Posts Tagged ‘Tibet’

An Unwanted Hitchhiker

Friday, July 19th, 2013
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Jocelyn returned from a meditation retreat at the
Taoist monastery in China the last week of May.
She’s an old friend and called me when she
returned and shared her adventure with me.
She told me that she had the opportunity to visit
Tibet and see where the Sky burials take
place.
Living in the western world we never hear much
about death and any burial practices. In the USA
we are sort-of born from nothingness and then die
into nothingness. It’s like it all takes place off
stage.
How many of you have witnessed a birth or been
with someone when they died? Not too many of us
get to see the comings and goings of birth and
death.
She told me of The Sky burial, it’s a funerary practice in Tibet
wherein a human corpse is incised in certain
locations and placed on a mountaintop, exposing it
to the elements and predatory birds. This practice
is known as jhator, which means “giving alms to
the birds.”
According to tradition there is no need to
preserve the body, as it is now an empty vessel.
Birds may eat it, or nature may cause it to
decompose. Thus, the function of the sky burial is
simply to dispose of the remains.

Last week Jocelyn gave me a call and said she
wasn’t feeling very well. She reported that she
had no energy and just wanted to sleep all the
time.
She said, Dr. Wu Dhi I just feel horrible it’s
almost like I am not myself.
She told me that she needed to see me ASAP. The
next day she came into the office and I hardly
recognized her. She was drained and after an
examination I suggested that I come over to her
house to clear the energy and see what’s going on
energetically.

We found that she picked up a hitchhiker-spirit on
her travels and it followed her home and was now
having a feast with her energy.

We set up an appointment to clear her home office
and do some Medical Qi Gong to clean and clear
the energy and send the hungry spirit packing.

We don’t hear much about this in America. It
definitely exists here but it is usually treated
as a mental problem.

I had images
This week I will spend 3 or 4 hours at her home
clearing out all the cobwebs, using a combination
of special mantras, incents and rituals to clear
cleanse and purify the house and property.

Sound spooky to you? It is just part of the
Medical Qi Gong work
If you ever need this kind of special work done
contact me and we can have a conversation and see
if it’s right for you.

305-407-0120

I wish you the best in your Health, Wealth and
Happiness
Dr. Wu Dhi

PS write me if you just can’t seem get over a long standing illness, a chronic problem can be much more than a dis-ease

The Tibetan Connection

Friday, October 12th, 2007
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Back in the 70’s I was living around San Francisco and
through auspicious coincidence started studying various
types of Tibetan yoga.

I had no idea at the time that this training would
change me forever.

The Tibetan masters, and their equally great western students,
I met then not only changed my Life personally, it changed me
as a Healer, and it changed the World I live in.

Maybe too much to get into in one email but let me just say
that anyone who truly knows the Great Internal Yogas of Tibet
or Tummo (pronounced “do mo”) will turn to Exercise 1 in the
manual and immediately recognize what a gift I’ve included in
this program.

Warming the Channels, as I renamed the exercise, almost didn’t
make it into the manual because in addition to it being truly
Tibetan in nature it is regarded to many as secret. I had to
first convince my nephew and editor of the Recharging Qi Gong
that it was essential.

“This is the way that I train and it’s what I’m teaching, I’m
not going to censor myself on this one” I told him.

When I created the Recharging Qi Gong I wanted to create a book
on moving meditation and Qi activation that nobody had ever
seen before and so I did.

When you properly do Exercise 1 of the Recharging Qi Gong you
do several things:

  • You straighten out the physical channels in the legs, torso,
    and arms for the Qi to follow.
  • You churn up the essential Qi from the core of your being.
  • You blow off any static energy or patterns from the body.
  • You generate heat in the body.

The heat from this process is then reintegrated into the joints
and tendons of the body.

This is what makes the Recharging Qi Gong different.

You first stoke the fires and then you pump that healing energy
throughout all the parts of the body.

This exercise should never be skipped or practiced half-way.

If you skip this exercise in the Recharging Qi Gong you gut the
entire system and will cut the benefits in half.

Even if you practice this one exercise on it’s own you may gain
more benefit from it than any other of the exercises combined.

A few key points for those who already have the program:

  1. Keep the shoulders down with the arms extended. Move around
    inside this position until you click into it, you’ll know when
    it feels both relaxed and powerful.
  2. Don’t bend the elbows until the very last position in the set.
  3. Really turn the body side to side to generate the heat in the
    hands, this exercise is more difficult than it initially looks.
    Turn and churn from the core, you may sweat a little when you
    get it right.

Remember this exercise is especially important for those of us
that are healers by practice. Make an effort to master this one
exercise and you will discover exactly what I mean by this.

Wishing you Health, Wealth and Happiness,

Dr. Wu Dhi

PS: Later by coincidence, three months after the release of the
book, I was invited to attend a private function at one of my
patient’s home in Miami Beach. This woman was hosting a very
powerful Lama and Advisor to the Dali Lama himself. He turned
through every page of the book and gave it his direct blessing.

PPS: Here’s the link for the Recharging Qi Gong
http://rechargingqigong.com don’t miss out, I’m going to be
giving more and more by email and teleseminar and you’re really
going need the manual to get the most out of it.