Cultivating the Energy of Life: A Translation of the Hui-Ming Ching and Its Commentaries

Cultivating the Energy of Life: A Translation of the Hui-Ming Ching and Its Commentaries

by Liu Hua-Yang
Cultivating the Energy of Life: A Translation of the Hui-Ming Ching and Its Commentaries

Cultivating the Energy of Life: A Translation of the Hui-Ming Ching and Its Commentaries

by Liu Hua-Yang

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Overview

A modern translation of Hui-ming Ching, the classic Taoist manual on cultivating and conserving energy as a means of achieving greater health, longevity, and inner peace

To live a healthy and long life, to be tranquil and untouched by the dust of the mundane world, and to become one with the life-giving energy of the Tao—these are the goals of the practitioner of Taoist spirituality.

The classic Chinese text Hui-ming ching (“Treatise on Cultivating Life”) is one of the most important Taoist classics on the arts of longevity and a major inspiration for many techniques of Qigong. Even two hundred years after its initial publication, it is still one of the most accessible works on a branch of Taoist practice that has been heretofore shrouded in mystery.
 
Abandoning the symbolic language typically used in the ancient classics, it discusses the practices of the Microcosmic and Macrocosmic Orbits, the role of breath in circulating energy, and the conservation of procreative energy in a straightforward and concrete way.
 
Now, in this new, complete translation, a foremost translator of Taoist texts clarifies and elucidates the Taoist methods of conserving and cultivating energy for the attainment of health, longevity, and inner peace.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780834828223
Publisher: Shambhala
Publication date: 02/17/1998
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 120
File size: 429 KB

About the Author

Eva Wong is an independent scholar, a translator of Chinese texts, and a practitioner of the Taoist arts of the Pre-Celestial Way and Complete Reality lineages. She has written and translated many books on Taoism and related topics, including A Master Course in Feng-Shui; Tales of the Taoist Immortals; Taoism: An Essential Guide; and Seven Taoist Masters.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter
1:
The
Dissipation of Life Energy

The subtleties of the

Tao lie in original nature and life, and to cultivate original nature and life is to return to the One. The ancient sages used symbols when they spoke of returning original nature and life to the One because they did not want to present the teachings in a straightforward way. Consequently, nowadays it

is difficult to find someone who truly understands the meaning of cultivating mind and body.

I
have not broken the oath of secrecy by compiling the illustrations and presenting them in this book. I have only taken the teachings of
Hua-yen
Scripture
and the Taoist classics and described them as pictures.

The key to cultivating life lies in the One cavity. The illustrations are intended to help fellow spiritual seekers to understand the meaning of the dual cultivation of mind and body so that they will not stray into erroneous paths.
The pictures show how the true seed is conceived within the body, how the energy of life is lost, how the Child of the Buddha is cultivated, and how the
Tao is attained.

Figure
I.
Hui-ming ching

Illustration
I: Picture of Leakage

Each illustration in the
Hui-ming ching
is accompanied by phrases that are mnemonics of instruction (
k'ouchüeh).
The phrases are written in a Chinese literary form in which two phrases form a pair. The pairs are arranged side by side. Thus, the upper two phrases form one pair and the lower two phrases form another pair. Since Chinese is read from right to left, the phrase on the right is always the first half of the pair.

The four seven-word phrases read: "If you want to stop the leakage and attain the indestructible golden body, focus on the radiance and do not leave the happy grounds. Practice diligently to temper the root of life. Always keep the true self hidden in its home." The circle in the abdominal area of the figure is the cavity called the Gate of Life (
ming-men).
The path that leads from the cavity to the outside is called the path of leakage.

The
One cavity is the root of the void. It has neither shape nor form. When the original vapor emerges, the cavity appears; when circulation is at rest, the cavity disappears. The One cavity is the place where the sacred is hidden. It is the altar of life, and it has many names—the Palace of the Dragon at the
Bottom of the Sea, the Land of the Snowy Mountain, the Western Realm, the
Original Gate, the Land of Great Happiness, and the Home of the Limitless. If the practitioner of the arts of longevity does not understand this cavity, he or she will wander through thousands of lifetimes not knowing where to look.

This cavity is great and wonderful. It emerged when we were conceived in our mother's womb. In it, original nature and life are intertwined like flames in a furnace and are united with the Laws of the Celestial Way and the Great
Harmony. Therefore it is said that before birth and creation, inhalation and exhalation are limitless.

Before we were born, we were a fetus, a round shape inside our mother's womb. When the womb is filled with the primordial vapor, the shape inside stirs, the shell breaks, and like a mountain crashing down, the fetus tumbles out. In the infant's first cry, original nature and life are separated. From then on,
original nature does not recognize life and life does not communicate with original nature. Thus we go from infancy to youth and from youth to old age and death.

The
Tathagata Buddha in his compassion has revealed a method that will help people to return to the womb. By uniting original nature, life, spirit, and vapor and returning them to the One cavity, our true essence can be recovered. It is as if the original vapor of our parents has reentered this cavity to create a fetus.

Inside the One cavity is the Ruling Fire. At the gate guarding it is the Subordinate
Fire. Throughout the body is the Common Fire. When the Ruling Fire stirs, the
Subordinate Fire will burn and support it. When the Subordinate Fire moves, the
Common Fire will follow accordingly. In the way of mortals, the three fires follow the forward path; in the way of the Tao, the three fires follow the reverse path.

Therefore,
the One cavity that dissipates the energy of life is also the cavity where the sacred form emerges. You will receive no benefits if you take the incorrect paths. If you try tens of thousands of methods looking for the One cavity outside and do not understand that the key to life lies within, you will waste time and effort and accomplish nothing.

Table of Contents

Introduction 3
Historical and Philosophical Background

7

Teachings of the
Hui-Ming
Ching
17

Treatise on Cultivating Life:
Hui-Ming
Ching

1. The
Dissipation of Life Energy 23

2.
The Six Phases of the Circulation of Fire 29

3.
The Jen (Function) and Tu (Governor) Meridians 33

4. The
Fetus of the Tao 37


5.
Emergence of the Fetus 41

6.
The Transformations of the Body 45

7.
Facing the Wall 49

8.
Absolute Extinction in the Void 53

Discourse on the Correct Method of Cultivation

Cheng-Tao
Hsiu-Lien Chih-Lun
57

Discourse on the Correct Method of Energy Work

Cheng-Tao
Kung-Fu Chih-Lun
71

Discourse on
Stillness (Ch'an) and Movement (Chi)

Ch'an-Chilun
91

The
Nine Steps of Refining the Mind

Chiu-Tseng
Lien-Hsin
103



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