healing intention and external qi: the chaos connection a new therapeutic perspective (c) copyright...
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Healing intention and external qi: the chaos connection
A new therapeutic perspective
(c) Copyright reserved Christopher Low Ph.D.
Aims of presentation• What is external qi?• What is healing intention? • New data on physiological impacts of
intention during daoyin healing (RCT)• The need for a new therapeutic and
research paradigms
Internal vs. External Qi
Internal• Health-promotion
practices applied to oneself
• One person is affected by the process i.e. ‘self-healing’ is considered to occur
External• ‘ Therapy’ /’Healing’
given to another person or group
• All participants are affected by the interaction, with the healer facilitating ‘healing’ in the others
Intention and will: the basis of intentionality
‘The thinking aspect of the mind is called intention. The function which fixates intention on things, we call the will.’
(Lingshu 2.14a)
Reference Ishida H (1989) Body and Mind: The Chinese Perspective. In Taoist
Meditation and Longevity Techniques (Ed. Kohn L). First Edition. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan.
INTENTIONALITY:
• Imagination - ‘mental’ daoyin• Physiological - ‘breathing’ daoyin• Form - ‘postural’ daoyin
‘Healing intention’
Daoyin and external qi
• Mobilisation of qi• Physical separation• Implicit notion of a healing space• Effects on many levels from the
extremely subtle to the mundane.
Key question:
“Is there a way of thinking about qi which will enable us to bridge the gaps between the measurable certainties of clinical science, the embodied experience of ‘energy’ and metaphysical description?”
Research question:
Is it possible to track and map therapeutic agency (qi) quantitatively in the clinic?
External qi: the chaos connection
• Many complex biological systems have the capacity for self-organisation
• Newer approaches to physiology have found that this self-organising behaviour can be measured quantitatively
• Some of these systems (eg heartbeat regulation) may respond to subtle impacts
Many complex biological systems have the capacity for self-
organisation
In recent years it has become possible using computer software to map fluctuations in physiological signals such as heartbeat intervals over extended periods of time. Far from being random ‘noise’ this dynamic behaviour can be shown to contain hidden rhythmic order embedded within it.
Self-organising behaviour can be measured quantitatively
For example, Goldberger and Peng* have established that the rhythmic order of heart rate degrades to a more random condition in certain heart pathologies such as angina and congestive heart disease, and also with healthy ageing. This loss of order suggests that these complex rhythms are vital to health through maintaining the plasticity of our adaptive responses.
* http://reylab.bidmc.harvard.edu
May this process be impacted favourably by daoyin healing to enhance order /restore health?
• In other words, may this subtle rhythmic order be sensitive to qi arising in the healing ‘space’ and therefore be used as a marker for healing?
• A randomised baseline and placebo-controlled clinical study was conducted to investigate this question
• therapeutic agency (qi) reputed to be associated with daoyin lies at the core of external Qigong healing, and could be similar to the placebo effect seen throughout the CAM and biomedical fields.
Rhythmic order: how to quantify?
Measure is ALPHA
• ALPHA = 0.5 • ALPHA = 1.0 • ALPHA = 1.5
Type of behaviour
• Random - no order
• Persistent rhythmic order indicative of self-organising process. Also exhibits property of self-similarity.
• Random walk - weak short term correlations, with widely divergent range of values over time.
Heartbeat locked into a pathological rhythm. This arrhythmia creates a stereotyped dynamic response
as the attractor shows
4 phases of whole session :
Vertical axis represents the delay between successive beats to map the fluctuation in time-segments (A)-(D) (A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
A. 5 min. Before Daoyin
B. DaoyinC. ShamD. Last 5 min. Of
session
Issues for ‘external qi’ research
• Receptivity to qi• Role of intention• Origin and persistence of external qi
‘field’• Use of touch (in ECG procedure)• Is objectivity possible, or even
desirable?
Shao, Zhang, Chen et al (2009)Effects of External Qi of Qigong with Opposing Intentions on Proliferation of Escherichia coli.
J Altern Complement Med15(5):567-571
Creating new therapeutic perspectives based on subtle energy
Therapeutic agency (e.g. ‘External qi’, prana, ‘subtle energy’) is distinct from the specific active components of the treatment itself
Focus is on maintenance of health, rather than symptom removal as the prime criterion of therapeutic efficacy
Primacy of the Mind-Body Connection Role of intention in potentiating efficacy.Focus on top-down causation (wholistic)
References Low C J (2011) Systems theory: tracking and mapping healing with
qi. In Energy Medicine East and West: a Natural History of Qi. Eds. Mayor D and Micozzi M S. 1st Edition. London, Churchill Livingstone Elsevier.
Qigong databasewww.qigonginstitute.org
HRV Studieshttp://reylab.bidmc.harvard.edu
Qigong in Chinese Medicinewww.singing-dragon.com
Presenter: Christopher Low, PhDwww.chrislow.net