Dan-Tien: Your Secret Energy Center
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Dan-Tien - Christopher J. Markert
Introduction
The mysteries of the Far East have fascinated me ever since I was a student forty years ago. I felt that here I would discover the secrets that are missing in our Western culture. China has the world's oldest living culture, reaching back over five thousand years. After rejecting its ancient heritage in recent decades, China is now rediscovering its past.
Just as the Chinese are now learning technological skills from us, so we can benefit from the profound wisdom of the Chinese sages.
Over the years I have written two books about this subject that were well-received and widely published.* My version of the I Ching, the Bible
of the Far East, was even published in Chinese (Mandarin) in Taiwan. The publishers seem to feel that I have a good grasp of the Far-Eastern mentality.
In my present book I describe a more practical aspect of Chinese culture. Western readers will find the concept of Dan-Tien not only enlightening but also very useful in daily life. For me and many others it has been a revelation that changed our lives.
—Christopher J. Markert
* Yin/Yang: the Dynamic Balance has been published in Germany, France, Holland, Argentina, and Brazil. I Ching: The Ultimate Success Formula was published by the Aquarian Press in 1986. It was also published in Germany, Holland, Norway, Finland, Spain, Argentina, Mexico, and Taiwan.
CHAPTER 1
Subtle Signals
Good Feelings are Guiding Us
The secret of good health, happiness, and success lies in the Dan-Tien, according to ancient Chinese texts. Dan-Tien is the source of vitality and joy. We all possess this source, but we are seldom aware of it. We all have an inner compass that leads us to the good life and keeps us in tune with the cosmos. When we listen to its subtle signals we can look forward to a life that is rich and rewarding and blessed with loving relationships.
This compass is so simple and foolproof that we tend to ignore it. Most of us have even been taught to ignore it and to rely instead on complex theories, artificial rules, or belief systems. The concept of Dan-Tien reminds us that all great truths are simple and easily practiced in daily life.
East Asians have known for thousands of years that the core of our vitality and unconscious wisdom lies in our very center. In this area we can spontaneously sense whether we are in tune with life at any given moment. When we think or do something that does not agree with our deepest feelings, we immediately get an unpleasant sensation in our center, in the Dan-Tien. This is a signal that tells us that the way we think or act at this time is not quite right. If we fail to listen to the signal, it will become stronger, to the point where we get a knot
in the stomach. If we habitually ignore the message, we may end up with a stomach ulcer or other psychosomatic complications.
Figure 1. In tune with life at any given moment.
But if we think and act in tune with the Dan-Tien, we notice a pleasant sensation in the belly area. We feel happy and enjoy inner harmony. In time we can learn to cultivate this state, so that it becomes a pleasant habit. Mind and body can thus function optimally and avoid needless stress.
Millions of Happy Minutes
There is a deeper reason why Dan-Tien makes us happy and successful: it connects us with the cosmic life force. When we listen to the signals in our center and act accordingly, we harmonize with the primal force that is called divine. We can find true happiness only when we live in tune with our divine self.
Dan-Tien offers no philosophical systems, moral precepts, psychological analyses, or intellectual explanations. Instead we receive helpful impulses from moment to moment. Just like a child searching for Easter eggs is guided by calls of warm
or cold,
so we can rely on the hints from our center in our search for happiness and success.
Through Dan-Tien we appreciate and enjoy the here and now.
When we can be happy here and now, when we can enjoy the next minute and the next minute, too, and so on, then we can enjoy the whole day. When we do this all week and through the months, we enjoy millions of happy minutes over the years. It is that simple.
Of course there will be minutes when we notice that something is wrong. Then we feel unhappy until we remember our inner compass and follow its messages. Usually it turns out that we got lost in useless and aimless trains of thought, or perhaps we were doing something that did not fulfill the need of the moment. Instead of living here and now we worried about the past or the future. Instead of sweeping in front of our own door we got involved in other people's problems.
But as soon as we realize that we are on the wrong track, we can change course and restore the good feeling, usually in a matter of seconds or minutes. Our greatest source of happiness is the feeling of being on the right track, here and now. We also feel good when we reach a goal, of course, but we do not reach goals every day.
Divine Impulses
With our inborn Dan-Tien we have a proven system that has been refined over millions of years. It connects us on-line
with the great cosmic computer. No man-made system can ever match its ingenuity and perfection.
The idea that divine impulses can be relayed through a nerve center in the body does not agree with our Western concepts. We have been taught that the divine can only come from above, through the head, the soul, or the conscience. We have been trained not to trust our gut feelings
and to suppress our lower animal instincts.
Many people still consider the body below the belt dirty,
unspeakable, or the source of sinful urges.
But in such Western beliefs lies the root of our inability to enjoy day-to-day life. People who reject their body and their emotions are called neurotic. They may get used to their split condition and endure life, but they cannot find real happiness. They can harmonize with themselves and the cosmic whole only occasionally and coincidentally.
They can console themselves with theories or religions that accept suffering as normal, or they can deaden the pain through legal or illegal drugs. They can try to divert themselves with ceaseless activity or noise, but they cannot find access to the secret that their remote ancestors still knew before they were civilized
through unnatural teachings.
It is possible to drop unnatural habits. We can find our inner center and we can rediscover our ability to enjoy each minute. To do this we need no strenuous exercises or lengthy and costly analyses. All we need to do is trust our inner impulses again and follow them.
In the following chapters we will see how we can practice the secret of Dan-Tien in daily life. But first let us take a look at its ancient origins.
CHAPTER 2
The Ancient Origins of Dan-Tien
The Best Place in the Body
The word Dan-Tien means belly area,
and ancient Chinese texts describe it as the best place in the body.
Sometimes it is also called the One-Point. In Japan it is known as Hara, which simply means belly.
Taoist teachings reaching back four to five thousand years tell in great detail how to be in touch with the center of vitality and joy, and how to use it as a link with the cosmic power Chi. Taoism is the Chinese folk religion that teaches the right way,
the word Tao meaning way
or path.
This is not a father religion
in the Western sense, but a practical philosophy of life with religious roots.
The One-Point is said to be located just below the navel and about an inch inside the body. This point also happens to be just above the womb, the warm and protected place where life originates. Here is the best place for the embryo to grow, where it is safely resting in the gravity center of the mother's body. It is also surrounded by vital organs and has a good, dependable blood supply. Even in the male anatomy, in the absence of a womb, this is the central core of vitality. While the head, the sense organs, and other external organs are exposed and vulnerable, the One-Point in the belly is a sanctuary, a safe haven, a place where we can feel good.
Figure 2. The word Tao means way or path.
Persons whose Chi energy is centered in the One-Point are said to be protected from dangers of all kinds. The Dan-Tien can dissolve or burn
strains, pains, diseases, and other hostile influences. A scattering or loss of Chi energy therefore opens the door to suffering and misfortune, while gathering the life energy in the Dan-Tien brings happiness and good fortune.
Hara, the Japanese One-Point
Zen, the art of emptying the mind and finding the center within, is an experience that cannot easily be described with words. But if Zen has an essence, it might be Hara, the equivalent of Chinese Dan-Tien.
The concept of Hara is deeply rooted in Japanese culture, religion, and daily life. Most Westerners know the word only in connection with Harakiri, the curious way of Japanese suicide. Samurai warriors resort to this way of taking their life because they believe the life energy Ki resides in the belly, not in the heart or the head.
Even today, the Japanese tend to sit, stand, walk, and move in a quite centered way. When they wait in line, for instance, they usually stand firmly on both legs, with a straight spine and relaxed arms and neck. Westerners in this situation would tend to stand relaxed
on one leg while resting the other, which creates a curve in the spine and a loss of Hara.
The emphasis on a centered posture and attitude is ingrained in the Japanese national character. Persons who are not firmly settled in the Hara tend to be considered immature, unreliable, or confused. Even school children learn about the importance of being centered in the Hara, the belly brain,
in school as well as in daily life.
Most of the Zen meditations have one aim—to clear the mind of irrelevant chatter and to find the true self in the silent center. In the center we experience bliss, while all suffering is only a sign that we have lost touch with our true nature, with Nature in general, and with the cosmic life force Ki.
Westerners who try the path of Zen tend to find the endless sitting
(Zazen) so boring and painful that they soon give up. In chapter 6 we will return to this subject and show a form of meditation that you will want to do often because it is so enjoyable.
The Dan-Tien Personality
People who live in tune with their center are said to have a Dan-Tien personality,
and this is considered a great honor. They are recognized by their collected, responsible, helpful, and modest attitude. They are self-confident but do not seek the limelight, and they are not interested in impressing or dominating others. Yet they radiate quiet power and attract admirers and followers.
All aspects of their life harmonize with the Dan-Tien, from the smallest detail to their over-all goals. Their life has direction, and they seem to know the meaning of life. They are not afraid of obstacles, enemies, or death. They know that each obstacle can teach them a valuable lesson, and that each enemy is a teacher who can help them to eliminate their weaknesses. They do not fear illness, infections, or bacteria as long as they live in harmony with the universal life force.
They see the good side in every human being and do not exclude anyone. They know that all people like to harmonize with the life force, but many do not know how. When people do not know the secret of Dan-Tien, they easily become angry, greedy, envious, proud, depressed, perverse, jealous, lazy, or sick in mind and body.
Dan-Tien personalities usually look younger and healthier than their age. They can run without losing their breath. They know which foods are good for them and have no problems with digestion or elimination. They know how to gather their energies by sitting in silence with a straight spine. They breathe through the nose, in a quiet rhythm, slowly emptying the lungs with each outbreath. Their eyes are relaxed but alive