10/08/2025
🥋According to many oral traditions, Bodhidharma developed the Baduanjin around the 5th century in a monastery. In the 12th century, General Yue Fei is said to have refined it to improve the health and resilience of his soldiers.
📚 However, the Health Qigong Management Center of the Chinese National Administration of Physical Culture and Sports states that its exact origins remain unknown. Illustrations discovered in a Han dynasty tomb (206 BCE – 220 CE) depict at least four movements similar to those in the modern Baduanjin.
👘 The term “brocade” refers not only to the rich silk robes worn by imperial dignitaries — symbolizing health and vitality — but also to the “silken” quality of the body’s fascia when it is supple and well-nourished through regular practice.
🌊 The Silk of the body is awakened through this practice, to nourish the Qi in deeper layers of the body, including the Channels/Meridians. This is done through a deep stretch coming from release, separating the bone and flesh (Yin Jin Jing principle)
🫀 Each move also has a specific organ system that it targets.
🫁 The first one in this clip targets the Lung/Large Intestine axis (Metal Element)
— "Draw the Bow to Shoot the Eagle"
🌏 and the Second one targets the Spleen/Stomach axis (Earth Element)
— "Separate Heaven and Earth"