enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Qigong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qigong

    With roots in Chinese medicine, philosophy, and martial arts, qigong is traditionally viewed by the Chinese and throughout Asia as a practice to cultivate and balance the mystical life-force qi. [4] Qigong practice typically involves moving meditation, coordinating slow-flowing movement, deep rhythmic breathing, and a calm meditative state of mind.

  3. History of qigong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_qigong

    The Chinese Health Qigong Association was established in 2000 to regulate public qigong practice, restricting the number of people that could gather at a time, requiring state approved training and certification of instructors, limiting practice to four standardized forms of daoyin from the classical medical tradition, and encouraging other ...

  4. Zhan zhuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhan_zhuang

    The amount of time spent practicing zhan zhuang varies between styles and schools; one may spend anywhere from two minutes to two hours standing in one posture. [7] Many styles, especially the internal styles, combine zhan zhuang with qigong training and other coordinated-body methods to develop whole-body coordination for martial

  5. Ping Shuai Gong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping_Shuai_Gong

    Pingshuai is simple. It has health-giving properties. Daily Pingshuai is claimed to enhance immune system, improves balance, makes joints and muscles more flexible, fortifies muscles, joints and bones, enhances blood and Qi circulation, replenishes energy, relaxes, calms and clears the mind, and sharpens senses.

  6. Microcosmic orbit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcosmic_orbit

    Microcosmic orbit. The history of the microcosmic orbit dates back to prehistoric times in China, and the underlying principles can be found in the I Ching which according to legend was written by the Emperor Fu Xi approximately five thousand years ago or at least two centuries before the time of the Yellow Emperor.

  7. Qigong fever - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qigong_fever

    The Chinese term Qìgōng rè (气功热), referred to in English as "the qigong boom" or "qigong fever", was a social phenomenon in which mass practice of qigong became extraordinarily popular in the People's Republic of China during the 1980s and 1990s, with more than 2,000 qigong organizations and between 60 and 200 million practitioners.

  8. Baduanjin qigong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baduanjin_qigong

    The Baduanjin qigong (八段錦) is one of the most common forms of Chinese qigong used as exercise. [1] Variously translated as Eight Pieces of Brocade, Eight-Section Brocade, Eight Silken Movements or Eight Silk Weaving, the name of the form generally refers to how the eight individual movements of the form characterize and impart a silken quality (like that of a piece of brocade) to the ...

  9. Iron shirt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_shirt

    Iron Shirt is said to be a series of exercises using many post stances, herbs, qigong and body movements to cause the body's natural energy to reinforce its structural strength. Practitioners believe that directing energy to parts of the body can reinforce these parts of the body to take blows against them.