Friday 31 October 2014

PLEASE, DO AWAY WITH THE COMFORTABLE WORD 'AGING', 
AND RESTORE YOUR GOOD HEALTH.' [2]

BLOG POST November 1, 2014 [London, UK]

Have you heard of Li Ching-Yuen? He lived 256 years. Let’s read on.
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Li+Ching+Yuen

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Ching-Yuen

[An Internet Download]
Li Ching-Yuen or Li Ching-Yun [died May 6, 1933] was a Chinese herbalist, martial artist and tactical advisor. He claimed to be born in 1736, while disputed records suggest 1677. Both alleged lifespans of 197 and 256 years far exceed the longest confirmed lifespan of 122 years and 164 days after the older French woman Jeanne Calment.

Biography
Li Ching-Yuen was supposedly born in 1677 in Qi Jiang Xian, Szechuan province. By his own account, he was born in 1736. However, in 1930, Professor Wu Chung-chieh of the University of Chengdu discovered Imperial Chinese government records from 1827, congratulating one Li Ching-Yuen on his 150th birthday, and further documents later congratulating him on his 200th birthday in 1877. In 1928, a New York Times correspondent wrote that many of the old men in Li's neighborhood asserted that their grandfathers knew him when they were boys, and that he at that time was a grown man.

He began gathering herbs in the mountain ranges at the age of ten, and also began learning of longevity methods, surviving on a diet of herbs and rice wine. He lived this way for the first 100 years of his life. In 1749, when he was 71 years old, he moved to Kai Xian to join the Chinese army as a teacher of the martial arts and as a tactical advisor.

One of his disciples, the Taiji Quan Master Da Liu told of Master Li's story: at 130 years old Master Li encountered an older hermit in the mountains who taught him Baguazhang and a set of Qigong with breathing instructions, movements training coordinated with specific sounds, and dietary recommendations. Da Liu reports that his master said that his longevity "is due to the fact that I performed the exercises every day - regularly, correctly, and with sincerity - for 120 years."

In 1927, Li Ching Yuen was invited by General Yang Sen to visit him in a Xian, Szechuan. The general was fascinated by his youthfulness, strength and prowess in spite of his advanced age. His famous portrait was photographed there. Returning home, he died a year later, some say of natural causes; others claim that he told friends that "I have done all I have to do in this world. I will now go home." After Li's death, General Yang Sen investigated the truth about his claimed background and age. He wrote a report that was later published. In 1933, people interviewed from his home province remembered seeing him when they were children, and that he hadn't aged much during their lifetime. Others reported that he had been friends with their grandfathers.
Li's obituary was printed in The New York Times, Time Magazine, and other publications. The Time magazine article stated that in 1930 Professor Wu Chung-chieh, from Chengdu University, found records from the Chinese Imperial Government congratulating Li Ching Yuen in his 150th birthday in 1827.

He also worked as an herbalist, promoting the use of wild reishi, goji berry, wild ginseng, he shou wu and gotu kola along with other Chinese herbs.

The secret of longevity
The article "Tortoise-Pigeon-Dog", from the May 15, 1933 issue of Time reports on his history, since it included Li Ching-Yuen's answer to his secret of a long life:
Tranquil mind
Sit like a tortoise
Walk sprightly like a pigeon
Sleep like a dog
[End of Download]

Who could believe that all written about Li is all false? All these writers about Li wouldn't be wasting their time writing what they believed was false. And what of all the references in Wikipedia and in the Free Dictionary? Are they all false? There must have been some great truth about Li. We do not have to read an account recorded by a government to believe.

Can we now say that Joshua of the Bible did not live 120 years because no government recorded his date of birth; or, would we say that the writers of the Bible were joking about the long life of Methuselah?  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methuselah

Indeed to be healthy we've got to be positive. We should believe that there is something like good health and long life beyond those recorded by current governments; remembering that some current nations were not there thousands of years ago, much less their records of births. As the Lord Jesus says: "Blessed are those who believe without seeing" [St. John 20 verse 29].



BLOG DECEMBER 1, 2014:
'Is aging limited only to those above a certain age?' 
In December we will discuss about aging infants.

May God grant you a very happy month of NOVEMBER?

[English Language: North American]


By Alexander





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