’m not an omnipotent dragon; I’m a fragile human body, mortal and transient, with tendons, ligaments, bones, muscles and fascia that pop and tear and break. There’s an opportunity to find humility here.

It’s also a chance to experience and come to terms with pain. To learn to deal with it through acceptance and relaxation, rather than fight and resistance and tension. In some small way, it’s a vehicle too for nurturing greater empathy for those around me who live with far greater or chronic pain every day.

And perhaps here also is an opportunity to briefly enter a more Yin period, stripped of my usual (and possibly excessive) activity, allowing for a time of reflection, slowness and rest. Maybe, it’s just what I needed.

An opportunity for new beginnings, only not as I had intended.