QIGONG
(CHI KUNG) -- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
[Sifu
Wong Kiew Kit received the "Qigong Master of the Year" award at
the Second World Congress on Qigong
held from 21st to 23rd November 1997 in San Francisco, USA, for his
outstanding contribution in explaining the depth of chi kung (qigong),
in spreading chi kung world-wide, and in helping many people to be
relieved of their cancer and chronic, degenerative diseases through
practising chi kung.]
[You
may like to read his paper, "Qigong:
a Cure for Cancer and Chronic, Degenerative Disease? A Global Interest",
presented at the plenary session of the World
Qigong Congress.]
What
is chi kung?
Chi kung
is the art of developing vital energy particularly for health, vitality,
mind expansion and spiritual cultivation.
Is
chi kung the same as qigong?
Yes,
they are the same. "Chi kung" is the usual English spelling,
whereas "qigong" is the Romanized Chinese spelling. In Romanized
Chinese, q is pronounced like the English ch'; and o like the English
u. Hence, both "chi kung" and "qigong" should be pronounced
like the English "ch'i gung".
Are
there many types of chi kung?
Depending
on how we would define "types", there are two, three, four, five,
six, hundreds of or thousands of types of chi kung. Some people divide
chi kung into two types: quiescent and dynamic, or internal and external.
Some into three types: quiescent, dynamic, and quiescent-cum-dynamic.
Others into four types: standing, sitting, lying down, and moving.
Still others into five types: Buddhist, Taoist, Confucian, medical,
and martial. Some add populace chi kung to the five to make six types.
There
are various schools of chi kung, such as Shaolin Cosmos Chi Kung,
Shaolin Damo Chi Kung, Taiji Eighteen Steps Chi Kung, Flying Crane
Chi Kung, Fragrance Chi Kung and so on. Sometimes, people may refer
to different chi kung techniques as different types of chi kung, in
which case there are thousands of them. Hence, it is understandable
that there are also different levels of attainment in the various
types of chi kung.
Is
chi kung the same as Tai Chi Chuan (Taijiquan)?
They
are different, although Tai Chi Chuan (if it is practised the way
traditional masters practised it) makes extensive use of chi kung.
Basically, Tai Chi Chuan is a martial art, whereas chi kung is a collective
term for various arts of energy, which may or may not be used for
martial art purposes. The movements of some chi kung types resemble
those of Tai Chi Chuan, whereas many other chi kung movements are
totally different from typical Tai Chi Chuan movements.
What
are the benefits of practising chi kung?
There
are many wonderful benefits derived from practising chi kung, and
they may be generalized into the following five categories:
- Curing
illness and promoting health.
- Enhancing
vitality and developing internal force.
- Promoting
youthfulness and longevity.
- Expanding
the mind and the intellect.
- Spiritual
cultivation.
Many
chi kung types focus on only one or two of the above categories, but
a few cover all the five. For example, most types of medical chi kung
aim mainly at curing illness, virtually all sexual types of chi kung
emphasize solely on youthfulness, whereas Shaolin Cosmos Chi Kung
touches on all the above five categories of benefits.
What
kinds of illness can practising chi kung overcome?
According
to Chinese medical thought, practising chi kung can cure as well as
prevent all kinds of illness, including diseases like asthma, diabetes,
hypertension and cancer which are generally considered "incurable"
by conventional medicine. Practising chi kung is also very effective
for overcoming psychological problems. (Please see the following section.)
How
does practising chi kung cure so-called incurable diseases?
One must,
first of all, realise that the conventional medical paradigm is only
one of many ways to look at health and illness, and it is not necessarily
the only correct way. According to the Chinese medical paradigm, there
is no such a thing as an incurable disease, although a patient may
be incurable if his disease, even a simple one, has done damage beyond
a certain threshold.
No disease
is incurable because it is our natural birth-right to overcome all
types of diseases -- if our psychological and physiological systems
are working the way they should work. Illness occurs only if one or
more of these natural systems fail in their functions.
When
all our systems are functioning naturally, the Chinese figuratively
describe this condition as harmonious chi flow, i.e. the energy flow
that supplies the right information to every part of our body (and
mind), that provides the right defence or immunity when needed, that
repairs all our wear and tear, that channels away toxic waste and
negative emotions, and that performs other countless things to keep
as alive and healthy, is functioning the way it should. If this harmonious
chi flow is disrupted, illness occurs.
The forte
of chi kung is to restore and enhance this harmonious chi flow, thus
overcoming illness, irrespective of the labels one may use to define
its symptoms, and promoting health, which the Chinese have always
considered to be more important than curing diseases. It is significant
to note that the claim of chi kung to overcome illness and promote
health is not based just on the above philosophical explanation, but
on thousands and thousands of practical cases. Please visit the website
on Good Health.
How
is chi kung related to kungfu?
All great
kungfu makes use of energy training, which is chi kung, to develop
internal force, without which it remains at its external, mechanical
level, considered by Chinese martial artists as rough and low-class.
Hence,
a kungfu master may look, and actually is, gentle, yet with his internal
force he can cause much damage to his opponent if he wishes. Moreover,
his internal force does not diminish with age, and he can apply it
for peaceful use in his daily living.
Unlike
in many other systems of martial arts where the training itself often
results in physical as well as emotional injuries, kungfu training
with chi kung enhances harmonious chi flow, thus promotes health,
vitality and longevity.
How
is chi kung related to Zen or meditation?
There
are three aspects in all types of chi kung, namely form, energy and
mind. If you practise only the form, without the energy and the mind
dimensions, then you are merely performing physical exercise, strictly
speaking not chi kung, for there is no training of energy.
For an
effective control of energy, you have to enter what is called in modern
terms "a chi kung state of mind". In the past, this was called "entering
Zen" or "entering silence". When you are in Zen or a meditative state
of mind, you can, among other things, tap energy from the cosmos and
direct the energy to flow to wherever you want in your body.
It is
this mind aspect of chi kung, even more than its energy aspect, that
enables chi kung masters to perform what lay people would call miracles
or, depending on their attitude, fake.