"Silk reeling (pinyin chánsīgōng, Wade-Giles ch'an2 ssu1 kung1 纏絲功), also called "Winding Silk Power" (chansijing) (纏絲勁), as well as "Foundational Training"(jibengong), refers to a set of neigong exercises frequently used by the Chen style, Wu style and some other styles of T'ai Chi Ch'uan. The name derives from the metaphorical principle of "reeling the silk from a silk worm's cocoon".
In order to draw out the silk successfully the action must be smooth
and consistent without jerking or changing direction sharply. Too fast,
the silk breaks, too slow, it sticks to itself and becomes tangled.
Hence, the silk reeling movements are continuous, cyclic patterns
performed at constant speed with the "light touch" of drawing silk.
In common with all Qigong
exercises, the patterns are performed in a concentrated, meditative
state with an emphasis on relaxation. However, rather than being
isolated exercises purely for health benefits, the focus is on
strengthening and training the whole body coordination (nei jin) and grounded body alignment that is used in the Tai Chi form and pushing hands.
Silk reeling is commonly used in Chen style as a warmup before
commencing Tai Chi form practice, but its body mechanics are also a
requirement of Chen Style Tai Chi throughout the forms. In other styles,
silk reeling is only introduced to advanced levels. Many schools,
especially those not associated with the orthodox Tai Chi families,
don't train it at all."
- Silk Reeling - Wikipedia
Dragon Qigong
Silk Reeling
Bibliography, Quotes, Notes, Videos. Compiled by Mike Garofalo.
Chan Ssu Gong, Chan Szu Chin, Chan Ssu Kung, Chan Si Gong, Chan Si Jing
Chen Style Taijiquan and Qigong
Spiraling Energy Exercises, Spiral Energy Qigong
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