Qigong Classes Rego Park NY

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Eastern School of Acupuncture and Traditional Medicine
973-746-2848
427 Bloomfield Ave., 3rd Floor
Montclair, NJ
Laureen Sanchez, L.Ac.,LMT.
917-757-6950
7 West 51st St., 2nd FL
New York, NY
Laureen Sanchez L.Ac.,LMT.
917-757-6950
51 N. Broadway
Hicksville, NY
Integral Astrology
917-216-1541
3327 201st Street
Bayside, NY
Natural Balance Massage & Wellness Center
718-336-8400
3013 Quentin Road
Brooklyn, NY
New York College of Traditional Chinese
212-685-0888
13 E 37th St. 2nd flr
New York, NY
New York College of Traditional Chinese
516-739-1545
155 First St
Mineola, NY
Adela Acupuncture and Herbs
718-359-3647
33-21 Murray Lane
Flushing, NY
Dynamic Skincare
914-262-4453
Bayside, NY
Open Spaces Feng Shui
646-382-3878
Brooklyn, NY

Is QiGong for you?

QiGong (pronounced Chee Kung) is a Chinese discipline that combines movement, meditation, and breathing. Though the phrase Qigong was coined in 1948, the practice is more than 5000 years old. Designed to promote health and relaxation, QiGong is a mind-body practice of slow movements, mental focus, and coordinated deep abdominal breathing that boosts and balances a person's vital energy, or "qi".

According to the QiGong Institute, a nonprofit educational organization, Qigong is the precursor to all Chinese energy practices. The word, pronounced "chee gong," is a combination of two ideas: "Qi" means air, breath of life, or vital energy of the body, and "gong" means the self-discipline skill of working, cultivating, and balancing Qi. The art of Qigong consists of intention, meditation, relaxation, physical movement or posture, mind-body integration, and breathing exercises. Kung-fu, vinyasa yoga, Taichi and many martial arts are forms of QiGong.

QiGong focuses on aligning posture, breathing, and awareness through movement. Like Tai Chi, the exercises are very slow, deliberate, and precise.  It's not athletic or vigorous like some forms of western yoga, but instead, emphasizes using each part of the body correctly.  There are many different QiGong styles and exercises and all are equally beneficial. Find a style that you like or mix and match different styles.

So, how do you learn QiGong? There are classes available all over the world that teach the basic movements and coordinated breathing.  Many acupuncture, Chinese medicine, yoga, and martial arts centers offer QiGong classes.  Or, you can buy DVDs or log onto online classes to learn exercise series with Zen-like names like Flowing Motion, Rolling the Ball, Inner Rivers Flowing, Flying Wild Goose and Wave Hands in Clouds. 

QiGong is not an athletic, or competitive sport.  There are no extra points for doing it better or at an advanced level.  In fact, the QiGong Institut...

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