Dr. Paul Lam, Tai Chi for Health Institute
I don’t need to give you all the details of my wonderful, overly full life for you to understand that sometimes it feels like I’m spinning out of control.
It is the norm for most of us.
Stress is so common that a Google search generates millions of results with opinions about what stress is doing to us, and advice about how to manage it.
According to an American Psychological Association survey in 2012, on a scale of 1 to 10 (where 1 is “little or no stress” and 10 is “a great deal of stress”), 20 percent of the respondents said their stress was an 8, 9 or 10.
And over the past five years, 60 percent of them had unsuccessfully tried to reduce their stress.
I love all of my busy-ness. After all, I am the chooser who puts all these pieces into my life. But when things get too stressful, I lose the sense of peace and joy that is key to living my life filled with joy.
Much of the advice we get about managing stress has to do with focusing our minds on the present, rather than letting it wander to “what ifs” about the past or “shoulds” about the future.
I agree.
It’s the advice that often comes next that doesn’t work for many of us: Sit. Close your eyes. Feel your breath. Gently bring your thoughts back when they wander.
Don’t get me wrong. I believe mindful meditation can be a powerful way to become centered and present in the moment. My husband Ed and I practiced Transcendental Meditation (TM) for decades, and we have attended numerous 10-day silent Vipassana Meditation retreats. Indeed, we have experienced moments of profound serenity and peace as a result of doing so.
But all too often, we find that our monkey-minds never shut down for very long. And sometimes the longer we sit silently, the louder they shout at us.
We have found an alternate route to peace and stillness that has become our daily routine: Tai chi.
Tai chi quite literally slows us down and centers us when life begins to feel out of control.
Research studies have conclusively demonstrated the benefits of tai chi for falls prevention, chronic disease alleviation and improved memory and cognitive function. And our teacher, Dr. Paul Lam (pictured above) has developed a series of Tai Chi for Health programs that are supported by many leading organizations and government bodies around the world, including the USA Centers for Disease Control, the Arthritis Foundation and the Administration on Aging. He has trained many hundreds of instructors who provide classes throughout the US and worldwide.
But there’s another benefit of practicing tai chi that doesn’t get as much press. And it has literally changed my life.
When I practice tai chi, I don’t have to calm my mind; the practice does it for me. I don’t have to pull my thoughts into the present; I’m already there. And I don’t have to open my heart; half the time during my practice, tears of joy well up in my eyes and I feel one with the universe.
This all happens as part of my tai chi practice, rather something I hope the practice will help me accomplish.
So when I feel like my life is spiraling out of control, I often rely on my tai chi practice to bring me back to my center.
It has rarely failed.
Like Marlena I also find joy in our tai chi practice. While I am well aware of the documented evidence supporting the health benefits of tai chi, knowing these might lead me to practice as just one more thing that I “should” do. Instead, for me our tai chi playtime is something I look forward to each day for the rewarding joyous energy it generously contributes to my life.
I have been playing Tai Chi for Arthritis and Fall Prevention developed by Dr. Lam off and on for about 20 years. Some of my most intense experiences of the presence of the Holy Spirit have been while doing Tai Chi. As Paul has often quoted, it is “Meditation in Motion.”
Now that I have retired, I no longer have an excuse to not practice.
I am so very happy to hear this, Penelope! I’m afraid many Christians see tai chi as some sort of cult, rather than a meditation in motion, which opens our hearts and minds to truly experience God’s love for all of us.
Keep playing and loving!