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November 18, 2004 at 4:58 am #7268August 10, 2005 at 7:12 pm #7267
I re-did a number of courses this summer at Dao mountain, from fundamentals up through greater kan and li. Michael and Joyces energetic resonance is getting more and more intense! The personal process is also getting progressively deeper; the fundamentals class was like nothing I experienced before.
Group qi-fields are the heat, baby.
Qiaholics anonymoos
August 11, 2005 at 3:44 am #7270If you don’t mind me asking, how do you manage that? I go to school full time and work full time and would probably have to plan months in advance to take 1 week long retreat much less several . Do you have lots of savings and or retired? Or are you very young?
I remember having a conversation with Winn years ago and he was like take the fundamentals, the fusion, the iron shirt, the lesser. Like over a month of retreats! I was like, that sounds very cool but I have a job man!
I can only imagine if I was amrried and had kids and other responsibilites on top of that. A month long retreat would be impossible.Then I here stories of these Tibetan Buddhists who do 3 year meditation retreats in complete silence and just wonder…
August 11, 2005 at 8:59 am #7272fyi,
I routinely finance people to take retreats on extended payment plans, no interest. Ask for half down to pay the r&b.In the old days (in China), you would learn all this over a much longer period of time, which was beneficial to actually actualizing it. (smirk).
But westerners are in a heady rush. Until their body slows them down. Or the lousy work ethic that only gives 2 weeks vacation per year….
August 11, 2005 at 10:52 am #7274When I first studied with Mantak Chia in the 80’s I would take one course over a weekend, every six months. Took me at least 3-4 years to get to advanced Fusion practices. Chia didn’t incorporate nearly as much material as is now offered as “fundamentals”.
I feel that was a very beneficial way to establish my foundation.
BTW I think I am more patient than some. I took 10 years to get my 1st degree black belt. But I OWNED that material by then.
Strong foundation. Patience. Persistence. Perseverence.
After establishing my foundation I continued to go to weekend workshops til the early 90’s. At the end of that period I would go to retreats in upstate New York (this was before Tao Mountain) for 2-3 weeks at a time, every other year.
If it is important enough you will find the time.
Chi Kung can be for the masses. Keep you healthy and happy better than just about anything from what I can see.
As Michael has recently said, alchemy is not necessarily for everyone, it takes dedication. I couldn’t agree more.
There is a HUGE amount of material to digest. Take small bites, chew thoroughly.Craig
August 11, 2005 at 12:11 pm #7276For a few years, I went and took one week long retreats per year, and would usually plan ahead and buy the plane ticket 4-6 months in advance. If you feel like you really want to pursue something, then there will be a way and a means.
August 11, 2005 at 2:40 pm #7278Like Craig says small steps. I took Fundamentals last year, this year Fusion, hopefully Lesser K & L next year. Really you can spend a decade on the basics.
Like Craig, the slow steady path makes for a more solid practitioner.
A 9 year black belt
Peace
Michael
August 11, 2005 at 5:35 pm #7280I was on the ten year black belt plan too, but I think that had more to do with my stubborn teachers in my school. They refused to cough up the higher belts to anyone without a persistent, genuine effort, a commitment. I saw lots of people get up to blue and black belts and then drift away.
I agree that it’s a matter of priorities, which I think has something to do with an overriding interest to some degree. What I mean is, if you become very focused on something, it will tend to come into your experience more and more, in some way or another. It’s something like, perhaps, how a person will only truly quit smoking if they get to that stage of overflowing interest in doing so–although equating quiting smoking to finding time to take a qigong retreat is a bit off I realise.
Yeah the vacation thing in North America is sad. Living in Germany for a few years and travelling around to neighbouring countries was a real eye opener for me. I literally could not fully grasp when I was handed a contract at one point that offered me five weeks paid vacation right off the bat–but that’s the law for full-timers (in Europe in general, not just in Germany)…
Simon
August 11, 2005 at 6:02 pm #72825 weeks paid vacation for full timeers, damn. God Bless America. I can understand though because I work in my family business and it just wouldn’t pan out to give people 5 weeks paid vacation and then have to pay part time workers to cover them when they are gone. But damn that sounds nice.
August 11, 2005 at 11:54 pm #7284What I did was different so I though I would share a different experience so people could hear another story.
I learned from the books and tapes. Practiced and studied diligently. One step at a time. Used I Ching for help on when to advance and when to stay with a practice when in doubt (someone here recommended it to me). I ended up only taking one course in person and that was a year after I had experienced the fruit of One Clouds formulas – which is just a new beginning an initiation into another aspect of life that is in general hidden. I still really enjoyed the class from both an intellectual / bringing completion perspective and also in meeting Michael and other practitioners – it was awesome! I will probably go back at some point in the future as the sharing that goes on at Tao Mountain is invaluable.
For me, it was a deeply personal journey and the tapes and books worked for me. So I guess what I am saying is that I agree that each one of us finds our own way in working out what we need or aspire to and somehow what we need becomes available to us when we are sincere and focused in our purpose. I had no idea how I was going to be able to afford even the tapes and books let alone a retreat! I know I have said it before but will say it again, there are many people out there who open up without any formal training – that blew my mind when I met someone like that and could feel the same primordial energy from them that came to me and other experiences. Now, I have seen many people in various traditions and practices who have opened up to these spiritual states of awareness. My venture in the HT took me two years. So I am also saying that time is not as important as your pure desire. Seems best to act on what you need to do and forget about how long it will take you.
Also tying into what Michael (thelearner) was saying in the post above. Yes, Pain or coming to a place where one is ready to change was essential. Perhaps it is a place where one realizes that they have grown tired of the ways of the world of this and that. That there is no rest in that. My mother had died after 4 years with cancer and I reached the lowest point of my life. Miracously I found Zen and Qigong and then HT. Without hitting that low I do not believe I would have moved along as swiftly as I did.
Inner Peace,
Matt
August 12, 2005 at 12:21 am #7286HEY ASA WHERE HAVE YA BEEN.
CUM OVER TAOBUM FOR A CHATAugust 12, 2005 at 1:55 am #7288I have a good friend/customer in France who has to give such great vacation time to his people, among other perks.
Recently visited him and he was going on 14 days in a row 10 hours or more a day. But it’s his company. I don’t think he can give himself 5 weeks off either.
Hard when you are the bossmann.
Craig
August 12, 2005 at 2:27 am #7290Alot of it is your personality also. Like my grandfather built a big company up and worked every day for like 30 years and now he is retired still goes to work. like his whole life is work and it’s probably more about the work than the money since I ams ure he has made enough not to work anymore.
Like I was telling an employee/co worker the other day my thing is not so much to make tons of money but freedom. I want to set myself up so I can go on a retreat for a month and it not be a problem. I can go to Europe or China or NYC for a month and not have to worry that I am missing a paycheck.
And in order to get that goal, I need to bust my ass for like the next 3 or 4 years and then I am good. When Michael says he can finance me taking retreats it’s not about paying for retreats. I am not at the point where my business cana fford me being away for a month. like my Dad is on vacation for 6 weeks and he cana fford to do that becasue I am here.
And I am going to full time in school for 3 more years. I may take a week or 2 off here and there but I am basically planning on going non stop until I get my MBA.
So my main issue is time right now. I can’t afford to take a month off. But I am 29. In 3 years I will be 32, 33 and will be set. Gotta think ahead like the chinese ๐
August 12, 2005 at 5:58 am #7292Well I think when you know it’s the law to begin with you plan with it from the beginning, so you wouldn’t grow faster than your ability to fulfill that law structure. For us to do it here, to be fair and practical, it would have to be brought in very slowly, with lots of government help, since entrepreneurs have gotten used to it the way it is. The wages are a lot higher over there too! But I mean, it’s not like there aren’t a lot of wealthy, successful people over there, because there are plenty; it’s just a little more equalized, so that even the janitor can have a life.
Actually it would be interesting to look into the history of how the European nations ushered in those changes–because it wasn’t always that way. Maybe they took advantage of the wreckage of world war two: ‘Now that were back to square one, sitting in the ruins of our last model of the universe…’
Incidentally, I don’t think the Europeans are more enlightened, unless you count ‘enlightened self-interest’ as enlightened. I think it has to do with centuries of bloodshed on their own soil; it’s cultural mathematics learned the hard way; if we let the gap between rich and poor get too great it results in a rise in survival anxiety which leads to increasing discontent, violence (the janitor taking to crime since sweeping floors only pays the rent but doesn’t adequately feed his family, or in anycase his sweeping wage doesn’t give him any kind of a life and bettering himself through education is something only the rich can afford, and they’re already doing fine, grrrrr!), and leads ultimately, to war and/or revolution; since that was very, very bad, and communism (the toughest and meanest of the uneducated janitors becoming king and making the laws–since they executed all the ‘aristocrats’) produced a psychotically cramped mode of existence, lets make some laws to make sure that doesn’t ever happen again. The tendency is to think that this can’t happen in ‘modern times’ but people are just as subject to falling into survival anxiety as they ever were, in which state they can do ugly things. I think that rather than ‘socialism’ this is ‘capitalism keeping the guillotine in the museum, where it belongs’; in other words, I think it is not an abstract difference but a profound, flesh and blood, human difference.
Simon
August 12, 2005 at 6:05 am #7294g> it’s not about paying for retreats. I am not at the point where my business cana fford me being away for a month. >
When I look at going away for some weeks, its the cost of the service (retreat, or clubmed or whatever) + travel (air fare) + what I would’ve made if i’d been working during that time. And, of course, the logistics of it being ok, or not, for work not to get done during that time.
Its the modern world. Gotta plan way ahead for spiritual ventures once or twice a year (if you’re able, and in that phase).
g> So my main issue is time right now. I can’t afford to take a month off. But I am 29. In 3 years I will be 32, 33 and will be set. Gotta think ahead like the chinese ๐ >
What’s the saying, “three generations”? ๐
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