Aryana Libris - Frantzis BruceRecension d'ouvrages au format numérique PDF2024-03-27T00:19:02+00:00urn:md5:a0ee72454095f037bdb86f20b0b6b82bDotclearFrantzis Bruce - The great stillnessurn:md5:213de0b19503bdd81497a043ed94fe222015-11-05T16:24:00+00:002015-11-05T16:29:36+00:00balderFrantzis BruceCroissance personnelleSex <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img2/Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_great_stillness.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Frantzis Bruce</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The great stillness Body awareness, moving meditation & sexual Chi Gung</strong><br />
Year : 2001<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook2/Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_great_stillness.zip">Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_great_stillness.zip</a><br />
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Introduction. When I talk about Taoists throughout this book, I am referring specifically to various individuals that I have met in China and with whom I have conversed in Chinese. These people were completely immersed in the practical living Taoist tradition, practitioners of the various schools and subgroups. Many of these individuals were secretive by nature or were under political pressure and thus requested that their names not be divulged. My reference, then, is to the living traditions of practicing Taoists and not to literary Taoism, which is often commented on by nonpractitioners and academics. The limited number of books available in America on Taoism tend to be filled with abstract descriptions or interpretations of Taoist rituals that never fit together into an integrated whole, or contain impossibly coded and baffling language, such as "the fire which burns the 24 embryonic knots and the 220 knots of the blood," or strange exercises whose rationale is never spelled out. In contrast, in this Water Method of Taoist Meditation Series, I have attempted to convey, in the clearest English I can manage, the practical foundation of the meditation practices I learned in China, especially from the Taoist sage Liu Hung Chieh. <strong>...</strong></p>Frantzis Bruce - The power of internal Martial Arts and Chiurn:md5:ed67665ffd8024be9c15fcfd71d369952013-10-18T13:41:00+01:002013-10-18T12:42:16+01:00balderFrantzis BruceArts Martiaux <p><img src="https://aryanalibris.com/public/img/.Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_power_of_internal_Martial_Arts_and_Chi_s.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Frantzis Bruce</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The power of internal Martial Arts and Chi Combat and energy secrets of Ba Gua, Tai Chi and Hsing-I</strong><br />
Year : 2007<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://aryanalibris.com/public/ebook/Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_power_of_internal_Martial_Arts_and_Chi.zip">Frantzis_Bruce_-_The_power_of_internal_Martial_Arts_and_Chi.zip</a><br />
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Hsing-I Chuan as a martial art. Like tai chi, hsing-i is a hybrid internal martial art. It exists in the middle ground between the psychological attitudes and emotional disposition of the Shaolin martial arts and internal power chi methods of the Taoists. The name hsing-i chuan is composed of three terms: 1. Chuan (see p. 122), which translates as “fist.” The word pertains to everything concerned with defeating a human being in physical combat. 2. Hsing, which means “the form of something.” Everything that manifests, at the level of either energy or matter has in one way or another a form, a shape, a cohesion, a configuration—the form of a cup, the form of a thought, the forms of different species of animals. More specifically, hsing indicates the form or shape the body will take during a martial posture assumed for hitting, throwing, or controlling an opponent. 3. I, specifically in the phrase hsing-i, refers to the ability of the mind to create an idea and project it into the body, creating a functional physical form, that is, a way of moving, a fighting strategy, a fighting posture, or a kind of power. <strong>...</strong></p>