Resurrecting Your Sexuality: Two
Yoga/Qigong Practices
by Elizabeth
Reninger
zone3
The Taoist world-view, and its associated yoga/qigong
practices, is based largely upon an understanding of the flow of energy,
within and outside of the human body, and includes an understanding of
sexual energy which is far more sophisticated than anything produced by
western culture. Integral to this understanding are what are known as “The
Three Treasures.” These Three Treasures represent three types (or
vibratory frequencies) of energy found in the human body: (1) Jing, or
generative energy, (2) Qi, or life-force energy, and (3) Shen, or
spiritual energy. Fundamental to all qigong/Taoist yoga practice,
including sexual/consort practices, is the waking up of Jing/generative
energy and its subsequent transformation into Qi/life-force energy and
Shen/spiritual energy. And then, conversely, the transformation of Shen
into Qi into Jing. In other words, the Taoist practitioner cultivates the
capacity to circulate energy freely between its various forms/frequencies:
from the most primal/mundane to the most refined/ephemeral … and back
again!
How exactly this happens is the subject of a vast field of enquiry
& practice called Internal Alchemy. If you’re interested in reading
about internal alchemy via classical Taoist texts, please see Eva Wong’s
translations (from the Chinese into English): “Harmonizing Yin and Yang,”
and “Holding Yin, Embracing Yang.” For a wonderful presentation of a
sequence of qigong practices (which include sexual practices), please
check out Eric Yudelove’s book “Taoist Yoga and Sexual Energy.” In this
and subsequent postings, I’ll be introducing some of these (and related)
practices, but they’re best done in the kind of long sequence that Eric
Yudelove lays out … and/or with the guidance of a flesh-and-blood
teacher.
Here’s a simple practice that you can try: sit at the very edge of a
firm straight-backed chair (a wooden kitchen chair is ideal), with your
feet on the floor and your knees directly above your heels. Your sitting
bones should be firmly planted on the chair, at the same time as most of
the length of your thighs extends out in front of it. Place your hands,
palms down, on the front of your thighs, in a way that allows your
shoulders to be relaxed, and let your belly be soft. Take a couple of deep
breaths, letting go of any tension you find in your face, jaw, or
neck/throat. Smile gently. Then, as you exhale, hinge forward at your
hips, bringing your head down toward the space between your knees. With
the very next inhale, reverse the process so you’re once again sitting
up-right. And repeat: exhale~down, inhale~up (like a crane, taking sips of
water from a lake) … Do your best, with each forward rotation, to rest the
entire front-side of your torso onto the front of your thighs. Continue
for a minute or two, then pause again in the upright position, and notice
how you feel.
The second part of the practice is done entirely from the upright
position (still sitting right at the edge of the chair, with your feet
planted firmly on the ground). It involves coordinating the movement of
your breath with the movement of your attention. As you inhale, feel your
sitting bones becoming more heavy, releasing more completely into the
chair. (You can imagine that your sitting bones are two heavy diamonds,
which you’re going to return to their home in the center of the earth.) As
you exhale, feel a spaciousness, expansion & gentle effervescence at
the center of your heart-space (that place behind the sternum/breastbone
and in front of the thoracic spine). And repeat: inhale~sitting-bones
heavy, exhale~heart-center spacious … Continue for a minute or two, then
pause, and notice how you feel.
This simple practice, if done regularly, has the power to wake up
fields of sensation which are quite interesting, and enjoyable … And can
serve as a ground for the continuing cultivation of Jing, Qi & Shen:
the Three Treasures which ~ from the point of view of Taoism ~ are the key
ingredients of a healthy sexuality, among many other things …
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Elizabeth Reninger holds Masters degrees in Sociology & Chinese
Medicine, is a published poet, and has been exploring Yoga ~ in its
Taoist, Buddhist & Hindu varieties ~ for more than twenty years. Her
teachers include Richard Freeman and Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche. For more
essays on yoga-related topics, please visit her website.
Yoga Related Articles:
Yoga and Your Health
Yoga for Mind Development
Yoga: The Complete Science of Life
Yoga Helps Kids Find Balance in Their Lives
Is Free Online Yoga Safe?
Pilates: Holistic Fitness Goes Retro
Yoga: Far More Than a 5,000-Year Old
Trend
Yoga For Men
Yoga for Fibromyalgia
Chronic Pain Release Through Yoga
|