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All About Tai Chi (Taiji)

"The hinges of a moving door never rust, and flowing water never becomes stagnant."  --Ancient Chinese proverb

Tai Chi (Taiji) is full of flowing movements that keep the body moving while relaxing the mind.  Tai Chi is an ancient Chinese art of healing and self-defense. Its gentle and fluid motions are suitable for everyone, regardless of age or athletic ability, but Tai Chi postures can also be used for self-defense applications.  Tai Chi is widely practiced for:

  • Stress reduction
  • Energy enhancement
  • Preventing illness
  • Improving concentration
  • Toning muscles
  • Slowing the effects of aging
Tai Chi is a natural solution for stress. Tai Chi has been recognized by medical experts as a practical, effective alternative to expensive drugs and therapies to control chronic disease. Tai chi is the fastest-growing popular exercise in the world today.

Tai chi is often described as "meditation in motion," but it might well be called "medication in motion."  There is growing evidence that [Tai Chi] has value in treating or preventing many health problems.  And you can get started even if you aren't in top shape or the best of health.  --Harvard Women's Health Watch, May 2009

An article titled “Why Tai Chi is the Perfect Exercise” in Time magazine, August 2002 said: Practitioners praise Tai Chi’s spiritual and psychological benefits, but what has attracted the attention of Western scientists lately is what Tai Chi does for the body. Scientists at the Oregon Research Institute in Eugene reported that Tai Chi offers the greatest benefit to older men and women who are healthy but relatively inactive. Tai Chi combines intense mental focus with deliberate, graceful movements that improve strength, agility, and best of all, balance.

The Johns Hopkins Medical Letter in April 2002 said that people with osteoarthritis may benefit from Tai Chi (Taiji). “A Korean study presented at the American College of Rheumatology conference examined the effect of this ancient Chinese exercise discipline in 31 inactive 64-year-olds with osteoarthritis. Seventeen of the participants practiced Tai Chi daily for 12 weeks; the remainder did not. At the end of the program, those in the Tai Chi group had significantly more abdominal muscle strength, better balance, and less pain and difficulty in performing daily activities than their sedentary counterparts.”

Health Journal Silver, a CIGNA Medical Group’s publication, said “The Ancient Art of Tai Chi Can Be Good for Your Health” on its Spring 2002 issue. “Regular Tai Chi practice can help you maintain muscle strength, lower your blood pressure, and relax. It can also improve your balance, which reduces your risk for falls. In a study of people ages 70 and older, 96 percent of those who practiced Tai Chi said they felt more secure in their movements. They also felt more confident, alert, energetic, and relaxed.

The health benefits of Tai Chi (Taiji) tie in strongly with the practice of internal motion, which fully utilizes the powerful core of the body. It is a uniquely effective means of invigorating the internal organs, circulatory systems and nervous systems.  Tai Chi also helps increase joint flexibility and fluidity, and alleviates chronic pain.  The ultimate purpose of practicing Tai Chi is to live longer in the spring season of our lives. Tai Chi is not just for longevity, but also for robustness, even at an old age.  Tai Chi increases strength and endurance, renewing

When examining the movements of very young children, we see that their movements of arms and legs often originate from their torso. Their movements are relaxed and without tension. As we grow older our movements tend to concentrate on our arms, legs and shoulders and less on our torso. Tension and stiffness  also start to creep into our movements. Gradually, we loose touch with the torso, and stagnation in the torso sets in. Tai Chi  (Taiji) is considered as a means to return to our childhoods. Physically, the internal movements penetrate to the deep recesses of the torso, stimulating and invigorating the inner organs and the circulation systems in the torso.