Questions I have been asked quite frequently are: What is the difference between Qigong and Tai Ji? Which class should I take?
The first question is first. Both Tai Ji and Qigong are ancient practices that can improve health, fitness, well-being, and longevity. Both cultivate the “Qi” (or “life energy”) that flows through the body’s meridians by combining movement, breathing, and meditation.
Qigong literally means “life energy work”. It is a healing art, a way of cultivating physical, spiritual, and psychical health, that originated in China about seven thousand years ago. it is part of Traditional Chinese Medicine and can be practiced as a physical movement that incorporates deep breathing or as stationary meditation.
Qigong Forms are not nearly as intricate as Tai Ji forms, which need not be executed as precisely. So really anyone in any health condition can learn Qigong quickly by simply following the instructor’s movements.
Tai Ji is a martial art and healing art that originated in China more than two thousand years ago. It includes a series of continuous, circular, slow, and smooth-flowing movements that have numerous health benefits, including improved stability, flexibility, coordination, balance, as well as brain function, etc.
The Tai Ji forms are more complicated and take considerably longer to learn than Qigong because the movements in a Tai Ji form follow certain rules and involve intricate body mechanics. Done correctly, it stimulates the energy and power flow through different meridians, freeing up blocked pathways and allowing the Qi to flow throughout the body more effectively.
Qigong and Tai JI, which class is better for you? If you have physical difficulties, the Qigong class fits you better. If you are new to Tai Ji, start from the Qigong class, and switching to Tai Ji could make your learning curve smoother. If you have been learning Tai Ji for a while, taking some Qigong classes could help you learn Tai Ji better because, in Qigong class, you will learn a variety of Qigong forms that can help you to be more physically fit and to be enabled you to perform some tricky movements in Tai Ji with relative ease.