Are you a benevolent host? A benevolent guest?

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This may be a shorter, one off post than some of the others. . .

 

Taoists (as well as people from many and most other practices) generally consider the human body to be a micro-cosm of the universe.  A universe within a universe. 

 

You may have heard an expression like “As above, so below” but haven’t given it much thought.

 

Take a minute to cue up your minds eye and visualize the rotation or orbit of the plantes in our solar system around our sun.  Now think of the orbits of protons and electrons around a neutron.  As above, so below.

 

What I am about to suggest to you requires more of a leap of capacity than faith, but it’s a leap that most normal people aren’t ready to make.

 

let’s start out with a simple illustration:

 

12345

 

What’s so special about this number?  Nothing, really.

 

But we’ll use it as an example. 

 

So we could read this as 1-2-3-4-5 or we can read it as twelve thousand, three hundred and forty five.

 

In this example, 1 is part of twelve thousand three hundred and forty five.  2 is part of it also.  So is 3 and 4 and 5.

 

However, the opposite is not true.  Twelve thousand, three hundred and forty five is not part of 1.  or 2.  or 3. 

 

Are you with me?

 

So . . . Quarks, Neutrinos, Protons, Neutrons, electrons, molecules, planets and galaxies are all part of our universe.  That’s not to say that our universe is part of any of those particular items, though, right?

 

Smaller systems are incorporated and are a part of larger systems that are similarly structured and follow similar laws

 

A man or a woman is part of a society.  A society is part of a species.  Etc.

 

So lets assume that the traditional Taoist view of the human body is correct, and that it is in fact, a micro-cosmic model of the universe.

 

Albert Einstein said that the most important decision you  make in life is whether or not you believe that the universe is a “friendly” place.

 

Of course, it’s friendly and unfriendly, just like the rest of nature.

 

But it leads to an interesting question . . .

 

“Are YOU a friendly universe?”

 

Again, if we assume that the historical Taoist cosmology is basically correct and that you are indeed a microcosm of the universe, than it makes sense that YOUR universe is teeming with life - or at least has life or capacity for life in much the same way as the larger system that you yourself inhabit.

 

Do you shake your head in agreement with Al Gore documentaries and chain smoke cigarettes while watching?

 

Do you purposely go out and through violence, over exertion, or whatever - destroy large amounts of your body or tissue before it’s natural time to die off and be replaced?

 

Do you live a life of physical, emotional, and psychological excess, or do you try to achieve a more homeo-static grounding?

 

This is a wake up call to people who know better but aren’t doing better

 

Preserve your body to follow its natural course.  Control your emotions to avoid the pollution of harsh neuro-chemicals into unknown worlds.  Take it easy, and when you “do unto others” remember that others might not just be the ones you see at your own level.  You are part of something bigger than yourself, and ultimately a bigger context for things that are smaller than yourself. 

You’re right not to want to be left outside the gate at Wudangquan.com . . .

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Hey gang,

 

I’ve been watching some interesting things unfold over the last few months.  The last year or so, actually and I want to take some time to talk about it for a while.

 

I’ve been really, really reluctant to talk about this for a while even though it’s something that I think needs a frank and open discussion - but to be totally honest, I’ve been  waiting for someone else to do it.

 

That’s not happening, so I guess I’m going to do it here and now.

 

First - let me give you a bit of additional background on me - within the context of martial arts, Taoism, and then finally within the context of that dirty word - “Marketing”.

 

People who are familiar with me know I like to break everything down into the simplest and most easily digestible memes possible.  I could sit here with my laptop at the secret headquarters in South East Asia and write a bunch of flower prose like a duchess with an opium pipe - or I can just give you the straight dope.

 

1.  I’ve been doing, and have been involved in Martial Arts since I was a kid

2.  I’ve been involved in some esoteric and high level qigong practices for years

3.  I am a clinical epileptic

4.  I have kleinfelders syndrome

5.  I have a background in online marketing, psychology, NLP, classical salesmanship, blah blah and have been exposed to and know some of the biggest players in this field

 

So I want to talk about each of these in a bit of detail. . .

 

My background in martial arts begins, like most people my age at the YMCA when I was a kid.  I also grew up in a “charasmatic” christian church.  Speaking in tongues.  The laying on of hands to cure illness, people being “slain” in the spirit, and everything that goes along with that.

 

One of my earliest “spiritual” memories was of my Sunday school class being more or less forced to go up on stage at church when a travelling evangelist was there.  Doing the whole “thing” that those guys do.

 

I watched as each of my Sunday school classmates were slain “in the spirit”, got the shakes and the heebie jeebies, and fell out backwards into the arms of the elders and deacons and then after a few moments of psycho-spiritual ctrl-alt-del came back up again, feeling better than ever.

 

When Brother Vodoo got to me, he encountered a horse of a different color, though. . .

 

One thing I always try to do is keep it real and give credit where credit is due and my man had some mojo.  I had already experienced some serious psycho-physical dissonance from my first epileptic seizures which had taken me out of body, and was . . . Let’s just say sensitive.

 

The thing about homeys mojo was that it was dark.  I inherently reacted to it, inherently understood that it was not benevolent energy, and resisted as much as a kid could in that situation - refusing to surrender and go down.

 

That’s all not to say that I had any psychological resistance to what he was doing on my own, because I was born into this kind of environment, and believed in it - and had experienced some pretty significant things of a “spiritual” nature on my own.

 

Just that I knew the difference between Charles Manson and Timothy Leary sitting in adjacent cells in San Quentin - both sitting in the full lotus positioin, meditating (and that actually did happen, as a historical footnote).

 

So rather than speak at such length about each of the other points, let me just mention that I have had a wide range of non-physical experiences, and by virtue of physiology (not to say that is the causal agent, because it’s not) have a naturally more balanced masculine/feminine side than most people. 

 

And you know the old saying - you can’t hustle a hustler?  I’ve spent most of my life on the streets.  I was a runaway at 14 years old or so (a fugitive in fact, after being one of the first juveniles in the USA charged with computer crime), and I never turned back.

 

It doesn’t take a lot of investigating (you can pick up the movie “invisible revolution” - or just ask around with people who were involved in radical/left wing politics who are my age) to figure out that I was probably one of the best and most feared streetfighters in the 90’s, either.

 

Without getting off an a tangent ninja aside, I realized at one point that I had gone off the deep end, and that my compassion had been manipulated and used to push me to begin enlightening along an evil path, and a materialist path.  So I got onto a plane with no return ticket and less than $50 to my name and went to India for a few years, then Thailand, then South Korea, then China, stubbornly resisting what I knew I really ought to be doing - for a long time.

 

I’ve also been around some of the most brilliant and cut throat marketers in the world, and have a pretty good sense of the power of suggestion, the manipulation of peoples jungle instincts, NLP, etc.

 

Still with me?

 

I’m getting to the point here, in a round about way

 

So that’s just a bit of contextual reference for what I’m about to say - which isn’t going to make me alot of friends. . .

 

It’s going to piss certain people off, and it’s going to create a bit of trouble for me personally, but nothing that I can’t clear up   . . .

 

It’s also something that although I don’t want to be the person saying it - I’m not afraid to say. 

 

The reason I’m not worried is because while there are people with legitimate power and empowerment who could literally crush me with a thought at this point - Those people are righteous individuals and are hip to the game (more so than me) enough to realize that their levels (read: levels, not states) share a direct correlation with their benevolence, their uprightness, their non-attachment, etc.

 

Also - I hope you understand that I don’t have material motives for saying what I’m about to say.  I’m not selling anything.  I’m not positioning myself as anything other than that “Indiana redneck with bad tattoos”,

 

Vampires can’t come into your house unless you invite them in first

 

Everybody knows that, right?

 

So let’s cut to the chase.

 

There are a couple of dangerous trends in the West that are being marketed as “Taoist” cultivation practices.

 

I’m thinking of one specifically, but there are a couple that are active to a lesser degree.

 

To get to the heart of the matter, we need to ask a couple of basic questions:

 

1.   What is the process and desired outcome of Taoist practice and cultivation at “high levels”?

 

The short answer is immortality and enlightenment. 

 

To become a “true” person. 

 

To transcend that true personhood, and return to the Tao.

 

2.  How is material being presented as “high level” Taoist cultivation being presented or -marketed- to  you?  What are the images or pictures that it conjures in your mind and your subconscious?

 

Are they things like:

 

·                     Physical power and domination of others?

·                     Sexual-energetic potency that will cause the opposite sex to orgasm with a touch or a look?

·                     Women on their knees convulsing in sexual ecstacy and bliss at the lotus feet of the “master”?

·                     Secret initiation into what others know, but you’ve hereto been kept out of?

 

3.  How is the language structured?

 

There is a place for purposeful misdirection and flipping off the light switch of cognition.  That’s the function of Zen koans.  To spin your gears out of control until the cognitive process breaks down under the duress of a feedback loop and causes that chattering “monkey mind” of yours to stop and achieve some measure of stillness or silent witnessing.

 

The Zen student is aware that they’re being given an unsolvable riddle to ponder though.

 

Examine the language structure and memes of some of the marketing material, and ESPECIALLY the behind closed doors speaking, paid seminars, etc.

 

Let me give you a quick example of how this is basically done covertly and with nefarious intent:

 

“For thousands of years, hidden deep in mountains, monasteries and the caves of secretive and reclusive Taoist masters, these sages have been producing ecstatic, bliss inducing orgasms from the very energy of the universe, leading them towards enlightenment, sexual bliss, and martial arts mastery to powerful to be shown in public - ever.

 

Imagine if all of that were about to change.  This sort of teaching only comes around once every 7 million years in public, and you’re right not to want to feel left behind and that’s why you must immediately register for this seminar, the chance to be in the presence of a true master, and receive guanding or a direct transmission of energy that will blah blah blah. . . . “

 

Anybody catch that?

 

It’s subtle and insidious, so you probably didn’t.

 

There’s lots more there than just this, but take a look at the last sentence.

 

“You’re right to not want to feel left behind . . . “  Is this a spatial-directional value or a subjective emotional value?  Your gears start to spin like rain man in a Zendo. . . .  You’re cognitive abilities lock up, your logic faculties freeze, and then - *BAM* you’re hit with the command suggestion.

 

 

It can be done alot easier than this, and produce much, much, much stronger effects - but there’s no point in me giving an example to the next would be recipient of the secret of secrets, is there?

 

Why do you cultivate? 

 

This is the critical question you have to ask yourself. 

 

If your motives are of a base nature - you want power and domination over others, you’re titillated by mounds of writhing orgasmic bodies at your feet, et al - I would suggest that like a bad case of the Syphillis - you might get more than you bargained for.

 

I can tell you honestly, from my own subjective experience that there are people with some special abilities.  Some of them good, and some of them who . . . have other motives.

 

You have to be careful about who you attach yourself to, and who (and what) you let get attached to you.

 

I hope that enough and enough of the right people will be able to read between the lines and give some serious thought about this, without me having to say alot of fantastic sounding things in a public space.  :)

 

So that’s it…

Wudang and Taoist Domains That Need To Be Developed

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So I’m sitting on a ton of domains that need to be developed, but I don’t really have time to do it.

 I’m willing to cover the hosting if anyone wants to develop the following domains into something that’s REALLY useful.

You can keep any profits if you make some money of ads or whatever.  All I want is a link back here.   The main point is I would like to see something cool and beneficial done with these:

lao-zi.net
zhuang-zi.net
sun-zi.net
kongfuzi.info

BookOfFiveRings.Org

KongMenQuan.Com
YuMenQuan.Com

TaoistMeditation.Net
TaoistMonk.Net
TaoistQigong.Net
TaoistTemple.Net

TaoYin.info Running Wudangquan.com is about all I really have time for, to tell the truth - because I want to do it right.

That means creating alot of free video, audio, and text content for free.

Other than here on the blog, you’ll notice that I am not even running any ads on the main site, because my motivation isn’t to make money from this.

But . . . I’ve got all these other good domains that are just going to waste.

Again, I’m willing to let somebody else run them, or sell them off completely to the right person with the right project.

If you’re interested drop me a line at jonathan at iamjonathan.com

Also - I have this really wierd domain and I don’t know what I should do with it . . . it’s Popullution.Com . . .  A pretty powerful meme, actually.

I was thinking about doing something related to hermits, or retreating from social life, but have no idea, really.  Any thoughts?

Today is Wednesday . . . Because of Visa issues during the olympics, I’m not going immediately to Wudang Shan, but will do a run down to Laos for a bit.

Will try to get some more content up in the meantime.

The Taoist Secret To Blowing Your Load 99 Times In 30 Seconds

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Not really . . .  To bad, so sad.

Later on tonight, I will be filming two new videos for the site.

They are:

  1. Understanding the Zhuang Zi
  2. An Introduction To Contemporary Taoism

But, I have this gut feeling about what people really want to see.

I guess, that alot of people are probably looking to see alot of video on internal martial arts, and training at Wudang.

And it’s coming, Don’t worry. . . There will be ample opportunity to see me (happily) made a fool of.  :)

I also am worried that some people might not understand why I’m posting the things I’m posting in the members area right now . . .

Why I’m posting so many videos and audio about traditional Taoist writing and theory:

There are multiple reasons for this, and it’s not really an accident, or because of a lack of other material that I could present instead.

The first, is that I personally am interested in study of this material.  So, while I’m doing that, I figure I might as well go ahead and make some shareable content out of my own study.  MP3’s you can listen to while walking or driving.  Videos you can watch that will provide (at least a minimal) audio visual input to help you internalize the material better.  PDF’s to read when you’re bored.

The second reason is because I enjoy doing it.

The third reason is because I think that before we begin higher level discussions or start putting higher level material out there, it’s important to create a solid ideological foundation.

Which brings us to the fourth and main reason . . .

I believe that it’s not a good idea to talk about high level concepts or processes without making every possible effort to talk about morality, first.

There are people who do this.

More specifically, lots of people mass market material on Taoist sexual practices.

My personal feeling about this issue is that I find it to be quite irresponsible.

There are several reasons why:

  • It easily encourages an attachment to lust
  • I believe that high level practices without a solid moral foundation can contribute to delusions and psychological disorders (Mainly wierd Messianic delusions and/or paranoia)
  •  When or If people experience any results,  or phenominalogical effects from these processes, they can easily go down a wrong path

 What I believe in, and what I’m trying to follow and share with people is orthodox Taoism.

At this point, there are hundreds of heterodox practices that are derivative of traditional Taosim.

From martial arts, to Chinese medicine, to Qigong, Feng Shui, Astrology and all sorts of other things.

All of them are good, I think.

But, peoples intentions, motivations, secret desires and hang ups aren’t always good.

Often, it seems like the reason people become involved in these practices are quite contrary to “the Tao”.

  • They seek to artificially influence something.
  • They want to control things rather than let them follow their natural course.
  • They hope to gain something that is not theirs to begin with.

 Hucksters, Charlatans and Fakes possess attributes which can be recognized

This is not a call out.  I’m not even saying that hucksters, charlatans and fakes don’t serve their purpose or have their place within the eco-system of Taoist cultivations.

Only that they can recognized.

Questions to ask yourself:

  • Is this person offering me something for “nothing”?
  • Is this person offering me a shortcut to enlightenment, martial ability, sexual power, well being, etc. that doesn’t require a proportionate sacrifice of worldly interests?
  • Does this person have my best interest at heart, or are they out for material gain?  Is the true value they’re providing me consistent with what they’re asking from me, materially?
  • Is this persons life, life style, and behavior consistent with what they’re teaching me?
  • What is my OWN motivation, and reason for doing this?  What am I really trying to pursue?  (I don’t mean the features, but the results.  Not Qigong, or Kung Fu, Or Feng Shui, but things like fame, money, power over others, helping others, health, understanding the nature of “things”, living in accord with the Tao, blowing your load 99 times in half a minute, etc.)

I am an Indiana redneck - covered in bad tattoos. 

So in saying all of that, I guess I should caveat it by saying that I’m nobody to listen to.

I am not capable to be anybody’s teacher or anything like that, because I’m just a beginner at trying to be a real person (ZhenRen)  myself, and I’m no where near even being close.

But . . .  my instinct and my spirit tell me that - before we start taking the camcorder into anybodys secret mountain caves, talking about re-directing peoples momentum into concrete walls, or seminal retention - it’s important to at least make available as much information as possible about how to be a good human, rather than just a human who’s efficient at doing this or that.

So bear with me . . . The time is VERY near when I’ll be living on WudangShan full time, and when it comes to providing you with great content related to internal martial arts, qigong, Chinese medicine, etc. - I guarantee . . . I WILL CRUSH IT.

In the meantime, bear with me while I try to get my own self in a better head space.  I encourage you to try and do the same, if that’s what you want to do.  :)

Out Of The Frying Pan . . .

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Today someone asked me at my Myspace Account about cultivating the Tao here in China, and about the place where I am now (Yunnan) in particular.

I was going to type this long reply to him, because I think that it’s worth explaining my thoughts on this subject, but I decided I would do it here, too because I think lots of people have these sorts of “crouching tiger” dreams about what Asia will do for them.

Upon arrival, it will probably mystify and enchant you. . .

Give it a year and you’re likely to be climbing the walls, and find yourself incredibly frustrated.

As many of you know, I’ve lived in lots of different countries here.  3 years in India.  4 years in Thailand.  A year in Korea, and now China. . .

One thing that I consistently see is people looking for this sort of mytherial “Asian” experience.  You know - The kind of stuff you see in movies, with sagely old men who reluctantly agree to show you “the way”, and bamboo forests, and lots of “spiritual” people.

 So without further Adieu, here are the top things spiritual/philisophical searchers need to know about Asia before they show up:

  1.  It’s mostly corrupt in ways that you’re not accustomed to
  2. The ideas that you hold dear, like the significance and value of the individual, don’t exist here for the most part
  3. It’s generally dirty
  4. People are generally MUCH more materialistic than in the West
  5. There is no feeling of boo boo headed mysticism circling through the trees.  There is yellow dust, massive amounts of industrial pollution, and a sort of cut throat, dog eat dog selfishness that pervades almost everything

 With that being said, and with some clarity in mind - Let me tell you why Asia is awesome:

  •  The social environment is terrible
  • The moral quality is very low
  • The environmental pollution is generally out of control
  • Your limited only by your imagination in how evil you become and to what extent you surrender to your base nature if you have a bit of money

At this point, you’re probably wondering if I’ve lost the plot while you’re reading this right, or at least - “Where the hell is he going with this?” - right?

  The truth is, Asia has produced some of the highest level human beings precisely because the environment is so problematic.

Lao Tzu.  The Buddha.  Confucius.  Guru Nanak.  Ghandi . . . The list goes on and on.

In order for me to continue along this line of thought, it’s important that we be in agreement upon two basic principles:

The way to ascend in cultivation practice is to:

  1. Improve your morality
  2. Eliminate your attachments

Are you still with me?  Ok . . .

As a tangent ninja aside, I always tell people that I think there’s a standard of human morality . . .

Wicked, immoral people - Let’s take for example someone like Hitler, or the Cannibal Jeffrey Dahmer - As a society and as individuals we always condemn the acts of these people as being “Inhumane”.

Do we literally mean no longer human?  Or below the moral standard for humanity?  I would say so.

I’de venture to guess that at our core - that part of ourSelves which hasn’t been totally eroded by socialization - we basically understand that these people have fallen below the standards of behavior and morality to even be considered human beings any longer.

Still with me . . . ?

If we assume that the equation balances itself, or that if Yang exists so must Yin, then it stands to reason that there’s a standard at the upper level, too.

That - quite literally there is an upper level standard for human morality, and that if someone transcends that standard, and they have improved their own morality beyond that point, and have eliminated enough human attachments - We also can no longer consider this person to be a normal human.

Again:  Lao Tzu . . . The Buddha . . .  Jesus . . .  Is there a reason that we hold these, who were born in flesh and blood the same as us in such reverence?

I’d say “yeah”.

If you want to make steel, you turn up the heat

To further illustrate the point that I’m actually trying to get to, I guess it’s best to use an analogy based on Alchemy.

Let’s assume that you have a lump of iron ore.  Full of dirt, debris, all sorts of roughage, oxidized and not at all pure.

How does this dirty rock get from being a dirty rock to being high quality steel?

It has to be tempered.  You put it in a cauldron or kiln, and you burn it.

Or better yet - how does a lump of carbon become a diamond?

You guessed it.  Through a long, protracted process of being exposed to MASSIVE heat and/or physical pressure.

Out Of The Frying Pan, and Into The Fire

So that brings us back around to the original point of all of this. . . .

In *MY* experience, Asia is a great place to cultivate.  Not because there is zither music floating around on the wind the moment you walk out the door, but because if you can resist the temptations that are all around you (From “Get in my Taxi” to “Buy my book” to “F*ck My Son”) -

And if you can remain compassionate towards life around you -

And if you can resist being pulled into the consensus reality which is HIGHLY materialistic -

Then you can make real progress.

And you can probably make it more quickly than you could in another type of environment.

Plan to burn, not “chill”

So for those people who are interested in coming here for spiritual reasons - I would say that you either have to have a realistic understanding of how things are here, or you have to have the emotional resillience to deal with a big “let down” when you realize that nobody is hovering about the bamboo forests, you won’t be shooting an qi balls at the bad guys (the bad guys will be your bosses, masters, landlords, political leaders, etc.).

But if you’re ready to do that . . . And if you can resist the consensus reality in one place, and then resist it in another, and on and on until you find that you’re so outside the realm of social human “groupthink” that even if you went home you would still be a foreigner - There’s hope for you yet.

6 Free Taoist Audio Books Up Now

General, Wudang Photos, Taoist Culture, Site News, Wudang Martial Arts, Qigong, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Five Elements Theory, Entertainment, wudang tai chi, wudang qigong, wudang culture, internal martial arts, taoist, tao te ching, taoism, lao tzu 10 Comments »

I recorded six new audio book tracks for myself to listen to while I excercise or walk, or ride the bus or whatevever so I thought you might like to check them out to.

Here is a list of the tracks included:

  • Chi Wen Dong - The Red Streaked Cave
  • The Pivot Of Jade
  • The Hsin Yin Ching - Imprint Of The Heart
  • Ching Jing Jing - Purity And Rest
  • Tai Hsi Ching - Respiration Of The Embryo
  • Universal Understanding<

The tracks are kind of rough, as they’re just for personal
use, and I stumbled more than a few times, but you can download and
listen to them HERE.

Added Non-Member Video Site

General, Wudang Photos, Taoist Culture, Site News, Wudang Martial Arts, Qigong, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Five Elements Theory, The Web, Entertainment, wudang tai chi, wudang qigong, wudang culture, internal martial arts, taoist, tao te ching, taoism, lao tzu 1 Comment »

I went ahead and added a video site for non members.

You can find it here:  Wudang Videos

This is not the members content - It’s just some other stuff from youtube, etc.

If you want the WudangQuan.Com Membership content, you have to sign up.

Wudang Quan .Com Stuff This Weekend

General, Wudang Photos, Taoist Culture, Site News, Wudang Martial Arts, Qigong, Traditional Chinese Medicine, The Web, wudang tai chi, wudang qigong, internal martial arts, taoist, tao te ching, taoism, lao tzu 2 Comments »

Here’s a list of what’s on tap to be inside the private members area this weekend.

 Core To Core

This is a video I’m putting together which is basically just me talking to you.  I don’t want to get into alot of details before you see it, but it’s going to be kind of “heavy”.  I don’t mean intense philosophical stuff, really or even some knock down drag out self criticism or analysis - but . . .

I’m not doing WudangQuan.Com like other guys do their sites.  When I say this site is about our PERSONAL journeys, I mean it. . . I could post a lot of cold data and some step by step stuff, but that’s not really what I’m trying to do.

So the core to core video is really going to be about the differences between our superficial selves (I’m Bob - I’m a tech support guy and I have a good insurance plan) vs. our core selves (I’m Bob - I want to help other people, I want to understand myself more, and I want to feel free to express who I really am without fear of ridicule, and I want to live life sucessfully, more than I want to live a sucessful life).

So I’m not going to give you any advice or anything, and I’m not going to give you a bunch of get along gang new age BS, but really - I want to talk TO your core self FROM my core self.   If we can at least do that, then the other things will fall into place pretty easily I think.

Tao Te Ching Study Group Videos 3 and 4

I’m going to go ahead and get these together.  I’ll probably film them at Longquan temple here in Kunming.  Not so much because I want to show it to you (cuz I have other videos of it floating around), but because I just like to hang out and parlay there . . .

So TTCSG videos 3 and 4 will basically be about Parts 2 and 3 of the Tao Te Ching, and if you’ve seen the first videos, you know the translation we’re using, etc.

Taoist Diet And Nutrition Video

I’ll also probably film this one at Longquan.  I’ll presnet a basic outline of Taoist dietary considerations, and some stuff specific to the diet of Wudang Taoist monks, etc.  Probably will film this one at Longquan, and maybe in the kitchen if I feel really inspired.

Catch up on correspondance

You guys have been really cool about leaving me comments on the blog and stuff.  So I’m going to go through and try to reply to every one of those individually.  Let’s not say I’m going to try, let’s say I’m going to do that.  :)

Also will try to catch up on email and other correspondance.

So . . . That’s it in a nutshell.

J

Wudang Free Stuff For Members (real stuff)

General, Wudang Photos, Taoist Culture, Site News, Wudang Martial Arts, Qigong, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Yin/Yang Theory, Five Elements Theory, The Web, Entertainment, wudang tai chi, wudang qigong, wudang culture, internal martial arts, taoist, tao te ching, taoism, lao tzu 2 Comments »

Here’s a quick video from youtube where I talk about the free (physical products) that I’m going to give away for our members in the next week or so, and how you can claim them:

Do you support this project?

General, Wudang Photos, Taoist Culture, Site News, Wudang Martial Arts, Qigong, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Five Elements Theory, The Web, Entertainment, wudang tai chi, wudang qigong, wudang culture, internal martial arts 30 Comments »

In the last few days, I’ve gotten a bit of negative feedback.

Not a lot, mind you, but from one person in particular.

The basic idea of the criticisms was:

  • Wudang Culture should not be widely spread
  • I say I don’t have alot of money, so how am I going to do it?
  • Allowing people to see video from inside of Wudang de-mystifies and “cheapens” it
  • And some criticism of me trying to pull off something like the TV show “Big Brother”

So let me try to address each of these as well as I can.

 #1.  Wudang culture should not be widely spread

This is pretty subjective, I guess.  If that’s what somebody really believes, than I guess that I won’t be able to change their mind easily.

Having lived in Asia for most of my adult life, I’ve taken more than a passing look at the major religious, and spiritual threads running through the history of this continent.  Buddhism, of course offers universal salvation to all.  The Tao (as far as my undestanding goes) is more oriented towards personal cultivation.

That being said - Wudang culture and Taoism, particularly are already quite spread out amongst the mainstream - We even have hip hop groups like Wu Tang Clan on MTV!

My goal is not to take away any of the mystery of Wudang, but to share the living tradition, founded by Zhang San Feng with others who would be interested - not the entire world.

And I think that there are alot of people like me out there.   Maybe they have a martial arts background, and maybe they are spiritual people - but they’ve let themselves get trapped in the quicksand of every day human society.

#2.  I say I don’t have alot of money, so how am I going to do it?

Well . . . I have a video camera.  :)  I will have computer access, and my housing and food are arranged.

Will I be able to afford expensive Kung Fu suits, weapons, and late nights at the KTV with beautiful women?  Probably not.

But my goal is not to live what I’ve talked about before as a successful life, but rather - to live life successfully.

For me, that means helping myself realize my own physical and spiritual potential, and helping, or at least encouraging other people to do the same.

#3.  Allowing people to see inside Wudang culture de-mystifies and “cheapens” it.

This is really the same argument as #1, but just phrased differently.

I have tremendous respect and admiration for the monks, both in history and today at Wudang.

The truth is though, that we live in a society where people are led along by their base instincts to do what others want, to their own detriment.

If showing a viable alternative to that cheapens that alternative - than I will accept that guilt.

 #4.  Trying to do something like the TV show big brother

If the person means showing a lot of petty inter-personal drama, and trying to tittilate peoples worst instincts, they couldn’t be more wrong.

If they mean that I want to give normal people who can’t get away from their jobs, families, school, etc. and live at Wudang the opportunity to see the possibilities of REAL life change, and the profundity of Taoist thought and practice, again - guilty.

. . . And so.  I will go to Wudang regardless of what anyone tells me, because I know what I need to do for myself.

That being said, Even though 99.999% of my feedback has been overwhelmingly positive, I want to know what you think.

Should I close this project down, and just use WudangQuan.Com, WudangMountain.Com, etc. to sell other peoples expensive DVD’s and make a quick buck for myself?

Or are people really interested in this?

Click below to leave a comment, and I really need your feedback!