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The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity
The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity
The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity
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The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity

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With a detailed introduction to the ancient philosophical, ethical, and religious Chinese practice of Taoism, The Tao of Health, Sex, and Longevity is a unique, comprehensive, and practical self-help guide to live a balanced and positive Taoist lifestyle.

Written by a Westerner for the Western mind, The Tao of Health, Sex, and Longevity is perfect for the modern reader interested in exploring the balanced and holistic health care system used by Chinese physicians, martial artists, and meditators for over 5,000 years.

Drawing on his extensive personal experience and research from original sources, author Daniel Reid covers all aspects of the healthy Taoist lifestyle, delivering concise information and instruction on diet and nutrition, fasting, breathing and exercise, sexual health, medicine, and meditation.

Featuring helpful charts and illustrations, The Tao of Health, Sex and Longevity makes the ancient practice easier to understand and more applicable to a modern Western audience than ever before.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAtria Books
Release dateMar 8, 2011
ISBN9781439148075
The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity
Author

Daniel Reid

Daniel Reid has a Master’s degree in Chinese language and civilization, and he studied Taoist practices in Taiwan for 16 years and in Thailand for 10 before moving to Australia in 1999. He is the author of several books, including The Tao of Health, Sex & Longevity and The Complete Book of Chinese Health & Healing, and the translator of My Journey in Mystic China, John Blofeld's autobiographical account of his years spent in pre-Communist China.

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Good stuff
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
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    I got this book in my hands at age 25 and it changed my life. His other texts are just as good. I'm 58 now. Stopping by to pay homage to Mr. Daniel
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Written by a Westerner who lives in Taiwan and has studied under several masters. This is a clearly written text with diagrams and charts that cover the Taoist approach to the physical aspects of life: diet, exercise, meditation, and sex. The last being controversial is covered in the same clear style with the object of preserving physical energy for the purpose of living a long and healthy life.
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    negative man hating dribble. iv read many books now on this topic. no thanks

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The Tao Of Health, Sex, and Longevity - Daniel Reid

Preface

Tao is the primal power that forges all phenomena in the universe, from the infinite to the infinitesimal. Invisible yet ever present, Tao permeates the world with the very breath of life, and those who learn how to harmonize themselves with Tao may harness that power to enhance and prolong their own lives.

Although the principles of Tao were first formulated in words and symbols by the sages of ancient China about 5,000 years ago, Tao predates human civilization and transcends all boundaries of space and time, race and culture, for Tao is the universal and enduring Way of Nature. But thanks to the wisdom and insight of the ancient sages who gave birth to the world’s oldest ongoing civilization, traditional Chinese culture evolved entirely around the fundamental framework of Tao, and today its principles still lie at the heart of all the classical Chinese arts, from philosophy to poetry, calligraphy to cooking, medicine to meditation.

Tao is more than just a philosophy of life. It’s a whole way of life, and the only way to realize practical benefits from Tao is to cultivate and practice it. This was the goal of the ancient Chinese sages, and fortunately they left us abundant records charting their progress along the Way. Today, the most enlightened practitioners of modern Western science are also approaching the Tao, but from the opposite direction, and they are arriving at precisely the same conclusions. This is most apparent in the fields of physics and medicine, where the mutable relationship between matter and energy, body and mind, is beginning to emerge. Still, while the conclusions are essentially identical, the poetic imagery and earthy allusions with which the Chinese sages elucidated the Tao and its power are far easier for the average man and woman to grasp than the complex technical jargon favored by modern Western scientists, and therefore it’s simpler to view the Tao through Chinese eyes.

This book focuses on three practical aspects of Tao that have always been of vital concern to men and women everywhere: health, sex, and longevity. All three are intimately related, and together they form the foundation of human happiness. The purpose of this book is to provide the reader with a lucid introduction to the basic principles of Tao, and to offer a practical program by which men and women everywhere may apply those principles and tap the power of Tao to enhance and prolong their lives.

Research for this book was done primarily from original Chinese sources, although certain English translations of various Chinese texts were also consulted. Except where otherwise indicated, translations from the Chinese are based upon my own interpretations of the materials. My rendering of passages from the Tao Te Ching, however, closely follows the interpretation of the great English sinologist Arthur Waley, as recorded in his most excellent translation The Way and Its Power. In addition, I wish to acknowledge the deep inspirations provided by the prolific writings of the late sinologist John Blofeld, as well as the pioneering work of R. H. van Gulik.

Supporting evidence from Western science was culled from various reference books, medical journals, health studies, magazines, and recent newspaper reports, most of which are cited in the text or listed in Additional Recommended Reading. However, lest readers mistake this book for a mere recapitulation of existing materials East and West, I wish to attest that I have been practicing all the regimens described here for many years and that this book is based as much on personal practical experience as on scholarly research.

May this book provide all readers with abundant food for thought and sufficient fuel for practice on the Way to a long and healthy life!

DANIEL P. REID

Phoenix Mountain

Peitou, Taiwan

October 1988

INTRODUCTION

The Tao

History of Taoism in China

There was something formless yet complete

That existed before heaven and earth;

Without sound, without substance,

Dependent on nothing, unchanging,

All pervading, unfailing.

One may think of it as the mother

Of all things under heaven.

Its true name I do not know;

Tao is the nickname I give it.

These mysterious words come from the beguiling 5,000-word poem on Tao called Tao Te Ching, written almost 2,500 years ago and traditionally attributed to Lao Tze, the Old Sage. The incisive insights contained in the terse verse of this enchanting book form a living fountain of wisdom that has brought comfort, advice, and enlightenment to millions of people throughout the world. No other book has been translated as widely and as frequently as Lao Tze’s Tao Te Ching, and no book except the Bible has been translated as often into English. As of 1955, there were 100 different translations in print throughout the world, 90 in Western languages, 36 in English alone.

The actual date and authorship of the Tao Te Ching remain, quite appropriately, obscure. However, it has been established with historical certainty, based on consistency of language and metrical structure, that it was composed sometime between the 5th and 3rd centuries BC, and that it was the work of a single author. That a man named Lao Tze existed is also fairly certain, for there are records of such a man, also known as Lee Tan, Lao Tan, and Lee Er, in charge of the Imperial Archives during that period. Disgusted by the political chaos and greed that marked his time, he retired from public life at an advanced age and rode off into the western mountains on the back of a buffalo. When he reached the final pass that marked the boundary of the empire, the pass keeper recognized the famous sage and pleaded with him to leave some sort of record of his teachings for posterity. Reluctantly, spontaneously, and with a wily sense of irony, Lao Tze paused on his pilgrimage into oblivion and swiftly composed the Tao Te Ching in 5,000 characters, with the following disclaimer in the first two lines:

The way that can be spoken is not the real Way

The name that can be named is not the real Name.

Then, without uttering another word, he rode off into the mountains and was never heard from again.

Tao means way, te means power, and ching means book in the sense of a historical classic. So the title translates fully as The Classic Book of the Way and Its Power. This title was most likely added by later commentators, for Lao Tze had no more use for titles and names than he did for fame and fortune.

Lao Tze did not invent Taoism. Like Confucius, who gained access to the precious Imperial Archives through his meetings with Lao Tze, he simply claimed to recapitulate an ancient way of life that had prevailed in China 2,500 years before his own time, during the reign of the Yellow Emperor (Huang Ti), China’s founding father. Both Lao Tze and Confucius revered the Yellow Emperor as the progenitor of Chinese civilization and acknowledged him as the foremost practitioner of the Way.

The Yellow Emperor reigned over a loose confederation of Chinese tribes around 2700 BC. He is credited with having discovered the secret of immortality through the subtle blending of male and female essence during sexual intercourse and the transmutation of the resulting elixir into pure energy and spirit. He kept a harem of 1,200 women with whom he coupled frequently according to the tenets of the Tao of Yin and Yang, and at the age of 111 he is said to have achieved immortality and ascended to heaven on the back of a dragon.

The Yellow Emperor learned the Tao of Yin and Yang through discourse with his three chief advisers on sexual matters: the Plain Girl (Su Nü), the Mysterious Girl (Hsüan Nü), and the Rainbow Girl (Tsai Nü). Significantly, all three were female. Their conversations are recorded in The Classic of the Plain Girl (Su Nü Ching), a text that dates from the 3rd or 2nd century BC but records information that was already current in China for more than 2,000 years. It provides a gold mine of original material on ancient Taoist techniques in which sexual energy is skillfully utilized to bolster health and prolong life. This remarkably frank and factual book will be explored in detail in chapter 6.

In addition to sexual yoga, the Yellow Emperor was an avid student of herbal medicine, a field dominated entirely by Taoists in ancient China. His conversations with his chief medical adviser Chi Po are recorded in The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Internal Medicine (Huang Ti Nei Ching), which also dates from the 3rd century BC. This book, which remains an indispensable text for students of traditional Chinese medicine, summarized all the medical knowledge handed down in China since the time of the Yellow Emperor and clearly defined the fundamental Taoist principles that lie at the root of Chinese medical arts. Like the Plain Girl, Chi Po frequently reminded the Yellow Emperor of the intimate relationship among health, sex, and longevity, a unique and salient point that distinguishes Chinese medical theory from all others.

Huang Ti and Lao Tze were the only ancient sages to leave a record of Taoist thought prior to the era of intellectual ferment that followed Lao Tze’s disappearance. Therefore, Chinese historians often refer to Taoism as Huang Lao Tao, the Way of the Yellow Emperor and the Old Sage. But the simple word Tao by itself suffices to conjure up in Chinese minds the entire edifice of natural philosophy that has guided Chinese civilization for 5,000 years.

Western scholars often refer to Taoism as one of the world’s major religions, but this is not entirely correct. To be sure, an organized church complete with its own Taoist pope did branch out from the mainstream of Taoist philosophy about 500 years after Lao Tze, but this church has little to do with the original Tao. To paraphrase Lao Tze, The way that can be organized is not the real Way. Indeed, the very idea of an organized church, frocked clergy, and religious dogma runs completely contrary to Tao.

Tao is a way of life, not a god or religion. It literally means Way, or path—a trail on the journey through life that conforms to nature’s own topography and timetables. Any path but Tao is, by definition, artifice. Western ways, which attempt to conquer rather than commune with the forces of nature, lead inevitably to a schizophrenic split between man and nature. Tao views man as a tiny, vulnerable creature within the grand scheme of things and suggests that our best hope for survival is to live in harmony with the great natural forces that formed us as well as our environment. To go against Tao is like trying to swim upstream against a strong current—sooner or later you will exhaust your energy, grind to a halt, and be swept away by the cosmic currents of Tao.

Taoists see the entire universe as suffused with Tao Te (power of Tao). This primordial cosmic power has been called Tai Hsü (the Great Void), Tai Chi (the Supreme Ultimate Source), and Tai Yi (the Supreme Mover). It comprises the very stuff of the cosmos, the immaterial material from which the entire universe emerged.

Tao gave birth to the One;

The One gave birth to two things,

Then to three things, then to ten thousand . . .

The One is the Supreme Ultimate Source. When the big bang split Tai Chi to create the universe, Yin and Yang emerged as the positive and negative poles of a vast electromagnetic field, setting in motion the ceaseless ebb and flow of forces and phenomena we call the universe. The three things are the Three Treasures discussed below. From the one, two, and three evolved all the myriad plants, animals, and objects of the universe.

Western religions propose the notion of a supreme being who rules the universe from his throne in heaven, and they refer to him as God with a capital G to underline his omnipotence. The focus of all Western religions is the afterlife, and most believers manifest a morbid concern with the fate of their souls after death. As such, Western religions are idealistic rather than practical, more concerned with the next world than this one.

Taoists, on the other hand, speak not of a supreme being but of a supreme state of being—a sublime state that lies deeply locked within every human being and can be reached only through the greatest personal effort and self-discipline. This state of being, commonly referred to in English translation as enlightenment, is as revered in the East as notions of God are in the West and forms part of every human being’s innermost potential.

One of the most distinctive features of philosophical Taoism is what the great sinologist and translator Arthur Waley termed its lyrical acceptance of death. Taoists regard birth and death as transitions from one realm of existence to another rather than as absolute beginnings or endings. As Lao Tze’s greatest disciple, Chuang Tze, asked his students, "How do I know that in clinging to this life I’m not merely clinging to a dream and delaying my entry into the real world?" Although the Taoist sage tends to live a long and healthy life in this world precisely because he patterns himself on nature, he also faces death without fear or regret, because death too is natural.

Taoism is concerned primarily with life on earth. It unequivocally equates physical and mental health, and insists that only a strong, healthy body can house a strong, healthy spirit, which is why Tao focuses on health and longevity.

According to Tao, we reap what we sow during our own lifetimes. Therefore, Tao provides the seeds of wisdom we need to cultivate health and longevity in the fertile garden of life, and those who till the soil of Tao with daily practice and self-discipline will surely harvest these luscious fruits. Tao maps a path between heaven and earth, but man must walk it on his own power. Unlike Western religions, which offer salvation in exchange for faith alone, the gates of Tao open only to those who really work hard to cultivate the Way. Tao cannot be petitioned in prayer, but it can be utilized in practice, and those who learn to harness its power will find that it is inexhaustible. The prime importance in Taoism of practice over faith, experience over erudition, cannot be overstated. Halfway measures never suffice: One must go all the Way.

Dualistic Western philosophy splits the spiritual and physical realms into two hostile and mutually exclusive spheres and attaches superior value to the former. Taoism regards the physical and spiritual as indivisible yet distinctly different aspects of the same reality, with the body serving as the root for the blossom of the mind. A plant can live without its blossoms but not without its roots, and so it is with people. A person who has lost his mind can still live a long time, but if he loses his heart, lungs, or liver, he will die, regardless of how intelligent or spiritually enlightened he is.

The essential Taoist approach to life is captured in the phrase ching-jing wu-wei, literally, sitting still doing nothing. Doing nothing doesn’t mean sitting around all day like a bump on a log, but rather doing only those things that really need to be done and doing them in a way that does not run counter to the natural order of Tao and the patterned flow of cosmic forces. It means engaging only in spontaneous, unpremeditated activity, doing things purely for their own sake rather than for ulterior motives, and living in harmony with rather than trying to conquer nature. Perhaps most important, wu-wei means knowing when to stop rather than overdoing things and knowing when to refrain entirely from inappropriate action. As Lao Tze put it:

When your work is done, then withdraw!

That is the Way of heaven.

As for sitting still, this is the actual Chinese term for meditation. The word meditation confuses or scares many Westerners because it implies focusing on some profound but perpetually obscure idea that is never quite defined to anyone’s satisfaction. In Buddhist and Taoist tradition, however, the nonactivity of meditation involves a conscious effort to completely empty the mind, rather than fill it with intellectual profundities. This sort of meditation is both relaxing and highly invigorating, for it removes from the mind the incessant internal chatter that burdens and belabors the spirit during normal activity. The resulting calm and mental clarity permit all sorts of spontaneous intuitive insights on Tao.

Taoism remains one of the richest and certainly the oldest ongoing philosophical tradition in the world. A colorful, eclectic philosophy chock-full of wisdom and humor, its history is cast with a delightful assortment of eccentric characters. With its unique blend of physical and mental regimens and its equal emphasis on theory and practice, Taoism has come to include such diverse elements as alchemy, deep breathing, calisthenics, sexual disciplines, herbal medicine, diet, heliotherapy, and much more. These various disciplines are discussed in great detail in the various Taoist texts handed down from master to disciple over the ages, and all will be covered in this book. Indeed, the Taoist bible, a massive tome called Tao Tsang (Treasury of Tao), ranks among the world’s lengthiest canons—1,120 volumes compiled over a period of 1,500 years—and it provides a treasure trove of esoteric information.

Still, when all is said and done about Tao, it all boils back down to the entrancing verse of the Tao Te Ching, which, despite Lao Tze’s own disclaimer, packs a lot of Tao into a mere 5,000 words and covers a lot of territory in a few pages. That’s because every line can be taken on several different levels at once, and every point reflects the multifaceted Tao like a jewel reflects light. The Tao Te Ching transcends the relative human boundaries of history and culture, time and place. Therefore, before exploring the incredibly fertile garden that sprang from the potent seeds of Lao Tze’s words, let’s devote a bit of time and space to a brief review of this remarkably rich little book.

The Way and Its Power

Here’s how Lao Tze illustrates the functional utility of emptiness over form and the dependence of all things on nothings:

We put thirty spokes together and call it a wheel;

But it is on the space where there is nothing that the usefulness of the wheel depends.

We turn clay to make a vessel;

But it is on the space where there is nothing that the usefulness of the vessel depends.

We pierce doors and windows to make a house;

But it is on the spaces where there is nothing that the usefulness of the house depends.

Therefore, just as we take advantage of what is, so we should recognize the usefulness of what is not.

The inherent superiority of emptiness over form and stillness over activity, as well as their indivisible interdependence, is a salient point in many Asian philosophies. Most Westerners, however, geared as they are to concrete form and activity, usually find this point difficult to grasp. But the way Lao Tze puts it, even a child could grasp it, for Lao Tze patterns his points on simple, solid observations, not on specious abstract arguments. Objective observation of nature has always been the primary method of Taoist discovery, and such observation clearly reveals that the whole picture must always include what is not as well as what is and that the utility of anything springs from the union of opposites.

Water was one of Lao Tze’s favorite images, and it remains the quintessential symbol of Tao. Like emptiness, water goes largely unnoticed, yet it possesses far more te than its own opposite elements:

Nothing under heaven is more yielding than water;

But when it attacks things hard and resistant,

There is not one of them that can prevail.

That the yielding conquers the resistant

And the soft conquers the hard

Is a fact known by all men,

But utilized by none.

Here’s a fine example of the manifold meanings tucked into every line of the Tao Te Ching. First, the passage represents a simple, natural statement of Taoist philosophy, identifying Tao with the softness, flexibility, and irresistible power of water. Second, it’s a clear-cut lesson in sex, illustrating how woman conquers man by yielding to his passion, using her softness to overwhelm his hardness. Third, this passage is frequently quoted by Chinese martial artists, who use it to explain the superior virtues of traditional Chinese soft-style forms such as tai chi chuan over the hard-style offshoots such as Korean tae kwon do and Japanese karate.

Another reason Lao Tze admired water is that water benefits all living things without taking credit for doing so. Indeed, after bestowing its life-giving benefits to field and stream, man and beast, water is perfectly content to puddle up and rest in the lowest, darkest, places. It falls as rain from heaven and, when its work is done, it flows down into the deepest recesses of the earth:

The highest good is like that of water.

The goodness of water is that it benefits the ten thousand creatures,

Yet itself does not scramble for attention,

But is content with places that men disdain.

It is this that makes water so near to the Way.

By association, this passage also implies the superior virtue of all things symbolized by water, such as the female of the species, who bestows life to all creatures through birth and motherhood yet herself does not scramble for attention in doing so.

Closely related to the image of water is the concept of softness and all its implications:

When he is born, man is soft and weak;

In death, he becomes stiff and hard.

The ten thousand creatures and all plants and trees

Are supple and soft in life,

But brittle and dry in death.

Truly, to be stiff and hard is the way of death;

To be soft and supple is the way of life.

Therefore, the weapon that is too hard will be broken,

And the tree with the hardest wood will be cut down first.

Truly, the hard and strong are cast down,

While the soft and weak rise to the top.

This is another favorite passage for practitioners of China’s soft-style martial arts. It extols the virtues of nonresistance, of bending with the wind, and the last two lines clearly echo the familiar ring of the popular Christian belief that the meek shall inherit the earth.

Lao Tze lived during a long, chaotic chapter of Chinese history known as the Warring States period. While dozens of petty princes schemed and vied for supremacy, kingdoms rose and fell like waves on the sea, with alliances forming overnight only to dissolve at dawn, and warfare raging throughout the land. The latter part of this period of intellectual ferment was called the Hundred Schools era, and it produced great philosophers such as Confucius, who roamed from state to state trying in vain to persuade the warring princes to adopt his own pacifist philosophy as state policy.

As Confucius’s contemporary, Lao Tze naturally had some things to say about politics as well, though he couched his concepts within his usual clever metaphors. Throughout the Tao Te Ching he ridicules such lofty human ideals as benevolence, piety, loyalty, and morality, condemning as wholesale artifice all social conventions and scoffing at the notion that people can be ruled by ideology. He points out that the very need for rule by law and threat of punishment indicates that society has already reached an advanced stage of decay. People everywhere are the same, Lao Tze said. When happy and healthy, they naturally treat each other with kindness and respect. When hungry and oppressed, they naturally become cruel and unruly. Since most rulers keep their subjects more or less in a state of perpetual hunger and oppression, they find it necessary to impose from above the unnatural fetters of law and punishment in order to stay on top. Even more ludicrous, in order to justify their privileged positions, they pose themselves to the public as morally superior persons.

The true sage rules the people by rearing them and feeding them but not laying claim to them, and by eliminating the sources of strife rather than punishing the consequences:

If we stop looking for persons of superior morality to rule

There will be no more jealousies among the people.

If we cease to place value on products that are difficult to obtain

There will be no more thieves.

Thus the enlightened leader rules his people by emptying their hearts and filling their bellies. Most commentators and translators have misinterpreted this as simply meaning that the best way to rule people is to keep them well fed but ignorant. That’s true, but there’s much more to it than that. To empty the mind is an old Chinese concept that refers to a traditional technique used in Taoist meditation to accomplish the goal of completely clearing the mind of all discursive thoughts, so that intuitive understanding of Tao may rise spontaneously. A cluttered mind obscures Tao, whereas an empty mind reflects Tao like a mirror. Therefore, the sage ruler endeavors to keep his subjects’ minds as empty as possible of artificial ideas and desires, for these serve only to confuse people, create conflicts, and distract attention from Tao.

To rule people by filling their bellies not only eliminates the major source of strife, it also stresses the primacy of nutrition over ideology, diet over dogma. Filling their bellies also refers to Taoist breathing regimens, whereby the breath is pushed deep down into the abdomen with diaphragmatic pressure, a technique that requires adepts to empty their minds in order to concentrate on filling their bellies with breath. Such manifold meanings and linguistic versatility run throughout the Tao Te Ching.

One of the most charming and incisive political commentaries in the entire book deals with relations among large kingdoms, what we call superpowers today:

A large kingdom must be like the low ground toward which all streams flow.

It must be a point toward which all things under heaven converge.

It must play the role of female in its dealings with all things under heaven.

The female by quiescence conquers the male;

By quiescence she gets underneath.

This of course was the cornerstone of China’s foreign policy for thousands of years prior to the 20th century. Conquered several times by Tartar, Mongol, and Manchu invaders, China simply lay down and got underneath them, seducing these vigorous barbarian aggressors with the irresistible charms of Chinese food and dress, painting and poetry, music and dance, and, not least of all, Chinese women. Instead of fighting fire with fire, China fought fire with water, and won, reducing her rock-hard conquerors to a heap of sand. China survived and thrived while her various conquerors passed forever from the stage of history. Such are the benefits of playing the part of the female in foreign relations.

Although the Tao Te Ching was written several centuries before Christ and in a cultural milieu completely different from the West, it bears striking similarities to the spirit of the New Testament, and perhaps this accounts for its enduring popular appeal throughout the Western world. For example, Luke 6:27 advises, Do good to them who hate you, and chapter 63 of the Tao suggests, Requite hatred with virtue. In Matthew 26:52 we find the observation, They who take the sword shall perish by the sword, which agrees well with Lao Tze’s line in chapter 42, The violent man shall die a violent death.

Conflict can occur only by establishing arbitrary, rigid boundaries between opposites and then defending them: boundaries between man and woman, nation and nation, good and evil. By erasing boundaries so that opposing forces may meet and meld and yield to one another, the two blend together and strike a natural balance, automatically eliminating the source of conflict. As we shall see while exploring the various aspects of Taoism in subsequent chapters, balance and harmony among opposites form the philosophical key to all mysteries and the practical foundation of all avenues to health and longevity. Before exploring these mysterious avenues, however, let’s complete our historical survey of Taoism in China.

The Parting of the Way

The greatest proponent of pure philosophical Taoism after Lao Tze was Chuang Tze, who lived around 350 to 300 BC. Chuang Tze was by far the best writer among the great Taoist sages of antiquity, and he was especially renowned for his ironic sense of humor. It was he who remarked to his students upon waking from a nap in which he dreamt he was a butterfly that he could not tell for sure whether he was a man who had just dreamt he was a butterfly, or a butterfly who was now dreaming that it was a man.

Chuang Tze was one of Taoism’s strongest advocates of wu-wei, which he defined as getting things done by doing nothing. In a discourse with his students, he said, Is there such a thing as true joy? For me, the perfect freedom of doing absolutely nothing is true joy, but ordinary people consider this a waste. As the Tao Te Ching puts it:

Tao never does;

Yet through it

All things are done.

The sage who patterns himself on Tao also gets things done by doing nothing.

Contentment and humility were the twin pillars of Chuang Tze’s life. His sense of humility did not include the Western notion of meekness or self-denial but simply the frank admission that man knows very little about the great mysteries of the universe and occupies only a tiny, insignificant niche within the great scheme of things. As for contentment, he believed that it is a state of mind achieved by simply being content, not a process of material acquisition.

After Chuang Tze passed from the scene, the Way began to branch off into various byways, each focusing on a unique aspect of Tao while still growing from the same seeds planted by Lao and Chuang.

Soon after Buddhism began to take root in China during the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, Taoist philosophy began to exert a powerful influence on the direction Buddhism took as it evolved there. Called Chan in Chinese, this sinified form of Buddhism was borrowed first by Korea and then by Japan, where it’s known as Zen. Such familiar elements of Zen as irreverence toward ritual, nonverbal teaching, instant personal enlightenment (satori), philosophical riddles (koan), silence, and ironic humor all bear the stamps of Chinese Taoism.

There followed in Chuang Tze’s wake a series of eccentric Taoist sages the likes of whom the world has not seen since. These were true adepts of the real Tao, not clergymen or charlatans, and they dabbled in everything from alchemy and medicine to diet, deep breathing, and sexual yoga. They wrote prolifically, recording their findings in lengthy tomes couched in secret terminology that made sense only to fellow adepts. Some of their ideas and achievements were indeed quite remarkable, if somewhat eccentric, and they merit close attention.

One of the earliest Taoist characters was Yang Chu, who lived around the 4th century BC. He gave rise to the hedonist tradition in Taoism, in which gratification of the senses was regarded as a form of devotion to Tao. Some of his followers and successors indulged in unbridled debauchery, claiming thereby to find the same direct perception of Tao that others did by sitting still doing nothing.

Among the most famous Taoist eccentrics of all time were the crazy characters known as the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, who lived during the 3rd century AD, a time when charlatans were corrupting the Tao in order to establish an organized church to compete with Buddhism. They were proponents of the Pure Conversation (ching-tan) school of Taoism, and their goal was to revive the pure philosophical Taoism of Lao and Chuang. They also believed that Taoists should live within the world of men and women, not as hermits isolated from the world in mountain caves. They generally gathered in a bamboo grove near the villa in Honan of the poet Chi Kang (223–262). After an afternoon of pure conversation, they would stroll over to a nearby tavern for a night of serious drinking, which they continued until they were all drunk and at one with Tao. All of them were highly talented men who scorned social convention and preferred to devote their genius to Tao. Like other Taoists through the ages, they were renowned as prodigious drinkers with the capacity of the sea for wine. For example, the famous poet and tippler Liu Ling (221–300) wrote all his poems under the influence and in praise of wine. Wherever he went, his servant followed him with a jug of wine in one hand and a shovel in the other, the latter to dig his grave on the spot should he happen to drop dead during a binge. Another famous drinking Taoist of that era was the alchemist Ko Hsüan, who cultivated Taoist deep-breathing techniques by holding his breath underwater.

The term used to describe the lifestyles of the Seven Sages and others like them is feng-liu, literally flowing with the wind, a poetic way of saying to fly in the face of convention. These adepts followed their own internal impulses throughout life, and they relished nothing more than the opportunity to ruffle Confucian feathers with their eccentric behavior. They were highly sensitive to the beauties of nature, and they believed that wine brought them closer to Tao. However, the pure conversationalists were not much interested in alchemy, diet, sexual yoga, and other life-prolonging disciplines; like Chuang Tze, they regarded death as a transition, leading perhaps to an even better life. They were pure philosophers, and in their writings they preserved for posterity the original pristine spirit of Lao and Chuang.

One of the greatest all-round Taoist adepts in Chinese history was Ko Hung, who lived during the 3rd and 4th centuries AD. A dabbler in philosophy, alchemy, diet, breathing, sex, and every other branch of Taoism, Ko Hung wrote 116 volumes on Tao during his lifetime.

Ko Hung’s contributions to Taoism were enormous. He wrote astutely on medicine, breath control, hygiene, exercise, and sex. He concocted special herbal formulas to help sustain recluses living alone in remote mountain caves. He experimented scientifically in alchemy and even tried to compound the elusive elixir of immortality from various herbal, mineral, and animal extracts. To his credit, he confessed failure in formulating the elixir, although he attributed that primarily to an acute lack of funds needed to purchase the more expensive ingredients and equipment.

Ko Hung represents the apex in the evolution of pure Taoism in China, culminating a 3,000-year tradition that began with the Yellow Emperor around 2700 BC. From Ko Hung’s time until the present, the pure branches of Taoism continued to develop with only minor variations and offshoots, closely following the traditions established and recorded by Taoist sages during the 600 years between Lao Tze and Ko Hung. Ko Hung’s most devoted disciple, T’ao Hung-Ching, rigorously cultivated the various disciplines recorded in his master’s voluminous writings, and he too wrote many essays on the subject. It is said that at the age of 85 he still looked like a man of 35. He too attracted many followers who, in turn, continued the tradition, and so the Way came down to us today.

Taoism is the only major world philosophy that stresses the importance of disciplined sexual relations as an absolute prerequisite for health and longevity. The sexual school of Taoism began to blossom during the 2nd to 4th centuries AD, although The Classic of the Plain Girl on which it is based appeared about 400 years earlier and contained information handed down for at least 2,000 years prior to that. When practiced in private by individual adepts, sexual yoga had never caused much concern to Confucian authorities, who themselves practiced Tao in the boudoir. But when sects arose that practiced sexual yoga en masse in Taoist temples, they aroused stern repression and sexual pogroms by government authorities.

The sexual sects of Taoism continued to crop up from time to time right down to the present day. Commenting on their practices, the Buddhist monk Tao An (292–363) wrote, These Taoists wantonly practice obscene disciplines from the Yellow Book [a secret sex manual], whereby men and women indulge in promiscuous sexual intercourse like birds and beasts in order to avert disaster and death. Offended Confucian authorities stepped in to suppress these movements. The Communist regime, which came to power in China in 1949, proved to be just as relentless and ruthless as its conservative Confucian predecessors. In an article dated November 2, 1950, the Communist newspaper Glorious Daily News reported that shamelessly lustful leaders held beauty contests for female adepts and forced them to engage in licentious sexual behavior in order to gain health and longevity.

Another major branch of Taoism that began to blossom profusely in China soon after Lao Tze and Chuang Tze was alchemy. The earliest case of alchemy ever recorded East or West dates from 133 BC, when the Taoist alchemist Lee Shao-chün recorded an experiment he performed to transmute cinnabar into gold. The resulting compound was not ingested but rather fashioned into an eating vessel that conferred longevity on whoever ate from it. Lee also practiced deep breathing, diet, herbology, and other Taoist disciplines, and he was one of the first Taoist adepts to organize the various regimens into a single coherent system of health and longevity.

Lee Shao-chün also introduced Taoism’s first deity. In conducting his alchemical experiments, he required a good stove and intense heat, so he invoked the favor of Tsao Chün, the God of the Stove in Chinese folklore. Later, Tsao Chün became better known as the Kitchen God, and to this day almost every Chinese household throughout the world keeps a shrine to him over the stoves in their kitchens. As Director of Destinies, one of Tsao Chün’s annual duties is to report the behavior of each family member to heaven at Chinese New Year, which explains why Chinese families are so careful to curry his favor.

In AD 150, the Taoist adept Wei Po-yang produced the most complete text on Taoist alchemy ever written. Called the Tsan Tung Chi (The Union of Triple Equation), it discussed the alchemy of the External Elixir (wai-dan), which involved refining pills from minerals and metals, as well as the Internal Elixir (nei-dan), which involved the inner alchemy of breathing and sexual yoga. Although in the introduction to his tome Wei issues words of warning to dilettantes and charlatans, he also repeats the ancient Taoist view that Tao can be found and cultivated by anyone who is sincerely willing to study and practice its methods.

It was during this same period of intellectual ferment that Chinese medical theory was first formally codified from the vast accumulation of information already collected for thousands of years by Taoist adepts. The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Internal Medicine and The Classic of the Plain Girl were both compiled by this period, which also produced two very important Taoist physicians: Chang Chung-ching and Hua To.

Chang Chung-ching’s book Discussion of Fevers (Shang-Han-Lun), written about 200 BC, remains one of the most important medical texts in China. It contains 113 medical prescriptions using 100 varieties of herbal, animal, and mineral drugs, including his famous and still popular fever remedy Cinnamon Sap Soup, made from cinnamon, ginger, licorice, peony, and jujubes. Dr. Chang also developed a detailed system of diagnosis based on the Taoist principles of Yin and Yang; the Five Elemental Activities of earth, water, fire, metal, and wood; and the Three Treasures of essence, energy, and spirit.

The physician Hua To, who lived around AD 200, specialized in an ancient breathing and exercise therapy called dao-yin (induce and guide). It is a method for inducing vital energy to enter the body, then guiding it to the various organs and limbs with rhythmic movements. He prescribed it for respiratory and circulatory ailments, constipation, arthritis and rheumatism, fatigue, and depression, and he prescribed it along with herbal formulas and dietary therapy. Hua To also made great strides in surgery and herbal medicine. He developed China’s first topical anesthetic from datura, rhododendron, and aconite, and used it to perform major surgery. Chinese surgery, however, begins and ends with him. Soon thereafter, Confucian authorities imposed a strict taboo on cutting open the human body, dead or alive, for they regarded the body as a precious gift from one’s parents and ancestors. Cutting open the flesh for surgery or autopsies was thus a grave offense against one’s ancestors and, by extension, against oneself.

The next great period of Taoist development occurred during the Tang Dynasty (618–907), universally acknowledged to be China’s Golden Age of culture, somewhat similar in spirit to the Renaissance in Europe. Taoism reached its apex of political and social influence during the Tang, not least because the family who founded the dynasty carried the surname Lee, the same as Lao Tze, and therefore could claim the Old Sage as their imperial ancestor. The Emperor Hsüan Tzung (712–756) declared the works of Lao and Chuang to be official classics on a par with the works of Confucius, and this honor gave Taoism in general a tremendous boost in China. That good image was somewhat tarnished in 820, however, when the Emperor Hsien Tzung died after ingesting an external elixir pill prepared for him from toxic minerals and metals by his Taoist alchemist Liu Pi.

The Tang saw great leaps forward in all three major fields of Taoist research: alchemy, medicine, and breathing. After the emperor’s untimely death in 820, alchemy moved decisively away from External Elixirs made from toxic minerals and focused instead on Internal Elixirs compounded of human essence and energy. The term dan-tien first appeared during the Tang: It literally means Elixir Field and refers to the region 2 inches below the navel and midway between the abdominal wall and spine, where vital energy concentrates and the Internal Elixir is formed. Adepts refine this elixir with breathing, meditation, and sexual yoga in order to cultivate a strong spirit-body in which to achieve immortality. This internal alchemy became and remains the most profound and mysterious of all Taoist disciplines. It is still taught today by a small handful of masters in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and a few other Chinese communities outside the mainland. It cannot be mastered without the guidance of a qualified teacher and many decades of disciplined practice.

Medicine made even greater progress than alchemy in Tang China. One of the first decrees issued by the founding emperor of Tang was that all medical knowledge throughout the empire should be gathered and brought to the capital, where in 629 he established China’s first medical academy. That was a full 200 years before Europe’s first medical school appeared, in Salerno, Italy.

More than 1,000 years had elapsed since Lao Tze rode off into the mountains on his buffalo, and during the subsequent centuries Taoist adepts and recluses had combed the mountains and forests of China collecting and experimenting with various plants, animals, and minerals in their quest to develop an elixir of immortality. In the process, they compiled an enormous pharmacopoeia in which the chemical and therapeutic natures of all these items were recorded in detail. It is important to realize that Taoist adepts were truly the scientists of ancient China: They conducted their experiments objectively and in full accordance with the scientific methods used today. They recorded all their findings, and their discoveries led to momentous developments in medicine, porcelain, metallic alloys, and dyes, and gave birth to important inventions such as the compass and gunpowder. The British sinologist Dr. Joseph Needham cataloged and analyzed the many Taoist contributions to the mainstream of world science in his massive, definitive series Science and Civilisation in China. You’d be surprised how many things that we take for granted today were invented by the Taoist alchemists of ancient China.

The foremost physician of Tang, and perhaps in all Chinese history, was the Taoist adept Sun Ssu-mo (590–692). Dr. Sun cultivated all the traditional Taoist paths to health and longevity, but his favorite approach in treating disease was nutritional therapy. For example, he observed that people living in remote, landlocked mountain regions were highly prone to goiter, an enlargement of the thyroid gland, which we now know is due to iodine deficiency. He prescribed a diet of seaweed and extracts of deer and lamb thyroid, thereby isolating the cause and providing an entirely nutritional cure for this troublesome disease more than 1,000 years before it was discovered in the West. He also provided a nutritional cure for beriberi (a vitamin deficiency disease) by prescribing calf’s and lamb’s liver, wheat-germ porridge, and vitamin-rich herbs such as almond and wild peppers. European physicians didn’t figure out the cause of and cure for beriberi until 1642, again lagging behind Taoist physicians by 1,000 years.

Sun Ssu-mo wrote two editions of his famous book Precious Recipes (Chien-Chin-Fang), which forms a gold mine of information on traditional Taoist medical theory and practice. In this book are two passages—one on diet and one on sex—that succinctly summarize two of the most basic Taoist approaches to health and longevity. Regarding nutritional therapy, he wrote:

A truly good physician first finds out the cause of the illness, and

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