Tibetan Five - or Tibetan Six?

 by Dr Tom J. Chalko, PhD

A set of concentration exercises, known as "The Original Five Tibetan Rites of Rejuvenation" has been published in the western world by Peter Kelder in 1939. Due to unprecedented effectiveness of these simple concentration exercises (which I have also verified myself) Peter Kelder' book has been published again (Peter Kelder, The Eye of Revelation - The Original Five Rites of Rejuvenation, Borderland Sciences Research Foundation, 1989, ISBN 0-945685-04-1) and is gaining considerable popularity. Below is my summary of these exercises.

According to Tibetan Lamas, these exercises aim to:

     -stimulate spinning of all chakra vortices
     -balance the activity of all chakras

Even if only a part of above aims is achieved, the impact of these exercises seems to extend far beyond their physical benefits.

The most important in all Tibetan exercises described below seems to be a conscious synchronisation of breathing with physical activity. For best results, I strongly advise anyone to practice basic 4 stage breathing techniques ( inhale, hold, exhale, hold empty lungs) before trying Tibetan Rites.

The other important advice, passed on by ancient Lamas and verified by modern medical science is that no exercise at any stage should be too intense or make us feel exhausted. This advice applies not only to The Five Tibetan Rites presented below, but to any physical exercise.

If the intensity of the exercise is excessive, not only such exercise is not beneficial, but may be even harmful. If you are "loosing your breath" for example, it is a sign that the body has entered an anaerobic (low oxygen) emergency mode of operation and it is a fair warning from your body and mind that you should slow down.

One method of assessing the right level of physical activity for you is to observe your pulse rate. If it exceeds 90-100 - you should slow down. Another good gauge is this: if you feel comfortable continuing the exercise (Tibetan, yoga, jogging, walking, skating, roller skating, tennis etc.) over long periods of time without strain, this level of activity is right for you. Note, that with training you can increase the intensity of exercise. After exercising at the right intensity you should not feel tired. On the contrary, you should be more energetic and, most importantly, have clearer, sharper mind. We should enjoy whatever we do, shouldn't we?

Applying the above advice to Five Tibetan Rites, you should not get too enthusiastic about overdoing them. Although they are very simple, the main emphasis should be on breath synchronisation and fluency, rather than on speed and number of repetitions.

Tibetan Lamas recommend starting with 3 repeats and gradually building strength and skill to reach 21 repeats. Performing more than 21 repeats, according to Lamas, is redundant and therefore not necessary.

All motions in the following Five Tibetan Rites need to be fluent, with depicted positions held between the motions as shown in the following diagrams. PLease note breathing phases.



Tibetan #1





Stand straight and stretch your arms to the sides. Spin clockwise standing at one spot. The most important, apart from the clockwise direction of spin, is to make sure that you stop before feeling dizzy and getting any difficulty with your balance. Choose carefully the speed and the number of full rotations (up to 21) which do not make you dizzy. Gradually with practice, you should be able to spin full 21 times and also increase the speed without getting dizzy. Children do this exercise spontaneously and they have plenty of energy.



Tibetan #2



Start stretched on your back with your hands along the body, palms of your hands on the floor, fingers together. Raise your head and legs gradually while breathing in. Your legs should be straight, straighten them as much as you can. Tuck your chin against the chest. After holding the position with raised legs and head, lower them gradually while breathing out. Then relax your muscles before repeating the cycle. Keep a breathing rhythm so that all four phases of this exercise are approximately of the same duration. If you need to miss a cycle because you need a rest, keep breathing in the same rhythm and wait for the entire breathing cycle before starting again. Maintaining the rhythm is important.


Tibetan #3



Lamas recommend exercise #3 to be practiced immediately after the exercise #2.

Kneel on the floor, hands on thigh muscles. Tuck the chin against the chest, breathing out. Then arch back as far as you can bracing your arms against your thighs while breathing in. When you return to the original position, breathe out, relax and start the cycle over again.

Lamas practice this exercise with eyes closed, focusing inward for best effect.

Deep breathing and maintaining rhythm is important. Keep a breathing rhythm so that all four phases of this exercise are approximately of the same duration.


Tibetan #4



Start sitting down on the floor, legs straight, feet 30 cm (12 inches) apart, palms of your hands on the floor alongside your buttocks. Tuck the chin against your chest, breathing out.

Then arch your head back and lift your body so that the knees bend and your arms remain straight while breathing in. Aim to achieve the horizontal position of the body as indicated in the figure above and maintain it by tensing every muscle in your body. Then exhale while returning to the original sitting position. Your hands and feet should remain at the same location on the floor. Relax with your chin down and start the cycle over again.

This exercise may seem to be initially more difficult than others. If you cannot do it at first, continue with other exercises, trying your best with this one every time. Gradually, Tibetan #4 should become as easy as others.Keep a breathing rhythm so that all four phases of this exercise are approximately of the same duration.


Tibetan #5



In this exercise hands and feet should be spaced slightly wider than your shoulders.

Start in a sagging position, your spine arched back, hands perpendicular to the floor, feet on the toes, head as far back as possible, breathe out. Your body should be close to the ground, but not touching it.

While breathing in and keeping your legs and arms straight, raise your body as high as you can, as depicted above. Then breathe out returning to the original position. Tense your muscles at each position.

Keep a breathing rhythm so that all four phases of this exercise are approximately of the same duration.

Tibetan #6 restricted exercise




The series of Five Tibetan exercises described above can be practiced two or three times a day everyday during the entire lifetime. In contrast, the following exercise, according to Lamas, has a very special purpose and it should be practiced only in circumstances described below. If you are not sure, and do not practice the first five exercises regularly, do not practice this exercise. You have been warned.

The purpose of the Tibetan #6 exercise is to redirect the excess of sexual and reproductive energy, generated by the activity of the base chakra to all higher chakras along the spine, especially to the brow chakra, which activity is related to our spiritual awareness and psychic abilities. According to Lamas this exercise should be practiced only when the excess of the sexual urge is experienced, otherwise this exercise does more harm than good, by draining the energy from the base chakra.

By systematically practising the first five Tibetan exercises it is quite possible to raise the energy of the base chakra so much, that the sexual urge appears and needs to be dealt with. This can happen at any age.

One way to handle the situation is to dissipate this powerful energy in sexual activities. The Tibetan alternative is to transmute it to higher use, to accelerate our spiritual development and rejuvenate the body. Instead of dissipating the reproductive energy you can use it to regenerate cells in your entire body. The choice is yours, you have the free will, as always.

In my opinion, sexual activity without sincere love and a spiritually matched partner is like going to a forest and not seeing trees. Or enrolling at a University just to have lunch in the canteen.

Sexual love should be a spiritual union, bringing experiences and sensations far more profound, pleasurable, longer lasting and beneficial than just a physical act of relief (see The Book).

In the absence of a perfect partner, Tibetan Lamas offer us the alternative, verified over many thousands of years to be not only effective, but also very beneficial to our health, longevity, bio-energy level, Aura and most importantly to our spiritual development. They do not try to suppress the powerful energy of the base chakra. Such suppression is destined to fail, much as any act against the Nature. They offer an efficient way to transmute it for the higher purpose.

Tibetan #6 differs in many ways from all of the previously described Tibetan exercises. Firstly, it is one of the easiest to perform from the physical body motion point of view, hardly requiring any diagram. Secondly, it involves a special breath control, requiring a prolonged holding of the breath, rather than breathing rhythmically. The third difference is that after each cycle of Tibetan #6 several cycles of deep breathing are required. Another difference is that no more than three repeats are recommended for most people.

The sequence of Tibetan #6 is as follows:
  1. Stand straight and breathe out completely
  2. Bend over forward putting your hands on your knees, forcing out the last trace of air
  3. With your lungs empty return to standing straight posture
  4. Put your hands on your waist and push your shoulders up by pressing down with your hands. Pull the abdomen in as much as possible and raise your chest - keeping your lungs empty.
  5. Hold this position as long as you can, with empty lungs
  6. Breathe in through the nose until your lungs are full
  7. Exhale through the mouth, relaxing arms to hang free
  8. Take several deep breaths before the next repetition

                                                             (c) Tom J. Chalko 2000

Web 3.5: The Future of the Internet and the World


The discussion of Web 1.0, 2.0 and 3.0 has focused on the features of websites and the internet in general. The categorization provides at least one way to see the web progressing and it creates potentials for 3.0, which still lies almost entirely in the future. Many bash this as hype and techno-talk, but it is useful as a general scheme. Below is a very general review of the three webs.

Web 1.0 – This is the brick and mortar web. The New York Times discovers the Internet, so they stick the NY Times on a website. Amazon builds the super online bookstore. This is the world of email and directory based search. Not very interactive, not much user generated content.

Web 2.0 – This is the world of user based content: MySpace, Face Book, YouTube, Blogs, Tweets, Digg, Seeking Alpha, even the Huffington Post to a certain extent. The movement away from static, institutional content. Google rules the organization of sites.

Web 3.0 – This world is not here yet. There is a natural progression from Web 1.0 to 2.0, the users begin to create, and rate the content. But the idea of Web 3.0 is more technical. Without going into excessive details, the world of Web 3.0 might be one where the computer learns “to read”. When you query “hotel Madrid” the search engine will actually read the content, not just rate the site. This would make the exchange of information much faster and more fluid. This is the semantic web, post Google. Some put behavioral targeting here, but I believe BT is Web 2.0.

So what is Web 3.5? The progression of Web 1.0 to 2.0 and 3.0 is more of a technical progression than a political one. Web 3.5 is the political progression beyond 2.0.

The internet has revolutionized the way we communicate and how we organize (among many other things it has changed). But what hasn’t happened yet is a real revolution in online political organization on a national and trans-national level. Politicians have used the Internet to create databases of donors and volunteers, and less successfully, they have tried to use the Internet to compliment traditional media campaigns. But we have yet to see a truly grass roots political movement emerge online that captures the potential of the Internet, no borders, very inexpensive organization, very horizontal, very democratic and anonymous.

Traditional media has always been elitist and top heavy, and that is not necessarily a bad thing. We looked to traditional media as a specialized, informed source. The blogosphere offers something different; the two can and should exist together. The driving force behind Web 2.0 and what differentiates it from Web 1.0 is its democratic nature. The origin of the content stopped being primarily something from professional journalists, filmmakers, and authors and became populist. The vast majority of the user based content was put to the service of the big internet institutions. MySpace, YouTube, the blogs with ad sense, affiliate sites, all of it was to generate ad space and its derivatives. There were no significant philosophical movements to come out of Web 2.0.

This is the dividing line between Web 2.0 and 3.5. In web 3.5, not only will the content come from non-traditional sources, it will work toward a world organization that will trump the nationalist government and multinational corporations that are owned and at the service of the world financial elite. With a PC, internet connection and a few dollars, a worldwide political organization can be created. This is the liberation that the internet offers. The institutions and financiers saw only media space and earnings, but the creature is about to turn on them.

Web 3.5 will be owned and operated by the people of the world, and it will be the launching pad for a world government that will end war, hunger, poverty and the destruction of the world’s natural resources that have been till now at the service of the super elites. Never before in the history of man has there ever been an opportunity for the people of the world to discard national identities and unite behind a single world movement. The English language has become a de-facto language for the world, and the Internet has become the community. The only missing ingredient is a platform that could be built for under $100,000 to house the community and organize it. Who will step up and launch the first world community? There lies the danger and the opportunity. Conspiracy theorists, racists, demagogues will try, and the oligarchs of the world will certainly propose a straw man to serve their purposes. Beware of the Astroturf world movements that will soon be upon us.

Now is the time for a charismatic, modern, figure to emerge and carry the world to the next level. The only thing lacking is the seed money and thinkers. A global community of writers, scientists, business people, environmentalists, artists, marketers and political organizers need to come together to create an agenda to take the world beyond nationalism and capitalism. The movement must reject all forms of violence and corruption and embrace peace, equanimity and sustainability. It must be secular and completely post-nationalist. People of the world, we can do this, or they can do it for us. We now have the tools to overcome oppression, poverty and manipulation. We must not let this moment by squandered.

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How Christian are We?

We often think of Israel as a Jewish state or France a Catholic country. But the United States is more Christian (83%) than Israel Jewish (76%) or France Catholic (65%). There is often talk of a Judeo/Christian heritage, or our multiculturalism. But only 4% of the United States population identifies themselves as part of a non-Christian religion, the rest identify themselves as either Christian or atheist/agnostic. (ABC News)

While America’s major film, television and publishing industries try to depict the country as a multicultural religious melting pot, nothing could be farther from the truth. Again, we are more homogenous religiously than Israel. While there is an immense racial, linguistic, and cultural diversity, the strong Christian unity of the nation is not emphasized in an overzealous attempt by a small non-Christian minority (less than 4%) to protect the secular playing field.
But let’s try and imagine a United States that was as unabashedly Christian as Israel was Jewish. This would at least be democratic, considering the demographics. Let’s imagine a country that really united around the core message of Jesus, and promoted a culture, social policy and a foreign policy that was Christian. This in no way means mixing church and state, which would be ludicrous and truly run counter to our very successful political traditions. Let’s simply imagine a country whose social, cultural and political life reflected the one unifying factor that holds together our wide diversity.

There are two pillars to the message of Jesus, love and commitment to the spiritual life. The Beatitudes from the Sermon on the Mount epitomizes Jesus’ message of love.

And seeing the multitudes, he went up into a mountain: and when he was set, his disciples came unto him:

And he opened his mouth, and taught them, saying,
Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.
Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.
Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Imagine a country united around these principles. The weak, the poor and the hungry of the wealthiest nation in the history of the Earth would be given health care, a good education and a safe, clean place to live. We would stop being the largest police state in the world with over 2 million people in prison. We would find a way to peacefully and humanely rehabilitate non-violent criminals. In fact, we would become a society that abhorred all forms and manifestations of violence; rejecting it in favor of a commitment to love, peace and sustainability.

Our foreign policy would search for peace in the world, and would commit to war only under the most drastic of circumstances. As the wealthiest nation in the world, the US would use its influence to help those that were weak, hungry, downtrodden and hopeless. We would never again commit atrocities abroad that we would consider abhorrent at home.

We would reject the cult of money and personal grandiosity in favor of a society that first looked after its weak, poor, hungry and desperate. America will always be a land of opportunity and wealth, but we will once again remember our core Christian values. Before we build McMansions and buy Hummers, we will make sure the folks in our communities are at least safe, warm, and fed.

While our public discourse would always be charged and varied, we would have an underlying respect and love for each other, even when our ideas were radically different. And no matter how diverse out opinions, certain precepts would unite us: love, peace, compassion and mercy.

Jesus taught us to love each other. He also taught us to pursue the spiritual life. We are not beasts of burden doomed to work and labor our lives away for food and shelter. We are spiritual beings and we should have faith in life, and the life force of the universe. Of course we must tend to ourselves and ours societies, but there is something so much more powerful, so much more fulfilling than the materialism we cling to out of desperation. Time and again Jesus returns to this theme, to choose the spiritual life over the material.

No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.
Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?

Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?
Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin:
And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.

Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to day is, and to morrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?

How poignant is this message to our consumer driven society desperately looking for meaning and peace yet bombarded by materialism and medication as the way towards happiness. Why should we be embarrassed to embrace the one thing that can unite this country, our overwhelmingly Christian faith? Yet even as I write this I feel the taboo of bringing into the public forum the words of Jesus. How absurd is that? How did we get so far away from the driving force of our spiritual lives?

The hypocrisy of public and political Christianity in America has made it an embarrassment to all but the most fundamentalist and right wing Christians. The left has been terrified to bring religion into the cultural and political spectrum while the right has had no qualms about using Christianity as the bully-pulpit for conservative and neo-conservative agendas, both of which have almost nothing to do with the authentic message of Jesus; we have allowed them to co-opt the brand.

How did George Bush, Tom Delay and the war mongering neo-conservatives come to dominate the Christian message? The political center of America, both Republican and Democrat, must be able to recapture the one great unifying principle of American society, Christianity, even if a vociferous minority will fight tooth and nail to keep Jesus out of mainstream culture. Christianity and the message of Jesus must be ripped away from radicals and manipulators and given its sacred place at the center of American culture.

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