Is it good to practice chikung outside in a park or up on a mountain?

Our biggest concern when we practice chikung is that we are most open at that time to receiving external stimuli like negative forces and frequencies which may harm us physically, mentally, or spiritually. The unstable weather factors we may encounter whil practicing outside (e.g. wind, rain, lightning, thunder, etc.) create negative forces and frequencies. Thus, when we practice outside in a park or mountain we may encounter unstable and weird phenomena leading to us catching some strange disease or our being possessed by bad spirits. If we practice indoors, this situation is much less likely to occur.

Our reluctance to practice chikung outside does not extend to regular physical exercise outside because the latter does not open our sphere of forces or channels with the outside. During our chikung practice we have a multi-channel feedback situation: the frequency a chikung practitioner carries in the practice would invite the same frequency from outside instead of another frequency which the practitioner is really looking for. Therefore, we need the protection powers of a safe place (such as a practice center which carries protective forces) or a master with strong protective power during our practice.

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Chi Kung Culture Society of TAIPEI