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BONE BREATHING *******
One
of the great legacies of the ancient Taoist masters of China has been the
practices for regenerating the bone marrow through a series of simple breathing
exercises.
The
practice of `bone breathing' developed in the context of the yogic procedures
for developing higher consciousness and opening the highest human potential.
They are considered a branch in the vast tree of Taoist energy practices and
have as a trunk the meditative practices for calming the mind.
As
the human body ages it is subject, like all energy processes, to the laws of
change and decay. This is especially true in the case of the human skeleton.
-The
bones in our skeleton are the most dense and solid aspect of our body. As solids
they have a microstructure which is basically crystalline with the property of
absorbing and transmitting the energies radiated by the Earth and the rest of
the universe.
The
ancient Taoists understood the human skeleton as an antenna channeling the
necessary energies to sustain life and at the same time serving as a
communication medium for broadcasting energy frequencies through the structure
of meridians and vital organs.
The
concept of the skeleton as a dynamic energy structure forced the Taoists to
develop ways to maintain the bones in optimum shape and prevent the natural
process of decay from taking place.
-When
we are born our bones are dense and heavy with red marrow. The high density of
the bones is what accounts for the heavy feeling of babies when they are held in
the arms even when not physically fat. As we age there is a progressive loss of
bone mass, due to improper diet and lack of physical exercise. The red marrow is
progressively replaced by a white marrow resembling fat. The reduction of red
marrow may be accompanied also by a progressive reduction in the density of the
actual bones, rendering them more porous and frail. At this stage it is not
unusual that an aged person fractures the bones easily through a simple fall.
Older people with frail bones feel very light when lifted up in relation to
their body size.
-The
loss of bone mass, medically known as osteoporosis, affects millions of people
in the developed countries and in the last decades has reached a great deal of
attention through specialized studies trying to find an effective remedy. One of
the most common treatments involves taking calcium supplements or hormone
replacement therapy.
The
practice of bone breathing is capable of arresting the loss of bone mass and
with continued practice begin to replace bone mass and red marrow through a
process the ancients called `bone marrow washing'. The main ingredient of marrow
washing is the breath, not the gross breath that enters our nostrils but rather
the subtle breath that penetrates through every pore in the skin.
-The
subtle breath is guided through the bone marrow with the attention. For example
one places the attention on the tip of the index finger and slowly moves the
attention up the length of the bone, moving up to the wrist. This simple action
activates a very powerful law of energy work that states that any place in our
bodies we place our attention a flow of energy is generated in that direction.
By moving the attention from the tip of a the index finger to the wrist over and
over again warmth, tingling, heaviness or subtle vibration of the finger may be
experienced. The warmth or heaviness that may follows is an indication that the
exercise is generating energy flow within the bone. One of the basic tenets of
Taoist medicine is that if there is good flow there is health, and when energy
flow is reduced illness appears.
From
the finger the practice may be continued to the rest of the fingers and
gradually up the arms, up the legs and the rest of the skeleton.
-The
practice of bone breathing was introduced into the Western world by the Taoist
teacher Mantak Chia back in 1983. One of the first students was a middle-aged
woman residing in Los Angeles, California who was losing bone mass in her spine
at an alarming rate. She was under the care of several specialists who had been
unable to arrest the bone loss. The predicted outcome of her illness would be a
spinal collapse threatening the nervous system and bringing paralysis or early
death. As soon as she heard about bone breathing she enrolled in a class and
began a daily routine of 3 hours of continuous exercise bringing subtle breath
to the bone marrow. Since the skeleton is considered an antenna the most
efficient way of practicing bone breathing is standing up in a special posture
that allows the complete skeleton to be aligned in the most efficient way with
the flow of universal energies.
Within
six months of practice she not only arrested bone mass loss but also began
reversing the process and gained some 10% of the mass back. The doctors who had
been treating her were at a loss to explain the reversal. Within three years of
continued practice she began to appreciably regain bone mass and at the end of
five years had replaced 100% her bone mass without indications that there had
ever been osteoporosis.
This
case is not an isolated one, since the 1980's similar cases have been reported
by practitioners in different countries in Europe and the Americas. Bone
breathing has been successfully used also for accelerated healing of broken
bones and torn ligaments.
An
important condition in bone breathing practice is being able to feel the area
being worked with the attention. The ancient Taoists have left us the maxim that
says that `The practice of the Tao begins with feeling'. Without feeling the
practice may degenerate into being just a mental exercise unrelated to the
bones.
-Bone
breathing is not only for those repairing bones, as mentioned earlier, the
Taoists developed these practices for opening the human potential to its
maximum. One powerful effect of bone breathing sessions is the ability to calm
the mind and arrest the current of internal talk which goes on constantly. It
also brings a profound sense of relaxation and openness that aids in resolving
muscular tension and stress.
-From
healing the bones the Taoists went on to utilize bone breathing as a means of
absorbing the subtle energies of trees, rivers, sun, moon, and stars. For
contemporary people, bone breathing offers the possibility of maintaining
healthy bones regardless of age while at the same time delighting in the ocean
of calmness that it brings as a fruit of practice.
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BONE BREATHING PRACTICE **
-Sit
comfortably and place the extended arms on your lap. The palms of the hands are
open and the fingers relaxed.
-Inhale
gently through the nose in the direction of the abdomen and then exhale deeply
all the way from the abdomen. Do this several times mentally letting go of
tension with each exhale.
-Bring
your attention to the tip of the index finger of the left hand.
-The
next time you take your normal breath, simply let you attention run slowly from
the tip to the base of the finger.
-As
you exhale normally through the nose let the energy stay in the finger and
return your attention to the tip of the finger. Repeat again the procedure with
the next breath.
-As
a sensation of heaviness or warmth develops in the left index finger compare it
with the right index finger where you have not done any bone breathing yet. This
will help develop the ability to feel more deeply and identify the sensation
bone breathing brings..
-As
the left index finger becomes warmer or heavier continue the same bone breathing
procedure with the rest of the fingers of the left hand, either one by one or
all the same time.
-As
the left hand becomes warmer and heavier compare with the right hand where no
practice has been done yet.
-When
you decide to incorporate the right hand into the practice simply reproduce the
feeling in the left hand into the right or start once again finger-by-finger.
-Once
both hands are feeling heavy continue the same practice but higher and higher in
the arms until the same feeling is up to the shoulders.
-For
bone breathing through the feet it is best to remove the shoes and any tight
clothing and guide your awareness up the toes, either singly or together up to
the ankle.
-For
breathing up the spine begin at the tip of the sacrum and run your awareness up
the spine higher and higher until you reach the base of the neck and the same
feeling of warmth and heaviness is developed.
-As
the practice progresses and the body relaxes the gross breath through the nose
may become more and more subtle. Do not try to force back to gross, rather let
it stay subtle and calm. Continue to guide your attention up the bones.
-Eventually
it is possible to have the whole skeleton doing bone breathing, that is
including the teeth.
-As
practice develops try to breathe through the whole body at once, like a sponge.
-If
more specific knowledge of the bones is desired then it is advisable to work
with an anatomical chart of the skeleton to guide the energy with more
precision.