Void is YinYang: Qigong training in Star Wars: Yoda is Hai Deng of Shaolin
So I finally saw Stars Wars the first prequel made in 1999. If I had
not known the qigong alchemy secrets then I would not have appreciated
Yoda's dismissal of Anakin (the future Darth Vader as the fake Chosen
One).
Anakin in his test to do the Jedi training (qigong alchemy training) is asked how he is and he says he is cold.
Yoda then asks if Anakin is afraid and he says no.
Then Yoda later dismisses Anakin to the other Jedi Masters saying fear leads to anger and anger leads to hatred and so the future of Anakin would be bad.
Of course for those who know qigong training Yoda was testing the Yi or intention of Anakin - was he being honest or having true intention?
True intention is the secret to having a good heart which is then the secret of building up and restoring the Yuan Qi energy of the kidneys.
Anakin was cold due to low kidney energy which creates fear. But Anakin did not want to admit his fear and so he lied saying he was not afraid.
Because Anakin lied then his heart intention was not good.
The bad heart intention means his spirit energy would not then be focused on sublimating and storing up his kidney energy.
Instead the frequency of his spirit would be low so that his force energy would be a low spirit frequency.
This would cause his increased power to be driven by low frequency spirit energy so that any build up of kidney energy would lead then to a liver blockage.
The liver blockage would cause anger and then the anger would cause a heart blockage that causes further bad energy.
So then in the original Star Wars series Darth Vader and the evil Emperor encourage Luke Skywalker to feed his own anger in their attempt to get him to lower his spirit intention energy so that his liver blockage would cause his force - his yuan qi - to be deconverted to be lost as fear - the kidney loss.
But Luke had a higher frequency spirit intention and so his Force was restoring and sublimating his kidney energy so that his anger was cleared out and sublimated - harmonizing his body and mind as unified spirit and force.
I have not seen Number 7 yet and even that does not end the movies. I will continue watching the prequels.
We know George Lucas went to Shaolin and that was his direct inspiration for the Star Wars series
I had read this in some book in a bookstore and I could never remember what book that was so glad these documentaries have been made.
So then the Jedi Master in Phantom Menace is a name variation on qigong.
part 2 of George Lucas being inspired by Shaolin qigong masters
So then Yoda looks like Hai Deng, the Shaolin elder qigong master who directly taught the original qigong master that I studied from. So I actually have a direct lineage to Yoda! Here
There is a story about Hai Deng from Paul Dong. Let's see if I can find it online.
This 2002 pdf is linked of Yan Xin science experiments on qigong the student of Hai Deng
An excerpt from Paul Dong's China's Super Psychics book scribd on Yan Xin qigong, student of Shaolin's Hai Deng:
Paul Dong wrote:
Now, I would like to present some little-known but fascinating material to Western readers. In 1977, Yan Xin, a young man known in China as a super psychic, graduated from the College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Chengdu, China. After his graduation, he started to work at the Chinese Medicine Research
Institute in the city of Chongqing. He practiced a method of treatment using mind power instead of drugs. He cured patients of broken bones, diabetes, heart disease, traumatic paralysis, neurosis, rheuma tism, hepatitis, cancer, and other conditions. In the past few years, taking advantage of his international tour, he has done experiments on the treatment of AIDS with some success. Unknown to many, the lives of some of China's top national leaders and VIPs have been prolonged by his treatment.
Among these is the famous scientist-"the father of the 'Chinese A-bomb" - Deng Jiaxian. The Chinese paper Liberation Army News has openly lauded him as the "great pioneer of the two bombs" (referring to the A-bomb and the H-bomb). Deng was suffering from the advanced stages of cancer of the rectum. By June 27, 1986, when the hospital announced the critical state of Deng Jiaxian's condition, signaling that his life was almost at its end, all the doctors of the People's Liberation Army had given up all hope of saving him. At that inoment, the last hope was to ask for help from Director Zhang Zhenghuan of the Military Technology
Commission, since he also served as the head of the Chinese EHF Research Association, to bring Yan Xin to give Deng a healing.
As Zhang Zhenghuan and two doctors drove with Yan Xin to the hospital, they smelled a fragrance, which was getting stronger and stronger. As they were wondering where the fragrance was coming from and talking about it, Yan Xin started laughing. They didn't know why he was laughing, but when they went into Deng
Jiaxian's ward, they found that Deng's severe pain had stopped, and he was sitting up. Everyone was very surprised by this. From this, everybody knew that the only thing that could make Deng's critica l illness disappear instantly was the power of Yan Xin.
In a later discussion about this, Dr. Liu Huamin asked Yan Xin about the laughing in the car. Yan Xin replied that it was simple. "When I send my energy, I sometimes emit a sandalwood scent. After I got in the car, I started sending energy toward the hospital, and I was already relieving some of his symptoms."
There is nothing unusual about emitting scents when sending energy. Tian Ruisheng, a Chinese chi gong master called a "fragrance master," and the over-ninety-year-old Yang Meiqun, are both well known for their ability to emit fragrances. The former came to San Francisco in 1995 to teach the technique to
Chinese-American audiences. The latter, Yang Mei- qun, is famous for teaching her practice, "wild-goose-style chi gong". Whenever she sends her energy, there is a fragrance.
On June 27, 1986, Yan Xin gave Deng Jiaxian his first healing, and on June 28, Deng Jiaxian felt no pain all day. Until then, he had needed to take pain-killing injections most days. By June 29, Deng's condition improved more. His temperature was normal, his bowel movements were smooth, and most of his pain was gone. He could get up and walk by himself, go to the bathroom, and eat (he had been unable to eat or drink for the past week).
On July 29, Deng suffered a relapse, treatment that afternoon didn't save him, and he passed away. Later, a leader asked Deng's wife, Xu Luxi, for her opinion. She matter-of-factly pointed out, "No matter what people may say, Dr. Yan Xin's psychic powers were effective in stopping the pain."
Isn't it miraculous to help someone on the edge of death live another month without pain?
Yan Xin has said, "Early-stage cancer is curable as easily as the common cold. If the patient works with me, I can reduce mid-stage cancer, and control the spread of some latestage cancer." Ao Dalun, a reporter for the Sichuan Province newspaper Sichuan Worker, has covered the Yan Xin story since July 1984. He has
many times seen Yan Xin heal people with cancerlike symptoms. One of these was a man named Tang Lao. He was a doctor of Chinese medicine, but he couldn't do anything about a hard lump about the si ze of an egg on his neck. Several hospitals diagnosed it as "liver cancer metastasis" or "aneurism," but said it couldn't be removed. One day, Tang Lao's whole body turned a yellowish color, he was suffering from constant diarrhea, and he felt exhaustion in his whole body.
Later, he saw Yan Xin, who agreed to give him a healing. As the two of them chatted, Tang Lao gradually began to feel a sensation of an electric current flowing through his whole body. The lump on his neck felt like it was being pulled by a powerful force, and it also felt a little numb and burning, but there was no pain
at all. After about half an hour, Yan Xin told him to feel the lump on his neck. He reached out to touch it, but it was gone. Tang Lao could hardly believe it, but he was crying for joy unc ontrollably.
Tang Lao is not the only one to have had such an experience, which sounds like something out of a science-fiction novel. For example, on April 27,1984, Li Ping, a steel worker in Chongqing City, was knocked down by a truck. X rays revealed that both shoulders were fractured, and the right shoulder was dislocated.
For a month, Li Ping couldn't move it. On a friend's recommendation, he went to the Chongqing Chinese Medicine Institute to see Yan Xin. He took off the bandages from Li Ping's body and had him lie down. Then, Yan Xin massaged his back. Li Ping later described the feeling as a cool and refreshing stream.
After twenty minutes of this, he had recovered completely, and was able to lift fifty-pound objects. Later, according to the X-ray report, the fracture lines were mostly gone, and the right shoulder joint was in its place again!
On April 5,1982, an employee of Beijing Tractor Company, Song Dianzhang, age fifty-eight, was pinned by a heavy object from a crane and injured in the right ankle. Four years of treatment at Beijing Reservoir Hospital by all kinds of methods were no use. He had to walk with a cane and could not walk for more than
fifteen minutes without feeling a numbing pain in his leg. This got worse in the winter. Because he couldn't crouch down, it was difficult for him to relieve himself. He was practically unable to g o on with his life. Later, he read an article about Yan Xin in the magazine Sports Amateur, so he wrote a letter to him, but
without having much hope in it. On May 30, 1986, he suddenly received a phone call from Yan Xin,
making an appointment to give him a healing. Yan xin asked some questions about his condition, and brought a bowl of water, putting a little salt in it. Yan Xin told him to put both feet in the water, close his eyes and sit quietly. Then he left him there. But about half an hour later, a warmth started moving up his legs, until it covered his whole body. As Song Dianzhang described it, "Usually, I would feel numbing pain in my waist and legs i f I sat down for twenty minutes and get pins and needles in my feet. But this time, I was in a kind of waking sleep, and sat there for over two hours without tiring a bit!"
Yan Xin returned two hours later and asked how he was. He said he felt light throughout his body, and so Yan Xin told him to put his shoes on and try walking around a little. Song said, "Then I was about to pick up my cane, but Yan Xin told me I didn't need to. I hardly dared believe I could get up and walk around like
this!" After that, the pain went away and his leg returned to normal.
In Western societies, particularly the U.S., many people suffer from diabetes. According to a friend of mine, a practitioner of Chinese medicine, if you compare hepatitis, diabetes, and nephritis, hepatitis is the most serious, and diabetes is second.
Liu Tiegang, a thirty-nine-year-old worker from Beijing, had diabetes. His wife was worried sick, and she would often tell people, "I would gladly give everything we have to anyone who can cure my husband." On June 26, 1986, Yan Xin gave him a healing.
First, they chatted a little. Yan Xin told him that it was a minor illness and he had nothing to worry about. fie told him to drink some water, then gave him a bottle of Coca-Cola. Liu said excitedly, "Usually people with diabetes don't dare drink this, but I did because he told me to." Then Yan Xin asked him if he drank milk. Yan Xin told him, "Drink three bottles of milk with sugar!" What was the result? Liu Tiegang did as Yan Xin told him to, and drank the milk with sugar. Three days later, he was cured. From t hen on, he could eat whatever he wanted, including high-sugar grapes, apples, pears, oranges, and bananas, but he never had a relapse of diabetes.
This raises the question, how could Yan Xin have told a person suffering from diabetes to drink Coca-Cola? Wasn't that against common sense in medicine, wouldn't it make the patient worse? No -need to fear, because Yan Xin's mind power can change the molecular structure of substances. He could turn Coca-Cola into ordinary water, or even into a medicine beneficial to someone suffering from diabetes. Now let us look at a case in which he changed the structure of white pepper.
Jin Yong lives in Hong Kong and is the founder of the wellknown Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao. He has written six best-selling martial arts novels. One day, he went out with the chairman of the Hong Kong Science and Technology Commission, chemistry professor Pan Zongguang, former editor of the newspaper Ming Pao A Le, and Yan Xin. Before they ate their meal, Yan Xin took a white-pepper shaker and dumped the contents over his vegetables, covering it with a thick layer. A Le asked him if it was spicy enough. Yan Xin said it wasn't. Yan Xin is from Sichuan Province, and the people of Sichuan love spicy food, so this was
nothing to him. Then Yan Xin told the rest of them to dump the white-pepper shaker over their dishes too. This was a great joke.
Yan Xi-n told them to eat. The strange thing was that it didn't taste spicy at all. Even the waiter came and tasted it, and it wasn't spicy to him either!
As to Yan Xin's experiments changing molecular structures, these are described in detail in chapter 5. Today, some in mainland China call Yan Xin a "miracle doctor," and others call him a "new Ji Gong." He can not only cure diseases and change molecular structures, he can also help people confined to wheelchairs to get up and walk again, and people who walk with a cane to throw it away and walk by themselves. Let the facts speak for themselves.
Ji Gong is a household name in China. It is said that there was a Buddhist in ancient China who sailed the seas and lived the life of a wanderer, but he had an incredible power. He gave people healings, never taking a penny for it, and could cure anything, no matter how rare and exotic. He could also create something from nothing, and change the shape and structure of objects. For this reason, people believed he was a god come down to live among the mortals and save them from their misfortunes.
Those things the people of that time didn't understand we now know are psychic phenomena.
Making something out of nothing and changing the structure of material objects are things known to happen in mainland China today. Indeed, they are the subject of this book, the things done by super psychics Zhang Baosheng, Yan Xin, and perhaps another, greater one.
Yan Xin and Professor Lu Zuyin of the Chinese High Energy Physics Institute were invited by the East-West Academy of Healing Arts to come to the U.S. to participate in the First International Congress of Chi Gong. It was held June 22-24, 1990, at the University of California at Berkeley and was organized by the East-West Academy. Three weeks later, on the evening of July 15, when he gave a lecture with emitted chi at the Fine Arts Theater of San Francisco, the tickets to the lecture were sold out. But Jia Y uane, an eighty-year-old woman, didn't give up. She had been paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair for forty-three
years. She said she would be satisfied just to hear Master Yan Xin's voice from outside the door. She had heard of Yan Xin's fame for years. Yan Xin was a miracle doctor, a new Ji Gong, and she wouldn't miss the chance to see him for anything.
When his lecture started, she paid great attention, listening quietly outside the entrance. Yan Xin's voice was brought to her ears by the amplifiers, and every sentence felt like a wave of warmth pouring over her. She swayed and shook to this flow of warmth, and not long thereafter, her waist and legs felt as warm
as if they were being roasted by fire, but she also felt that her whole body from top to bottom was being filled with power. The power was getting stronger and stronger, and suddenly, she got out of her wheelchair and stood up! Her daughter-in-law, who was pushing the wheelchair for her, couldn't believe it, and was in a
fluster.
"I want to go in," the old woman shouted as she went in the entrance. At this moment, the audience of hundreds looked on hei, with astonishment. just as they were all talking about it, Yan Xin hushed them and said, "If she can stand, let her stand. If she can walk, let her walk."
Jia Yuane is not the only person who has got out of her wheelchair and walked again. Two days earlier, the authors attended one of Yan Xin's lectures with emitted chi for the first time. This was at Stanford University, one of the top science schools in the world. Both times, the auditorium was packed. In the three-hour lecture, in which he emitted chi energy, many people were affected by the psychic energy he released as part of his presentation, with reactions including swaying and moving in strange forms . A middle-aged woman who had been confined to a wheelchair for years got up and walked.
A visiting scholar from what was then West Germany, Professor Maria Biege, who was sitting in front of me, asked me if it was real. I told her that it was indeed, because I myself have a kind of psychic ability known as "empty force" which allows me to knock a person down without physical contact. She appeared skeptical, but later, I met her in her home in Menlo Park (a California town not far from Stanford), along with her friend, Erica Wheeler, who said she was preparing to play for the U.S. Olympic javel in team. I agreed to demonstrate my power to them.
They stood one in front of the Other, with a mattress behind them (because I was afraid they might be injured if they fell on the floor), and they fell on the mattress with one wave of my hand, exclaiming that it was Iiamazing."
After Yan Xin's lecture was over, Professor Lu Zuyin, the scientist from the Beijing High Energy Physics Institute who accompanied Yan Xin to the U.S., followed up on Yan Xin's presentation with a lecture on his scientific experiments on Yan Xin, including the records and results of these experiments.
Professor Lu has been involved in long-term collaboration with Beijing's Qinghua University and the Chinese Medicine Research Institute in Chongqing, Sichuan Province. They have been focusing on experiments to test Yan Xin's powers (some of these are described in detail in chapter 5).
Before Yan Xin came to the U.S., a friend of mine sent nie a videotape of Yan Xin giving a lecture with emitted chi be fore an audience of 5,000 at Guangzhou Stadium, and I saw the scenes of people getting out of their wheelchairs and walking. But at that time, I didn't believe it.
Yan Xin has given over a hundred lectures with emitted chi in mainland China, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Thailand. The reason he has turned to this mass healing method is that too many people want to seek healings from him. it is said that the effects of the mass healings are just as good as one-on-one
healings, and rely mostly on mind power that he sends to the audience. In his visit to the U.S., Yan Xin spent a month in tests of the effectiveness of chi against AIDS. However, Yan Xin is not licensed to practice medicine in the U.S. and so is not permitted to treat AIDS patients medically. For this reason, the
experimenters chose the method of mass healing by lectures with emitted chi. In this way, they avoided the use of the term "medical treatment.
According to Guo Tongxu, the author of the book Yan Xin in North America-Shaking the World (Sichuan Education Publishers, 1993), Yan Xin gave three sessions of energy adjustment and healing for a group of AIDS patients from Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and New York on September 2, October 10, and November 14, 1990. Their immune Systems were greatly strengthened, and the patients requested a continuation of the program. Thus, the Institute of Chinese Medicine in New York again requested Yan Xin
to come into action, an invitation which was accepted by Yan Xin.
As Yan Xin later disclosed, he did over ten research projects in the U.S. for preventive treatment of AIDS patients. He used the method of treating the patients without physical contact, combining Chinese medicine, chi gong, and lectures with ernitted chi. However, he didn't describe the outcomes.
A report on Yan Xin in the San Francisco Chronicle of May 16, 1991, said, "Ken Sancier, a scientist retired from SRI, worked with Yan on the AIDS study, but said he could not release any findings." I am personally familiar with Dr. Sancier, because it was he who organized a class I taught in "Chi Gong for Scientists" (the students were all Ph.D.'s and M.D.'s). I taught them chi gong and attempted to give them an understanding of what chi is through actual practice and facts. Dr. Sancier himself was one of t he students. He was not willing to disclose any results of the Yan Xin AIDS study to me either, because he and Yan Xin had a nondisclosure agreement under which nothing could be revealed to the public without the prior approval of each party.
Before this, Yan Xin went to Hong Kong on January 20, 1989, to give a healing to the daughter-in-law of a Hong Kong billionaire. She had suffered a fractured leg bone and a cracked hip bone in a traffic accident. At the same time, he gave two healings for an AIDS patient. One of these was a long-distance healing (or off-site healing). Three days later, the patient's lab results changed from HIV-positive to negative.
Yan Xin does not generally touch his patients. His longrange energy projection has a range of effectiveness from seven to 2,000 kilometers. As Yan Xin was in Hong Kong on this occasion, his long-range projection must have been within thirty kilometers.
In China, from December 1986 to January 1987, Yan Xin took part in seven tests of long-distance energy projection at varying locations and distances. All achieved the anticipated results. Placing bottles of physiological saline, glucose solution, and methramycin solution in a dark room, Yan Xin then projected his
energy remotely, from different distances in each test. The tests resulted in the discovery of a new broad band between the characteristic bands of the laser Raman spectrum of the water, showing th at it had changed its structure. The saline, glucose, and methramycin all showed significant changes of a similar sort.
of Kunming in Yunnan province, Chengdu in Sichuan Province, Guangzhou in Guangdong Province, and Hong Kong, projecting his energy to a laboratory in Beijing, at distances of 1,800 to 2,000 kilometers.
A more surprising experiment took place during Yan Xin's visit to the U.S. Professor Lu Zuyin and Yan Xin arranged to conduct a long-distance experiment across the Pacific Ocean at a distance of 10,000 kilometers. This was done on December 9, 1990, from 2:00 to 5:00 P.m. Beijing Standard Time, and the target of the
experiment was an atomic nucleus! (All these experiments are described in greater detail in chapter 5.)
With Yan Xin's EHF, there is one amazing thing after an other. On May 15, 1991, at the Masonic Auditorium in San Francisco, he demonstrated his ability to act as a "human electrical conductor" before an audience of 1,700. In his article, San Francisco Chronicle reporter Don Lattin described what Yan Xin was showing as "his alleged ability to channel elec tric current through his body, and his capacity to change wine from light to strong." With the article was a photograph of Yan Xin holding both ends of an electric wire as a lightbulb lit up.
The caption read, "Yan Xin showed his ability to handle electric current during a lecture at the Masonic Auditorium." Many Chinese-Americans clipped this article in the Chronicle, feeling that Yan Xin had brought them a little glory.
This demonstration as a "human electrical conductor" was not the first for Yan Xin. On the evening of December 11, 1986, in the Central Academy of the Chinese Communist Party, he gave a demonstration of this ability before an audience of 1,200 people after concluding a lecture on chi gong.
This demonstration was also monitored by an expert. Yan Xin held an electric wire carrying 200 to 240 volts in his left hand, and a ground wire in his right hand. Then he completed an electric circuit with his body for a few minutes. Someone stood by with an electric test pencil to verify that his body was electrified. Not
only that, he was also able to raise and lower the voltage with his mind power!
Bi-gu (a type of meditation for fasting) is a rare and exotic term not only for Westerners, even most Chinese don't know what it means. Bi gu is an ancient term, and can only be found in classical texts. It is not the same as a "hunger strike." Hunger strike is a modem term, and most of us would associate it with political protest or similar matters. Hunger strike refers to the technique of refusing to eat as a way of shocking one's
opponents. But in bi gu or fasting, a person has no desire for food, not as a symptom of a disease, but in such a way that good health is maintained even without eating. For this reason, some Chinese call bi gu "eating the air." The belief behind this is that a person's energy must come from somevvhere, and if not from
food, it must be from the air. Is it really energy from the sky and the ground, or the surrounding universe, allowing the person to live? Science does not currently have the answer to this. A person in a state of bi gu not only goes without eating, but can even cure his or her own diseases. This is called "bi gu healing," or healing by fasting.
Western medicine and ordinary natural healing also sometimes use fasting for one, two, or three days as a healing technique, but the Chinese technique of bi gu involves fasting for several months or years!
I have personally met Ms. Ha Toi Chun, an entrepreneur from Hong Kong who came to the U.S. on business. She has fasted for six months. She studies chi gong under a master from mainland China, Chen Letian. After practicing chi gong for two weeks, she heard the master mention the meditative fasting phenomenon in chi gong, and since then she hasn't felt like eating. While Chen Letian has been teaching in San Francisco, he asked me to serve as a consultant, and I often rneet with him. Three times I had lunch
wi th the two of them, ,rid we ordered many nice dishes, but she never had a bite 'f it. She would have no reason to fool me, because. she doesn't need anything from me. She told me she had a stomach disease and often suffered from headaches, insomnia, and lack of energy, but since she has been fasting, all of these
Problems have disappeared, and she is feeling much better thanl before. She doesn't want to eat, but she drinks a little wvater sometimes. She has lost twenty pounds. The remarkable powers of th e m aster Chen Letian are described more fully in chapter 11.
On October 3, 1987, Ms. Xu Xiaosheng, who had lived ir, Beijing for all of her twenty-one years, took part in a lecture with emitted chi by Yan Xin. After that, she didn't feel like eating. She didn't see anything surprising in this, because she knew it could be the meditative fasting phenomenon. She was still full of
energy, so she didn't worry about it and went on for 133 days like that. During this period, she wrote the following.
The smell of rice would make me feel sick to my stomach and very uncomfortable. After two hours of teaching [authors' note: perhaps she is a schoolteacher] and taking care of other tasks, I used to need a drink of water as soon as I got home, but on this day, there was no dryness, in the mouth and I didn't need water.
I felt as though I didn't need any of the things to eat or drink in the world.
Over the 133 days of her fasting, her weight did not go down. This does not contradict the above case of the woman who lost twenty pounds. During this type of fasting, sorne people lose weight and others do not. In order to study this phenomenon, the Human Body Science Laboratory of Beijing Teachers' College
decided to follow and observe her, keeping her under observation day and night for fifteen days. it was indeed true that she ate nothing, but still had the energy and strength of a normal person.
Bi gu is not only found in many ancient Chinese chronicle,, it can also be found in Ci Hai (Sea of Words), a standard modern dictionary of the Chinese language. In an event that brought great attention to bi gu, two major chi gong documents were discovered in 1973 in an excavation in grave 3, Mawang mound,
Changsha City, Hunan Province. One of these was called Bi Gu Shi Wu Fa (Diet Technique of Bi Gu). According to a study of the text by chi gong researcher Qian Junsheng, in ancient times, there
were three ways in which bi gu was practiced: (a) eating nothing at all and not drinking water during bi gu; (b) drinking water and eating some fruits or medicines; (c) drinking nothing but water, and consuming nothing else. As Mr. Qian said, the holistic view of man and nature is the general picture left to us by the ancients, but we are still unable to elucidate in full detail all the complexities of this lifestyle. Such life phenomena as
meditative fasting, the same as EHF, are yet a mystery....
One might ask, What is Yan Xin's greatest power? I don't have an answer to this question. To give some idea of the scope of his powers, here is a story about psychokinesis, or moving objects with mind power.
Over his career, Yan Xin has done healings for thousands of people, relieving their pain, but some say it is "coincidence," or no more than a "placebo effect" or even a "fraud." His opponents include scientists (some of whom have not actually done any research to investigate the claims). Once, someone registered a complaint against Yan Xin with the Chongqing Municipal Health Department, accusing him of spreading "feudal superstitions" and requesting that his license to issue prescriptions be revoked.
After an investigation, the Chongqing City government certified that there was no mistake in the records of Yan Xin's successful cases, but the investigators wanted to test his powers in person as well. Yan Xin told the municipal inspector, Zeng Youzhi, to stand facing the wall, while he stood a few meters away. When he
raised his hands and pushed forward, Zeng Youzhi was pushed into the wall, and when Yan Xin pulled his hands backward, Zeng Youzhi started falling backward, until he was so frightened, he sh outed for Yan Xin to stop!
I am firmly convinced of the truth of this report, because I myself have mastered a form of chi gong called empty force, in which it is possible to knock down an opponent without physical contact. My book about this, Empty Force, has been published in the U.S. and England. The U.S. martial arts world, particularly
in California, knows of the existence of the empty force, because in the last few years, two emptyforce masters from mainland China have come to teach their arts in the cities of San Francisco and Berkeley.
There are so many stories about Yan Xin, and some of the ones described in chapter 5 and chapter 7 may be more amazing than the ones in this chapter. However, one news item, which I have been unable to confirm, states that it has been reported that he has done experiments on bringing dead animals back to life. This was stunning for the scientists.
To conclude on a lighter note, a reporter once interviewed Yan Xin about his two-week chi gong class in San Diego, California, in which twenty-six of the eighty-three students were reported to enter the meditative fasting state. The reporter said that if he promoted meditative fasting as a weightloss program, it would be
very popular in the U.S. Yan Xin replied, "If you promote fasting in America, you will make enemies in the food industry. They make their living selling hamburgers."
The First Psychic War Between China and Japan
The term "psychic war" was often mentioned before the dissolution of the Soviet Union, but people did not know what its methods of fighting involved. Would it be to project the fighting power across the oceans, or would it be used at close range to cause a military commander on the battlefield to spurt blood from the
nose and mouth? Some time ago, some magazines reported that the Soviets had used group mind power to sink a submarine. If a country sent a team of well-trained psychic spies (particularly woman spies) to an enemy country for sabotage and dirty tricks, it could be a terrifying nightmare. If EHF can stop a frog's
heart from beating, it could also be directed against the commander-in chief of a country's armed services (such as a king, president, or chairman) to stop the leader's heart from beating.
But we have nothing to worry about. The strategic planners are not so dumb. If the president dies, we still have the vice research. president, if the vice president dies, we still have the Speaker of the House, and beyond that the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and so on down the line.
Not all of them could die at once. What is more worrisome is that the opposing country could play a great joke and use mind power to make the president go running in the streets barking like a dog and the vice president go meowing like a cat. Then the country could not go into battle in the first place. This would
fit a f amous line in China's ancient classic of military science, Sun-Tzu's Art of War: "The best strategy is to weaken the enemy's troops without fighting oneself."
The above is just speculation about something which we hope does not come to pass. However, a decade ago, a closerange psychic war did take place between China and Japan. After news of this war leaked, it was reported in newspapers and magazines in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. However, the story has been ignored by the media in other countries. Whether the story was deliberately suppressed, overlooked, or underrated in importance, let us now discuss the causes and results of this China-Japan
strug gle.
It was November 1986, and Yan Xin was visiting Japan with a friendship delegation from the Chinese Chi Gong Scientific Research Association. The delegation consisted of seven people, and the leader was Zhang Zhenghuan, the chairman of the Chinese Human Body Science Association as well as the Chinese Chi Gong
Scientific Research Association. However, his more important position was as head of the National Defense Science Commission, the leader of military research. China's nuclear test detonations and long-r ange missile launchings all came under his purview. He has also been a powerful associate of Qian Xuesen in the field of
EHF
Zhang Zhenghuan is directly in charge of all EHF people. In one video on Zhang Baosheng, Baosheng was shown successfully demonstrating his powers of removing medicine pills from a bottle and other skills with great success. But then, in an attempt to set fire to a piece of clothing with his finger, he was unable to
make the fire come and looked very upset. At that moment, Zhang Zhenghuan, seeing that he didn't look well, came out, sat beside him, patted him on the shoulder, and said some consoling words to him. In a little while, Zhang Baosheng's finger suddenly lit up and he burned the piece of clothing right away. This type of
psychological support from his leader made it easier to enter the psychic state.
On this visit to Japan, Zhang Zhenghuan was not only the delegation leader, but also the director of planning. The seven of them went to the New Otani Hotel in Tokyo. That evening, they were hosted by Furuoka Katsu, the chairman of the Japanese Chi Gong Science Association, and many members and followers of this organization, and, of course, some diplomatic officials and representatives of Japan's martial arts world. Before the start of the banquet, Furuoka complained to Zhang Zhenghuan:
"Just as the Chinese proverb says, 'A barber needs someone else to cut his hair.' Even though I am a chi gong master, I can't do anything about my own injured ligament in my old elbow joint that
has been bothering me for many years. Many doctors have not been able to help me with this."
Zhang Zhenghuan realized that Furuoka's real intention was to test Yan Xin's powers, so he said:
"Yan Xin, please offer five glasses in toast to Mr. Fur-uoka's health." Zhang didn't mention the healing, only giving a toast.
Yan Xin understood his meaning, so he poured a glassof rice wine and passed it to Furuoka, saying, "Mr. Furuoka, to your health."
A toast is just what Furuoka usually wanted to hear, because he had a reputation as a "strong drinker" and would usually drink wine as if it were water. He could drink all day without getting drunk, so he happily accepted the glass and drank it down in one gulp. At this time, Yan Xin was about to pour a second glass, but Furuoka started muttering:
"How strange. I seem to be feeling a little drunk."
At this, his Japanese friends all around him had looks of surprise on their faces, but none of them believed such a thing could happen. This "strong drinker" had a reputation for "drinking a thousand glasses without getting drunk." No matter how strong Yan Xin's powers were, they could not be enough to make Furuoka drunk after only one glass. As they were discussing this among themselves, Furuoka suggested that they change to beer for the second glass, regardless of his reputation as a "strong drinker."
Yan Xin agreed to this, and poured a second glass, using beer this time. Although Furuoka was mostly drunk by this time, he still had some of his senses, and he made another suggestion: he would drink the glass of beer in four gulps, each one counting as a toast.
Yan Xin agreed to his suggestion, and so Furuoka drank a quarter of a glass of beer. In an instant, his whole face turned red, and he raised his arms and shook himself vigorously a few times, saying, "I don't feel any pain from my disease now. This is amazing. Yan Xin's powers are tremendous."
As it turned out, when Yan Xin toasted him, he had sent his energy to the rice wine and the beer. He was not only able to make a strong drinker almost completely drunk, but was also able to change the drinks into a medicine to treat his hard-to-cure disease.
The Japanese people have the courage to admit defeat, as well as the fortitude never to give up. At this time, a high Japanese chi gong master named Kobayashi Yasuyuki saw that Furuoka was giving a poor impression of the Japanese people, so he immediately said he wanted to test his chi against Yan Xin's. The interpreter at
this time was a friend of mine, Mr. Yan Hai, an editor with Beijing's People's Sports Publishers. He felt the manner was too rude to translate, so he rendered it in Chinese as something m ore like "an exchange of ideas."
Kobayashi Yasuyuki had his own skills to give him the courage to challenge Yan Xin. He is very famous in Japan and has strong powers, particularly in projecting his energy at acupuncture. points. He had never been defeated in his career, and even though Yan Xin was famous, he had no fear of him. Thus, he gathered his
d-d around the dan tian acupuncture point (the center of the body's energy in chi gong theory), and made a fierce attack on Yan Xin. Yan Xin acted as though nothing had happened, in the same wa y he usually behaved when chatting with people at the same time as giving them healings. However, Kobayashi perceived
that there was some kind of power surrounding Yan Xin, so he immediately strengthened his attack on Yan Xin. Still he couldn't break through Yan Xin's protective cover, and Yan Xin was still sitting motionless.
Kobayashi saw there was something strange about this, so he stopped and regrouped his energies. He made a new request of Yan Xin, wanting to try to attack him from behind. His idea was that Yan Xin may have strong chi in the front, but he must have a weak spot in back. After this was translated, Yan Xin nodded his
agreement. Kobayashi Yasuyuki again sent his chi out to attack, aiming strong power at Yan Xin's back. But still he couldn't make the slightest impression on Yan Xin- Kobayashi felt that Yan Xin had some kind of force protecting his back, so all attacks were useless!
At this moment, Kobayashi Yasuyuki was becoming frustrated. He couldn't attack Yan Xin from either the front or from behind. Could it be a matter of distance? He immediately decided to come two steps closer, raised his hand and sent his striking power toward Yan Xin's back, but Yan Xin still did not react, so
Kobayashi again raised his hands to push all his power at Yan Xin's back, but it was like trying to push a massive stone.
Kobayashi was so tired he was puffing and sweating. Having exhausted his powers , Kobayashi realized that he had met his match. If he relied on chi and energy, he would be sure to "lose." And so, going against the traditional rules of sportsmanship for martial arts contests, he decided to try another tactic without warning his opponent. He made use of his techniques for attacking the acupuncture points, aiming at the bai hui acupuncture point on Yan Xin's forehead. If he succeeded at this, his target would become as stiff as a board and lose consciousness. But stil l Yan Xin did not mov e. He let his attacker try all kinds of techniques to attack his acupuncture points, but none of them could hurt him.
Kobayashi Yasuyuki is known as one of Japan's top masters. Besides the abilities to use chi and fing (sudden striking energy), and to affect the acupuncture points of his targets, he has another, most ferocious technique. This is to grab the jugular vein of his opponent. When he does this, his opponent may be severely injured or killed. Since Kobayashi saw he was losing the contest, and losing badly in a way he never imagined possible, he suddenly had a terrible thought. Without regard for sportsmanship or appearances, he immediately stretched out his arm to try to grab Yan Xin's jugular. But once again, his efforts came to nothing, because Yan Xin had already closed all his acupuncture points. When Kobayashi made his grab for Yan Xin's
jugular, the people viewing the scene watched with bated breath. But Yan Xin just let him claw away all he wanted, without showing the slightest sign of anxiety.
Although Kobayashi Yasuyuki used rough tactics and didn't play by the rules in this China-Japan battle, he was a frank and straightforward person. Convinced that he was no match for Yan Xin, he admitted defeat with a bow. He freely admitted, "Chinese martial arts are great! I admire them." Then he and his son, who
was at his side, said Yan Xin was their master and they wanted to learn from him.
Originally, a Japanese fist fighter and a kendo master were waiting after Kobayashi, also hoping for a chance to "exchange ideas" by testing their skills against Yan Xin, but seeing their colleague lose so ignominiously, they decided to avoid further humiliation and gave up the idea.
After the group of seven returned home from Japan, over a hundred newspapers and magazines reported the story of Yan Xin's victory over the Japanese masters in Tokyo under many different headlines, including "Battle of the Chinese and Japanese Chi Gong Masters in Tokyo ... .. A Decisive Result in the China-Japan War
.... .. Battle in Tokyo," "EHF War between China and Japan ... .. Legend Yan Xin's True Story," "Pride Comes Before a Fall in Tokyo Battle," and many others.
Anakin in his test to do the Jedi training (qigong alchemy training) is asked how he is and he says he is cold.
Yoda then asks if Anakin is afraid and he says no.
Then Yoda later dismisses Anakin to the other Jedi Masters saying fear leads to anger and anger leads to hatred and so the future of Anakin would be bad.
Of course for those who know qigong training Yoda was testing the Yi or intention of Anakin - was he being honest or having true intention?
True intention is the secret to having a good heart which is then the secret of building up and restoring the Yuan Qi energy of the kidneys.
Anakin was cold due to low kidney energy which creates fear. But Anakin did not want to admit his fear and so he lied saying he was not afraid.
Because Anakin lied then his heart intention was not good.
The bad heart intention means his spirit energy would not then be focused on sublimating and storing up his kidney energy.
Instead the frequency of his spirit would be low so that his force energy would be a low spirit frequency.
This would cause his increased power to be driven by low frequency spirit energy so that any build up of kidney energy would lead then to a liver blockage.
The liver blockage would cause anger and then the anger would cause a heart blockage that causes further bad energy.
So then in the original Star Wars series Darth Vader and the evil Emperor encourage Luke Skywalker to feed his own anger in their attempt to get him to lower his spirit intention energy so that his liver blockage would cause his force - his yuan qi - to be deconverted to be lost as fear - the kidney loss.
But Luke had a higher frequency spirit intention and so his Force was restoring and sublimating his kidney energy so that his anger was cleared out and sublimated - harmonizing his body and mind as unified spirit and force.
I have not seen Number 7 yet and even that does not end the movies. I will continue watching the prequels.
We know George Lucas went to Shaolin and that was his direct inspiration for the Star Wars series
I had read this in some book in a bookstore and I could never remember what book that was so glad these documentaries have been made.
So then the Jedi Master in Phantom Menace is a name variation on qigong.
part 2 of George Lucas being inspired by Shaolin qigong masters
So then Yoda looks like Hai Deng, the Shaolin elder qigong master who directly taught the original qigong master that I studied from. So I actually have a direct lineage to Yoda! Here
There is a story about Hai Deng from Paul Dong. Let's see if I can find it online.
For his martial art training, the Venerable Hai Deng literally stood vertically upside-down on two fingers for hours. His two fingers were so powerful that he could pierce through buffalo's hide with just one jab. When a Japanese master mentioned that Shaolin Kungfu could noYou can see in that video he looks like Yoda. I had posted that response four years ago on "Disinfo.com" which was started by the Western occult scene that is too materialistic. So a person responded that qi is not laser holographic energy as I had stated. Well the "Yuan Qi" is the source of the "Yuan Shen" which is coherent holographic biophoton laser energy indeed!
longer be found in China, the Venerable Hai Deng cme out from his self imposed
retreat to demonstrate genuine Shaolin arts. He was invited to become
the kungfu grandmaster at the Shaolin Monastery in Henan Province. Perhaps due to
policy differences, the Venerable Hai Deng later resigned from the
monastery, where today modern wushu rather than traditional Shaolin Kungfu is
taught, though not inside the monastery itself but in the numerous wushu
schools around the monastery and often conducted by monastery monks. One of Hai
Deng Fa Shi's distinguished disciples is the great chi kung master, Yan
Xin, considered by the present Chinese government as a national treasure.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?f...
This 2002 pdf is linked of Yan Xin science experiments on qigong the student of Hai Deng
An excerpt from Paul Dong's China's Super Psychics book scribd on Yan Xin qigong, student of Shaolin's Hai Deng:
Paul Dong wrote:
Now, I would like to present some little-known but fascinating material to Western readers. In 1977, Yan Xin, a young man known in China as a super psychic, graduated from the College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Chengdu, China. After his graduation, he started to work at the Chinese Medicine Research
Institute in the city of Chongqing. He practiced a method of treatment using mind power instead of drugs. He cured patients of broken bones, diabetes, heart disease, traumatic paralysis, neurosis, rheuma tism, hepatitis, cancer, and other conditions. In the past few years, taking advantage of his international tour, he has done experiments on the treatment of AIDS with some success. Unknown to many, the lives of some of China's top national leaders and VIPs have been prolonged by his treatment.
Among these is the famous scientist-"the father of the 'Chinese A-bomb" - Deng Jiaxian. The Chinese paper Liberation Army News has openly lauded him as the "great pioneer of the two bombs" (referring to the A-bomb and the H-bomb). Deng was suffering from the advanced stages of cancer of the rectum. By June 27, 1986, when the hospital announced the critical state of Deng Jiaxian's condition, signaling that his life was almost at its end, all the doctors of the People's Liberation Army had given up all hope of saving him. At that inoment, the last hope was to ask for help from Director Zhang Zhenghuan of the Military Technology
Commission, since he also served as the head of the Chinese EHF Research Association, to bring Yan Xin to give Deng a healing.
As Zhang Zhenghuan and two doctors drove with Yan Xin to the hospital, they smelled a fragrance, which was getting stronger and stronger. As they were wondering where the fragrance was coming from and talking about it, Yan Xin started laughing. They didn't know why he was laughing, but when they went into Deng
Jiaxian's ward, they found that Deng's severe pain had stopped, and he was sitting up. Everyone was very surprised by this. From this, everybody knew that the only thing that could make Deng's critica l illness disappear instantly was the power of Yan Xin.
In a later discussion about this, Dr. Liu Huamin asked Yan Xin about the laughing in the car. Yan Xin replied that it was simple. "When I send my energy, I sometimes emit a sandalwood scent. After I got in the car, I started sending energy toward the hospital, and I was already relieving some of his symptoms."
There is nothing unusual about emitting scents when sending energy. Tian Ruisheng, a Chinese chi gong master called a "fragrance master," and the over-ninety-year-old Yang Meiqun, are both well known for their ability to emit fragrances. The former came to San Francisco in 1995 to teach the technique to
Chinese-American audiences. The latter, Yang Mei- qun, is famous for teaching her practice, "wild-goose-style chi gong". Whenever she sends her energy, there is a fragrance.
On June 27, 1986, Yan Xin gave Deng Jiaxian his first healing, and on June 28, Deng Jiaxian felt no pain all day. Until then, he had needed to take pain-killing injections most days. By June 29, Deng's condition improved more. His temperature was normal, his bowel movements were smooth, and most of his pain was gone. He could get up and walk by himself, go to the bathroom, and eat (he had been unable to eat or drink for the past week).
On July 29, Deng suffered a relapse, treatment that afternoon didn't save him, and he passed away. Later, a leader asked Deng's wife, Xu Luxi, for her opinion. She matter-of-factly pointed out, "No matter what people may say, Dr. Yan Xin's psychic powers were effective in stopping the pain."
Isn't it miraculous to help someone on the edge of death live another month without pain?
Yan Xin has said, "Early-stage cancer is curable as easily as the common cold. If the patient works with me, I can reduce mid-stage cancer, and control the spread of some latestage cancer." Ao Dalun, a reporter for the Sichuan Province newspaper Sichuan Worker, has covered the Yan Xin story since July 1984. He has
many times seen Yan Xin heal people with cancerlike symptoms. One of these was a man named Tang Lao. He was a doctor of Chinese medicine, but he couldn't do anything about a hard lump about the si ze of an egg on his neck. Several hospitals diagnosed it as "liver cancer metastasis" or "aneurism," but said it couldn't be removed. One day, Tang Lao's whole body turned a yellowish color, he was suffering from constant diarrhea, and he felt exhaustion in his whole body.
Later, he saw Yan Xin, who agreed to give him a healing. As the two of them chatted, Tang Lao gradually began to feel a sensation of an electric current flowing through his whole body. The lump on his neck felt like it was being pulled by a powerful force, and it also felt a little numb and burning, but there was no pain
at all. After about half an hour, Yan Xin told him to feel the lump on his neck. He reached out to touch it, but it was gone. Tang Lao could hardly believe it, but he was crying for joy unc ontrollably.
Tang Lao is not the only one to have had such an experience, which sounds like something out of a science-fiction novel. For example, on April 27,1984, Li Ping, a steel worker in Chongqing City, was knocked down by a truck. X rays revealed that both shoulders were fractured, and the right shoulder was dislocated.
For a month, Li Ping couldn't move it. On a friend's recommendation, he went to the Chongqing Chinese Medicine Institute to see Yan Xin. He took off the bandages from Li Ping's body and had him lie down. Then, Yan Xin massaged his back. Li Ping later described the feeling as a cool and refreshing stream.
After twenty minutes of this, he had recovered completely, and was able to lift fifty-pound objects. Later, according to the X-ray report, the fracture lines were mostly gone, and the right shoulder joint was in its place again!
On April 5,1982, an employee of Beijing Tractor Company, Song Dianzhang, age fifty-eight, was pinned by a heavy object from a crane and injured in the right ankle. Four years of treatment at Beijing Reservoir Hospital by all kinds of methods were no use. He had to walk with a cane and could not walk for more than
fifteen minutes without feeling a numbing pain in his leg. This got worse in the winter. Because he couldn't crouch down, it was difficult for him to relieve himself. He was practically unable to g o on with his life. Later, he read an article about Yan Xin in the magazine Sports Amateur, so he wrote a letter to him, but
without having much hope in it. On May 30, 1986, he suddenly received a phone call from Yan Xin,
making an appointment to give him a healing. Yan xin asked some questions about his condition, and brought a bowl of water, putting a little salt in it. Yan Xin told him to put both feet in the water, close his eyes and sit quietly. Then he left him there. But about half an hour later, a warmth started moving up his legs, until it covered his whole body. As Song Dianzhang described it, "Usually, I would feel numbing pain in my waist and legs i f I sat down for twenty minutes and get pins and needles in my feet. But this time, I was in a kind of waking sleep, and sat there for over two hours without tiring a bit!"
Yan Xin returned two hours later and asked how he was. He said he felt light throughout his body, and so Yan Xin told him to put his shoes on and try walking around a little. Song said, "Then I was about to pick up my cane, but Yan Xin told me I didn't need to. I hardly dared believe I could get up and walk around like
this!" After that, the pain went away and his leg returned to normal.
In Western societies, particularly the U.S., many people suffer from diabetes. According to a friend of mine, a practitioner of Chinese medicine, if you compare hepatitis, diabetes, and nephritis, hepatitis is the most serious, and diabetes is second.
Liu Tiegang, a thirty-nine-year-old worker from Beijing, had diabetes. His wife was worried sick, and she would often tell people, "I would gladly give everything we have to anyone who can cure my husband." On June 26, 1986, Yan Xin gave him a healing.
First, they chatted a little. Yan Xin told him that it was a minor illness and he had nothing to worry about. fie told him to drink some water, then gave him a bottle of Coca-Cola. Liu said excitedly, "Usually people with diabetes don't dare drink this, but I did because he told me to." Then Yan Xin asked him if he drank milk. Yan Xin told him, "Drink three bottles of milk with sugar!" What was the result? Liu Tiegang did as Yan Xin told him to, and drank the milk with sugar. Three days later, he was cured. From t hen on, he could eat whatever he wanted, including high-sugar grapes, apples, pears, oranges, and bananas, but he never had a relapse of diabetes.
This raises the question, how could Yan Xin have told a person suffering from diabetes to drink Coca-Cola? Wasn't that against common sense in medicine, wouldn't it make the patient worse? No -need to fear, because Yan Xin's mind power can change the molecular structure of substances. He could turn Coca-Cola into ordinary water, or even into a medicine beneficial to someone suffering from diabetes. Now let us look at a case in which he changed the structure of white pepper.
Jin Yong lives in Hong Kong and is the founder of the wellknown Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao. He has written six best-selling martial arts novels. One day, he went out with the chairman of the Hong Kong Science and Technology Commission, chemistry professor Pan Zongguang, former editor of the newspaper Ming Pao A Le, and Yan Xin. Before they ate their meal, Yan Xin took a white-pepper shaker and dumped the contents over his vegetables, covering it with a thick layer. A Le asked him if it was spicy enough. Yan Xin said it wasn't. Yan Xin is from Sichuan Province, and the people of Sichuan love spicy food, so this was
nothing to him. Then Yan Xin told the rest of them to dump the white-pepper shaker over their dishes too. This was a great joke.
Yan Xi-n told them to eat. The strange thing was that it didn't taste spicy at all. Even the waiter came and tasted it, and it wasn't spicy to him either!
As to Yan Xin's experiments changing molecular structures, these are described in detail in chapter 5. Today, some in mainland China call Yan Xin a "miracle doctor," and others call him a "new Ji Gong." He can not only cure diseases and change molecular structures, he can also help people confined to wheelchairs to get up and walk again, and people who walk with a cane to throw it away and walk by themselves. Let the facts speak for themselves.
Ji Gong is a household name in China. It is said that there was a Buddhist in ancient China who sailed the seas and lived the life of a wanderer, but he had an incredible power. He gave people healings, never taking a penny for it, and could cure anything, no matter how rare and exotic. He could also create something from nothing, and change the shape and structure of objects. For this reason, people believed he was a god come down to live among the mortals and save them from their misfortunes.
Those things the people of that time didn't understand we now know are psychic phenomena.
Making something out of nothing and changing the structure of material objects are things known to happen in mainland China today. Indeed, they are the subject of this book, the things done by super psychics Zhang Baosheng, Yan Xin, and perhaps another, greater one.
Yan Xin and Professor Lu Zuyin of the Chinese High Energy Physics Institute were invited by the East-West Academy of Healing Arts to come to the U.S. to participate in the First International Congress of Chi Gong. It was held June 22-24, 1990, at the University of California at Berkeley and was organized by the East-West Academy. Three weeks later, on the evening of July 15, when he gave a lecture with emitted chi at the Fine Arts Theater of San Francisco, the tickets to the lecture were sold out. But Jia Y uane, an eighty-year-old woman, didn't give up. She had been paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair for forty-three
years. She said she would be satisfied just to hear Master Yan Xin's voice from outside the door. She had heard of Yan Xin's fame for years. Yan Xin was a miracle doctor, a new Ji Gong, and she wouldn't miss the chance to see him for anything.
When his lecture started, she paid great attention, listening quietly outside the entrance. Yan Xin's voice was brought to her ears by the amplifiers, and every sentence felt like a wave of warmth pouring over her. She swayed and shook to this flow of warmth, and not long thereafter, her waist and legs felt as warm
as if they were being roasted by fire, but she also felt that her whole body from top to bottom was being filled with power. The power was getting stronger and stronger, and suddenly, she got out of her wheelchair and stood up! Her daughter-in-law, who was pushing the wheelchair for her, couldn't believe it, and was in a
fluster.
"I want to go in," the old woman shouted as she went in the entrance. At this moment, the audience of hundreds looked on hei, with astonishment. just as they were all talking about it, Yan Xin hushed them and said, "If she can stand, let her stand. If she can walk, let her walk."
Jia Yuane is not the only person who has got out of her wheelchair and walked again. Two days earlier, the authors attended one of Yan Xin's lectures with emitted chi for the first time. This was at Stanford University, one of the top science schools in the world. Both times, the auditorium was packed. In the three-hour lecture, in which he emitted chi energy, many people were affected by the psychic energy he released as part of his presentation, with reactions including swaying and moving in strange forms . A middle-aged woman who had been confined to a wheelchair for years got up and walked.
A visiting scholar from what was then West Germany, Professor Maria Biege, who was sitting in front of me, asked me if it was real. I told her that it was indeed, because I myself have a kind of psychic ability known as "empty force" which allows me to knock a person down without physical contact. She appeared skeptical, but later, I met her in her home in Menlo Park (a California town not far from Stanford), along with her friend, Erica Wheeler, who said she was preparing to play for the U.S. Olympic javel in team. I agreed to demonstrate my power to them.
They stood one in front of the Other, with a mattress behind them (because I was afraid they might be injured if they fell on the floor), and they fell on the mattress with one wave of my hand, exclaiming that it was Iiamazing."
After Yan Xin's lecture was over, Professor Lu Zuyin, the scientist from the Beijing High Energy Physics Institute who accompanied Yan Xin to the U.S., followed up on Yan Xin's presentation with a lecture on his scientific experiments on Yan Xin, including the records and results of these experiments.
Professor Lu has been involved in long-term collaboration with Beijing's Qinghua University and the Chinese Medicine Research Institute in Chongqing, Sichuan Province. They have been focusing on experiments to test Yan Xin's powers (some of these are described in detail in chapter 5).
Before Yan Xin came to the U.S., a friend of mine sent nie a videotape of Yan Xin giving a lecture with emitted chi be fore an audience of 5,000 at Guangzhou Stadium, and I saw the scenes of people getting out of their wheelchairs and walking. But at that time, I didn't believe it.
Yan Xin has given over a hundred lectures with emitted chi in mainland China, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Thailand. The reason he has turned to this mass healing method is that too many people want to seek healings from him. it is said that the effects of the mass healings are just as good as one-on-one
healings, and rely mostly on mind power that he sends to the audience. In his visit to the U.S., Yan Xin spent a month in tests of the effectiveness of chi against AIDS. However, Yan Xin is not licensed to practice medicine in the U.S. and so is not permitted to treat AIDS patients medically. For this reason, the
experimenters chose the method of mass healing by lectures with emitted chi. In this way, they avoided the use of the term "medical treatment.
According to Guo Tongxu, the author of the book Yan Xin in North America-Shaking the World (Sichuan Education Publishers, 1993), Yan Xin gave three sessions of energy adjustment and healing for a group of AIDS patients from Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and New York on September 2, October 10, and November 14, 1990. Their immune Systems were greatly strengthened, and the patients requested a continuation of the program. Thus, the Institute of Chinese Medicine in New York again requested Yan Xin
to come into action, an invitation which was accepted by Yan Xin.
As Yan Xin later disclosed, he did over ten research projects in the U.S. for preventive treatment of AIDS patients. He used the method of treating the patients without physical contact, combining Chinese medicine, chi gong, and lectures with ernitted chi. However, he didn't describe the outcomes.
A report on Yan Xin in the San Francisco Chronicle of May 16, 1991, said, "Ken Sancier, a scientist retired from SRI, worked with Yan on the AIDS study, but said he could not release any findings." I am personally familiar with Dr. Sancier, because it was he who organized a class I taught in "Chi Gong for Scientists" (the students were all Ph.D.'s and M.D.'s). I taught them chi gong and attempted to give them an understanding of what chi is through actual practice and facts. Dr. Sancier himself was one of t he students. He was not willing to disclose any results of the Yan Xin AIDS study to me either, because he and Yan Xin had a nondisclosure agreement under which nothing could be revealed to the public without the prior approval of each party.
Before this, Yan Xin went to Hong Kong on January 20, 1989, to give a healing to the daughter-in-law of a Hong Kong billionaire. She had suffered a fractured leg bone and a cracked hip bone in a traffic accident. At the same time, he gave two healings for an AIDS patient. One of these was a long-distance healing (or off-site healing). Three days later, the patient's lab results changed from HIV-positive to negative.
Yan Xin does not generally touch his patients. His longrange energy projection has a range of effectiveness from seven to 2,000 kilometers. As Yan Xin was in Hong Kong on this occasion, his long-range projection must have been within thirty kilometers.
In China, from December 1986 to January 1987, Yan Xin took part in seven tests of long-distance energy projection at varying locations and distances. All achieved the anticipated results. Placing bottles of physiological saline, glucose solution, and methramycin solution in a dark room, Yan Xin then projected his
energy remotely, from different distances in each test. The tests resulted in the discovery of a new broad band between the characteristic bands of the laser Raman spectrum of the water, showing th at it had changed its structure. The saline, glucose, and methramycin all showed significant changes of a similar sort.
Quote: |
From January to March 1983, working with a group of scientists, Yan Xin did thirty-two long-distance experiments, from the cities |
of Kunming in Yunnan province, Chengdu in Sichuan Province, Guangzhou in Guangdong Province, and Hong Kong, projecting his energy to a laboratory in Beijing, at distances of 1,800 to 2,000 kilometers.
A more surprising experiment took place during Yan Xin's visit to the U.S. Professor Lu Zuyin and Yan Xin arranged to conduct a long-distance experiment across the Pacific Ocean at a distance of 10,000 kilometers. This was done on December 9, 1990, from 2:00 to 5:00 P.m. Beijing Standard Time, and the target of the
experiment was an atomic nucleus! (All these experiments are described in greater detail in chapter 5.)
With Yan Xin's EHF, there is one amazing thing after an other. On May 15, 1991, at the Masonic Auditorium in San Francisco, he demonstrated his ability to act as a "human electrical conductor" before an audience of 1,700. In his article, San Francisco Chronicle reporter Don Lattin described what Yan Xin was showing as "his alleged ability to channel elec tric current through his body, and his capacity to change wine from light to strong." With the article was a photograph of Yan Xin holding both ends of an electric wire as a lightbulb lit up.
The caption read, "Yan Xin showed his ability to handle electric current during a lecture at the Masonic Auditorium." Many Chinese-Americans clipped this article in the Chronicle, feeling that Yan Xin had brought them a little glory.
This demonstration as a "human electrical conductor" was not the first for Yan Xin. On the evening of December 11, 1986, in the Central Academy of the Chinese Communist Party, he gave a demonstration of this ability before an audience of 1,200 people after concluding a lecture on chi gong.
This demonstration was also monitored by an expert. Yan Xin held an electric wire carrying 200 to 240 volts in his left hand, and a ground wire in his right hand. Then he completed an electric circuit with his body for a few minutes. Someone stood by with an electric test pencil to verify that his body was electrified. Not
only that, he was also able to raise and lower the voltage with his mind power!
Bi-gu (a type of meditation for fasting) is a rare and exotic term not only for Westerners, even most Chinese don't know what it means. Bi gu is an ancient term, and can only be found in classical texts. It is not the same as a "hunger strike." Hunger strike is a modem term, and most of us would associate it with political protest or similar matters. Hunger strike refers to the technique of refusing to eat as a way of shocking one's
opponents. But in bi gu or fasting, a person has no desire for food, not as a symptom of a disease, but in such a way that good health is maintained even without eating. For this reason, some Chinese call bi gu "eating the air." The belief behind this is that a person's energy must come from somevvhere, and if not from
food, it must be from the air. Is it really energy from the sky and the ground, or the surrounding universe, allowing the person to live? Science does not currently have the answer to this. A person in a state of bi gu not only goes without eating, but can even cure his or her own diseases. This is called "bi gu healing," or healing by fasting.
Western medicine and ordinary natural healing also sometimes use fasting for one, two, or three days as a healing technique, but the Chinese technique of bi gu involves fasting for several months or years!
I have personally met Ms. Ha Toi Chun, an entrepreneur from Hong Kong who came to the U.S. on business. She has fasted for six months. She studies chi gong under a master from mainland China, Chen Letian. After practicing chi gong for two weeks, she heard the master mention the meditative fasting phenomenon in chi gong, and since then she hasn't felt like eating. While Chen Letian has been teaching in San Francisco, he asked me to serve as a consultant, and I often rneet with him. Three times I had lunch
wi th the two of them, ,rid we ordered many nice dishes, but she never had a bite 'f it. She would have no reason to fool me, because. she doesn't need anything from me. She told me she had a stomach disease and often suffered from headaches, insomnia, and lack of energy, but since she has been fasting, all of these
Problems have disappeared, and she is feeling much better thanl before. She doesn't want to eat, but she drinks a little wvater sometimes. She has lost twenty pounds. The remarkable powers of th e m aster Chen Letian are described more fully in chapter 11.
On October 3, 1987, Ms. Xu Xiaosheng, who had lived ir, Beijing for all of her twenty-one years, took part in a lecture with emitted chi by Yan Xin. After that, she didn't feel like eating. She didn't see anything surprising in this, because she knew it could be the meditative fasting phenomenon. She was still full of
energy, so she didn't worry about it and went on for 133 days like that. During this period, she wrote the following.
The smell of rice would make me feel sick to my stomach and very uncomfortable. After two hours of teaching [authors' note: perhaps she is a schoolteacher] and taking care of other tasks, I used to need a drink of water as soon as I got home, but on this day, there was no dryness, in the mouth and I didn't need water.
I felt as though I didn't need any of the things to eat or drink in the world.
Over the 133 days of her fasting, her weight did not go down. This does not contradict the above case of the woman who lost twenty pounds. During this type of fasting, sorne people lose weight and others do not. In order to study this phenomenon, the Human Body Science Laboratory of Beijing Teachers' College
decided to follow and observe her, keeping her under observation day and night for fifteen days. it was indeed true that she ate nothing, but still had the energy and strength of a normal person.
Bi gu is not only found in many ancient Chinese chronicle,, it can also be found in Ci Hai (Sea of Words), a standard modern dictionary of the Chinese language. In an event that brought great attention to bi gu, two major chi gong documents were discovered in 1973 in an excavation in grave 3, Mawang mound,
Changsha City, Hunan Province. One of these was called Bi Gu Shi Wu Fa (Diet Technique of Bi Gu). According to a study of the text by chi gong researcher Qian Junsheng, in ancient times, there
were three ways in which bi gu was practiced: (a) eating nothing at all and not drinking water during bi gu; (b) drinking water and eating some fruits or medicines; (c) drinking nothing but water, and consuming nothing else. As Mr. Qian said, the holistic view of man and nature is the general picture left to us by the ancients, but we are still unable to elucidate in full detail all the complexities of this lifestyle. Such life phenomena as
meditative fasting, the same as EHF, are yet a mystery....
One might ask, What is Yan Xin's greatest power? I don't have an answer to this question. To give some idea of the scope of his powers, here is a story about psychokinesis, or moving objects with mind power.
Over his career, Yan Xin has done healings for thousands of people, relieving their pain, but some say it is "coincidence," or no more than a "placebo effect" or even a "fraud." His opponents include scientists (some of whom have not actually done any research to investigate the claims). Once, someone registered a complaint against Yan Xin with the Chongqing Municipal Health Department, accusing him of spreading "feudal superstitions" and requesting that his license to issue prescriptions be revoked.
After an investigation, the Chongqing City government certified that there was no mistake in the records of Yan Xin's successful cases, but the investigators wanted to test his powers in person as well. Yan Xin told the municipal inspector, Zeng Youzhi, to stand facing the wall, while he stood a few meters away. When he
raised his hands and pushed forward, Zeng Youzhi was pushed into the wall, and when Yan Xin pulled his hands backward, Zeng Youzhi started falling backward, until he was so frightened, he sh outed for Yan Xin to stop!
I am firmly convinced of the truth of this report, because I myself have mastered a form of chi gong called empty force, in which it is possible to knock down an opponent without physical contact. My book about this, Empty Force, has been published in the U.S. and England. The U.S. martial arts world, particularly
in California, knows of the existence of the empty force, because in the last few years, two emptyforce masters from mainland China have come to teach their arts in the cities of San Francisco and Berkeley.
There are so many stories about Yan Xin, and some of the ones described in chapter 5 and chapter 7 may be more amazing than the ones in this chapter. However, one news item, which I have been unable to confirm, states that it has been reported that he has done experiments on bringing dead animals back to life. This was stunning for the scientists.
To conclude on a lighter note, a reporter once interviewed Yan Xin about his two-week chi gong class in San Diego, California, in which twenty-six of the eighty-three students were reported to enter the meditative fasting state. The reporter said that if he promoted meditative fasting as a weightloss program, it would be
very popular in the U.S. Yan Xin replied, "If you promote fasting in America, you will make enemies in the food industry. They make their living selling hamburgers."
The First Psychic War Between China and Japan
The term "psychic war" was often mentioned before the dissolution of the Soviet Union, but people did not know what its methods of fighting involved. Would it be to project the fighting power across the oceans, or would it be used at close range to cause a military commander on the battlefield to spurt blood from the
nose and mouth? Some time ago, some magazines reported that the Soviets had used group mind power to sink a submarine. If a country sent a team of well-trained psychic spies (particularly woman spies) to an enemy country for sabotage and dirty tricks, it could be a terrifying nightmare. If EHF can stop a frog's
heart from beating, it could also be directed against the commander-in chief of a country's armed services (such as a king, president, or chairman) to stop the leader's heart from beating.
But we have nothing to worry about. The strategic planners are not so dumb. If the president dies, we still have the vice research. president, if the vice president dies, we still have the Speaker of the House, and beyond that the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and so on down the line.
Not all of them could die at once. What is more worrisome is that the opposing country could play a great joke and use mind power to make the president go running in the streets barking like a dog and the vice president go meowing like a cat. Then the country could not go into battle in the first place. This would
fit a f amous line in China's ancient classic of military science, Sun-Tzu's Art of War: "The best strategy is to weaken the enemy's troops without fighting oneself."
The above is just speculation about something which we hope does not come to pass. However, a decade ago, a closerange psychic war did take place between China and Japan. After news of this war leaked, it was reported in newspapers and magazines in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. However, the story has been ignored by the media in other countries. Whether the story was deliberately suppressed, overlooked, or underrated in importance, let us now discuss the causes and results of this China-Japan
strug gle.
It was November 1986, and Yan Xin was visiting Japan with a friendship delegation from the Chinese Chi Gong Scientific Research Association. The delegation consisted of seven people, and the leader was Zhang Zhenghuan, the chairman of the Chinese Human Body Science Association as well as the Chinese Chi Gong
Scientific Research Association. However, his more important position was as head of the National Defense Science Commission, the leader of military research. China's nuclear test detonations and long-r ange missile launchings all came under his purview. He has also been a powerful associate of Qian Xuesen in the field of
EHF
Zhang Zhenghuan is directly in charge of all EHF people. In one video on Zhang Baosheng, Baosheng was shown successfully demonstrating his powers of removing medicine pills from a bottle and other skills with great success. But then, in an attempt to set fire to a piece of clothing with his finger, he was unable to
make the fire come and looked very upset. At that moment, Zhang Zhenghuan, seeing that he didn't look well, came out, sat beside him, patted him on the shoulder, and said some consoling words to him. In a little while, Zhang Baosheng's finger suddenly lit up and he burned the piece of clothing right away. This type of
psychological support from his leader made it easier to enter the psychic state.
On this visit to Japan, Zhang Zhenghuan was not only the delegation leader, but also the director of planning. The seven of them went to the New Otani Hotel in Tokyo. That evening, they were hosted by Furuoka Katsu, the chairman of the Japanese Chi Gong Science Association, and many members and followers of this organization, and, of course, some diplomatic officials and representatives of Japan's martial arts world. Before the start of the banquet, Furuoka complained to Zhang Zhenghuan:
"Just as the Chinese proverb says, 'A barber needs someone else to cut his hair.' Even though I am a chi gong master, I can't do anything about my own injured ligament in my old elbow joint that
has been bothering me for many years. Many doctors have not been able to help me with this."
Zhang Zhenghuan realized that Furuoka's real intention was to test Yan Xin's powers, so he said:
"Yan Xin, please offer five glasses in toast to Mr. Fur-uoka's health." Zhang didn't mention the healing, only giving a toast.
Yan Xin understood his meaning, so he poured a glassof rice wine and passed it to Furuoka, saying, "Mr. Furuoka, to your health."
A toast is just what Furuoka usually wanted to hear, because he had a reputation as a "strong drinker" and would usually drink wine as if it were water. He could drink all day without getting drunk, so he happily accepted the glass and drank it down in one gulp. At this time, Yan Xin was about to pour a second glass, but Furuoka started muttering:
"How strange. I seem to be feeling a little drunk."
At this, his Japanese friends all around him had looks of surprise on their faces, but none of them believed such a thing could happen. This "strong drinker" had a reputation for "drinking a thousand glasses without getting drunk." No matter how strong Yan Xin's powers were, they could not be enough to make Furuoka drunk after only one glass. As they were discussing this among themselves, Furuoka suggested that they change to beer for the second glass, regardless of his reputation as a "strong drinker."
Yan Xin agreed to this, and poured a second glass, using beer this time. Although Furuoka was mostly drunk by this time, he still had some of his senses, and he made another suggestion: he would drink the glass of beer in four gulps, each one counting as a toast.
Yan Xin agreed to his suggestion, and so Furuoka drank a quarter of a glass of beer. In an instant, his whole face turned red, and he raised his arms and shook himself vigorously a few times, saying, "I don't feel any pain from my disease now. This is amazing. Yan Xin's powers are tremendous."
As it turned out, when Yan Xin toasted him, he had sent his energy to the rice wine and the beer. He was not only able to make a strong drinker almost completely drunk, but was also able to change the drinks into a medicine to treat his hard-to-cure disease.
The Japanese people have the courage to admit defeat, as well as the fortitude never to give up. At this time, a high Japanese chi gong master named Kobayashi Yasuyuki saw that Furuoka was giving a poor impression of the Japanese people, so he immediately said he wanted to test his chi against Yan Xin's. The interpreter at
this time was a friend of mine, Mr. Yan Hai, an editor with Beijing's People's Sports Publishers. He felt the manner was too rude to translate, so he rendered it in Chinese as something m ore like "an exchange of ideas."
Kobayashi Yasuyuki had his own skills to give him the courage to challenge Yan Xin. He is very famous in Japan and has strong powers, particularly in projecting his energy at acupuncture. points. He had never been defeated in his career, and even though Yan Xin was famous, he had no fear of him. Thus, he gathered his
d-d around the dan tian acupuncture point (the center of the body's energy in chi gong theory), and made a fierce attack on Yan Xin. Yan Xin acted as though nothing had happened, in the same wa y he usually behaved when chatting with people at the same time as giving them healings. However, Kobayashi perceived
that there was some kind of power surrounding Yan Xin, so he immediately strengthened his attack on Yan Xin. Still he couldn't break through Yan Xin's protective cover, and Yan Xin was still sitting motionless.
Kobayashi saw there was something strange about this, so he stopped and regrouped his energies. He made a new request of Yan Xin, wanting to try to attack him from behind. His idea was that Yan Xin may have strong chi in the front, but he must have a weak spot in back. After this was translated, Yan Xin nodded his
agreement. Kobayashi Yasuyuki again sent his chi out to attack, aiming strong power at Yan Xin's back. But still he couldn't make the slightest impression on Yan Xin- Kobayashi felt that Yan Xin had some kind of force protecting his back, so all attacks were useless!
At this moment, Kobayashi Yasuyuki was becoming frustrated. He couldn't attack Yan Xin from either the front or from behind. Could it be a matter of distance? He immediately decided to come two steps closer, raised his hand and sent his striking power toward Yan Xin's back, but Yan Xin still did not react, so
Kobayashi again raised his hands to push all his power at Yan Xin's back, but it was like trying to push a massive stone.
Kobayashi was so tired he was puffing and sweating. Having exhausted his powers , Kobayashi realized that he had met his match. If he relied on chi and energy, he would be sure to "lose." And so, going against the traditional rules of sportsmanship for martial arts contests, he decided to try another tactic without warning his opponent. He made use of his techniques for attacking the acupuncture points, aiming at the bai hui acupuncture point on Yan Xin's forehead. If he succeeded at this, his target would become as stiff as a board and lose consciousness. But stil l Yan Xin did not mov e. He let his attacker try all kinds of techniques to attack his acupuncture points, but none of them could hurt him.
Kobayashi Yasuyuki is known as one of Japan's top masters. Besides the abilities to use chi and fing (sudden striking energy), and to affect the acupuncture points of his targets, he has another, most ferocious technique. This is to grab the jugular vein of his opponent. When he does this, his opponent may be severely injured or killed. Since Kobayashi saw he was losing the contest, and losing badly in a way he never imagined possible, he suddenly had a terrible thought. Without regard for sportsmanship or appearances, he immediately stretched out his arm to try to grab Yan Xin's jugular. But once again, his efforts came to nothing, because Yan Xin had already closed all his acupuncture points. When Kobayashi made his grab for Yan Xin's
jugular, the people viewing the scene watched with bated breath. But Yan Xin just let him claw away all he wanted, without showing the slightest sign of anxiety.
Although Kobayashi Yasuyuki used rough tactics and didn't play by the rules in this China-Japan battle, he was a frank and straightforward person. Convinced that he was no match for Yan Xin, he admitted defeat with a bow. He freely admitted, "Chinese martial arts are great! I admire them." Then he and his son, who
was at his side, said Yan Xin was their master and they wanted to learn from him.
Originally, a Japanese fist fighter and a kendo master were waiting after Kobayashi, also hoping for a chance to "exchange ideas" by testing their skills against Yan Xin, but seeing their colleague lose so ignominiously, they decided to avoid further humiliation and gave up the idea.
After the group of seven returned home from Japan, over a hundred newspapers and magazines reported the story of Yan Xin's victory over the Japanese masters in Tokyo under many different headlines, including "Battle of the Chinese and Japanese Chi Gong Masters in Tokyo ... .. A Decisive Result in the China-Japan War
.... .. Battle in Tokyo," "EHF War between China and Japan ... .. Legend Yan Xin's True Story," "Pride Comes Before a Fall in Tokyo Battle," and many others.
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