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ZhongDaoTaiChi & QiGong & TCM

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48 contributions to ZhongDaoTaiChi & QiGong & TCM
Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-46
[46] During my internship in treating patients, I observed various reactions of qi in the patients. I'm not sure what kind of pathological phenomenon this is. Some patients have cool qi in their body, some have hot qi, some have qi rushing out from their abdomen or back, some have convulsions, and some have qi being drawn inward. Is this a pathological reflection of deficiency, excess, cold, heat, or deficiency and excess, cold and heat, or meridians and internal organs? Don't worry about anything. If you engage in the practice of ZhiNeng and try to deal with these issues, your proficiency will not improve. Some students want to study the yin-yang, exterior-interior, cold-heat, deficiency-excess, meridians-and-organs concepts of traditional Chinese medicine. If you delve into these things, you will no longer be practicing ZhiNeng, we are about not dealing with these things. Many of our students during their internships do not experience these sensations. The teachers in the rehabilitation department also do not experience these sensations. Just let your consciousness not focus on these,There is no help in studying those things. Building the Qi field, you don't even know the nature of the disease, but you can still recover. ZhiNeng starts from simplicity and the fundamental principles, emphasizing practicality. ZhiNeng works for both living and non-living things, without discrimination. I hope that all of you can put aside the past knowledge of qigong, and learn more about the basic theories of intelligence cultivation. Only then can you study the mysteries of intelligence cultivation as a whole and exert its power.
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Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-46
Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-45
[45] When a teacher giving Qi therapy to treat a patient, the patient always feels extremely cold all over. If others who practice together with him also feel cold, why is that? If it is a sensation of extremely sharp coldness, so cold that it makes one uncomfortable, it is not normal. One should pay attention to adjusting and add the intention of "heating"; if it is a somewhat chilly but comfortable feeling, then it is normal and there is no need to worry about it. Because everyone's qi varies due to different personalities and constitutions. Of course, the neutral qi is the best.
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Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-45
Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-44
[44] If you give Qi to a cancer patient and after a long time (sometimes even for a couple of days), you accidentally smell the stench (or the smell of traditional Chinese medicine) emanating from him, what could be the reason for this? Don't pay attention to these issues. If there is an unpleasant smell, don't pay attention to it. Let others smell it and you can also tell them: Do you smell anything? At this point, if others do smell it, you may not be able to detect it yourself. Therefore, the unpleasant smell might be caused by concentrated thinking or might be fabricated out of nothing. After understanding this principle, if there is indeed an unpleasant smell, if you focus your intention: "It's gone!", then it will indeed be gone. We should use positive intentions to generate positive energy and achieve good results.
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Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-44
Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-43
[43] When treating others, sometimes I feel dizzy or have a headache. What's the reason for this? This is because your intention is too strong. You just need to think of them getting better in a relaxed way. Do we exert force when concentrating on doing things in our daily life? No. If we do, the qi will be blocked instead, causing dizziness and headache, and it won't achieve the desired effect. The same principle applies to treating diseases. Therefore, the more relaxed you are, the better.
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Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-43
Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-42
[42] After getting treated for an illness, if one feels dry in the mouth, what's the reason? It's because the spirit is too tense. When the mind is tight, there will be more heat. Traditional Chinese medicine says, "Excess qi is fire." Qigong also says, "Excess intention is fire." When getting treated, if one smiles and relaxes the spirit, the dryness in the mouth will disappear. Not only when getting treated, but also when practicing qigong, if the spirit is too tense, dryness in the mouth may occur.
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Dr. Pang's Q&A on Qigong Therapy-42
1-10 of 48
Xu Hongzhi
4
18points to level up
@xu-hongzhi-6939
QI healer and Fitness Coach, over 30 yearsof teaching experience. I enjoy communicsting eith like-minded people to mutual benefit and progress.

Active 50d ago
Joined Oct 6, 2025
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