Inner Smile and Six Healing Sounds Practices
As taught by Master Mantak Chia, Universal Tao Center, Thailand
www.universal-tao.com
In the Taoist
tradition, positive and negative emotions are associated with the internal
organs. One of the keys to good health is to become aware of the emotional
energies that reside in the organs, and to transform the negative emotional
energies into positive virtues. Taoists believe that we are all born with
the virtues of love, gentleness, kindness, respect, honesty, fairness,
justice, and righteousness. 
Figure 1. The positive virtues.
Unfortunately, as we mature and encounter more stress in our daily lives,
negative emotions such as fear, anger, cruelty, impatience, worry, sadness,
and grief often predominate. The negative emotions have deleterious effects
on the internal organs and glands, draining our life-force and undermining
our health. 
Figure 2. The negative emotions are the body's garbage.
In the Tao "emotional intelligence" is a process of recognizing emotions by
their effects on the body, and employing exercises that transform the
negative emotions into positive life force, or Chi. Two important exercises
are the "Inner Smile" and the "Six Healing Sounds" techniques, as taught by
Master Mantak Chia. |
Figure 3. The negative emotions affect the body's organ systems. |
Taoists learned the relationships between emotional energies and organ
systems over many centuries of study and meditation. They developed methods
to transform negative to positive emotions from their practical and
intuitive understanding of the human body. Many of the Taoist insights are
supported by observations and evidence from modern psychology and medicine.
The "Inner Smile" and "Six Healing Sounds" exercises focus on five organs or
organ systems: the heart, the lungs, the kidneys, the liver/gall bladder,
and the stomach/spleen.
· The heart is associated with the
negative emotions of arrogance and hate and the positive virtues of kindness
and love. Recent scientific research shows that feelings of love and
appreciation strongly influence the heart's rhythm and its relationship to
the body's physiological systems. · The lungs are associated with
the negative emotions of sadness and depression, and the positive virtues of
courage and righteousness. Emotional depression is often recognized by a
physical depression and collapse of the chest and lungs. · The
kidneys are associated with the negative emotion of fear and the positive
emotions of gentleness and kindness. Fear is closely related to the activity
of the adrenal glands that lie on top of the kidneys. The adrenal glands
secret adrenalin and noradrenalin when stimulated by the body's
fight-or-flight response. · The liver is associated with the
negative emotion of anger and the positive emotions of generosity and
forgiveness. Physiologically, the liver is important for storing and rapidly
releasing glucose into the blood. The energy of anger requires the rapid
availability of metabolic energy stores in the body. · The
stomach/spleen are associated with the negative emotions of worry and
anxiety and the positive emotions of fairness and openness. Most people will
be familiar with the "butterflies" and "knots" in the stomach related to
worry, apparently related to a network of neurons and
neurotransmitters in the sheaths of tissue lining the digestive system,
known as the enteric nervous system (Gershon, 1998).
The Inner
Smile and Six Healing Sound exercises direct our attentions to the body's
organs and associated qualities. We successively visualize each organ,
cleansing the organ and transforming negative emotional energies into
positive virtues. |
Figure 4. The Inner Smile |
In the Taoist tradition, each person assumes responsibility for the emotions
that arise within, regardless of the external events that trigger the
emotions. Taoist exercises take us into our bodies and transform emotions by
transforming the associated physiological systems. The Inner Smile and Six
Healing Sounds exercises help balance and integrate our sympathetic and
parasympathetic nervous systems, promoting health, resilience, and vitality.
References: Chia, Mantak, 1986. Taoist Ways to Transform Stress into
Vitality: The Inner Smile, Six Healing Sounds, Huntington, NY: Healing Tao
Books. Chia, Mantak, and Maneewan Chia, 1993, Awaken Healing Light of the
Tao, Huntington, NY: Healing Tao Books. Gershon, Michael D. 1998. The
Second Brain: The Scientific Basis of Gut Instinct and a Groundbreaking New
Understanding: of Nervous Disorders of the Stomach and Intestine.
HarperCollins.
Where could I
learn this Qi Gong?
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