07/09/2025
How to practice Qi Gong while standing?
Standing Qi Gong practice involves practicing in a standing posture, including both dynamic and static standing qigong. Static standing qigong, also known as standing posture qigong, is effective in treating certain illnesses and maintaining health. There are many types of standing dynamic qigong: routine and non-routine. Non-routine qigong includes free-hand exercises and inducing qigong (also known as spontaneous qigong or induced qigong). This article focuses on some aspects of standing posture qigong.
Zhan Zhuang Gong is a practice that organically integrates and interacts "form, intention, qi, and strength." It not only offers a variety of postures to suit various needs, but also has specific requirements. For example, it requires the "three internal harmonies" and "three external harmonies." The "three internal harmonies" are the harmony of mind and intention, intention and qi, and qi and strength; the "three external harmonies" are the harmony of shoulders and hips, elbows and knees, and hands and feet. This achieves a state where form, intention, qi, and strength are fully unified and blended into one.
There are many different postures in Zhan Zhuang practice, each with its own distinct requirements and benefits. For example, the posture can be high or low, with the lower the position, the greater the intensity of the exercise. Young people seeking fitness can choose a low position, while those with general health conditions can adopt a high position, gradually lowering the position as their strength improves. The arms can be held open or closed, high or low, in embrace, support, pressing, or holding. However, different postures require different intentions. For example, the "pressing the ball" posture involves imagining each hand pressing a ball floating in water; the "holding the water" posture involves holding a bowl of water, and the effects are also different. The movements in Zhan Zhuang can be asymmetrical, such as one hand lifting up and the other pressing down, or symmetrical, with both hands pointing up or down simultaneously. In short, there are many different postures in Zhan Zhuang, and practitioners should choose the appropriate posture based on their specific needs. The posture should be complete and balanced, upright and comfortable, relaxed but not slack, tight but not rigid, with the upper body empty and the lower body solid, like a tree taking root.
The following introduces one of the most commonly used standing postures. Practitioners can change different postures according to the above principles.
Vertical Support Stance: Stand with your feet parallel and shoulder-width apart. Keep your head straight and looking straight ahead, your back straight, arms like a bow, shoulders relaxed, elbows hanging down, armpits empty, fingers stretched out, chest tucked in, hips drawn together, buttocks in a sitting position, knees slightly bent and inward, feet evenly touching the ground. Maintaining this posture, relax all muscles as much as possible. Breathe naturally, imagining your feet taking root like a tree, your body standing tall and straight like a pine tree, unwavering and unshaken.
Practice Zhan Zhuang two or three times daily, starting with about 10 minutes and gradually increasing to half an hour or even an hour. Initially, you may experience soreness and fatigue in your legs. This is normal and will gradually become accustomed to after some practice. When changing postures, some advocate keeping your hands no higher than your eyebrows, no lower than your navel, no farther than a foot, and no closer than your body. Within this range, naturally change postures according to your purpose and intention. Observe the changes in physical sensations associated with a particular intention in a particular posture, aligning posture with intention. Regardless of the posture adopted, achieve emotional tranquility, natural relaxation, and a sense of comfort and ease. Generally, after adopting natural breathing and relaxing into a state of tranquility, your breathing will naturally become slow, even, and long. With intention and posture in harmony, allow distracting thoughts to flow naturally, without artificially seeking tranquility.
* I have been practicing Zhàn Zhuàng since 2000, but at that time my teacher taught this method by calling it Qi Gong practice, he said for beginners just do it correctly for 5 or 10 minutes, as time went by and the length of the practice was increased. He never mentioned Zhan Zhuang then until I found out the name Zhan Zhuang on the internet *