Posts Tagged ‘Healer’

Ancient Tips to a Long Life

Friday, January 3rd, 2014
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Shaolin-monksAncient Tips to a Long Life

Last week my cousin Bari sent me this:
“Ten Tips From A Shaolin Monk On How To Stay
Young”. Most of us have heard of the Shaolin
Monastery. It was founded in the 5th century and
has been the main association with the martial
arts. I was fascinated with Shaolin and Kung Fu
for years. I read every book I could get my hands
on and when the Kung Fu TV series started. I never
missed one adventure of Kwai Chang Caine played by
David Carradine. I remember the sayings: Master
Kan in the show.

“To hit a target… is to exercise the inner
strength. Indeed there are two kinds of strengths.
The outer strength is obvious: it fades with age
and succumbs to sickness. Then there is the ch’i,
the inner strength. Everyone possesses it, too.
But it is indeed much more difficult to develop.
The inner strength lasts through every heat and
every cold. Through old age and beyond. –
Wow was I excited and inspired, I knew I had to
develop Chi and the inner power and to this day I
still work on cultivating my Chi.

My life has followed three stages. When I was
young I developed the skills as a warrior learning
the martial art skills and as I matured I became a
healer and a priest. Today that may sound like a
video game or something from an old Druidism
religion of the Celtic people. Life is an
interesting journey, staying alive is challenging.

These ancient tips to a long life from the
Shaolin monetary still apply today.

1) Don’t think too much. Thinking takes energy.
Thinking can make you look old.
2) Don’t talk too much. Most people either talk or
do. Better to do.
3) When you work, work for 40 minutes then stop
for 10 minutes. When you look at something all the
time, it can damage your eyes and also your
internal organs and peace.
4) When you are happy, you need to control your
happiness; if you lose control then you damage
your lung energy.

5) Don’t worry too much or get angry because this
damages your liv er and your intestines.
6) When you eat food don’t eat too much, always
make sure you are not quite full as this can
damage your spleen. When you feel a bit hungry
then eat a little.
7) When you do things take your time, don’t hurry
too much. Remember the saying “Hasten slowly you
will soon arrive.”
8) If you only do physical exercise all the time
and you never do Qi gong this makes you lose your
balance and you will become impatient. You lose
the Yin of your body. Exercise balances the Yin
and the Yang.
9) If you never exercise, just peace, meditation,
soft training, Qi Gong, then this doesn’t give you
Yang energy so you use up your Yang energy.

I have spent most of my life studying and
researching the keys to longevity and now coach
thousands of people in the ancient and modern
discoveries of staying young.
If you are one of the health nuts like me that are
dedicated to your health and longevity, take a
look at my private coaching pro gram
http://rechargingqigong.com/private-coaching.html

and we can discover what and how to keep you
healthy and young for a long time to come.

I wish you the best in your Health, Wealth and
Happiness

Dr. Wu Dhi

Lost Love

Monday, September 9th, 2013
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Mack has been one of my friends for some years.
He’s a pretty rational guy and is well skilled in
the martial arts, communications skills, has a
strong spiritual background and has traveled
extensively for years. He is living in Asia and
makes a good living doing international business
with China and Europe.

We met at a conference some years ago and after we
spent some time together we became Dharma brothers
and been in touch ever since. I received a call
from him the other day. It seems that he finally
met a girl that was his equal who he couldn’t stop
talking about.
He said, she is an artist, spiritual, a musician,
a healer, a dancer, a writer, mystical and a business lady.

Mack couldn’t stop talking about her, he sounded like a
teenager in love.
He said, “She is as delicate as a flower and
strong as a bull and as smart as a whip. She has
become my best friend in just a few months and
makes every cell in my body come alive.”

I congratulated him and wished him all the best
and asked; where did you meet her?
That’s when he told me she came into his life from
nowhere and like the fog that comes in from
everywhere all at once and she left just as
quickly.

Mack said his heart was broken.

“I’m a mess right now! I can’t eat, can’t sleep,
bills are piling high, I haven’t been able to work
in three weeks, ain’t bathed, can’t shave, cause
my heart is so tender like living in a blender.
I’m shaken and I’m stirred”
– Anthony Hamilton

This happens to all of us now and then. One of my
teachers told me long ago that if you want to have
your heart open, it has to break first.
Broken hearts are what give us strength,
understanding, and compassion. A heart never
broken, is pristine and sterile, and will never
know the joy of being imperfect.

As the saying goes “Tis better to have loved and
lost than never to have loved at all”

Many years ago when I first started to study with
the “Lama on the Mountain” I asked him if he would
open my heart chakra. He sort of blew me off; I
asked him a few times and got the same response
over and over.

One-day the Lama’s youngest daughter became very
sick she was just a baby and her fever spiked to
over 104. They had to take her to the hospital for
an emergency treatment. There wasn’t anybody to
watch their 5 year old, I immediately offered to
watch her and the parents were off to the hospital
with the baby.

They were gone for hours but I had no problem. I
love kids and for the most part they love me. We
went to town for an ice cream, took a long walk,
and played in the park, on the swings, played with
her stuffed animals and what ever else I could
think of to entertain a 5 year old. Finally they
came back home. The baby was much better. The Lama
on the Mountain said, “we are so grateful to you,
we didn’t know what we would have done if you
didn’t offer to watch our child. If there is
anything I can do for you please let me know.”

That’s when I laid it on him. Yes! There is, will
you open my heart?
The Lama chuckled and agreed to grant my request.
The next day we met in the meditation hall to
begin the ceremony.

He worked with me for the entire day and into the
late evening. The Lama did many different rituals,
prayers, and mantras. Touching different points
on my body with ritual objects, then it started to
happen. imagesand then I
started to see the decaying of everything, death,
hunger, pain and suffering, starving so much
suffering it was very sad. I started to cry and
even after I came out of the meditation I cried
and sobbed for the entire week.

I now know why the Lama didn’t want to open me up
so quickly.
When one opens their heart it not only opens up to
all the beauty it opens up to everything and
that’s hard to swallow. I told Mack this story and
he understood. Opening your heart is a good thing
but very painful indeed.

I wish you the best in your Health, Wealth and
Happiness

Dr. Wu Dhi

PS.
Practice your meditations daily. You can transcend
pain and suffering and open up to a new and
wonderful you. The Mantra program will help you
move through the tough spots and bring out the
best in you.
Check it out:
http://rechargingqigong.com/the-internal-mantra-program.html

What are those Big Red Spots all over his back?

Wednesday, April 24th, 2013
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The rage in Hollywood is Cupping.
….And the movie stars are looking like an octopus
kissed them.
Cupping is one of the oldest methods of healing
used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM).

The earliest recorded use of cupping dates to the
early fourth century; one textbook included an
entire chapter on “Fire Jar Qi,” a type of cupping
that could alleviate headaches, dizziness and
abdominal pain.

Originally, practitioners would use hollowed-out
animal horns for cups, and place them over
particular points or meridians. When I lived in
Maui I went to see a healer who only used the
horn, a single edge razor blade and a candle to
create the suction needed for the treatment.

I have been using a hand pump to pull out all the air
inside the cup to create the vacuum instead of fire.

Some years ago my mother had a bad backache and
although she wasn’t really sure about all this new
Chinese work that I learned but she let me try cupping
on her. Any way I was a little nervous myself as
at that time I learned the technique but didn’t
have much practice.
I got everything ready,the cups, a candle, some
alcohol and a lighter. I did everything that I
learned, but I didn’t realize that the cups got
hot, so when I placed them on my mom’s back she
yelled, “You burnt me, you burnt your own mother”.

The next day I bought the cups with the suction
bump and eliminated fire once and for all.
The vacuum created by the lack of oxygen anchors
the cup to the skin and pulls it upward on the
inside of the glass, as the air inside the jar is
gone. Drawing up the skin is believed to open up
the skin’s pores, which helps to stimulate the
flow of blood, balances and realigns the flow of
Qi, breaks up obstructions, and creates an avenue
for toxins to be drawn out of the body.
The cups are usually left on the skin for about 5
to 10 minutes. Several cups may be placed on a
patient’s body at the same time. Sometimes I will
put some oil or medicine on the skin so I can move
the cups around to loosen up things and bring more
energy to the body.

Cupping is used to treat respiratory conditions
such as bronchitis, asthma, and congestion;
arthritis; gastrointestinal disorders; and certain
types of pain. I have also use cupping
to treat depression and reduce swelling.

Cupping is safe, if you don’t burn your
mother by mistake, it can cause some swelling and
bruising on the skin but thats normal. The spots are gone in a few days.
The skin under a cup is drawn up, the blood vessels at the surface of the
skin expand. thats why why we get circular
bruises on the areas where the cups were applied.
These bruises are painless and are a good topic of conversation

Cupping is becoming very popular these days. Stars
like Victoria Beckham, Geri Halliwell, Paris
Hilton, David Arquette, Lady Gaga and Andy Murray
they all have one thing in common – circular marks
on their back that looks an octopus was sucking on
them. Even Jennifer Aniston was seen with some
circular marks on the red carpet.

I use cupping in my office just about every day to
treat colds, coughs, asthma, back pain and pain
with great success. If you come into my office be
sure to ask for a cupping treatment along with
your acupuncture treatment.
I wish you the best in your Health, Wealth and
Happiness

Dr. Wu Dhi
PS.

Call my office and set up an appointment today
305-407-0120

PSS check out the pictures on youtube
images-2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdh-pdALaQ4

Opening Up to New Possibilities

Monday, June 20th, 2011
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In 1977 I was invited to come
to Park City, Utah with a group
of healers and meditation students
for a month to study with
Virginia Satir.
She was a great psychotherapist, known
especially for her approach to family
therapy.

She was regarded as
The “Mother of Family Therapy.”

When you are working with people,
(No matter if you are doing massage,
medical qi gong or acupuncture)
when you open up to new modalities
in your practice it will make you a
better doctor, healer or therapist.

One of Satir’s most novel ideas at
the time, was the “presenting issue”
or surface problem – that the presenting
issue itself was seldom the
real problem; rather, how people coped
with the issue is what created the problem.
She also offered insights into the
particular problems that self-esteem
could cause in relationships.

Whenever I work with a patient or a
student, I start with a process that
Virginia developed called:

“The Five Freedoms”.

*The freedom to see and hear what is
here, instead of what “should” be, was,
or will be.

*The freedom to say what you feel and think,
instead of what one should.

*The freedom to feel what you feel,
instead of what you “ought.”

*The freedom to ask for what you want,
instead of always waiting for permission.

*The freedom to take risks on your own
behalf, instead of choosing to be only
“secure” and not rocking the boat.

What The Five Freedoms will do
for you is open you to new possibilities
in your life and give you a way to look
at the world differently.

Applying the five freedoms in your
life can give you different twist
to think outside of the box and
free up your stresses.

In the Turn Stress into Power Program
I incorporated the Five Freedoms
in my writing and presented a new way
of looking at stress.
How to use your stresses to transform your
life and get on top of the wave of stress,
instead of being flipped, rolled and pulled
under by every day stresses.

Open up to new possibilities in
your life and order the program today.
It will transform your Stress into Power.

www.Turnstressintopower.com

I Wish you the best in your Health,
Wealth and Happiness!

Dr. Wu Dhi