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Qigong Meditation: Embryonic Breathing
 
 
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Qigong Meditation: Embryonic Breathing [Paperback]

Jwing-Ming Yang
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 389 pages
  • Publisher: YMAA Publication Center; Bilingual edition (1 Oct 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1886969736
  • ISBN-13: 978-1886969735
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 18.3 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 181,278 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Yang Jwing-Ming
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Product Description

Product Description

Uniting the natural spirit and human spirit is the ultimate goal of spiritual enlightenment. In order to reach this goal, a practitioner must first know how to store Qi in an abundant level in the human body. This means knowing the theory and the techniques of Embryonic Breathing. This book discusses most of the available ancient documents, and includes scientific analysis of the practice, and detailed instruction for practising.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
82 of 89 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
"Pay attention to your breath".

So often, this is the only guidance given regarding the importance of the breath during relaxation and meditation practice, especially in the West.

In his new book, Qigong Meditation, Dr. Yang explodes this sentence, as he instructs Embryonic Breathing, the missing key to modern mediation practice. These Qigong breathing techniques and Qi energy circulation practices are an essential part of sitting meditation, as it was taught in ancient times. This important teaching was passed down by Buddha, and by subsequent masters over the centuries, but has nearly been lost due to language barriers and the difficulty of understanding the deeper aspects of the training.

When mediation travelled out of India and China, and especially as it made it's way into western societies, this vital information has often been neglected, and new schools of thought developed. Though some people have had success in re-opening the third eye and attaining enlightentment with other methods, many have been Qigong masters.

Thank you Master Yang for translating most of the available ancient documents on this training - their profound content is now available to so many more people, and your excellent commentary is invaluable. I share your hope that more people strive to continue this research so that we may gain a modern scientific understanding of the human body, mind and spirit, and of the universe we inhabit.

As the word 'enlightenment' gets thrown around more and more casually in the West, it is important that we truly seek the roots of this precious learning, which has been passed down to all of us, with humble and open minds.

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By maya77
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I wasn't sure whether this book would be too complicated for me, given my limited knowledge in Chinese medicine and Qigong, however the book is just brilliant. It is a well of knowledge, nothing is omitted, and all the concepts are well explained. Having said that, I wouldn't say it is the most practical book, it is meant to give you a very broad and thorough theoretical knowledge of Qigong and good insight into TCM/Chinese philosophy etc. Anyone interested in Qigong practice and Chinese way of maintaining good health and longevity should definitely give it a go. Some prior knowledge would be beneficial.
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50 of 51 people found the following review helpful
Truly deep book about breathing and energy 9 Jan 2007
By Korpo - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I hesitated quite some time buying "Qigong Meditation - Embryonic Breathing". I wondered whether it would be worth reading (and paying money for the privilege to do so). Everything I read _about_ it seemed generic and uninformative, but the book itself is marvellous, as I know now.

I have read other reviews and came to the conclusion this book is not for everyone, some reviewers even cited sentences next to the key sentences and complained about it lacking detail. It does not. Some things are simply hard to convey and describe...

Today, thanks to the publishing of a lot of books suggesting that you apply techniques early on that may have been esoteric, inner circle and hidden knowledge, a lot of people think that they are in the know. In fact, in terms of real written knowledge they may be. Small Circulation / Microcosmic Orbit meditation seems to be easy enough.

The problem is that key techniques need some time to develop and need to be developed properly. Guiding Qi without being able to properly sense its whereabouts, concentration and impact may or may not benefit and may or may not do damage. Fact is, you simply may not know that you put "fire to the devil" when you practise incorrectly as you have no way to measure or determine your progress.

So when you practise such techniques without actually being able to properly judge how well you are doing them, this book seems to contain bad advice and little help. In fact it is only tailored to a more advanced, perhaps early-intermediate reader that has mastered the early stages of the practise, how to begin to regulate body/posture, breath, emotion and mind to a certain degree, can keep concentration, and can sense movement and stagnation of Chi. Without this a lot of the stuff written herein seems theoretical or lacking detail.

The realm you enter with the practise of Embryonic Breathing is the one of inner self-awareness, starting out from body awareness. It is a crucial skill, not developed easily, not a simple subject. Anyone interested to developing this before tackling this book should try a book like Bruce Frantzis' "Opening the Energy Gates of Your Body" first. Yang's book only gives you strong hints about it, but is focused on the theory, framework, context and practise of Embryonic Breathing - no surprise there.

If you know the basic skills, this book delivers everything you need to know to go on. On which points/cavities/nodes to concentrate, how to locate those, with which techniques to manipulate them, and what end result to produce, and what this end result means in the overall context of longevity and enlightenment meditation and different Qigong schools.

It is first book (I know about) that discusses something I wondered about in Qigong exercises - is the Lower Dantian at the navel on the Conception Vessel (the Qi reservoir running down from tongue root, frontal chest navel to Huiyin/Perineum), or is it located within the body's center inside the lower abdomen. Qigong literature is very unspecific about this, and depending on context names one or the other as the Lower Dantian.

Yang clarifies that the navel location is the "False Dantian", which can store some but not much Qi, and helps store some in the real one at the center of gravity. He gives full anatomical and self-awareness instructions where to locate which and how they are most likely constructed anatomically in the body (the bio-battery concept of layers of conductors (muscles/tendons) and isolators (fat/fasciae) is introduced here for the lower abdomen). Yang's discussion of bioelectricity and a possible working of the Qi / bioelectricity system in the body is well-written, most-interesting and intriguing.

Yang introduces deeper knowledge about the inner layers and details of the Qi circuit, such as the Yang core in the center of the Sea of Yin (in the center of the Real Lower Dantian) and the Yin Spiritual Center (in the center of the brain / Upper Dantian, where important glands reside). He relates this knowledge back to the Taiji symbol and shows yet another way for it to symbolize an important concept.

First you develop the ability to locate and feel the places mentioned, to concentrate and how to lead Qi, and the breathing techniques. Then you train the technique and practise it to achieve the given goal, for example storing ample Qi for a later step. And then you can advance to the next practise. Nothing is missing here. It's just so that this book does not repeat all preliminary skills necessary, and I for one do not demand that from it. I prefer a book with depth such as this over one with breadth, since those are available in reasonable numbers to satisfy anyone.

Breathing is of course discussed thoroughly, and how its different techniques should be trained and can be applied to achieving certain goals. Breathing becomes a tool and the way for achieving different stages of practise, a context lined out really well during the middle part of the book, with a lot of detail of a complete "religiously" Daoist / Buddhist meditation program for achieving enlightenment.

A lot of books have been written about meditation and breathing, but this practise and its intricate placement within context and theory makes this book a treasure. If you read carefully you may have answered enough about your questions about breathing and Qi to be sure you are practising properly and be able to monitor your progress.

These techniques may be the key tools for experienced meditators to put in the missing pieces into their practise, and for novice meditators to lay a sound foundation for their future practise. (Novices to sitting meditation maybe, but surely not to Qigong...)

It is one of the few books that leaves you with the feeling that there is a roadmap for practise and you don't have to stumble about in your search. It relies on many sources instead of citing a single master.

One especially rare treasure is the section containing translations of selected Chinese texts about the topic. As Dr. Yang points out, one needs a strong understanding of the context of Qigong, of Chinese culture, Taoist philosophy and technical terms to be able to comprehend and translate without loss of meaning such original sources. Else the output could be flowery and incomprehensible poems obscuring the real content (possibly with intent) hidden within.

I can truly recommend this book to everyone interested in deeper energy meditation practise and Nei Gong. You won't regret, I'm sure. The writing can sometimes be redundant, dry and lengthy, but the knowledge is better given in a most detailed way instead of the most entertaining. Depending on your predisposition you may prefer Yang's writing style over others, don't take my or anyone other's word for it.
33 of 35 people found the following review helpful
1st-class guide for energetic Qigong students 4 Jun 2006
By The_Mage_Lestat - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Having entered popular Western consciousness, the subject of Qigong is currently awash with fluffy, vacuous verbiage from pompous self-styled experts whose only real interest is cashing in on a lucrative New-Age trend. This volume, although dense and difficult, reveals much authentic and vital knowledge to those who have had some experience of Qi and are not afraid of patient study and experiment. Dr. Yang is one of a handful of authors in this field who is both qualified and willing to share significant teachings that have heretofore been kept secret or deliberately obscure. His material is presented in a format that, while extremely concise, assiduously avoids being cryptic. If you are a lazy dabbler interested in yet another mealy-mouthed, feel-good text weighted down with pseudo-exotica, promising everything and delivering nothing, avoid this book. But if you have perceived a little of the reality of internal Qi and desire to systematically expand your practice and understanding, you will probably find this volume unusually rewarding.
21 of 24 people found the following review helpful
Well Rounded, and Supported by Modern Physics 22 Mar 2004
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is well written and covers both theory and practice. I read many books that pertain to consciousness, and I have found parallels between the concepts in this book and those in works such as "Stalking the Wild Pendulum" (Bentov), "The Physics of Consciousness" (Walker), and "The Dimensional Structure of Consciousness" (Avery). In addition to works of physics, support for these concepts can be found in Jungian Depth Psychology, especially Alchemical Studies. Also, there is a strong similarity between Qigong and Kundalini Yoga. Of course, Qigong and Yoga have been around much longer than depth psychology or modern physics. Read this book, as well as other books by Dr. Yang; you may even want to read "The Root of Chinese Qigong" before reading this book.
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