Showing posts with label mindful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mindful. Show all posts

Monday, 24 August 2020

Breathing Space - A Meditation

As more and more businesses begin to re-open and schools are set to restart our lives may be changing again or even be speeding up. Is this something that we want to do?

This may be a good opportunity to check our internal speedometer and decide what speed we would like to be travelling at.  How do we control the speed? How do we slow down if we want to?

Phil's teacher used to say, 'If you give yourself time then you have all the time in the world.'

How do we give ourselves time in between all the other tasks of the day or just find time in between all the thoughts that may be rushing around our heads? 

 

In Tai Chi, we use a simple breathing exercise to practise pausing and slowing down. We can enjoy this exercise anytime, anywhere. We can do it this seated or standing or even lying down if we are at home.

Ideally, step outdoors to really reap the benefits of this exercise that has its roots in meditations practised over 2000 years ago in ancient China.  It could be a favourite place in your garden for instance, or a park, or any open space that resonates with you. 

You may like to begin by observing trees, clouds, plants and listen to the birds for a couple of moments. Just watching and enjoying the sights and sounds. Being in green spaces can help reduce high blood pressure. Observing nature moving more slowly can help us find a different pace from rushing traffic and computers. 

Following the traditional instructions in tai chi regarding the breath, let your breathing feel smooth, refined and continuous. A saying suggests our breath feels like drawing a single thread of silk from a cocoon.

Then we take time to observe the breath and any sensations that may come up. We follow the natural changes that occur as the breath comes in and goes out. We may feel like closing our eyes for a while to really feel the coming and going. 

"This creates a new spaciousness in the mind enabling us to think and see more clearly so that we are better able to focus on the things that really matter."
Dr Tamara Russell, 2015. Mindfulness In Motion. Watkins Media, London.

Why not try it just before settling down to sleep as part of your calming bedtime routine.

Once you get into a routine with this simple exercise you won't even need to use your hands as cues. You can visualise those touchpoints in your mind's eye and follow your natural breath cycle. 

If we can find just one minute to slow down, hit the pause button, and find breathing space, we give ourselves time and then we have all the time in the world.


Music: I Need To Start Writing Things Down by Chris Zabriskie

Saturday, 18 April 2020

Tai Chi for Workplace Wellness

Bespoke Tai Chi and Qigong programmes for your workplace.


Office Scene
Workplace Wellness
Photo by Headway on Unsplash

Why you might like to offer Tai Chi and Qigong in your workplace:
  • Tai Chi proves a great stress buster that can promote deep relaxation
  • Brings a more mindful level of presence to the workplace
  • Improves overall fitness to counteract those long periods sat at a desk or that long commute
  • Allows you staff team to bond in an authentic way with engaging partner exercises
  • Can provide a much needed positive pause to the routines that make up the working day
  • Proves an important mental and physical boost to start the the day and lovely pick me up to avoid the post-lunch slump
Get in touch and we'll tailor the ideal session for you.

Telephone: 07528 959091
Facebook Messenger: m.me/discovertaichi

Monday, 17 September 2018

Daoyin - Meditation in Movement

We're very pleased to announce we've partnered with EnergyBodi Sensation based in Rossendale, Lancashire, to offer a unique series of Daoyin - Meditation in Movement Workshops. You can find more details at our Facebook Page.

Daoyin - Meditaiton in Movement Workshop Poster
Daoyin - Meditation in Movement Workshop Poster

What is Daoyin?

Daoyin (Qigong) - Daoyin means to guide and pull. Daoyin originates from ancient China. Daoyin sequences move with a elegant and balanced flow of the whole body in tune with our natural breath pattern. Rather than stretching we move within a comfortable range of movement to avoid putting unnecessary strain on any particular joint or muscle group.

With regular practise we build strength and suppleness while calming the mind. Coordinating the mindful movements with a natural breathing cycle creates a deep sense of relaxation and wellbeing.
Daoyin Chart - Copy housed at the Wellcome Trust, London
Daoyin Tu - Copy housed at the Wellcome Trust, London
Daoyin goes back a long way. Archaeological evidence excavated from the Mawangdui Tomb 3 (sealed in 168BC) in the former kingdom of Changsha, shows a 'Guiding and Pulling Chart' with ladies and gentlemen enjoying various Daoyin exercises. You'll find the original chart housed in the Hunan Provincial Museum, Changsha, China. You can find a copy of the original at the Wellcome Trust, London.

Dates for Your Diaries 

All workshops fall on a Sunday - 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm

• 28th October 2018
• 16th December 2018
• 3rd March 2019
• 28th April 2019
• 23rd June 2019

£20 per workshop

We look forward to seeing you as we explore these unique exercises with their emphasis on BodyMind integration.

To find out more please do get in touch:
0759 800 4645

Philip & Helen

Monday, 31 July 2017

Tai Chi, Nature, and Health

“We seem to know that time spent in green space is just what the doctor ordered.”
I wrote the above quote as part of a guest blog for the support organisation AfterTrauma. In that blog I talk about how natural spaces can help us cope with the ups and downs of life and the growing evidence from science that supports our intuition. And what has this got to do with your practise of tai chi chuan.

Well, if you delve a little deeper into the roots of tai chi you soon find out that those roots spring from the rich cultural and philosophical ground of Taoism (sometimes written Daoism). This short, beautiful film below gives a good primer on Taoism and how it relates in particular to the martial arts of China, the same roots from which our tai chi for health programme stem:



I often encourage people who come to our classes and workshops to see if they can find a little private space, a garden if they have one, or a quiet corner in a park for instance, where they can practise their tai chi form outside.

People don't hesitate to say how their practice of the tai chi form takes on a new sense of meaning when they do so. Some of the sequence names found in the various styles of tai chi that we learn, such as wave hands in clouds and gather celestial energy, suddenly make perfect sense when performed outdoors.

I hope this short blog and the links within it encourage you to get outdoors. You don't have to practise the tai chi form outdoors to get the benefit, taking a short stroll, or taking a seat in a green space will reward and reinvigourate you. You'll find yourself slip effortlessly into that mindful state that eases our sense of wellbeing in the world.

The health benefits of forest bathing or Shinrin-yoku.
Forest Bathing or Shinrin-yoku


In Japan you will find people go to specially designated forest trails to ‘bathe’ in the healing balm of the trees. They literally call it forest bathing or Shinrin-yoku, and researchers have found that regular strolls in these lush spaces can offer profound health benefits for people living with many different long term physical and mental health conditions.

As I wrote in the guest blog for AfterTrauma, time taken to relax in green spaces proved especially important for my recovery from the significant trauma I experienced when I had my accident. It continues to remain an important part of my ongoing health and wellbeing today. So, if you can, get outdoors, relax and enjoy.

If you enjoyed reading this you may like to visit my other blog/website where you will find more pieces that touch on the arts, medicine, poetry, and more.

Do have a family member, friend or colleague who you think would like to read this blog? Please do share it with them.

Please do get in touch to let me know your thoughts.

All the best

Philip


Monday, 26 June 2017

Tai Chi Damps Down Inflammation Genes

Tai Chi as a moving mindful meditation appears to have a marked positive impact on dampening down inflammation in our bodies. This research study shows how our bodies inflammatory response effects both our physical health and mental wellbeing.
 
Tai chi for health class in Keighley, West Yorkshire.
Tai Chi – Mindful Meditation
 
Two links well worth a read:
 
The first, an easy to read article from New Scientist that summarises the amazing implications of this study.
 
The second, the full research paper published on Frontiers In Immunology which the article above summarises.
 
A little tai chi practise each day will help. If you think a family member, friend or colleague would be interested in this post please do share it.
 
We look forward to seeing in you in one of our classes, one to ones or workshops.

Thank you
Helen and Philip :)

Thursday, 16 March 2017

Tai Chi Principles


Tai Chi Principles


Sung and Jing


Sung (sometimes spelt Song), pronounced ‘soong’, represents the most important principle to build into your practice of tai chi and qigong.

Sung has many meanings, such as to relax, to loosen, to open, to release tension. Sung, counter-intuitively describes an active state of relaxation. Not as some people think to relax like a ‘sack of potatoes’.

In the classes I teach I often use an analogy from archery of the perfectly tensioned bow. Not too slack. Not too tight. Just right. Full of potential energy just waiting for the archer to draw and release. Which brings us to a second, yet equally important principle, that pairs nicely with sung, called Jing.

Misty mountain lake – Tai Chi – Movement with stillness
Movement with Stillness

Jing, like sung, has many meanings, such as stillness, motionless, silent, quiet, peaceful, calm and tranquil. When applied to your practice of tai chi Jing describes a quiet mind. An anonymous Tang Dynasty Daoist classic called the Qingjing Jing – The Classic on Clarity and Tranquility –  describes the quality of jing as a mind free from worries and naturally at ease. One can also think about jing as mindfulness or being mindful.

One could say the mind must also have sung. We could also say, that without jing, a tranquil mind, we'll find it difficult to feel sung throughout our body. Each principle supports and relates to the other, like the balance of yin and yang, which together form the familiar diagram of tai chi.

Through our practice of the tai chi form, we begin to realise the meanings behind well known tai chi sayings, such as, ‘movement with stillness’ and ‘when the wind blows the whole tree moves’.

Pine Tree on a cliff edge - Tai chi - Sung
Sung - Tai Chi

Sung and Jing represent very real felt qualities. It can take a little time to get a feel for them. At first you may get a glimpse, just for a moment, as you practice your tai chi form. With some patient practice each day you'll find your feel for sung and jing grow quite naturally like the unfolding of a beautiful blossom.

What do sung and jing feel like? Well, remember the archer and bow analogy? As you get familiar with the movements of the form you can begin to release tension from your mind and in your body. As you find and release all those tensions you will feel your muscles, tendons and ligaments, all the joints in your body, begin to open, loosen and relax. You will have started to develop sung – active relaxation. Further more, as you practice your tai chi form each day you'll find that quality of sung carry into your day to day activities also.

Mountain landscape - Tai chi - Chen
Chen - Tai Chi

Many people find a tai chi class without ever hearing about, let alone getting the opportunity to practice the principles that underpin tai chi, specially, sung and jing. Without these principles, one's tai chi becomes just another set of physical movements or form of thoughtless exercise like so many that people do day to day.

With jing and sung present you'll realise how they relate to, and act as the key to unlock the door to the other tai chi principles: Chen - meaning to sink, to feel heavy, rooted to the earth; Huo - meaning suppleness, agility, elasticity and resilience; the controlled transfer of our weight from one leg to another; and the rhythm for the slow, continuous, flowing movements we aim for when we practice tai chi.

Bamboo grove - Tai chi - Huo
Huo - Tai Chi

As you get a feel for these principles you'll find the health benefits really begin to kick in. You'll feel more  at ease and alert, calm and focused, with more energy for your day to day tasks, have greater physical and mental strength, stability and balance. With your continued practise you feel a real sense of happiness, contentment and feeling uplifted.

Women enjoying her tai chi practise
Tai Chi - Feels Good

Tai chi ought to feel good. If you don't get to practise it you begin to miss it. Finding a good tai chi class can really help keep you motivated as you learn the movements and give you a great sense of camaraderie. A good tai chi class will have a happy and relaxed atmosphere with lots of laughter present. If you find a class like that you'll know the principles of Sung and Jing are present too.

If you have a friend who you think would benefit from coming to one of our classes please do share this page as a link on social media or email.

We look forward to seeing you : )