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SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Page 1: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

SESSION 3

MIND AND MOVEMENT

Alternative Care for the Mind and Body

Jennifer KitchenJuly 3, 2013

Page 2: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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“If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment

and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have found

the safest way to health.” Hippocrates

Page 3: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Overview

Ancient beliefs

Qigong

Tai Chi

Yoga

Page 4: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Ancient Beliefs

Subtle Vital Energy

Qi, Chi, Ki, Prana

Breathe, Vital Substance, Radiant Energy, Life

Force

Aura ~ Meridians ~ Chakras

Page 5: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Ancient Beliefs

The Three Bodies

Physical, Astral, and

Causal

Body, Mind, and Breathe• (Kaminoff, 2007)

Page 6: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Ancient Beliefs

Page 7: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Qigong

Tao

The Way / Universal Order

“That which lets now the dark,

now the light appear is Tao”

• (Wilhelm and Baynes, 1967)

“Use stillness to deal with all

things changing”

• (Tse, 2004)

The 3 Principles of Tao

Change

Contradiction

Holism(Micozzi, 2011)

Page 8: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Qigong

The cultivation of a relationship with the energy that circulates and flows through your being

Page 9: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Qigong

Eight Pieces of Brocade (ba duan jin)

Simple set of exercises that cultivate

energy, flexibility, health, and awareness (Draffan, 2009)

Page 10: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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T’ai Chi Ch’uan

Meditation with Movement

Sequence of slow, graceful movements

Excellent therapeutic exercise

Relaxes the muscles

Slows the mind

Holistic (Gibbon, 2008)

Page 11: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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T’ai Chi Ch’uan

Golden Principles

Keep body erect and everything relaxed

Maintain rigidly the heel and toes principles for all foot movements

Coordinate movements of upper and lower body

Ensure continuity of movements

Movements should follow curved or circular form

Study the Chinese breathing systems (Gibbon, 2008)

Page 12: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Yoga

Personal Journey

Who am I?

Why am I Here?

What is the Nature of Suffering?

What is the Method of Escaping Suffering?

Page 13: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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For Health Yoga can…

Beneficial in pulmonary

and cardiovascular

conditions

Lower blood pressure

Balance metabolic

functions

Boost immunity

Relieve stress (Micozzi, 2011)

Yoga

Page 14: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Questions…

Page 15: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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Time to Relax

“Spiritual relationship is far more precious than physical. Physical

relationship divorced from spiritual is body without soul.” Mahatma

Gandhi

Page 16: SESSION 3 MIND AND MOVEMENT Alternative Care for the Mind and Body Jennifer Kitchen July 3, 2013

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References

Draffan, G., (2009). Moving in Awareness: Eight Pieces of Brocade. Retrieved from http://www.naturalawareness.net/qigong.pdf

Feinstein, D. and Eden, D., (2008). Six Pillars of Energy Medicine: clinical strengths of a complementary paradigm. Alternative Therapies, 14:1, 44-54. Retrieved from http://www.innersource.net/em/images/6_Pillars_of_EM.pdf

Gibbon, H., (2008). The Chinese Art of T’ai Chi Ch’uan: the first five steps. Retrieved from http://www.howardgibbon.com/Free%20Tai%20Chi%20eBook%20Download.pdf

Kaminoff, L., (2007). Yoga Anatomy (Adobe PDF). Human Kinetics: IL.

Micozzi, M.S., (2011). Fundamentals of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (fourth edition). Missouri; Saunders Elsevier.

President's Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition, (n.d.). Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Retrieved from http://www.fitness.gov/eat-healthy/dietary-guidelines-for-americans/

President's Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition, (n.d.). Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. Retrieved from http://www.fitness.gov/be-active/physical-activity-guidelines-for-americans/

Tse, M., (2004). Qigong for healing and relaxation. St. Martin’s Griffin: NY.

Wilhelm, R. and Baynes, C., (1967). The I Ching or Book of Changes. Bollingen: NY.