Dr Lam's Tai Chi, Health & Lifestyle Newsletter - Issue Number 99, November 2009

In this issue

--From me to you, Dr Paul Lam
--Remembering Suzanne, Dr Paul Lam
--Experiencing Depth in Tai Chi for Arthritis, Caroline Demoise
--Deepening your Tai Chi, Pat Webber
--Tai Chi as a Modality to Self Awareness, Troyce Thome
--How to Improve Tai Chi while not doing the Form, Tony Garcia
--Humour, Laughter and Radiant Health, Bob McBrien


Click on the title above to read the articles, this link to read all previous newsletters and here to subscribe.


Hello Everyone,

October has been a roller coaster month. While I was on my workshop tour, after completing some really exciting Dr Paul Lam peforming Single Whip Yang Style Tai Chi workshops in Asia and Europe, I received some shocking news that hit me and our Tai Chi for Health community.

On Thursday, Oct 8, the life of our distinguished Master Trainer, Suzanne McLauchlan, was snapped from her in a horrific car accident. She was travelling from her home in Mackay, Queensland to Townsville with her husband, Doug, for his medical appointment. Only minutes out of Mackay they were involved in a head on collision and she died on impact. Doug survived but is still fighting for his life.
Suzanne has been an inspiration to all of us. She contributed significantly to the Tai Chi for Health vision and impacted on countless lives. In her memory, I have collated comments from her friends and several articles written for her under “Remembering Suzanne”. In her honour we have set up the “Suzanne McLauchlan Memorial Scholarship” awarded each year to a recipient from regional Australia to attend the Sydney 2 Day Exploring the Depth of Arthritis workshop. Exploring the depth of Tai Chi for Arthritis has been one of Suzanne’s firm beliefs and she has worked hard to facilitate this workshop in rural Australia, we would like to remember her with this scholarship.
 

The December newsletter will be our 100th issue and we will be celebrating this significant milestone by offering a once only special offer and a prize. The theme will be “Tai Chi Spirit”. In the spirit of Christmas and as part of the celebration, we would like to offer a once only discount in our monthly special. We are providing a Christmas package, comprising of five DVDs from Tai Chi 4 Kids to Tai Chi for Older Adults and the music CD with specifically composed music. This package can be for yourself or as a Christmas gift to friends and relatives. There will be a 50% discount on the package so do take advantage of this special offer. Also as part of the special issue, we would like to hear your feedback on our newsletter. The most illuminating entries will win this special package worth US$145 AUD $175. The winner will be announced in the December newsletter.

I am in the midst of my workshop tour that started in Singapore with Tai Chi for Diabetes and Tai Chi for Arthritis. Dr Lam practising tai chi movement 'white crane flashing wings' in Florida Sept 2009 With the former I had the pleasure of working with community leaders and football players from the Malay ethnic group as well as tai chi teachers and health professionals, which was extremely uplifting. The latter was the second Tai Chi for Arthritis workshop that I have worked with 50 traditional Chinese tai chi teachers. It was especially gratifying for me to have met so many open minded traditional tai chi teachers; some of them teaching longer than I have. My heart warmed to see so many tai chi teachers recognising the merit of modifying traditional tai chi to make it safer, more effective and easier to learn. Their dedication to promote the Tai Chi for Health program was quite astounding.

After Singapore, I led two large workshops in the UK, Exploring the Depth of TCA and Tai Chi for Osteoporosis and Fall Prevention. This was my first return to the UK in three years and I was very excited by the overwhelming support, it was wonderful to meet new and catch up with old friends. I can see the UK moving forward and bringing more people to the Tai Chi for Health programs. Workshops in Barcelona and Zurich followed immediately after the UK. I am now in the USA conducting workshops in Georgia, Colorado, Oregon and California; I hope to meet some of you soon.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank and congratulate the dedication of local organisers and the enthusiasm from students. They are fundamental to the success of these workshops.

In this newsletter:

  • In memory of Suzanne McLauchlan, Dr Lam has collated a series of emails from the Tai Chi for Health community reflecting on their experiences with Suzanne. Several of her colleagues and students also write heart warming tributes to their teacher and friend
  • Caroline Demoise has devised practicing with a small ninja rubber ducky riding on top of your head as a way to help deepen your tai chi skills!
  • Pat Webber is more academic when it comes to deepening your tai chi. She believes knowledge and understanding of terms from classical tai chi writings will make tai chi more meaningful.
  • Troyce Thome has another approach, that the practice of mindful movement in tai chi trains both the body and the mind into deeper levels of understanding, coordination and balance.
  • Tony Garcia goes even one step further. He reveals how you can improve on your tai chi without having to practice the forms!

     

    This Month’s Special:

    First time offer of 20% discount on our full range of products. Please quote Voucher number 1109SP to receive the discount.
     

    Upcoming workshops by Dr Paul Lam

    November 7 - November 8, 2009. Sisters, OR, United States
    Exploring the Depth of Tai Chi for Arthritis

    November 14 - November 15, 2009. Pleasant Hill, CA, United States
    Exploring the Depth of Tai Chi for Arthritis

    December 14 - December 15, 2009. Seoul, Korea
    Tai Chi @ Work Instructor Training

    January 4 - January 9, 2010. Sydney, NSW, Australia
    One Week Tai Chi Workshop

    June 5 – June 6 2010 Tacoma WA, United States
    Seated Tai Chi for Arthritis and Tai Chi @ Work Instructor Training

    June 7 - June 12, 2010. Tacoma, WA, United States
    One Week Tai Chi Workshop

    July 15 - July 16, 2010. Ponsonby, Auckland, New Zealand
    Tai Chi 4 Kidz Instructor Training

    July 17 - July 18, 2010. Ponsonby, Auckland, New Zealand
    Exploring the Depth of Tai Chi for Arthritis
    Many other workshops conducted by my authorised master trainers are listed in the Workshop Calendar.

    Yours in Tai Chi,
    Dr Paul Lam, physician and tai chi teacher
     

    Paul Lam, M.D.
     
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    Remembering Suzanne
    Paul Lam, Narwee, NSW, Australia

    9th October, 2009

    It is with great sadness that I am writing to let you know that yesterday, one of our colleagues, Suzanne Suzanne (left) with Paul Lam, Janet Cromb and Rosemary Palmer at the Tai Chi for Diabetes Workshop in Brisbane September 2009 MacLauchlan, passed away in a car accident.

    Suzanne is a force behind Tai Chi for Health, her dedication and contributions are known to most of you. I am sure you will remember what a wonderfully caring and positive person she was to everyone.

    Rosemary Palmer, Janet Cromb and I completed a Tai Chi for Diabetes MT and instructor training workshop in Brisbane only three weeks ago with Suzanne. In a way I felt privileged to have shared that quality time with her – none of us would have dreamed that was the last time we enjoyed her presence and her unique energy!

    I know Suzanne’s work will never be forgotten, the seeds she has sown will grow into a multitude of strong and healthy trees. She has lived an incredibly full life and helped and inspired countless who were fortunate to have come in contact with her. We are proud to be associated with her.

    Please send your positive energy to her transition in life and your good wishes to her loved ones.”

    Several of Suzanne's colleagues and students have written heart warming tributes to their teacher and friend, please click here to view

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Experiencing Depth in Tai Chi for Arthritis
Caroline Demoise, Master Trainer, Chapel Hill, NC, USA

One of the most effective ways to deepen your tai chi skill is to slow down. When you slow down, balance and leg 'Caroline strength improve. Now turn your focus inward and notice the details of foot placement, weight transfers and arm movements. Animate each movement with intention. Control your movements to make them precise and more fluid. Another important change to make is from “thinking” to “awareness”. Thoughts add an extra layer between you and direct experience and thoughts are not always true. You think you move with an upright posture, but looking in the mirror shows otherwise. You believe you are doing the movement accurately, but reviewing the details in Dr. Lam’s new Tai Chi for Arthritis DVD reveals otherwise. When you move with awareness, rather than thought, your experience of tai chi is more direct, allowing you to feel your movement and self correct.

The principles underlying all styles of tai chi point the way toward depth. Invite tai chi itself to teach you by practicing principles with awareness. Feel when your posture is upright as you focus on maintaining good alignment while moving through the external choreography. Practicing with a small ninja rubber ducky riding on top of your head is a fun way to get instant feedback on your posture because if you lean or look down the little ducky will fall on the floor. Notice how you lift your foot to take a step and move purposefully in slow motion to become more accurate. Practice as though you are swimming on land to bring more fluidity to your movements. Notice every aspect of your movement to help you produce a coordinated tai chi flow. Repetition reinforces this mind-body connection. Patiently practicing the underlying principles cultivates depth.

Tai chi movement has intrinsic qualities that emerge naturally when movement following the underlying principles described by the ancient Chinese masters. Let’s look at two of these qualities, jing and song. Jing is a quality of mind, an internal stillness, which is quiet and deep. It is a meditative alignment with the spiritual vibration in the universe. When you begin tai chi, mentally your alignment is primarily with your thinking mind. Moving slowly provides an opening to move inward and align with tranquility. When mind aligns with awareness, a calm quietness develops as though time has stopped. Awareness and perception are heightened. The shift from thinking to a quiet background cultivates jing. Thoughts not focused on dissolve into the background, allowing you to experience peace. Following your mind into a meditative state is a natural progression toward connection with source energy. A quiet mind provides the environment for your awareness to expand from an exclusive identification as a separate body to the perspective of being part of the oneness of life expression. Jing, as mental quietude, is an alignment inviting spirit rather than ego to lead. Jing approaches the oneness.

The Chinese concept of song combines relaxation and expansion in your physical body. When your body is properly aligned to allow the natural flow of energy, relax your muscles into your supporting skeletal structure and use intention to loosen your joints by creating a little space within every joint. Use imagination to feel your spine grow. Imagine your legs lengthening as you extend them outward during a kick. Feel your arms growing longer as they move outward to accompany a kick or flow through wave hands like clouds. Begin to visualize your energy expanding outward from the center of every cell in your body to fill all the open space with vital life force. This energetic expansion within an environment of relaxation is the state of song. Cultivating song transforms your body from stiffness to fluidity and from stagnation to health.

Tai chi is an excellent teacher. It cultivates calmness in mind and body and encourages you to act from awareness with clarity and intention. Intention guides your every action, focuses your attention, and is an internal mechanism that draws to you what you focus on. When your intention is to deepen your experience of tai chi, you will slow down and move consciously with attention to tai chi’s underlying principles.
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Deepening your Tai Chi
Pat Webber, Master Trainer, Narwee, NSW, Australia

When we begin to explore the depth of tai chi we are exposed to terms which come from the Chinese classical Pat Webber, Master Trainer of the Tai Chi for Health programs writings on tai chi and from traditional Chinese medicine. Some knowledge and understanding of these terms will help to make our tai chi more meaningful.

Here are a few of those terms:0

QI: According to traditional Chinese medicine, we all have a life force called Qi which travels throughout our bodies along channels called meridians. . Qi which is strong and which moves freely means we enjoy good health. Qi which is weak or cannot move freely because of blockages in the meridians results in poor health.

QIGONG: An exercise (gong) to stimulate the flow of the qi.

DAN TIAN: The storehouse of the qi, located about three finger widths below the belly button. It is also our centre of gravity.

BAI HUI: When checking posture, we think first of gently pushing the crown of the head towards the sky. At the top of the head, where the midline intersects a line joining the tips of the ears is the Bai Hui point. This is where our focus should be.

SINK THE QI: Located in the perineum, which is between the anus and the sexual organs, is the point called the HUI YIN. The gentle lifting of this point, simultaneously with the out breath, sinks the chi and helps with balance. This is essential to our core strength.

THE BUBBLING WELL (YONG QUAN): Located on the sole of the foot, about 1/3 along the length of the foot. Said to be the point at which the energy from the earth can enter the body. Keeping the bubbling well in contact with the ground helps balance by avoiding the practice of touching the ground with the toes only when performing a following step.

YIN/YANG: The Daoist philosophy teaches that we should live our lives in harmony with nature. To achieve this we need balance in our lives. Tai chi moves are influenced by this need. Thus we think of up and down, forward and backward, hard and soft, fast and slow.

SONG: A Chinese word meaning “loosening”. Think of relaxing the tension on a stretched rubber band. A tense arm, whether throwing a ball or striking, is not as effective as an arm which is “song”.

FA JIN: “ Jin” means “internal force” and “fa” means “to release”. This is an advanced technique which requires the cultivation of “song”.

LAOGONG POINT: The point where the middle finger touches the palm when the fingers are closed. This is the point we focus on when doing the open/close movement in Sun style.

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Tai Chi as a Modality to Self Awareness
Troyce Thome, Master Trainer, Mission Viejo, CA, USA
 
“Is there anyone in the world whose idea of being truly healthy would not include along with a healthy body, a fine mind combined with an ease of disposition?” Sophia Delza

The effect of mind on body and body on mind is evident every day of our lives. Fleeting glimpses of this connection between body and mind are felt by everyone at sometime in their lives, moments like, “I feel like I was walking on air”, or conversely when something bad has happened “I had a pit in my stomach” or “a knot in my throat”.
Through recent advances in science and medicine we now have scientific proof that the mind is integrally connected to the body, as is body to mind. We should be asking ourselves how to have more moments of “walking on air” than “pits in the stomach”. More moments of feeling connected and grounded than moments of feeling scattered and fragmented.

Realizing the health benefits of an aware, present and calm disposition for both body and mind should be motivation enough for us to search for a technique or a practice that can enhance our ability to stay both mindful and responsive.
“Sensing the profound importance of the power of mindfulness, Jon Kabat-Zinn, in the late 1970’s began a project to apply these ancient ideas in a modern medical setting” Jon Kabat-Zinn formed a Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) clinic in collaboration with the University of Massachusetts Medical Center. The MBSR program brought the ancient practice of mindfulness to individuals with a wide range of medical conditions from back pain to psoriasis. Kabat-Zinn and colleagues were ultimately able to demonstrate that MBSR training could help reduce subjective states of suffering and improve immune function, accelerate rates of healing and nurture interpersonal relationships and an overall sense of well-being. (Davidson et al., 2003).
 
According to recent research studies being conducted at UCLA Medical Center, mindful practices stimulate neural integration. According to these studies, individuals engaged in Mindful practices, such as tai chi and yoga have better neural integration resulting in more resilient behaviours as well as a deeper level of intra-personal and interpersonal attunement.
 
The practice of mindful movement in tai chi trains both the body and the mind into ever deeper levels of understanding, coordination and balance.

Works cited: Daniel Siegel, The Mindful Brain.
 
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How to Improve Tai Chi while not doing the Form
Tony Garcia, Senior Trainer, Miami, FL, USA
 
There are several ways to improve your Tai Chi without practicing the form. In our everyday living we can Utilizing tai chi principles while shopping consciously increase our awareness to help us utilize the Tai Chi principles. Here are some good points to remember.
 
  • Make it a habit to consciously align (upright posture) anytime you are standing or in a seated position. This could be done anywhere such as when making a line in a grocery store or seated at home while watching television during a commercial.
  • Practice visualizing the form one movement at a time with your eyes closed. Incorporate the feel into each of the movements. For example; how is my body feeling as I step and slightly bend my knees and as my body turns?
  • Practice the agile stepping used in the form such as; half step, picking up toe, lifting and dropping heal.
  • Experience fullness and emptiness. Slowly transfer and feel how your weight transfers from one leg to the other while walking or use the same transfer by shifting side to side while standing on line.
  • Practice keeping your elbows down and shoulders relaxed while brushing your teeth or cleaning.
  • Improving your balance can help you with your form and walking as well.
    Rest both of your hands on the kitchen counter or the back of a chair and stand on one leg for a few seconds. Later on, you can try using one hand and eventually no hands. Always remain close to the object you are holding to prevent injury.
  • Practice portions of your everyday movements as if you are feeling a resistance in the air around you or as if you are moving inside the water. Capture that feeling to use it in the form.
  • Meditate to help clear the mind while remaining calm and focused.
  • Bring your life speed down a notch. Patterns in everyday life can sometimes bring us to an unconscious speed of continuously being in a rush, waking fast and even thinking fast.
  • Slow down and pay attention to the details life has to offer. The scents in the air, the way the foot feels when it touches the ground and expanding your vision to see things that are not only in front of us but all around us.
 
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Humour, Laughter and Radiant Health
Dr Bob McBrien, Salisbury, MD, USA
 
Teaching Tai Chi for Health classes provides quite special learning opportunities for the instructor. The saying, "by Bob McBrien and Paul Lam your students you are taught", is very true when your students are over 80 years old. One area I have benefited from is the healthy attitude most pensioners have regarding death. One can wonder how folks who have experienced family and friends passing on, or being the last of their family to still be alive, can laugh about their experiences with death and dying. What we learn is how healthy it is to continue to have laughter and humor in our lives after we lose a person who touched our life. Following are a few of examples of this type of humor.
 
* On his 100th birthday John was interviewed by the local TV station. The reporter asked, "Can you describe a benefit living to be 100?"
"No peer pressure," was John's reply.
* Continuing his interview the reporter next asked, "Can you offer the secret to living to be 100 to our viewers?"
"Keep breathing," John said.
Another life lesson has been told many times. It is about a young novice and his teacher.
* Ikkyu, the Zen master, was very clever as a boy. His teacher had a precious teacup, a rare antique. Young Ikkyu happened to break this cup and was greatly perplexed. Hearing the footsteps of his teacher, he held the pieces of the cup behind him.
When the master appeared, Ikkyu asked: "Why do people have to die?"
"This is natural," explained the older man. "Everything has to die and has just so long to live."
Ikkyu, producing the shattered cup, added: "It was time for your cup to die."

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END OF NEWSLETTER
Warning: Dr. Lam does not necessarily endorse the opinion of other authors. Before practicing any pro
gram featured in this newsletter, please check with your physician or therapist. The authors and anyone involved in the production of this newsletter will not be held responsible in any way whatsoever for any injury which may arise as a result of following the instructions given in this newsletter.
 
Ask Dr Lam - you can ask me anything about tai chi here.
 
 

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