Posts In: mind-body

From the first time you meet Kathi Diamant (or see her on KPBS TV) her sparkling eyes alert you to her intelligence and vibrant energy. That energy further manifests in an apparent and tangible eternal youthfulness. As Franz Kafka stated, “Youth is happy because it has the ability to see beauty. Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old.”

Come to her Qigong class on Wednesdays at 9am to try this wonderfully vibrant practice. Check out our full class schedule here.

photo credit: Simpatika

1. Let’s start with the basics, what is Qigong?

Qigong translates as “energy” (qi or chi) and “work” (gong), but I prefer to think of it as “energy play.” It has been used for centuries as an integral part of Traditional Chinese Medicine, prescribed both for the prevention and cure of chronic illnesses. Comprised of flowing movements designed to balance both hemispheres of the brain, Qigong is exercise that works from the inside out.

It truly is a practice available for everyone, at any age. It can be practiced sitting or standing, and no prior experience is required. We learn three things in Qigong: balance, letting go, and feeling our own energy. Through Qigong, we learn to differentiate between the Yin and Yang energy flowing in the body, and to integrate mind and body in a moving meditation.

2. What first attracted you to Qigong when you began your practice?

I took a Qigong class through the YMCA and I loved the experience of relaxation and focus at the same time. It was a perfect complement to my yoga practice, but also a different sort of workout. In Qigong, there is no effort, no force, you build strength and balance through letting go.

My real practice began in January 2000 when I started lessons in Tai Chi with Henry Cheng, a Fifth Generation Master in Wu-Style Tai Chi Chu’an at the YMCA Mind-Body Center. Master Henry specializes in developing, cultivating and increasing one’s own energy. Qigong is the concept, or idea, behind Tai Chi which is known as a form of Qigong.

Kathi Diamant by Simpatika3. What is your favorite place or time of day to practice?

My favorite places are outside, especially near old trees, which intensify the feeling of energy. But my absolute favorite is on the beach, at sunset. Sunrise is good, too, but it happens far less often!

4. What’s the most challenging aspect for you?

Focusing my mind. While my body has gotten much stronger and healthier, focusing my mind on my breath and movement is the real trick. New studies have shown that thinking about what you intend to think about produces higher levels of happiness, satisfaction and peacefulness. So the mind aspect of this mind/body exercise is the most challenging.

5. If you were an animal, you would be: a dolphin, definitely.

6. Describe what Qi Gong means in your life using just 6 words: playing with energy keeps me healthy.

7. What might your students be surprised to learn about you?

I have written a biography entitled “Kafka’s Last Love” which has been translated and published in ten countries, and since 1998 I have been the director of the Kafka Project at SDSU, where I lead the international search for Franz Kafka’s literary treasure, stolen by the Gestapo in 1933.

8. Do you have any words of wisdom or advice for new students?

By practicing Qigong, you can improve your health, your happiness, and the quality of your longevity. Without effort, without force, and without any special equipment!

Unbalanced Yoga

March 28, 2012

One of my favorite moments in any yoga class is right between the two sides of tree pose, or vrksasana. You’ve just finished balancing on one leg and you mentally prepare to balance on the other, usually non-dominant leg. The teacher guides you into tree with a few simple cues and then remarks with a smile that one side might feel very different from the other side, that perhaps it’s harder to balance on this side. All the people smiling back at the instructor are the ones who understand unbalanced yoga.

Perhaps the most iconic and easily recognizable of the yoga poses, tree pose can be a source of empowerment when you feel grounded or a source of frustration when you feel unsteady. When I first started practicing yoga, tree pose was a challenge for me. Like most non-yogis, my everyday life didn’t include time spent balancing on one leg each day. Given that I never practiced this skill after the age of eight or nine when I stopped playing hopscotch, it made sense that it was difficult for me in class. It seemed so simple and the instructor always demonstrated with such ease that I couldn’t understand why my standing foot and leg would start to wobble uncontrollably the moment I lifted my other foot off the ground.

Historically, a major objective of practicing asana was to open and strengthen the body so that practitioners could comfortably spend more time in meditation. The process of performing the physical movements became their own moving meditation, reaffirming the inter-connectedness of the mental and physical self. Our modern understanding of the brain confirms this mind-body connection. Tree pose, along with its asymmetrical balancing brethren like eagle/garudasana, dancer/natarajasana, and half moon/ardha chandrasana, requires that the left and right sides of the body move independently of each other while maintaining coordination and balance for the body as a whole. This asymmetrical movement increases communication between the two hemispheres of the brain, with even more activity occurring if the movement is a new skill. In other words, if you gracefully stand in tree with your eyes closed and arms outstretched, your brain needs a more difficult posture in order to be challenged.

So to all my fellow practitioners of unbalanced yoga – wobble on! The ability to hold an asymmetrical posture in the body could translate into holding two opposing viewpoints simultaneously in mind during a debate or better decision making. And the connections you form in your brain while learning a new skill help preserve mental acuity as you age. Experiencing imbalance or asymmetry and constantly striving to find balance and steadiness is how we create true balance, in yoga and in life.