'Dantian' or 'Tan t'ien' (
Chinese: 'Dāntián' ;
Japanese: 'Tanden' 丹田;
Korean: 단전' DanJeon' 丹田;
Thai 'Dantian' ตันเถียน) which literally means "cinnabar or red field" and is loosely translated as "elixir field". It is described as an important focal point for internal meditative techniques and refers specifically to the physical
center of gravity located in the abdomen three finger widths below and two finger widths behind the navel.
The dantian is important in
qigong,
neigong,
tao yin and other breathing techniques, as well as for
traditional Chinese medicine and is also widely used throughout
East Asian
meditation and
martial arts theory, especially the
neijia school of
Chinese martial arts.
The dantian is sometimes divided into sections. The lower dantian (at the navel as described above) is associated with physical energy and sometimes sexuality. The middle dantian (at the
solar plexus) deals with respiration and the health of
internal organs. The upper dantian (at the
third eye) relates to
consciousness or intent, spirit or shen, and the brain.
In speaking specifically of the lower of the three points, the term dantian is often used interchangeably with the Japanese word 'hara' (腹; Chinese: 'fù') which literally means simply "belly". In
Chinese and
Japanese tradition, it is considered the physical center of gravity for the human body and by extension the seat of one's internal energy (
qi). A master of
calligraphy,
swordsmanship,
tea ceremony, martial arts or comparable disciplines is held in the Japanese tradition to be "acting from the hara". The one-point (seika no itten, kikai tanden) is also a central element in
Japanese yoga,
Ki-Aikido, and other traditional arts.
Buddhist teachers often instruct their students to center their mind in dantian, held to aid control of
thoughts and
emotions. Therefore, acting from the dantian is considered to be related to the state of
samadhi.
The dantian also roughly corresponds to the
Indian concept of the
manipura, or third
chakra in
yoga philosophy, thought to be the seat of
prana that radiates outwards to the entire body.
Reference
★ Porkert, ''The Theoretical Foundations of Chinese Medicine'' MIT Press (1974) ISBN 0262160587
External Links
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Seiki tanden
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The Three Dantian, Hara and Seika Tanden
See also
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Haragei
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Jing (TCM)
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Pushing hands
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Aikido
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Tai Chi Chuan
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Meditation
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Mindfulness
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Misogi
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Kiai