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Dear Friends, Students, and Colleagues,
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Be sure to empty your cache periodically, so you are viewing the most recent information rather
than an “ancient” saved version. Believe it or not, I receive phone calls every few months from
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years! And you thought I was a ludite!

PUBLICATIONS AND MEDIA

The October 2009 Mayo Clinic Health Letter was titled: “October Special Report on Tai Chi and
Yoga.” Written by a Mayo physician who has attended my seminars and classes, it draws on my
qigong work as well as the Tai Chi teachings of my colleague, Master Yang Yang. To sign up for
a free trial issue of the Health Letter or to subscribe, go to
https://healthletter.mayoclinic.com/NL/print/landing.cfm?trkid=20909S893

Oprah has clips from my audios on her site.
http://www.oprah.com/search.jsp?query=Qigong&x=24&y=6

A brief interview about how to develop and enhance intuition was published in “Owning Your
Sixth Sense” by Debra Bokur in Healing Lifestyles & Spas Magazine, November 2009
http://www.healinglifestyles.com/index.php/owning6thsense

The Way of Qigong: Health, Energy, and Wisdom” by Kenneth Cohen in Connections Fall 2009,
magazine of the Natural Health Practitioners of Canada. To read the magazine and article, visit
the following website and then click on Connections Fall 2009
http://www.nhpcanada.org/pages/Links/Publications.aspx

“ The Qigong Getaway: Sequences for Life” by Susan Dawson-Cook in American Fitness
Magazine Sept/Oct 2009, based on an interview with Kenneth Cohen

“ Buddha In A Cup of Tea” listen to the free podcast interview with Kenneth Cohen and read a
transcription at http://personallifemedia.com/podcasts/236-buddhist-geeks/episodes/52961-
buddha-cup

Read my article "The Tribe I Wouldn't Join", published in May 2009 in News from Indian Country,
the national American Indian newspaper, archived at
http://indiancountrynews.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6539&Itemid=74 I
discuss what it means to be a member of an indigenous tribe/Nation and why I am critical of
people who claim membership neither recognized nor earned.

My review of David A. Palmer’s exceptional book Qigong Fever was published in American
Ethnologist 36:1 (2009).

"Insights from the Edge: Ken Cohen and the Power of Qi" This podcast interview aired in April 2010 and is archived at http://www.soundstrue.com/podcast/?p=1623

"Sacred Ceremonials for the Salish Sea" was held on Earth Day, 2010 in Olympia, Washington and attended by indigenous elders from Washington State and as far away as New Zealand. My poem in honor of water was posted on the website for this event.. http://sacredceremonialsforthesalishsea.wordpress.com/2010/04/11/water-poem-by-ken-bear-hawk-cohen/

In July 2010, I was interviewed about Native American healing and spirituality by Raven Redbone. His show "Make No Bones About It" is broadcast from Everett, Washington on KSER 90.7 FM. The interview is archived at http://ravenredbone.podomatic.com/entry/2010-07-12T01_29_15-07_00


" The Breath of Tao" book chapter and translations from Taoist classics, also a beautiful chapter on Mexican indigenous traditions by Grace Alvarez Sesma in Meditations for Interspiritual Wisdom: Practices and Readings from the World's Spiritual Traditions, edited by Netanel Miles-Yepez (Santa Barbara, CA: Spiritual Paths Publishing, 2011)

My colleague, Qigong and Tai Chi Master Ray Hayward has compiled an exceptional book on Tai Chi, Lessons with Master Liang, T'ai-Chi, Philosophy, and Life. You will understand my excitement when you read my foreword to this book.
 
Other recently published works include:
--Chinese Medical Qigong. Three chapters translated by Kenneth Cohen (Philadelphia: Singing Dragon, 2010)
--"Why I Am Against the Arizona Immigration Law: Your Papers Please" News from Indian Country, June 2010
--"In Harmony with the Tao: The Musical Roots of Qigong" Qi: The Journal of Traditional Eastern Health and Fitness 20:3, Autumn 2010
--"Taoists, Doctors and Shamans, Part 1" The Empty Vessel Fall 2010
--"Taoists, Doctors and Shamans, Part 2" The Empty Vessel Winter 2011 --“The Real Internal Martial Arts” in the July/August, 2011 issue of Kung Fu Tai Chi Magazine
--“The Essence of Martial Power” in the September/October, 2011 issue of Kung Fu Tai Chi Magazine
--“The End of Stress” a three-part (1 hr. each) web seminar published by Sounds True, available for purchase and download, includes lectures on the biology of stress and how qigong treats stress. Each session includes a slide show (based on my medical school presentations) and discussion, a guided qigong meditation, and answering questions. Cost: $20/session or $49 for all three. You can order it by clicking on the cd/dvd section of the catalog on this website.
--“Birds and Humans” in Keepers News (newsletter of the Keepers of the Sacred Tradition of Pipemaking), Summer 2011
--“Mind Matters: The Role of Intent in Healing” in the August 2011 issue of Yang-Sheng e-magazine, at www.yang-sheng.com
--"Wilderness As Medicine: Native American Healing" a chapter in the medical school textbook Wilderness Medicine 6th Edition (Elsevier, 2012), edited by Paul S. Auerbach, MD, Stanford University School of Medicine.

EXCERPTS FROM E-NEWSLETTERS BY KENNETH COHEN
Text and Photos ©Kenneth Cohen, unless other source noted

Medication in Motion

In May 2009, Harvard University Medical School published a report on "The Health Benefits of Tai Chi" that calls Tai Chi "medication in motion." Since Tai Chi is a subset of Qigong, all of this information applies to Qigong as well. It cites research for "No Pain, Big Gains" including improvements in muscle strength, flexibility, balance, and aerobic conditioning. Under the category "Tai Chi for Medical Conditions" it recommends Tai Chi as complementary therapy for arthritis, low bone density, breast cancer, heart disease, heart failure, hypertension, Parkinson's disease, sleep problems, and stroke. You can read the entire report at http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/Harvard_Womens_Health_Watch/2009/May/The-health-benefits-of-tai-chi?print=1

As we would expect from a conservative publication, Harvard has only noted information supported by peer-reviewed publication or research. It is important to realize, however, that the range of effective applications far, far exceeds this report, for several reasons:

  1. Like medical doctors, most Qigong practitioners are too involved in their practice and service to spend time writing up and submitting the results of their work for publication. I can personally attest to this. I have a huge amount of data from former clients who have experienced remission from late stage cancers, type-two diabetes, migraine headaches, chronic pain, multiple sclerosis symptoms, chronic fatigue syndrome, and many other conditions. I have dozens of articles "on the back-burner " (foreign readers: this is American slang for procrastination and delay).

    Admittedly, some of this delay is for financial reasons. There is no financial compensation for medical journal or textbook writing. Independent scholars, without university funding, simply cannot pay the bills if they spend too much time presenting research.

  2. Some excellent research remains unpublished because it threatens corporate sponsors (such as pharmaceutical companies) or the personal prejudices of the journal editors. Science has become scientism, a new religion, in which facts are dismissed if they don't match pre-existing theory. And this is, ironically, the opposite of real science, in which theory is supposed to follow observation. "Even if it were true I wouldn't believe it," said one so-called medical researcher. Or here's a winner: Elmer Green, Ph.D submitted results of energy medicine research (that included Qigong) to a prestigious peer-reviewed science journal. In a rejection letter, the journal's editor wrote, "We could find no fault with the science, but are concerned that the subject matter will offend our readers."

  3. University teachers are often hesitant to publish research that questions the status quo if they are being considered for tenure. They may also fear censure by colleagues. Remember what happened to Robert Becker, MD, when he reported the harmful physiological effects of electromagnetic radiation? His lab was immediately shut down.

  4. There is also the security factor. Imagine that you have invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in your medical school education and practice and subscribed to a mechanistic model of health in which disease is treated primarily by cutting (surgery) or medicating. Now you discover that there are more effective, inexpensive, non-medical interventions for many (though certainly not all) of the diseases you treat. Worse still-what if many aspects healing (and life) cannot be known, measured, or controlled? Many physicians and scientists retreat in fear or misplaced aggression against "alternative" medicine.

  5. Quality case reports and clinical studies often go unreported because the Qigong practitioner knows that they are not replicable. There is a certain magic that occurs when a Qigong master tunes in to the unique needs of a particular student/client. The "prescription" of exercises, meditations, and/or healing treatments may not apply to another person with the same disease label. Additionally, the efficacy of a therapy is influenced by the presence and sensitivity of the healer and the receptivity of the patient. Placebo is also a factor: the belief system of the patient and degree of congruence with the healer's philosophy of health. All of these variables make it impossible to truly replicate Qigong research.

How Popular are Qigong and Other Healing Systems in the U.S.?

According to a December 2008 report by the National Center for Health Statistics, a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Qigong is increasing in popularity. Extrapolating from the sample of approximately 30,000 adults, there were 527,000 adults practicing Qigong in 2002, and 625,000 in 2007, an increase of 18.6% in five years. This does not include more than two million Tai Chi practitioners also counted. This bodes very well for improvements in U.S. healthcare (in spite of lack of preventive med support in U.S. healthcare reform). And it also promises more career opportunities for students in my Qigong Teacher Training! The Qigong Research & Practice Center Qigong Teacher Training was the first program of its kind in the world, established during the 1970s, when qigong was still illegal in the People's Republic of China.

Students of indigenous healing will find it interesting that the category "Traditional [indigenous] Healers" was included in the 2007 survey. A total of 812,000 U.S. adults visited traditional healers, including 21,000 to Curanderos or Curanderas and 224,000 to Native American medicine men or women. And although Mesoamerican herbal medicine and Mesoamerican massage therapy are often included in the category of "curanderismo" many respondents identified these as separate healing modalities. Within the same total of 812,000 adults, 41,000 visited Hierberos or Yerberas (Mesoamerican herbalists) and 267,000 visited Sobadors (Mesoamerican massage therapists).

In the "race and ethnicity" category included in the 2007 survey, we find that American Indians and Alaska Natives have the highest percentage of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) usage, followed closely by Native Hawi'ian and Pacific Islanders, Whites, and Asians. African Americans and Hispanics report about half the usage of the other races.

As expected, CAM usage generally increases with economic and educational status.

To me, all of this points to the need for more outreach (financial and physical accessibility) among CAM practitioners and educators into Black and Latino communities, where these services are in great need.

The Power of Love
A Native American elder once shared with me, "There is no power stronger than Creator's Love."
His phrasing was deliberately fluid: love for Creator, love from Creator, love for Creation, love for
our friends and family. Isn't the Lakota phrase Mitakuye Oyasin "We are all related." an
expression of the unity and harmony so often associated with love? I have been in Native
American sweat lodges where people with serious diseases were healed when, through prayer
and song, a caring community invoked the healing power of Love. Every culture recognizes this
power. The Troubadours of ancient Europe, influenced by both Muslim Sufi mysticism and
Christianity, praised the unity of agape (divine love), amor (personal love), and eros (sexual love).
The Chinese celebrate Lover's Day on the 7th day of the 7th month, when two stars-- once mortal
lovers on earth-- cross the sky on a bridge of bird feathers. It is always cloudy that night, so we
cannot see what is happening in the heavens. And it always rains early the next morning-- the
tears of the departing lovers.

The Learning Journey

Aunty Lani, a hula teacher, once said to me, “All wisdom is not to be found in one school.” A ohe pau ko ike I kou halau. This means not only humility—the realization that what we know is tiny compared to what we don’t know, but also acknowledging the importance of broad, open-minded learning. Yet we must also keep in mind that it is better to dig a few deep wells than many shallow wells.

I was reminded of these truths during winter and early spring pilgrimages. My wife Grace and I visited sacred sites in the Yucatan—Chichen Itza, Tulum, Cozumel—met with Mayan healers and had the good fortune of being in the right place at the right time. Imagine being invited to the home of an Aztec gentleman to view and enjoy his
collection of more than 800 pre-Hispanic musical instruments! Or spending hours with a Mayan cultural historian, who we met by “chance” on a trail in San Gervasio, home of Ix-Chel, Mayan Moon Goddess/Spirit. These beautiful people spoke the universal language of kindness, insight, and generosity. They had dug “wells” deep enough to tap the common water of spirit.

A month later, during the Equinox Celebration on an Indian reservation in northern Mexico, we met a group of Yaqui Indian youth, elders, and wisdom-keepers. Poor by material standards, but rich in culture—they had traveled a great distance, including many miles by foot, boat, and bus, to share their heritage.

As they played traditional instruments, sang, and danced to honor the Deer and the Coyote, they seemed to become these animals. I was reminded of a teaching I received in the early 70s while studying the 12 Animals of the martial art Xingyi Quan with B.P. Chan.

One day, in a private class, after practicing the Chicken technique, Master Chan frowned and said, “ Your movement is correct but all wrong!” Seeing my puzzled look he explained, “Don’t imitate the chicken; become the chicken!” at which point, without even bending his knees, he suddenly jumped on a nearby chair. He landed balanced on one leg, folded his elbows near his body, raised them up and down as though flapping a pair of wings, and exclaimed, “You see. I am a chicken!”

Healing Sounds
The great Lakota holy man, Fools Crow once said, “Everything that exists has a sound, and when
things pass close by one another there is even a sound between them. This is how sound comes
into being. Wakan-Tanka, Grandmother Earth, and other Helpers use sounds to communicate to
us-- sometimes in words, but more often to stir up our minds and hearts to think of spiritual
things.” (Fools Crow: Wisdom and Power by Thomas Mails, p. 81)

Reverence for sound is universal. Ancient texts from India emphasize that Sabda is Brahman,
“ Sound is Divine.” In Genesis, “God said, “Let there be light, and then there was light.” Thus,
sound or vibration creates light, which precedes the creation of the world. African drums are more
than a method of communication across jungle and savannah; their complex rhythms remind us
that life is rhythm. Archaeologists have discovered that many Upper Paleolithic (10,000 to 40,000
year old) art and ceremonial sites, such as the famous Lascaux caves in France, were picked for
their acoustic properties. The most densely painted European rock art sites have the best
acoustics. To hum near a bend or crack in a wall produces the sound of the animal portrayed
there. I am reminded of the Great Pyramid of Kukulkan in Chichen Itza, Mexico. If you clap your
hands near the base, you hear, clearly and loudly, the sound of a macaw bird. “It’s not an echo,”
our guide explained, “it’s acoustics.”

In China, sound and music were considered keys to social harmony, spiritual cultivation, and
inner health. From very ancient times, at the beginning of each season, particular notes were
played on musical instruments. The sound of Spring puts one in touch with the qi, the energies of
spring, and preserves well-being. Chimes and gongs were already ancient by the time of
Confucius. Taoists loved the great qing, stone chime—the most sacred consisting of stalactites
from sacred caves. To create harmony in oneself or in the world, one might strike the instruments
of yang, yin, and taiji (harmony of yin and yang). The yang instrument is the metal gong. The yin
instrument is a hollow piece of wood, called the mu yu, wooden fish, commonly used by
Buddhists and Taoists to set a beat while chanting. The instrument of Taiji is the drum. During the
festive Lion and Dragon dances, the sound of the drum brings health and good fortune.

Not surprisingly, one of the central principles of qigong is called “tuning” (tiao), the same word
used in the phrase “tune the piano.” One tunes the body, breath, and mind with correct posture,
slow breathing, and equanimity. Sound is also used directly as a healing tool. There are mantralike
chants to stimulate the three dan tian energy centers at the third eye, heart, and lower
abdomen or to invoke deities and the qualities they represent, such as the beloved Guan Yin
chant to inspire compassion. Through the practice of nei guan, inner looking, ancient Taoists saw
and heard the qualities of the internal organs, and by visualizing their respective colors and toning
their sounds, one restores metabolic health. This “Healing Sounds” exercise, called Liu Qi Fa
(Six Qi Method) in Chinese, is associated with some of the greatest figures in ancient qigong
history. First mentioned by the alchemist Tao Hongjing (456-536), it is also described in the
writings of Buddhist monk Zhiyi (538-597), and in the classic works of the great Chinese medical
doctor Sun Simiao (581-682). In modern times, the late Dr. Ma Litang created the Liu Zi Jue (Six
Word Secret) by combining the Healing Sounds set he learned during the 1930s with elements of
Chinese medicine. Dr. Ma’s qigong is one of the most clinically effective and tested methods of
modern qigong. His set is one of the four styles officially endorsed by the Chinese government:
Six Word Secret, Five Animal Frolics, Eight Brocades, and Muscle/tendon Transforming.

I have a strong personal interest in this area, as it was my love of music that first brought me to
study the Chinese language. In 1968 my friend Alan Watts recommended a book on music theory
that contained a philosophy very close to Zen Buddhism. By mistake, I bought a book of the same
title, but by the wrong author. I was looking for a book about music, but ended up with a very rare
introduction to the Chinese language. By the time I read the first chapter, I was hooked! That was
in 1968. In the 1970s I had the opportunity to learn the Healing Sounds set from a Taoist friend
and from three other colleagues, one of whom was a student of Dr. Ma Litang. All through this period, I continued listening to music. I am convinced that music conditioned my brain to make
me a better learner, a kind of Mozart-effect, as people call it today (the term coined by another
friend and colleague, Don Campbell).

Real Kung-Fu
It's the end of an era. Inside Kung-Fu (IKF), the magazine that thirty-eight years ago introduced qigong and Chinese martial arts to North America and that served as a source of knowledge and inspiration early in my training, published its last issue in 2011. I imagine that they could no longer compete with the numerous free online journals and the general decline in American literacy. When IKF began, kung-fu was exotic and esoteric. Later, with the David Carradine TV series and Bruce Lee movies, it became a fad. And finally kung-fu (or the more accepted term wu shu) was recognized as a sport, discipline, and valid form of exercise or athletic training. In fact, the word "kung-fu" means not martial arts, but discipline, practice, and patience. In common Chinese usage, a person who is good at martial arts has kung-fu; one who is poor at martial arts lacks it. It seems to me that in our modern world, with its emphasis on technology and instant gratification, most people would rather do a google search than develop kung-fu.

Qigong: Real or Placebo?
I recently had the honor of presenting at the leading Chinese Medicine symposium in the United States. To my delight, there were about 700 very enthusiastic students in my lecture “Qigong for Cancer: An Evidence-Based Approach to Chinese Energy Medicine” and about 200 in my beak-away 3 hour workshop on Primordial Qigong.

Attendees, mostly acupuncturists, were probably surprised to see on the opening page of the Symposium website that all 63 hours of course work at the Symposium were approved for California continuing education units “except Ken Cohen’s lecture.” The background story brings out some absurdities in U.S. education and professional licensing. My lectures have been hosted by numerous medical schools, hospitals, and medical organizations, including the American Cancer Society, the Mayo Clinic, the American Association of Medical Acupuncture (medical doctors who practice Chinese medicine), the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, the University of Arizona School of Medicine, Abbott Northwestern Hospital, and so on. Physicians and nurses are able to get continuing education credits for my programs. Yet acupuncturists cannot. Why? My course was rejected by the California acupuncture board because treating cancer with qigong, EVEN AS COMPLEMENTARY THERAPY, “falls outside the scope of TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) practice.” By law, TCM doctors are only allowed to treat the side-effects of conventional (and sometimes unproven) western therapies. They can treat the nausea, pain and discomfort that follow chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. But they cannot, legally, treat cancer directly, and have little access to any supportive evidence, unless it is offered not-for-credit and outside of standard TCM school curricula.

I explained to the students in my lecture that I am not a physician and cannot offer medical advice regarding the prevention, diagnosis, or treatment of disease. Yet, it is my PERSONAL OPINION, that the evidence for the effectiveness of qigong far exceeds that of many standard western interventions for cancer. And I don’t give a damn about being politically correct. I received a hearty round of applause, and warm email feedback continues to pour in.

Of course many skeptics claim that qigong is “only placebo,” the power of positive beliefs and expectation. But then how do we explain why External Qi Healing (qi projected from the hands of a trained healer) works on mice, rats, and cell cultures? We presume that the mouse doesn’t believe in the power and charisma of the healer!

And if we are to cry “placebo,” let’s be fair. At least 1/3 of all healings attributed to western medicine are due to placebo, the natural course of the disease, or other unknown factors. A leading scientific methodology expert from the NIH told me, “When both patient and physician believe in the efficacy of treatment, the level of placebo effect jumps to 2/3.” I am certainly not denying the miracles of western medicine. It is can be absolutely life-saving if you have a bacterial infection, diabetes, are injured in a car accident, for some cancers, and for a host of other conditions. But we should not demand 100% evidence-based effect for qigong when we don’t make the same demands of medical science. And if you think that western medicine is supported by better research or “statistically significant” results, think again. Read this just published article from Science News. http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/335872/title/Odds_Are%2C_Its_Wrong
“ It’s science’s dirtiest secret,” the authors tell us, “The ‘scientific method’ of testing hypotheses by statistical analysis stands on a flimsy foundation.”

To put it simply, unproven therapies are given the stamp of approval, while many clinically effective interventions are unapproved, non-reimbursed (by insurance), and rarely funded, whether for research or public education. This is a terrible disservice to the patient and a betrayal of the Hypocritic, I mean Hippocratic Oath.

An Historic Unreported Event

On Saturday November 5, 2011 Grace and I attended a beautiful Native American event at San Diego’s popular Market Creek Plaza, a place once and still sacred to its original inhabitants, the Kumeyaay Indian Nation. Amidst joyous songs, speeches, feasting, and gift-giving, there was a ceremonial unveiling of a magnificent traditional basket. Only this basket was about 6 feet in diameter and sculpted in stone by Kumeyaay artist Kenneth Banks. It is good to see a public recognition of the Kumeyaay and the beauty of their culture.

Yet, in spite of the day’s historical and cultural importance, there were only a handful of people attending, I would guess about 25. Where were the TV crews and newspaper reporters? Are San Diego residents and media so ignorant of, or embarrassed and ashamed of their history that they would rather view art in a museum, so they can safely assume that such art represents a past that no longer exists? San Diego County probably has more reservations than any urban area in the U.S.; yet I have spoken to locals who are unaware that there are still Indians in the region. Casinos yes. But Indians? Euro-Americans are still looking for red men wearing war bonnets and riding on mustangs.

 

 

 

 

 



Radiation and Toxicity
Please join me in prayers for the people, animals, plants, land, and water of Japan.

I am sure you know that it only takes an incredibly small amount of radioactive material to cause cancer and radiation-induced disease. The jet stream is capable of pushing radioactivity from the area around Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Reactor to the West Coast of the United States in six to ten days. From there, wind currents could continue to disperse it across the continent. The only way to truly prevent radiation-caused disease is by avoiding radiation, including radiation-contaminated food (such as contaminated milk products, the principle carrier for radioactive iodine). However, there are some measures that may reduce disease risk. Evidence suggests that potassium iodide, found in seaweed, may prevent radioactive iodine from fall-out from binding with the thyroid and other tissues in the body. Make sure there is iodine in your diet before exposure and during, as iodine is eliminated from the body in one to three days.

Seaweed has many important properties. It contains numerous minerals in addition to iodine, such as calcium, iron, phosphorous, and zinc. Chemicals in seaweed bond with heavy metals such as lead, mercury, and radioactive elements such as cesium, strontium, and barium. Research conducted at Montreal’s McGill University and elsewhere have demonstrated that alginate, a chemical found in brown seaweed such as kelp, can remove radioactive substances deposited in the body even long after the initial exposure. In a series of experiments, alginate was able to remove radioactive elements such as strontium and cesium from the bones of people who had been exposed to airborne radiation during the height of nuclear testing in the 1950s.

There have been reports that Japanese people who ate a traditional diet suffered less radiation effects after Nagasaki and Hiroshima than people who did not adhere to these traditions. At first it was assumed that the protective agent was miso, a fermented soybean product used as the base in Japanese miso soup (my favorite breakfast). Today, most researchers agree that it was probably the seaweed commonly added to miso soup that had the preventive effects.

Various edible seaweeds bond with different substances. Therefore it is important to eat a variety of seaweeds such as dulse, nori, kelp, wakame, and hiziki. These are delicious added to rice, soups, salads, or in sushi. Add a little ground nori to toasted sesame seeds and salt for a delicious condiment. As with all dietary changes, eat new foods in moderation and check with your doctor to assure that you don’t have any condition for which seaweed is inadvisable. Also, it is essential that you eat only organic seaweed taken from pure waters. You can generally find seaweed products in a health food store.

Many people eat seaweed because of other benefits. The fiber found in kelp and brown colored seaweeds reduces fat absorption by 75%. Research funded by the National Institutes of Health and conducted at Georgia Tech and the University of the South Pacific has identified ten new seaweed compounds found in Fijian red seaweed, Callophycus serratus, that may lead to new anti-cancer drugs. These chemicals were found to kill human cancer cells (especially cervical cancer), as well as staph and other bacteria.

Many of the healthful properties of seaweed were/are known by coastal Native Americans, whose diets included foods such as seaweed and fish oil that are now the object of “cutting edge” research. As one example, in the 1920s the famous novelist Jack London, author of Call of the Wild, introduced his friend, Dr. Joseph V. Wachter, who had incurable tuberculosis, to his Tlingit Indian friends in Nome, Alaska. They treated Wachter with seaweed poultices and infusions and other traditional medicines for six months. After his cure, he walked 10,000 miles back to New York City and devoted the rest of his life to seaweed research and product development.

The current concerns about radiation should remind us about the everyday need to avoid or reduce toxic exposure from any source. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reports that there are more than 3.8 billion pounds of toxic chemicals released into the US environment every year. 25% of the U.S. population has heavy metal poisoning. Our ability to handle environmental toxins is likely decreasing because of “toxic load”—the total of all toxic exposures, from whatever source, that affects human physiology. To put it simply, if we were only exposed to small amounts of herbicides, insecticides, or air pollution, the effect might be negligible. But, add multiple exposures together, and one reaches a threshold beyond which even the slightest physiologic insult pushes one into a diseased state. Consider the following factors that influence this toxic threshold

• Insecticides, herbicides, drugs, solvents, metals
• Infections (viral and bacterial) and parasites
• Biological inhalants: molds, algae, pollens
• Physical phenomena: EMFs, Ionizing radiation
• Lifestyle-- drinking, smoking
• Mechanical problems such as arthritis and spinal injuries
• Biomechanical dysfunction: nasal, intestinal, gall bladder, kidney, etc.
• Allergies and food intolerance (the most universal: wheat and milk)
• Hormonal Imbalance: DHEA/cortisol, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, thyroid, etc.
• Stress of sound pollution, light pollution (excess light), mal-illumination (insufficient natural light), and lack of the biologically normalizing effects of nature: “nature deficit disorder”
• Psychosocial factors: emotional stress and trauma, poor coping skills, rigid belief systems

In addition to ingesting seaweed, it is important to have a balanced diet that includes garlic, onions, and the cruciferous vegetables such as cabbage, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts, as these improve the detox power of the liver. I also recommend drinking tea (see the chapters on tea and diet in my book The Way of Qigong). Healthy lifestyle, emotional balance, and a clean environment are essential to prevent illness. And, of course, I highly recommend qigong as an effective way to improve health and mitigate the effects of environmental toxicity.

How Will You Celebrate This Important Holiday?
If the United States has a Columbus Day, shouldn’t Italy have a day to commemorate the discovery of their country? On September 22, 1973, Ojibwe activist and artist Adam Fortunate Eagle landed in Italy in full regalia, and planting his ceremonial spear in the ground, took possession of that country by "right of discovery" (as established in European law). To the credit of Native American peoples (and contrary to the colonial history of Europeans in the Americas), since the discovery of Italy, neither land nor people have been pillaged. There has been no enslavement, and taxes and other levies have not been imposed. From the beginning of its civilized history, nearly 40 years ago, there has been no attempt to forcibly educate or convert Italian people, although the Pope did have the nerve to present his ring to Mr. Fortunate Eagle when they met. It was a stand-off, as Mr. Fortunate Eagle presented his own turquoise ring to the Pope. Neither graced the other with a bow or a kiss. Indeed, Native American tribal courts have treated Italians fairly, and never questioned their humanity (Native Americans were not categorized as human beings in U.S. courts until the late 1800s). Considering all of this, it is a travesty that there is no "Adam Fortunate Eagle Day" celebrated in Italy or the rest of Europe.

Postscript: Learn more about this great man, (perhaps best known for inspiring and leading the occupation of Alcatraz in 1969) in the DVD Contrary Warrior: The Life and Times of Adam Fortunate Eagle. My wife and I had the honor of enjoying the hospitality of Mr. Fortunate Eagle and his wife and the beauty of their art gallery in the fall of 2011.

Appreciation for Life
Below are some haiku I wrote during the cool, rainy spring season in the Colorado Rocky
Mountains. Both reading and writing haiku are wonderful ways to tune in to what poet William
Wordsworth called “the poetic moment,” a moment of passing beauty expressed in words. Or as
the Chinese Poetry Classic put it, more than 2,000 years ago, Shi yan zhi, “Poetry speaks the
wishes of the heart.”

Japanese haiku poetry, like other arts, owes much to China. Japanese artists refined and
simplified Chinese landscape paintings into the minimalist art of sumi—a few suggestive brush
strokes on a canvas with enough empty space for the imagination. Similarly, Chinese poems that
describe mountains and water with exquisite detail-- paintings made of words— inspired the
distilled poetic experience of haiku.

Thoughts disappear
As the world becomes one sound
In the rain.

How refreshing!
Bright rain pearls
On the spring aspen.

In spring mist
Mountain's granite face
Is softer.

When the mist blows in
An entire herd of elk
Disappears!

How sad, the modern world;
On the mountain slope
Not a single campfire.

Yes spring has come;
The air is criss-crossed
By trails of hummingbird sound!

A single songbird
Makes the pre-dawn silence
More mysterious.

Most of us associate the Chinese art/science of qigong with health, martial arts, and spiritual
cultivation. Indeed, these are the three classic categories of qigong: yi gong (health qigong), wu
gong (martial/sports qigong), and dao/fo gong (Daoist/ Buddhist qigong). However, I feel that
there is a much more basic, much more essential reason to train qigong, and that is appreciation
of life. Health is certainly important. Without it, we can enjoy little else. But there are limits to
health cultivation, set by our genetics, life circumstances, or the sometimes unpleasant
consequences of aging. To quote the famous Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, “Life is a disease with a very poor prognosis. It lingers on for years and invariably ends in death!” Like health qigong,
martial and sports qigong can help us maintain strength, flexibility, coordination, and energy--
important at every stage of our lives. Spiritual qigong includes practices that unfold inner peace,
contentment, and awareness of the great realm of being (The Tao) in which we live and may,
indeed, continue to live in after death of the body. Yet, ultimately, it is appreciation and joy of life
that creates meaning and fulfillment. To grimly or obsessively watch every calorie, sweat at the
gym, or train our qigong, is to miss the flowers! Both haiku and qigong can teach us how to live
more fully.

I remember a fine lesson I received from my first qigong teacher, B. P. Chan. It must have been
1974 or 5. I was at his studio one day for a private class in Bagua Zhang, a Chinese martial art
that includes extensive qigong energy building practices. Before starting our usual warm-ups,
Master Chan asked me, “Gao Han [my Chinese name], why do we practice these exercises?” I
knew he wanted to answer his own question, so I just repeated, “Why?” He stated, matter-offactly,
but with a penetrating gaze, “to find out, is this arm my arm, is this leg my leg, to master
the 4 Virtues of the Human Being. What are these 4 Virtues? How to lie down, how to sit, how to
stand, how to walk. If your arm were really your arm, if your leg were really your leg, you would
have no problem doing this…” At which point, Master Chan demonstrated a beautiful Bagua
movement in which his body seemed to twist, turn, and roll like a dragon playing in the clouds.
His point was well made; most of us are so disconnected from our bodies, so conditioned by poor
habits learned from others, and so distracted in our thoughts, that our bodies seem not our own.
At that point, Master Chan paid me one of the greatest compliments I have ever received, “Gao
Han, I can’t share this secret with most of my students. I can tell you because you are crazy like
me!” To appreciate life is to break from conditioning and convention. I was thrilled that Master
Chan saw me as a kindred unconventional character!

Tea Time: Cha Cha Cha
Flowers and songbirds in spring, tall grasses and full rivers in summer, colored leaves and crisp
moonlight in autumn, snow and silence in winter. And through all of these seasonal changes, we
celebrate with poetry, music, art, Tai Chi, and Tea. Tea harmonizes us with the seasonal
changes. All of the elements are present. Fire to boil the Water, Wood element in the green tea
leaves, Earth in the pottery teapot, and Metal representing the misty mountains where the tea
grows.

Of course, many people today are interested in tea because of its health benefits. Experimental
evidence suggests that tea may prevent or be a powerful adjunct in the treatment of cancer, heart
disease (lowering bad cholesterol), diabetes (increasing insulin sensitivity), osteoporosis, viruses
(such as the flu virus), and bacterial infection (including dental cavities). It has 200X the antioxidant
(anti-aging) power of vitamin E. Tea has always been the favorite beverage of qigong
practitioners, meditators, and acupuncturists. Of course, I am speaking only about true Tea (cha
in Chinese), an infusion of the leaves of camellia sinensis. Whether green, oolong, or black, it’s
the same plant. Please do not confuse tea, in this sense, with herbal beverages such as
chamomile or peppermint “tea.”

Tea is good for the heart, in both the Chinese and Western sense. In Chinese medicine, tea is
classified as bitter flavor—the flavor that directly influences heart function. The green color of the
leaves is associated with the liver, the source of heart-qi (energy) and the organ associated with
flow and adaptability. According to western science tea contains L-theanine, a mood-regulating
amino acid that creates a state of tranquil awareness. But there are qualities that cannot be easily
explained, the way the aroma of the brew expands the senses, the way time stops in the tearoom
and how mystery and beauty are found in the everyday.

Statements on this website have not been evaluated by the FDA. Information is provided for educational purposes only and is not meant to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease nor to substitute for medical advice by a licensed health-care professional.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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