“Ever Flowing River” 不斷流動的河流.
Feldenkrais & Taiji share several principles: combining these practices in our workshop will provide a bird’s eye view of how they enhance each other.
The Symbol of Taiji
The yin yang symbol of two teardrops creates the sense of movement. The left side of the circle is filled with the white teardrop with its bulb at the top as though it is ascending. The black teardrop descends with the bulb shape located at the bottom of the circle. This creates the illusion of a clockwise movement.
Feldenkrais® & Taiji
My experience with martial arts began in San Francisco in 1965-70 when I studied Aikido with Robert Nadeau. In 1970, I moved to Vancouver, BC, to teach Ballet for Norbert Vesak at his West Vancouver School while he traveled to choreograph for the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. In addition to teaching Ballet, I studied Yang-style Taiji in Vancouver with Raymond Chung, Sam Masich, and Shou Yu Liang.
I taught Taiji in Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia, including Waterloo Park, Dunbar Community Center Park, Crofton Manor, Ten Thousand Villages, and Southlands Farm Markets. It has been a pleasure to serve as a Level 3 Senior Instructor with the Canadian Taijiquan Federation since 2011.
My Feldenkrais® and Focusing practice enhance the Taiji curriculum. I completed the Focusing and Feldenkrais certifications in 2006. During the International Feldenkrais Conferences 2012, 2013, and 2014, I offered Taiji lessons in the early mornings. The response was heartening and continues to inspire Feldenkrais & Taiji program at Thinking in Movement Studio.
Katarina Halm is an Affiliate Instructor with Masich Internal Arts
As the Taiji classes and practice progress over weeks, months, and years, we notice what we like to do best, what we do well, building on our strengths until we feel confident with a few movements. Each student refines the weaker parts of his/her practice through an organic process which can be experienced as “happy learning “.
Notes from Ira Feinstein July 2017
- Better balance
- Greater range of motion
- Enhanced vitality
- More energy
- Increased cognitive skills
- Improved performance– in sports, the arts, and daily living
Modern neuroscience is finally catching up to the revolutionary ideas of Dr. Moshe Feldenkrais, who understood more than a half century ago what is finally being discussed today: that the human brain can change, learn and improve throughout our entire lifetime.”
Taiji (or Taichi) is a traditional Chinese martial art, sometimes practiced as a graceful form of exercise. Taiji may be described as a noncompetitive, self-paced system of gentle physical exercise and stretching. Each posture flows into the next without pause. It involves a series of movements. often performed in a slow, focused manner accompanied by regular breathing.
There are many different styles of Taiji, emphasizing various Taiji principles and methods. Some people practice Taiji for maintaining health, while others focus on the martial art aspect.
Moshe Feldenkrais was an expert in Judo. Thus Feldenkrais® practice emphasizes the Taiji principle of ‘reversibility‘, the ability to turn in any direction without hesitation.
Taiji can be enriched by the Feldenkrais study of ‘skeletal consciousness’ (Jeff Haller): we learn ‘self-organization and grounding to produce powerful movements’.
Feldenkrais & Taiji share several principles: combining these practices in our workshop will provide a bird’s eye view of how they enhance each other.
If you wish to learn the basic elements of Taiji, or have a long time practice of Taiji, this workshop is an opportunity learn about its relation to Feldenkrais.
Workshops & Lessons by request
Free Class during the month of May: Dunbar Vancouver BC
CELEBRATE: Join us to celebrate International Feldenkrais® Week! & Dunbar Salmonberry Days during the month of May each year!
WHEN Contact Katarina for the time each year
WHO: For beginners and those with experience.
Participate as often as you wish.
WHERE: Contact Katarina for the location each year
LOGISTICS
Click for PDF
Learn to Learn by Moshe Feldenkrais
Learn to Learn MF (numbering by KH) Legal 8p.
Learn to Learn by Moshe Feldenkrais
—- @ Copyright Feldenkrais Resources, Berkeley, CA
A manual to help you get the best results from … , but to enable you to learn at your own rate of understanding and doing. Time is the most important means of learning. To enable everybody-without exception-to learn, there should be plenty of time for everybody
—- Section headings & numbers added by Katarina Halm:
- Do everything very slowly
- Look for the pleasant sensation
- Do not “try” to do well
- Do not try to do “nicely”
- Insist on easy, light movement
- It is easier to tell differences when the effort is light
- Learning and life are not the same thing
- Why bother to be so efficient?
- Do not concentrate
- We do not say at the start what the final stage will be
- Do a little less than you can
_________________________________________
Learn to Learn
by Moshe Feldenkrais
—- @ Copyright Feldenkrais Resources, Berkeley, CA
A manual to help you get the best results from the Awareness Through Movement lessons
1. Do everything very slowly
I do not intend to “teach” you, but to enable you to learn at your own rate of understanding and doing. Time is the most important means of learning. To enable everybody-without exception-to learn, there should be plenty of time for everybody to assimilate the idea of the movement as well as the leisure to get used to the novelty of the situation. There should be sufficient time to perceive, and organize oneself. No one can learn when hurried and hustled. Each movement is, therefore, allotted sufficient time for repeating it a number of times. Thus, you will repeat the movement as many times as it suits you during the span of time allotted.
When one becomes familiar with an act, speed increases spontaneously, and so does power. This is not so obvious as it is correct.
Efficient movement or performance of any sort is achieved by weeding out, and eliminating, parasitic superfluous exertion. The superfluous is as bad as the insufficient, only it costs more.
No one can learn to ride a bicycle or swim without allowing the time necessary to assimilate the essential, and to reject the unintended and unnecessary, efforts that the beginner performs in his ambition not to feel or appear inadequate to himself.
Fast action at the beginning of learning is synonymous with strain and confusion which, together, make learning an unpleasant exertion.
2. Look for the pleasant sensation
Pleasure relaxes the breathing to become simple and easy. Excessive striving-to-improve impedes learning. It is less important to learn new feats of skill than it is to master the way to learn new skills. You will get to know new skills as a reward for your attention. You will feel you deserve your acquired skill, and that will add satisfaction to the pleasurable sensation.
3. Do not “try” to do well
Trying hard means that somehow a person knows that unless he makes a greater effort and applies himself harder he will not achieve his goals. Internal conviction of essential inadequacy is at the root of the urge to try as hard as one can, even when learning. Only when we have learned to write fluently and pleasurably can we write as fast as we wish, or more beautifully. But “trying” to write faster makes the writing illegible and ugly. Learn to do well, but do not try. The countenance of trying hard betrays the inner conviction of being unable or of not being good enough.
4. Do not try to do “nicely”
A performance is nice to watch when the person applies himself harmoniously. This means that no part of him is being directed to anything else but the job at the hand. Intent to do nicely when learning introduces disharmony. Some of the attention is misdirected, which introduces self-consciousness instead of awareness. Each and all the parts of ourself should cooperate to the final achievement only to the extent that it is useful. An act becomes nice when we do nothing but the act. Everything we do over and above that, or short of it, destroys harmony.
These courses are made to help you to turn the impossible into the feasible, the difficult into the easy: beautiful to see and lovely to do.
5. Insist on easy, light movement
We usually learn the hard way. We are taught that trying hard is a virtue in life, and we are misled into believing that trying hard is also a virtue when learning. We see, therefore, a beginner, learning to ride a bicycle or to swim or to learn any skill, making many futile efforts and tiring quickly.
Learning takes place through our nervous system, which is so structured as to detect and select, from among our trials and errors, the more effective trial. We thus gradually eliminate the aimless movements until we find a sufficient body of correct and purposeful components of our final effort. These must be right in timing and direction at the same instant. In short, we gradually learn to know what is the better move. Thus it dawns on us that moving the handlebar so as to twist the front wheel in the direction in which we tend to fall stabilizes us on the bicycle. Or that if we move our arms and legs slowly forward in the swimming direction and rapidly in the other direction we actually swim easier and faster. We sense differences and select the good from the useless: that is, we differentiate.
Without distinguishing and differentiating, we perpetuate-and possibly fuse-the good and the bad moves in a haphazard order as they happen to occur and make little or no progress in spite of diligent insistence.
6. It is easier to tell differences when the effort is light
All our senses are so built that we can distinguish minute differences when our senses are only slightly stimulated. If I were to carry a heavy load (say a refrigerator) on my back, I could not tell if a box of matches were added to the load, nor would I become aware of it being removed. What is, in fact, the weight that must be added or removed to make one aware that some change of effort has occurred? For muscular efforts or our kinaesthetic sense, that weight is about one-fortieth (1/40) of the basic effort for very good nervous systems. On carrying 400 pounds, we can tell at once when 10 pounds are added or removed from the load. On carrying 40 pounds, we can tell a change of one pound. And everybody can tell with closed eyes when a fly alights on a thin match-like piece of wood or straw, or when it takes to the air again.
In short, the smaller the exertion, the finer the increment or decrement that we can distinguish and, also, the finer our differentiation (that is, the mobilization of our muscles in consequence of our sensations). The lighter the effort we make, the faster is our learning of any skill; and the level of perfection we can attain goes hand in hand with the finesse we obtain. We stop improving when we sense no difference in the effort made or in the movement.
7. Learning and life are not the same thing
In the course of our lives, we may be called upon to make enormous efforts-sometimes beyond what we believe we can produce. There are situations in which we must pay no heed to what the enormous effort entails. We often have to sacrifice our health, the wholeness of our limbs and body, to save our life. Obviously, then, we must be able to act swiftly and powerfully. The question is, wouldn’t we be better equipped for such emergencies by making our efforts efficient in general, thus enabling us to exert ourselves less and achieve our purpose economically.
Learning must be slow an varied in effort until the parasitic efforts are weeded out; then we have little difficulty in acting fast, and powerfully.
8. Why bother to be so efficient?
We need not be intelligent, for God saves the fool. We need not be skillful, for even the clumsiest of us succeeds in the end. We need not be efficient, because a kilogram of sugar yields-roughly speaking-20.000 calories, and one gram calorie produces 426 kilograms of work. From that count, we can waste energy galore. Why go to such troubles as learning and improving? The trouble lies in that energy cannot be destroyed; it can only be transformed into movement, or into another form of energy.
What, then, happens to the energy that is not transformed into movement? It is, obviously, not lost, but remains somewhere in the body. Indeed, it is transformed into heat through the wear and tear of the muscles (torn muscles, muscle catarrh) and of the ligaments and the interarticular surfaces of our joints and vertebrae. So long as we are very young, the healing and recovery powers of our bodies are sufficient to repair the damage caused by inefficient efforts, but they do so at the expense of our heart and the cleansing mechanisms of our organism. But these powers slow, even as early as at our middle age, when we have only just become an adult, and they become sluggish very soon thereafter
If we have not learned efficient action, we are in for aches and pains and for a growing inability to do what we would like to do.
Efficient movement is also pleasant to do and nice to see, and it instills that wonderful feeling of doing well and is, ultimately, aesthetically satisfying.
9. Do not concentrate
Do not concentrate if concentration means to you directing your attention to one particular important point to the utmost of your ability. This is a particular kind of concentration, useful as an exercise, but rarely in normal occupation and skills.
Suppose you play basketball and concentrate on the basket to the utmost-you will never, or nearly never, have the leisure to do so unless you are alone in front of the basket. When there are two teams playing, the opening for a throw is a short, fleeting instant in which you have to attend not only to the basket, but to the players around you, and to the balance and posture that enable you to perform a useful throw.
The best players are those who attend to the continually changing position of their own players as well as of the opposing team. Most of the time, their concentration is directed to a very large area or space; the basket is just kept dimly in the background of their awareness, from where it can- at the most fleeting opportunity-become the center of attention.
The best and most useful attention is similar to what we do when reading. When we see the whole page, we cannot perceive any of the content, although we can say whether the page is in English or some language we cannot read. To read, we must focus on a minute portion of the page, not even a full line-perhaps, merely a single word, if it is a familiar one and rather short. If we are a skillful reader, we keep on picking our word after word, or groupings of words, to be attended to by our macular vision, which is only a minute portion of the retina, with sufficient good resolution to see small print clearly.
The good way of using our attention is, for the most part, similar to reading. One should perceive the background (the whole page) dimly and learn to focus sharply on the point-attended (concentration) rapidly before the next so that reading fluently means reading 200 to 1000 words a minute, as some people can.
Therefore, do not concentrate but, rather, attend well to the entire situation, your body, and your surroundings by scanning the whole sufficiently to become aware of any change or difference, concentrating just enough to perceive it.
In general, it is not what we do that is important, but how we do it. Thus, we can refuse kindly and accept ungraciously. We must also remember that this generalization is not a law and, like other generalizations, it is not always true.
10. We do not say at the start what the final stage will be
We are so drilled or wired-in by prevailing educational methods that when we know what is required of us, we go all-out to achieve it, for fear of loss of face, regardless of what it costs us to do so. We have it instilled in our system that we must not be the worst of the lot. We will bite our lips, hold our breath, and screw up our straining self in an ugly way in order to achieve something if we have no clear idea of how to mobilize ourselves for that task. The result is excessive effort, harmful strain, and ugly performance. The Awareness Through Movement® lessons will help you to reach your inborn potentiality in the best way and avoid giving you just another opportunity for using yourself in the accustomed way which led you, initially, to seek a better one.
By reducing the urge to achieve, and attending also to the means for achieving, we learn easier. Achieving-we lose the incentive for learning and, therefore, accept a lower level than the potential we are endowed with. When we delay the final achievement by attending efficiently to our means, we set ourselves a higher level of achievement if we are not aware that that is what we are doing. On knowing what to achieve before we have learned to learn, we can reach only the limit of our ignorance, which is often general. Such limits are intrinsically lower than those we can foresee after knowing better.
11. Do a little less than you can
By doing a little less than you really can, you will attain a higher performance than the one you can now conceive. Do a little less than your utmost while learning. You are thereby pushing your possible record to a higher setting.
Suppose you have not been running for a few years or that you are a middle-aged adult with the usual spread that goes with it: Suppose that you want to do some running again, and set out to the speed you remember: You will soon find yourself out of breath, your heart pounding, and compelled to stop, only to find that you have not achieved what you intended to achieve. Moreover, you will most likely be stiff all over and find it very difficult to persist in what you set out to do.
Now suppose you make your first attempt a little less fast than the top speed that is possible for you at this moment and, looking at your watch, you find that you are short of what you used to be able to do: But you will feel and think you could have done a little better had you really tried your best:
This feeling will lead you to try again. The next attempt will be a little faster anyway, so that, continuing to do a little less than your utmost, you go on improving. In the end, you will in a short time give a better account of yourself than in your younger days when youthful stamina and ambition made you always do your utmost. The wisdom of doing a little less than one really can pushes the record of achievement further and further as you come nearer to it, similar to the horizon that recedes on approaching it.
You will understand now why I say in the lessons “lower your knees in the direction of the floor” rather than “try to touch the floor with your knees.” This makes no difference to anyone who is beyond improving; but you will convince yourself that it makes a real difference, reminding you to keep yourself out of stress and give yourself a real chance to learn to learn.
© Feldenkrais Resources, Berkeley, CA
The Five-Stage Model of Adult Skill Acquisition
Stuart E. Dreyfus
University of California, Berkeley
Stage 1: Novice
Stage 2: Advanced Beginner
Stage 3: Competence
Stage 4: Proficiency
Stage 5: Expertise
Table of the skill model summarized
Skill Level Components Perspective Decision Commitment
Components
Perspective
Decision
Commitment
Click for PDF of Taiji 5 section form with Chinese & stances
Section #1
Commencement 起式 Horse stance
Parting Wild Horse’s Mane 野马分综 Bow stance
White Crane Spreads Wings 白鹤亮翅 Empty stance
Brush Knee 左右搂膝拗步 Bow stance
Play Guitar手挥琵琶 Empty stance
Section #2
Repulse Monkey (2) 倒撵猴 Modified Empty stance
Grasp Bird’s Tail 揽雀尾 Bow stance
1 Ward off 避开 Bow stance
2 Pull down 拉下 Bow stance
3 Press forward 前压 Bow stance
4 Roll back 击退 Bow stance
5 Push 推 Bow stance
Section #3
Cloud hands (2) 云 Horse stance
Single whip 单鞭 Narrow Bow stance
High Pat on Horse 高探马 Empty stance
Read book 右蹬脚 Modified Empty stance
Double Winds to Ears 双风贯耳 Bow stance
Section #4
Turn to Kick with Sole 转 左蹬脚 Modified Empty stance
Rooster 下势独 Modified Empty stance
Fair Lady at the Shuttles 左右穿梭 Bow stance
Needle at Sea Bottom 海底针 Empty stance
FanThrough the Back Narrow Bow stance
Section #5
Turn
Apparent Counter 转身搬拦锤 Horse stance
1 Parry 挡开 Bow stance
2 Punch 捶 Bow stance
3 Clear 除 Bow stance
4 Push 推 Bow stance
Closure, 收势 Horse stance
Video to follow
Classical Bejing 24 section Yang style Taiji
Videos
1. Commencing
2. Part the horse’s mane
3. White crane spreads its wings
4. Brush knee and step forward
5. Playing guitar
6. Repulse like monkey (4)
7. Grasp sparrow’s tail (left)
8.Turn body and Grasp sparrow’s tail (right)
9.Turn body and Single whip
10. Wave hands like clouds (3)
11. Single Whip
12. High Pat on horse
13. Right heel kick
14. Strike to ears with both fists
15. Turn body and left heel kick
16. Snake creeps down (L) & Golden rooster stands on
one leg
17. Snake creeps down (R) & Golden rooster stands on
one leg
18. Fair lady works at shuttles
19. Needle at sea bottom
20. Fan through back
21. Turn body, deflect, parry and punch
22. Apparent closure
23. Turn to front and cross closure 24. Closing
Click to download pdf: 48 Posture Taijiquan Introduction By Grandmaster Shou-Yu Liang and Master Wen-Ching Wu
Below are links to videos of Taijiquan 48 forms:
Master Wang Yanji
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiJDTuoq5RY
Li Deyin (partial demo and not following the sequence)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uvx6o_3-lw
Sifu Amin Wu
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yaibVCPscg
Su Renfeng
front view
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcqgFs7hDkQ
back view
Yang Style Taijiquan (108)1 楊式太極拳(一百八)
Click to view or download a PDF of the 108 form
Compiled with an excellent commentary by Sam Masich
Weekly Taijiquan classes are adapted for those of all abilities and disabilities who wish to improve their stamina, balance and well being while enjoying time with others. The class meets for 45 minutes including warm up exercises, a basic form and invocations to the elements – EARTH, SKY, FIRE, WATER, WIND and WOOD – to ground students in the philosophy of Tai Chi. Join us and you will:
- Improve your posture, stamina and balance. Enjoy moving gently, easily, elegantly.
- Learn to refine your internal-external organization to produce powerful movements!
- Develop your ability to turn in any direction safely.
- Discover a beautiful complement to earthquake or disaster preparedness.
Who can do tai chi? Tai chi is low impact and puts minimal stress on muscles and joints, making it generally safe for all ages and fitness levels. In fact, because tai chi is a low impact exercise, it may be especially suitable if you’re an older adult who otherwise may not exercise. You may also find tai chi appealing because it’s inexpensive and requires no special equipment. You can do tai chi anywhere, including indoors or outside. And you can do tai chi alone or in a group class.
Although tai chi is generally safe, women who are pregnant or people with joint problems, back pain, fractures, severe osteoporosis or a hernia should consult their health care provider before trying tai chi. Modification or avoidance of certain postures may be recommended.
CONTACT https://thinkinginmovement.ca/contact/
Free classes in Vancouver, BC, throughout the month of May each year. Participate as often as you wish, as we celebrate International Feldenkrais® Week & Dunbar Salmonberry Days during the month of May each year! Location TBA:
Katarina Halm will be the instructor and we hope to include guest teacher, Yanjiang Liu again for the morning series in 2019!
Gentle eye exercises based on Feldenkrais studies
&
Easy Tai Chi movements for balance and eye coordination
* relieve eyestrain, see with comfort and ease
* enjoy and expand your peripheral vision
* see more clearly in the distance and close-up
* enhance your depth perception
* help your eyes work together in harmony
Enjoy, relax, and learn good vision habits!
Click Here for more information
Sifu Laurens Lee section 1 & section 2 Old Form Yang Style Tai Chi Ch’uan
Adult swallow / tongue in roof of the mouth
Let’s consider the adult swallow and how it relates to where the tongue rests in the mouth. The carriage of the head and thus optimal airflow during Resting, Walking, Feldenkrais®, Taiji and other practices – are supported by the tongue in the roof of the mouth (an attribute of the ‘adult swallow). Breathing lessons are ideal for reawakening and training our best postural practices.
Tongue in the roof of the mouth ~ Swallowing reflex or deglutition reflex
Quoting Moshe Feldenkrais
Quoting from the end of 7: “Open the mouth and take air out slowly, slowly without noise, with the tongue soft. Open the mouth and take all the air out. Close it. Swallow the phlegm. Then, the lower part of the stomach begins to breathe. Begin breathing and when the chest is full of air . . . [incomplete sentence]. And, also the ribs behind next to the belt and the breastbone . . . [incomplete sentence]. It is possible to breathe one time – approximately. Then, when you feel the lung fill, full without effort, open the mouth and take air out slowly, slowly so you will not hear any noise.” –– From AY ATM 442 Ankle on the knee to sitting. Awareness Through Movement® Lesson from Alexander Yanai @ Copyright September, 1996. All rights reserved by and to the International Feldenkrais@ Federation, Paris, France in cooperation with The Feldenkrais institute, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Noting two additional Alexander Yanai lessons:
Yanai #23 Palate mouth and teeth. [1994] 1(A):137-43
Yanai #126 The mouth and head cavity. [1994] 3(B):837-44.
Adult Swallow Quoting John Oldham, Physiotherapist “Where the tongue rests in the mouth is dependant on the length of the oral cavity.”
In any posture where there is a long oral cavity ( any forward head posture) the tongue potentially rests in the floor of the cavity.
In any posture where there is shortened oral cavity the tongue potentially rests in the palatal position.
This is dictated by the oral pharynx. We have to keep the airway patent.
I use the term potentially as the tongue can be in the dental rest position with a balanced head but the airway will not be patent.”
–– John Oldham, Physiotherapist, in correspondence with Katarina Halm, Feldenkrais® Practitioner, June, 2017
Swallowing – Wikipedia
The pharyngeal swallow is started by the oral phase and subsequently is coordinated by the swallowing center on the medulla oblongata and pons. The reflex is initiated by touch receptors in the pharynx as a bolus of food is pushed to the back of the mouth by the tongue, or by stimulation of the palate (palatal reflex). –– From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swallowing
Click here for a short video of stepping sideways behind a leg
A short clip of Chen-style Taichi Wave Hands Like Clouds. The clip is from an excellent teaching video produced by Chen-Han Yang, and titled Chen Tai Chi for beginners. It teaches the Chen-style 56-movement form.
Taiji Chicken or Feldenkrais Egg?
Instructor Oliver Reimer writes:
I first learned about the Feldenkrais Method from a Taiji (Taichi) teacher — it was love at first sight. Ever since I’ve explored how these two practices can enhance each other.
In ATM we lie on the floor exploring novel movement patterns. We get up and we feel some lovely changes – new awareness of how we can move with greater ease. A few minutes later we return to “civilian” life and our lifetime of movement habits takes over. We have had a nice time on the floor and learned to appreciate our capability for easy movement but sometimes it seems that we leave a lot on the mat.
Taiji for me provides a middle ground between the pure movement of ATM and the habitual movements of everyday life. It is an applied science lab where we can test what we did on the floor in movement patterns that are also novel. But they are done upright and they are ones that are practiced slow in order to be able to be very fast and powerful. Fast and powerful because we learn to move with the whole body and with relaxation to learn not to stumble over ourselves.
Even if we practice Taiji a lot, the movement patterns are very close to the surface and easier to observe and change than the movements patterns of every day existence.
These are ideas that interest me. I’m curious about what I’ll learn from you.
………………………………………..
The invitation:
Hi there,
You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: Jun 25, 2023 01:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Register in advance for this meeting:
https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMuduihrjstHtUWyWFLErC-KwVbFYsrz53k
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Katarina Halm is an Affiliate Instructor with SAM MASICH Masich Internal Arts
Meridians
14 Classical Meridians
#1 YIN (LU) Lung & #2 YANG (LI) Large Intestine/
#3 YANG (ST) Stomach & #4 YIN (SP) Spleen
#5 YIN (HT) Heart & #6 YANG (SI) Small Intestine
#7 YANG (UB) Urinary Bladder & #8 YIN (KD) Kidney
#9 YIN Pericardium & #10 YANG Triple Heater
#11 YANG (GB) Gall Bladder & #12 YIN (LV) Liver
#13 (CV) Conception Vessel & #14 (GV) Governing Vessel
This list is from Yin Yang House: https://yinyanghouse.com
Meridian Hours
The following chart shows the times of meridian activity and the entry and exit points: (The chart is from: https://theory.yinyanghouse.com/acupuncturepoints/locations_theory_and_clinical_applications)
Here are the times with links to the individual pages
3-5 AM #1: YIN (LU) Lung
5-7 AM #2: YANG (LI) Large Intestine
7-9 AM #3:YANG (ST) Stomach
9-11 AM #4:YIN (SP) Spleen
11 AM-1 PM #5: YIN (HT) Heart
1-3 PM #6:YANG (SI) Small Intestine
3-5 PM #7 YANG (UB) Urinary Bladder
5-7 PM #8 YIN (KD) Kidney
7-9 PM #9 YIN Pericardium
9-11 PM #10 YANG Triple Heater
11 PM-1 AM #11 YANG (GB) Gall Bladder
1-3 AM #12 YIN (LV) Liver
General introduction to the organ systems – Heart, Lungs, Spleen, Liver, and Kidneys.
You may start your exploration by choosing a meridian from the list below.