On Oct 24, 2020, x wrote on alt.philosophy.taoism
(in article<a308917d-192d-4d5f-9b4c-1c338c91775en@googlegroups.com>):
of the dozen or so books on Chi Kung i bought it's the cheapest second hand one written by a humble english dude that draws me in first, emphasizing the
the felt experience of Chi at the heart of Chi Kung, albeit late in the book.. the necessity and importance of such pointing out growing every so frustratingly - i was feeling annoyed with all the talking as well as the exercise descriptions brushing over the issue of feeling the Chi but had started skipping straight to the exercises at the end of each chapter preparing to Just Do It, when i found the final chapter addressed the question of feeling "Chi" by repeated practice.
I think my hands and feet were awakened to chi sensitivity
by painful “thorn acupuncture” during my naked thorn hill
climb of Sept.5/6, 1991. And for a couple of days after
that, my hands received mini-shocks from metal cutlery
so I had to wrap it in paper napkins.
Some past parallels to my thorn hill climb are Moses barefoot
in the thorn bush and Quetzalcoatl self-sacrificing on thorns.
Let me know if you know of any others.
of the dozen or so books on Chi Kung i bought it's the cheapest second hand one written by a humble english dude that draws me in first, emphasizing the the felt experience of Chi at the heart of Chi Kung, albeit late in the book.. the necessity and importance of such pointing out growing every so frustratingly - i was feeling annoyed with all the talking as well as the exercise descriptions brushing over the issue of feeling the Chi but had started skipping straight to the exercises at the end of each chapter preparing to Just Do It, when i found the final chapter addressed the question of feeling "Chi" by repeated practice.
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