Standing Post Exercises
Standing Post Exercises
Standing Post Exercises
Zhan Zhuang (
Standing Post exercises are the architectural foundation for all Qigong and Tai
Chi positions. They are powerful and deceptively simple. The ancient
Chinese discovered that by standing and relaxing for an extended period of
time with the body aligned in specific ways, they could open up the energy
channels in the body and increase the circulation of qi.
In the beginning, one should start out doing 2-5 minutes of standing each
morning and work up to 20-30 minutes. Start with the most basic posture
(Wuji, see below) and add onto it.
Basic Position:
(Wuji Stance)
This is the basic Qigong position.
Wuji means without polarity. It
refers to the Chinese concept of
the world before creation, before
separation into yin and yang (left/
right, night/day, up/down, empty/
full). In Qigong and Tai Chi it
means the root posture from which
all others extend. It is a basic,
centered standing position without
any shifting of weight left or right,
forward or backward, up or down.
The following components of the Wuji stance apply to most of the Zhan
Zhuang postures:
Feet: Stand with your feet shoulder width apart, keeping the entire foot
evenly spread out over the floor with nine points in contact with the ground
(heel, outside of foot, 2 balls of the foot and 5 toes). Equalize the weightbearing on three points: 1) the ball of the big toes; 2) the ball of the last two
toes; 3) the middle of the heel. Be sure that you are not shifted toward the
toes nor the heel, neither toward the inside nor outside. Toes are pointed
forward, as close to parallel as is comfortable.
Arms: Drop the shoulders and elbows. Allow the arms to hang loosely by
the sides.
Fingers: Relax the fingers and allow them to curve gently and remain
slightly separated. Feel gravity pull the fingers down toward the ground,
extending the arm, until you the pull feel in your spine.
Head: Imagine your whole body as if it were being pulled up from a string
attached to the crown of the head. The string should be directly in line with
the tips of the ears. Feel yourself sinking down, relaxing as you hang from
the string like a puppet.
Nose and mouth: Breathe calmly and naturally, using abdominal
breathing. Inhale and exhale gently though your nose only. Your mouth
should be closed, but the jaw should be relaxed with a slight gap between
the teeth. If saliva forms, swallow it.
Eyes: Look forward. Allow your gaze to soften and become aware of your
peripheral vision. Do not focus on any particular object. Allow your
consciousness to globally diffuse over the field of your body and
environment, but without becoming foggy. Stay alert but relaxed.
Chin: Tuck in the chin slightly so that your head is not craning forward.
Feel the back of the neck at the base of the skull open. As the curve of the
neck flattens slightly, feel the crown of the head push slightly higher.
Chest: When you begin the stance, take a deep breath, fill the chest, then
exhale completely and quietly through your mouth and allow your chest to
sink down toward the belly, but without slumping the spine: maintain this
relaxed position of the chest while you breathe normally from the abdomen.
Knees: Soften the knees, allowing them to bend very slightly, just enough
to feel a springy, soft quality in them. Gently push the knees apart, as if
there were a balloon between the thighs inflating slightly. Be careful not to
shift your weight to the outside of the feet. Keep the balls of the big toes
firmly planted. Feel how the slight separation of the knees helps link the
legs together as a unit. It also opens the hips in the front and causes the
pelvis to slightly tuck under in the back. You can confirm this sensation of
stability by briefly doing the opposite -- make yourself knock-kneed and stick
out the butt. then gently pusht he knees apart and allow the butt the tuck
under slightly. Notice how much more rooted that position feels. The legs
should feel as if they were screwing down into the ground, like two giant
screws.
Lower back/hips/pelvis: Relax the lower back without sticking out the belly
or the buttocks. Allow the lower back to flatten slightly (tucking the pelvis
under), but without sticking the belly out. Feel the tucking of the pelvis
subtly elongating the spine. Do not bend forward. Imagine you are simply
resting your pelvis on the edge of a high stool. Alternately, imagine as if you
had a large dinosaur tail. Feel it settling onto the ground, pulling the lower
spine downward.
Spine: Feel the tailbone sinking down, pulling the lower spine down toward
the ground. At the same time, feel the crown of the head being pulled up,
pulling the spine up toward the sky. Feel the entire spine elongating and
opening in both directions simultaneously. You may also imagine the spine
extending through the tailbone deep into the earth, and continuing through
the crown of the head high into the sky.
Mind: See Eyes.
Duration: Stand quietly, allowing your whole system to calm down. In the
beginning, you should start with 2-5 minutes and gradually build up.
head and straighten up into the imaginary pushers hand. Thus move with
the whole body and not think of straightening the legs or moving from the
center
Rising against pressure: Slightly flex knees and rise against imaginary
pressure on crown of head; Moving up, sense whether one leg has more
weight than the other (may cause subtle strain at the hips)
Self-traction: Feel pull at base of skull and sacrum elongating spine.
Practice self-traction: standing with pelvis slightly rotated and head
suspended. Feel the spine lengthen. This may help with back problems
Screwing in/Locking the knees: Concentrate on the knees. Feel as
though they are simultaneously being pushed in and out. Then push the
knees slightly outward. Feel a spiraling effect from the knees to the ground
as if your legs were screws being screwed down into the earth.
Find center: From the ankles, tilt the body forward, shifting weight to the
balls of the feet, then back, shifting weight to the heel, then center; gently
press thighs backward and sacrum forward to center.
Relax in posture: relax the knees and lower back to let the tailbone drop
rather than deliberately tucking in; feel the buttocks and feet relax as well.
To root is to surrender yourself to the pull of gravity while maintaining a
structural skeletal alignment which supports the body in an upright posture.
Sink the Dan Tian: relax the abdomen and allow a heavy feeling, a sinking
feeling, to drop the body through the supporting foot and into the ground.
With each exhalation, feel the abdomen relax and sink down even more
Connect head to feet: extend the spine by holding the head suspended
until you feel it in the feet
weighted leg, through the hip joint, up the sacrum and spine to the top of the
head. Maintain the beanbag with this constant ground connection.
Exhale as you go down.
Inhale as you rise
You can also use either a chair or hanging rope as a stabilizing aid.
Stop. Imagine yourself doing the movement. Feel muscles contract
isometrically as if they were just beginning the movement or as if something
were blocking the movement, resisting it, but dont actually move.
Now perform the movement again.
Return to center and rest for a moment. Feel how much more rooted and
settled the whole body feels.
powerful torso, and is expressed through the hand. Almost zero force is
used. The mind directs the ground force, the extended connection, the
weight of the hand, the exhalation of qi through the hand. To train with force
is a mistake which only leads to li external, muscular force.
The head suspended from the crown sets up a mild tension/traction along
the entire spine which helps unite the body and gives you a grip with which
to manipulate the force
When you do the opening of Tai Chi, you connect your body fully with earth
strength and the very tenuous whole-body connection. Movement should
be driven by ground connection and the ribbon of ground strength should
never be broken. If you maintain the ribbon of ground strength constantly,
manipulating real or imagined things with ground strength, your movements
can only become correct. One leg is a feed for the ground strength until
the feed naturally changes to the other foot. In the classics, the leg with the
ground force feed is called substantial.
The important thing in all forms is learning to manipulate the ground force
with such facility that it becomes part of your movements in all direction
Connecting the Hand to the Spine
This exercise helps to strengthen the sensation of having all of your arm
movements coming from the spine, which is a basic principle of Tai Chi. The
arms should never move independently; they should always be carried by the
movement of the spine, just as the spokes of a wheel are carried by the
rotation of the axle.
Stand with the feet shoulder-width apart, crown of the head as if pulled up,
knees slightly bent, pelvis gently tucked under.
Raise the right arm across the front of the torso with the palm facing away
from you at a 45 degree angle, toward the left corner of the room.
Place the back of the left hand over the curve of the lower back. Keep the
hips facing forward. Push the palm toward the left corner, taking up all the
slack in the arm until you feel a slight stretch from the palm down the arm,
through the shoulder blade and into the spine.
Now, if you wanted to push the arm any further, you would have to twist from
the hips, rotating the trunk so that the right side of the pelvis thrusts
forward. Do this four times, being sure to keep all of the slack taken up in
the arm so that all of the thrust comes from the lower back and not the arm.
Cloud hands
Perform the Cloud Hands movement from the Tai Chi form several times while
standing in place, without moving footwork. See the description of this
movement later in this book.
Playing Pipa
Holding the Playing Pipa stance from the Tai Chi form helps to build strength in
the legs. Begin with just 30 seconds and work up to several minutes. Keep
the front foot relaxed and do not bear any weight on it. See the description of
this movement later in this book.