by Itinerant_Phenomenologist » Tue Oct 26, 2010 9:43 am
I think its already been mentioned but I'll throw in my two cents for what its worth:
When my uncle taught me awhile back, he said that the sounds are essential. After I learned all the sounds and practiced with them for a long while, he told me the sounds are not essential. [insert my slight confusion]
The key is the muscular contractions/relaxations of stomach/diaphragm/neck/etc area when making the associated sounds. You can get the same internal body mechanics with just breath alone. However, the way the specific sounds are emitted, coupled with the external physical bodily actions, forces you to inhale/exhale in that specific way which leads to those specific contractions/relaxations.
I asked why they teach with sounds at all if you can do it with just breath alone. He said "short cut". It's hard to consciously manifest those specific internal mechanics without any motivation. However, the "hissing", the "laughing", the "deep" sounds etc that some say are associated with emotions/mental states, when done "naturally" (not "forced" [sounds weird since you are still artificially inducing them]) more readily allows your body to engage in those internal mechanics in a much more reliable fashion.
After you do those for a long time, you recognize the patterns and you can then phase out the literal sounds while still maintaining the correct diaphragmatic motions, neck tension/relaxation and all the other internal mechanics normally associated with the sounds.
But as I said... this is just what little information I managed to glean from my uncle while he was still teaching me. Can't ask him anymore since he's already passed so I'm just muddling along the best I can. But I've been practicing in this fashion for awhile now and even if I can't say I feel invincible with Tit Sien, though I can say that it makes me feel stronger... I can at least state that I haven't suffered random hemorrhaging, sleeplessness, anxiety, headaches and all the other weird things that people associate with incorrect chi kung exercises.
Oh and when I say "breath alone", I don't mean the breathing is completely silent. There is a level of exaggeration, but only slightly.
Obviously... I admit that I might be 100% wrong.
If you can't hit hard, hit them where they're soft.
Be charitable when listening to people, but always ask questions.