What is The Dragon?

Jiulong DragonJiulong Journal readers will remember this guy. He posed the question, “Play with me and someday I will show you something. What do I mean?”

So what does this mean? The answer to this question takes us into the realm of spontaneous action.

First, let’s identify the Dragon. He’s a reference to the any of the Eight Palm Energies. So, there is a Heaven Dragon, Earth Dragon, Water Dragon, Fire Dragon, and so on. Each Dragon is an animated representation of the “personality” of the palm energy. For example, the Heaven Dragon expresses an energy that is unstoppable power that surges upward and outward. He is unconcerned with what may be an obstacle, simply flying up and out, completely overwhelming whatever stands in his way. One could think of his personality as one of unrelenting assertiveness.

In contrast, at the other end of the spectrum is the Earth Dragon.. He is soft, yielding, preferring to be like a wisp of smoke that rotates around an obstacle seeking an advantageous position. He does not contend with and opposing force, preferring to vanish and leave the opponent with the feeling of falling into empty space.

In each of these examples, you can clearly see that the nature of each palm energy is quite different. We personify these natures in the mythical animal called the Dragon and can refer to these traits as each Dragon’s personality.

Why would we personify these ideas?  Why not just refer to them as energies or forces and discuss their use with reference to vectors and levels of force or power? Because since we see ourselves as personalities with certain traits, it is easier to relate to the palm energies as if they also were personalities. If I want to create and generate a force that causes my opponent to fall backwards, it is easier to think and feel like an “unstoppable dragon that is flying up and out” than a “force vector that moves on a 45 degree angle at 100mph with the contact point on the opponents body at the optimum position to destabilize his/her balance causing a loss of coordination that provides tactical advantage for enough time to………” you get the idea. It’s easier to imagine I am the Heaven Dragon with all the  attributes I mentioned earlier, especially “unrelenting assertiveness”

This is not to say that you cannot generate this force by thinking of it using the physical description in the above paragraph. In fact some people’s minds work better in that mode. In either case, once you have the “feeling” of Heaven Palm, by which I mean the tactile sense of a force rising upward and outward, it no longer matters how you obtained that feeling. Now you can work directly with it.

But let’s return to the Dragon. First, with regard to gender, I always refer to him as “he”. This is because I am relating to him as a male personality in order to embody him. If you are female, you can refer to her as she for the same reason. Remember, the idea here is to use the personality of the Dragon so you can become her/him for a moment.

You now start standing, shifting, walking while using your imagination to create the Heaven Dragon feeling. There are specific methods for doing this. If you practice them you will generate the feeling and power described. As you walk, you will start to notice that the body, while following the feeling/force will “want” to turn a certain way. Or it might “want” to form one of the nine Heaven postures without you consciously deciding to form it. Of course you will start by consciously determining which postures you are going to form, and this is a very good way to create the “Heaven feeling”. But somewhere along the way, you may suddenly form a slightly different posture than you intended.

You may, for example, plan to use Twin Yang while walking  with Twin Yin on the turns but suddenly, upon coming out of the turn, your arms automatically form Pressing Heaven and Earth. And it feels exactly right. You will feel a little bewildered for a moment and then return to Twin Yang because, after all, that was what you were practicing. But there was a moment in which “something else” happened.

This spontaneous change, coming from seemingly nowhere is the experience we call “the Dragon showing you something”. It can be described as a spontaneous expression or manifestation of a feeling that, while unplanned consciously, is what the mindbody senses is the correct expression at that moment. The reasons for the expression can only be determined by the practitioner and this only after a great deal of experience with the process. This is because the reasons will be specific to the time, place and state of the practitioner at that time. But none of this negates the fact that “something” happens that is automatic and spontaneous. It just happens.

This experience has been described with statements like “I didn’t do it, it did me.” or “I suddenly felt this urge to move this way rather than that way.” or “My body seemed to have a mind of it’s own for a moment”. These are all attempts to express a non-conceptual experience with conceptual thought. In fact, this entire article is exactly that. Yet the experience is unmistakable and the language we are using in Jiulong is that of “the Dragon coming out and showing me something”. At this point we are discussing the moment the Dragon shows you a different posture than the one you thought you were practicing. There are other “messages” from the Dragon .

Once you have practiced being the Heaven Dragon long enough through the visualizations taught in connection with him, and you have practiced walking both in straight lines and circles with him, you will have created the feeling of Heaven in your mindbody system. (Please note that “long enough” varies from person to person and you will have to be the honest judge of this for yourself). Having created this feeling you are now ready to play with a partner in the Two Dragons Playing in the Clouds game to get a sense of how the Heaven Dragon might find opportunities for expression while engaged with unpredictable movement. This is where it gets really interesting.

Now you are dealing with forces coming in from a partner, and you have to deal with them in the moment they occur. One of the major difficulties with properly playing this game is having a plan and therefore not being attuned to what is actually happening. For example, I have found that while I am attempting to get into a position to do a certain technique, a strike or arm bar or whatever, I have missed the fact that my partner is uprooting me. So I abandon that plan and change to another, thereby repeating the mistake. The overall process here is that of attempting to consciously control the situation.

But in the meantime, my mind and body are already constantly moving with my partner and automatically adjusting to the angles, speed etc. I am missing all this automatic movement while formulating my various attack plans. I become aware of this and attempt to be “spontaneous” which of course is not possible. One cannot plan to be spontaneous. Then, suddenly, my body flows into a space (of which I was not conscious while I was planning spontaneity) and the unstoppable up and out force of Heaven overwhelms my partner. I internally congratulate myself on my martial prowess even though I know on a deeper level that “I” did not do anything. There was just that sudden movement which instantly appeared. And it had the same quality as that palm change while I was practicing Twin Yang/Yin palms when a different posture appeared.

These experiences are part of what we mean when we say “the Dragon comes out to show you something”. In essence it is that automatic expression of the right energy and movement at the right time over which one is not exercising conscious control. So, having described the experience, we can now look at the central question “What is the Dragon?”

Readers will be familiar with the concept of engrams. This was discussed in the Fall 2006 issue. When one repeatedly practices the Heaven Palm postures and imagines the forces the postures are supposed to be generating, that neurological loop we call an engram is being created. Eventually, simply adopting the posture will generate the power if Heaven. It would be correct to say that you are imprinting the Heaven Dragon into your mindbody system. Remember, the concept of Heaven Dragon is a composite of the physical posture and the psychological attitude the it is designed to generate. The result of the posture and the attitude is the feeling of the Heaven Dragon.

We are getting closer now.

When the physical posture and psychological attitude are repeatedly imprinted through standing, shifting, walking, and playing over a long period time, the expression of the Heaven feeling becomes automatic. In other words it will suddenly appear when you least expect it in ways you did not plan, but which are exactly appropriate to the situation at hand. THIS is the Dragon coming out to show you something. It is the spontaneous appearance of a movement combined with a sensation that is determined by the needs of the moment, not the plans of the conscious mind.

In other words, you have cultivated the Heaven Dragon though posture, visualization and attitude with the result being that he appears when the situation requires him. Upon reflection, you usually see why it was the right thing to do (eg. my partner was stepping this way and I suddenly felt his balance point and was able to uproot him with Heaven Palm) thereby learning something about that situation. But what you learned was revealed through that moment when the Heaven Dragon automatically did what was needed.

So a working definition of “The Dragon” now can be “an imprinted mindbody pattern of feeling that spontaneously reacts to the needs of the moment with correct force, angle and speed without conscious control”.

This is a bit cumbersome, but, I think, accurate. I hope it is giving you some insights into why Jiulong Baguazhang is taught with such emphasis on visualization combined with exact body mechanics. It is this combination that sets the stage for the Dragon to be born within you and start generating movement. The paradox inherent in all this is that you cannot force the Dragon to appear. All you can do is practice the methods designed to create him, continually refine the physical and psychological aspects required — then release control and wait.

With regard to Qigong for health, the exact same process applies. Obviously the overall intention is different from martial practice, but the methods are essentially the same. You combine postures with visualizations and attitudes directed to creating health. The composite of these practices becomes an overall feeling in the body (and in some cases specific places in the body) and the particular Health Dragon will appear at some point and show you what posture/attitude you should be using in that practice session. We will explore this health aspect more in future issues of the Journal.

I must conclude by drawing attention the single most important aspect to creating the various Dragons in your mindbody. That is Patience.

I know this seems obvious from everything you have just read, but since the idea of an automatic manifestation of an energy one has been cultivating is quite alluring, you will find yourself wanting it to happen constantly looking for evidence that it has happened. But this will lead to frustration and delusion. You will think something has happened when in fact you consciously generated it out of that desire.

I promise you that if you are patient and disciplined in your efforts to simply create the Dragon through the methods prescribed, he will appear at some point. It won’t take years. Some people experience him within a few short months. But it will always be when least expected and only when not being consciously sought.

Is this difficult? Of course it is. But when it starts to happen, and you keep practicing and strengthening him, the Dragon will appear more and more, to the point where you can start rely on him with the trust that he will appear when needed. This takes you into the realm of complete spontaneous movement that is, after all, is the goal of the Jiulong Baguazhang player.

Trust the Dragon. He will appear and show something. And when it happens you will be the first to know.

Yin, Yang, and Dao

Yin & Yang & Dao

Many people practice Chinese martial arts both internal and external. They talk about Yin and yang and Dao. The question is, how many truly understand the implications of these terms and how they apply to the philosophy of the health and martial practice known as Baguazhang or any other internal system?

“Everybody talks about Yin and yang,
But almost no one does anything about it!”
- John Painter

“Ok, you punch me real hard, right here,” the little man said, thumb pointing to his tiny nose. Knowing not to question a command, I launched a Xingyiquan standing fist with all my might at the grinning face of my 79-year-old teacher. I remember feeling a sensation like the brush of an eagle’s feather near my elbow, a sudden jarring impact on my chest, and then I found myself sailing backwards totally out of control. Landing unceremoniously in a heap against the old mattress strapped to the fence, I stayed down for the inevitable lecture that was to follow.

Mr. Li, the former head of the Li family of Chinese “wagon masters”, a formidable clan of bodyguards from Sichuan, China now living in exile in the United States, sauntered the ten feet across the back yard, looked down, and said, ” This was the energy of the yin and yang, what we call taijijin.”

“How is that in English, Shifu?” I asked slowly struggled to my feet and rubbing my sternum. “It is from my families quanfa , you would say in English, ‘fist fighting method.’ This was just part of our eight principles of action.”

“Shifu, I hardly felt you guide my strike away and at the same time I felt so much power from your palm.” Beckoning mysteriously with his index finger he pointed to the back wall of his house. He pulled himself up to his full height and assumed an air of supreme importance. His bony finger traced a line around a circle painted on a weathered piece of plywood that hung from the wall. It was white on one side and black on the other. The two halves were divided by a reverse ‘S’-shaped line.

“That is the yin yang, so what’s the big deal!?!” I blurted out. The little man folded his arm in front of his body placing his right palm against the inside of his forearm. He gently touched my shoulder and suddenly I was flying once again, only this time sideways through the air. “That was fajin form,” he said, hands on hips, staring down at me like a Chinese drill sergeant.

“And this is not yin yang. It is taiji, the foundation of all energy. When you understand this, and how wuji creates taiji, and taiji generates yin and yang, and the eight gua are each an expression of yin and yang, then you will know something. When you truly know taiji idea, then I have no more to teach you. Right now I fear you know less than that, so let us start.” I did not ask any more questions that day. I just listened as Li, Longdao began my Baguazhang taiji instruction. I was only sixteen then, and today at over sixty I am still working on the multiple layers of the simple yet oh-so-complex principles of the taiji.

Before his death, Master Jou, Tsung Hwa once told me during a visit to his farm in New York, “John you were very lucky to have a teacher that showed you the old way of Taijiquan and Baguazhang. I searched all over China for masters who knew the real martial ways; except for a very few teachers almost all is lost now. People talk of it but really no one knows the philosophy of taiji or the bagua and how they are the master keys that make these arts what they are.” He shook his head and looked down.” In America, even worse: All lost, all becoming sport with no inside! We must work to preserve the real founding idea and methods.”

I was moved by his faith in me, a guy from Texas, not even a Chinese, and I was reminded of the 1897 Charles D. Warner editorial when he penned the now famous saying, “Everyone talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.” Warner could just as easily have been speaking about the principles of yin and yang as related to the practice of Baguazhang and other so-called Chinese internal martial arts. Few people really understand or care anymore. They are too busy trying to perfect the outer appearance of a form to win a trophy or capture the will-o-the-wisp of eternal health.

What is Yin and Yang?
Today with so many books, magazines, and teachers sprouting up on every corner like convenience stores, people have a confused view of what Chinese philosophy and the words dao, yin, and yang really are.

This is especially true in the world of Chinese martial arts as taught in North America and Europe. Some think yin and yang are Daoist esoteric principles to be discussed in hushed tones; to others they are the essence of the healing powers of Taijiquan.

Others feel that yin and yang are philosophical concepts that have nothing to do with gongfu (Kung Fu) or combat methods. One author went so far as to write, “In relation to the actual teaching of Kung Fu, the Yin-Yang principle seems nowhere evident; it appears as the symbol, but without meaning which can be connected to the teaching.” (Bruce Tegner’s Book of Kung Fu & Tai Chi: Chinese Karate and Classical Exercises; Thor Publishing 1968)

Sorry, Mr. Tegner, but Baguazhang and Taijiquan are martial arts both totally derived from understanding the interaction of these two qualities of energy.

Baguazhang especially is an art that could not exist were it not for these principles. One must come to know the taiji and the yin and yang of ones own body and how to apply it to guide and control the actions of an opponent. Indeed, Baguazhang employs the principle of yin and yang for every aspect of its practice.

Origins of Taiji Symbol

The design we know, a circle with two interconnecting circular shapes is not the yin and yang; it is called the taijidu (“diagram of the supreme ultimate”). Contrary to popular belief although they adopted the symbol as their own, it is not of Daoist origin. The symbol in question was created by a Neo-Confucian, Chou Tun-I in the 5th Century BC to show the interaction of Yin and yang as described in the Yijing (book of change) and the Dao De Jing (classic of way and power).

The First Taiji Symbol
Prior to the taijidu, symbols from the Yijing had been used to illustrate the yin & yang principal. The diagram comprised of three symbols from the Yijing.

The Yijing Gua Fire

__________

____    ____

__________

The Gua Water

____    ____

__________

____   _____

They were wrapped around an empty circle, the symbol of Wuji (the void).

Interestingly, when you mix fire and water you get steam, which in Chinese is the character for qi (“life force energy”).

Daoists Did Not Invent Yin & Yang

While the three main branches of Chinese philosophy, Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism all use the yin and yang or taijidu symbol in their philosophical and medical practices, Taiji has become in the Western mind associated with Daoism.

This concept of polar opposites, yin and yang and the word dao originated in China’s pre-history long before even the Daoist, Confucian, or Buddhist sects arose. It was first discussed by the legendary First Emperor, Fuxi around 2730 BCE in his writing on the Yijing and was expanded upon over thousands of years by the three branches of Chinese thought.

When early Chinese man felt the winter air grow cold and the trees fell bare, he believed that life was over. There would be no more warmth. But with the advent of another summer, followed by another winter, man noticed a developing cycle. Realizing this helped early man in China to understand and bring order into the chaos of life. This recognition eventually led emperor Fuxi to begin recording what was to become the Yijing (Book of Changes). The yin/yang’s white and black hemispheres evolved over time. They became symbolic of everything physical, spiritual and emotional in the universe-male (yang), female (yin); sun (yang), moon (yin). For everything up there is a down. For every back there is a front

In time the common people of China and the Daoists adopted this version of the symbol of Master Chou Tun-I. It is the “double fish diagram” and is often mistakenly called the Yin and yang. This icon is actually called taijitu or grand ultimate terminus principle. The black and white curved circles fitting into each express the Dao of eternal wholeness. The unbroken line surrounding the two symbolizes wuji, while the reversed ‘S’-shaped curved line in the center simply divides the two. The two dots mean that nothing is ever absolutely one thing. Each thing contains just a little of the essence of the other. taijidu also represents continuous interaction or movement. There is no separate yin without yang or yang without yin. The two are part of one whole, the Taiji, and the Taiji is the creative principle of Dao.

A more modern way of illustrating this symbol would be to use an airbrush would to make the two slowly dissolve into each other. The black would blend into white so imperceptibly that there would be no way to say here is where yin starts and yang ends. For, in truth, there is no clear separation of night and day. Day fades to dusk and to night and to dawn back to day. It is the way of Taiji to move gently and smoothly.

Yijing Stages of Yin and Yang

In a correctly placed taijidu, the yang is on the left at the top and is associated with heaven, creative energy, and heat, and yin is moving down the right side to the bottom representing earth, receptive, and cooling energy. As one goes around the circle a cycle of energy exchange appears. At the top the yang is at its prime, then clockwise, the yin, or cold, begins to show. As one continues to move toward the bottom of the yin/yang circle all is yin, so cold dominates. Continue going clockwise, however, and the yang, or heat, will reappear. There are many different interpretations for what the lines symbolize.

In the Yijing, Winter (yin), a dormant period, has three broken lines. Summer (yang), the hottest time, has three solid lines. An agrarian calendar was created to chart the seasons. Over the centuries, Daoist and Confucians charted thousands of correspondences to these changes of yin to yang and back again.

If we study the diagram of the taijidu placed inside the circular arrangement of the Fuxi Yijing diagram it becomes apparent what the three line figures represent stages of change around the circle of the taijidu. Knowing this helps us to understand what happens after a particular event.

Dao of Yin and Yang and Baguazhang

No matter what philosophy one chooses, the concepts of dao, wuji, yin, and yang are part of the science of the Taiji. Taiji concepts are everywhere: not just in high-minded philosophy but also in physics, body mechanics and the movement of our bodies through space, to the on and off reaction of nerves, and the flexion (yang) and contraction (yin) of muscles. Even if you do not understand Chinese, this idea as a philosophy of action and reaction is central to understanding the foundation of the martial art called Jiulong Baguazhang.

For the Westerner understanding the principles of Daoist thought is not an easy task. In the first place, dao, like many other Chinese concepts, is mostly a construct of the intuitive or right-brain approach to life. Westerners tend to be predominately analytical or left-brained.

Even the way we write in the West is different from the eastern way. Ideograms, the type of writing used in China, are not at all like the Western alphabet. Chinese characters are most often symbols that represent ideas and poetic feelings expressed as a sort of artistic short hand that stimulates the right brain to feel a mood or energy about something. Perhaps this is why so many in the West try to make it mysterious and esoteric when in reality it is as common as the rain, moon, and sun.

What Then Is Dao?

First, if I could answer this I would not be here. There would be no reason to be on the Earth. No one has the total answer, no one! I will state what I believe at this time in my study. Later it may change; that is also the nature of Dao.

Daoists seek to follow the principles of Dao. Today, however, Daoism is divided into two main branches. One has turned the simple philosophy of Lao Zi into a complex religion, while the other Daoism is a simple approach to understanding nature.

So what is the Dao? Dao is not a thing. A simplistic way of putting it is to say, Dao means how, the how and why of things in the world both seen and unseen. In the classic of Daoist literature, the Dao De Jing, the author Lao Zi writes:

The Dao that can be spoken of is not the eternal Dao.
The name that can be named is not the true name.
The nameless (wuji) is the origin of both heaven (yang) and earth (yin);
That which we give name (taiji) is the mother of all existence,
Darkness within darkness, the gate to all mystery.
All who desire can see only the manifestation of it;
All who renounce desire can see the mysteries.
— Lao Zi, Dao De Jing #1

Here is a clue to the Dao of yin and yang. It is a profound mystery. Why? Because it is so simple that it appears complex. Lao Zi also tells us that Dao, no matter how we talk about it, remains an enigma. It is not yin and yang or taiji but the progenitor of them.

Dao can be examined but not touched; felt, but not seen. Its principles and laws of action expressed by yin and yang can be observed and utilized. We cannot use the Dao itself it is a universal absolute. Dao is the beginning and end of all things; it is both ancient and new.
Lao Zi says,

“Something mysteriously formed the primal creator.
I do not know its name for lack of a better word I call it Dao”

So trying to find a literal definition for the word “Dao” is virtually impossible. The Chinese calligraphic characters for Dao are derived from two radicals: the first meaning “foot” or “traveling”, and the second, “crowned head of a wise man or sage.” Simply, the “path of life,” or the “the path a wise person walks.” This is why I say, “Dao means how.”

When we know how we should move with things, we are working in the flow of Dao. To the original masters and martial artists looking at Dao or nature and finding the yin and yang energies in it was a way to glean valuable information.  By watching, listening, and learning how the flow of energy and cycles of life and death move through all natural things, one begins to see a pattern or way to the energy of things. Once you learn to see the ebb and flow of life’s ever-changing currents, the better you can deal with the highs and lows thrown your way on a daily basis.  Those who do not observe Dao or use its principles swim against the current and can expect a life of constant strife.

While Dao is the Alpha and the Omega, it is not the same as an anthropomorphic God. Dao is more like Einstein’s idea of a “unified field” of energy that is the ground upon which is played out everything that ever was, is, and will be. The mutuality of action and reaction, vibration and stillness arising from it is the engine that drives it all.

The Dao of Baguazhang can exist on many levels. In its simplest application it would be to learn to apply the principles of yin and yang to every aspect of combat or fist fighting: how the mind moves the muscles and which muscles need to move in harmony with other, and how action and reaction creates or dissipates power; how to harmonize with incoming energy and use it to advantage. There are thousands of ideas that are not so mysterious when you examine them carefully. Yes. It is really just that simple to say but very hard to do. So much has to be unlearned.

There is no time like the present to begin.

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