Chris Chi

Tai Chi for health & wellbeing

 

 

  • Home
  • About Chris
  • Workshops & Programs
    • Sports Chi
    • Chair Chi
    • Workplace Tai Chi
    • Energizers for Conferences
    • Wellbeing
    • For Schools
      • Pozitive Kidz … are happy kidz
      • conneXions
      • Top Tens
      • Success & Resilience
  • Products
  • Blog
    • Blog Archives
  • Newsletters
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
  • Resources
    • Tai Chi and the Immune System
  • Contact Me
You are here: Home / Archives for For Beginners

Wrong Journey – Right Destination

By Chris 2 Comments

Performing the Tai Chi form is like going on a journey without travelling too far to reach a destination.

Well, the other day I took the wrong journey and still ended up at the right destination.

I was performing my Tai Chi form at the The Convent in Abbotsford,  during a break at the Australian Appreciative Inquiry Forum day.

It was a beautiful sunny day and the grassed courtyard was the perfect environment to practice  my Tai Chi form. I was focused and relaxed and commenced my journey with the opening posture and ventured onwards as I had done thousands of times before.

Then it happened.

I lost my way.

During the journey I ended up facing  the wrong way in ‘Wave Hands Like Clouds’, missed the path to ‘Parting The Wild Horse’s Mane’ .

When I had realised what I had done I created a couple of new paths to include the missing postures and continued on until I had reached the end of the journey at ‘Completion’ of the form.

You see, I had travelled part of a wrong journey but still reached the right destination as the chi had flowed. Just like it had many times when I had travelled the right journey.

Many years ago I would have been very annoyed with myself for losing my way in the form. But now it doesn’t matter.

If I occasionally go on the wrong journey, it’s okay, as long as I reach the right destination.

Filed Under: For Beginners, Forms, Reflections Tagged With: Abbotsford, Appreciative Inquiry, Tai Chi form, The Convent

Improvised Tai Chi

By Chris Leave a Comment

When there is little space one has to improvise.

In this photo I had to jump up on a chair so the back row could see me.

There were 40 people in the room at the Abbotsford Convent here in Melbourne, Australia.

I was one of the organisers of the first Australian Appreciative Inquiry Forum and helped out with Tai Chi energisers throughout the day.

Plus I took photographs and recorded short interviews for a flash slideshow of the event. We hope to have that completed and up on the AI website soon.

I’m glad the chair was stable otherwise I would have been demonstrating Big Goose Falls to The Ground (secret technique).

Filed Under: For Beginners, Reflections Tagged With: Australian Appreciative Inquiry Forum, chair, crowd, improvise, presentation, Tai Chi, Tai Chi Energisers

Feeling Is Believing – Part 2

By Chris Leave a Comment

In the previous post I discussed  my approach to Tai Chi presentations I deliver.

That is – demonstrate a skill, get participants to do it and then ask an open question such as ‘do you feel any sensation in any part of your body’?

Usually I get someone answering the question.

But sometimes no one answers and what follows is silence.

And that silence can feel like an eternity.

Rather than give in to temptation and make excuses I simple move on and say something like ‘just practice more in your own time and see how you go’.

This is  a practical approach as usually in a speech or presentation I only have a maximum of ten minutes to introduce, demonstrate, get participants involved and ask the open question.

If I was running a workshop I’d have much more time to teach and develop the flow of Chi so most participants can actually feel it.

So even if a participant in a presentation does not feel the Chi at the very least they have been introduced to Tai Chi and challenged to practice and see what happens.

And if they do practice I’m confident that most will feel and believe.

Filed Under: For Beginners, Reflections Tagged With: Feeling, Presentations, question, reactions, responses, Speeches, Tai Chi

Feeling Is Believing – Part 1

By Chris Leave a Comment

They say that ‘seeing is believing’ but in Tai Chi I’ve found that ‘feeling is believing’.

Whenever I run Tai Chi presentations I first demonstrate a skill and then get the participants to perform the skill.

Then I always ask ‘do you feel any specific sensation in your body’.

I never ask a questions like ‘do you feel the chi in your hands’ because that insinuates that they should be feeling something in their hands. A leading question such as this is biased and will not always get an honest answer due to politeness.

But asking a question such as ‘do you feel any specific sensation in your body’ is unbiased and usually I get one or more people saying they feel something  and can describe where they feel it.

If they feel something then there is no need to try and convince someone in words.

Because feeling is believing.

Filed Under: For Beginners, Reflections Tagged With: Bias, Chi, Feeling, Questions, Seeing, Tai Chi, unbiased answers

Gift Of Tai Chi

By Chris 2 Comments

I stumbled upon Tai Chi many years ago when a friend of mine suggested I give it a go.

After my first lesson I was hooked for life.

It’s a fascinating journey which still continues because there are still higher mountains to climb in learning and teaching Tai Chi.

I don’t think I will ever reach a destination in Tai Chi but that’s okay because I don’t feel the need to ‘get there’ anymore.

Entering the many gates to continue the journey makes it a challenge and it’s also worthwhile from a health and self defence point of view.

Lately I’ve been reflecting on what Tai Chi means to me. What is it about it that resonates the most that encourages me to continue practicing and teaching?

Well, I feel it’s a gift that has been given to me.  As it has been given to many many others over the centuries.

And I feel the responsibility to give the gift of Tai Chi to as many people as possible.

Why?

Because if you do then your Yin Yang energies are balanced in regards to giving and receiving.

That to me, in simplistic terms, is what Tai Chi is all about.

Filed Under: For Beginners, Reflections Tagged With: appreciaition, Gift, giving, motivation, receiving, Reflection, Tai Chi, Yin Yang

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • …
  • 29
  • Next Page »

Good Chi News – Februrary Issue coming soon

Terms

Tai Chi Chuan
A health and self defence system.

Chi
The ‘intrinsic energy’ which circulates in all living things – Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming.

Chi Kung
….. specialises in building up the Chi circulation in the body for health and/or martial purposes – Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming.

Copyright © 2025 · Chris Bennett