Written By Reverend Dr. Hasan Rucker

If you’ve ever taken a deep breath in the middle of a chaotic day and felt your shoulders drop, you’ve already brushed up against the principle behind Qigong (pronounced “chee-gong”). It’s that quiet, internal shift — the moment your body remembers it knows how to be still.
Qigong is a 4,000-year-old Chinese practice that combines slow, deliberate movement, focused breath, and intentional awareness to cultivate what traditional Chinese medicine calls qi — your vital life energy. In Western terms, it’s a moving meditation that calms the nervous system, improves circulation, sharpens focus, and restores balance to a body and mind that modern life has worn thin.
And here’s what makes it remarkable: you don’t have to be flexible, athletic, spiritual, or experienced to begin. Qigong meets you exactly where you are.
If you’re new to this practice — or you’ve heard the word and wondered what it actually is — this guide is your starting point.
The word breaks down simply:
• Qi (chi) — the vital energy or life force that flows through every living thing.
• Gong — skill, practice, or work cultivated over time.
Put together, Qigong means “the practice of cultivating life energy.” It’s not a workout, and it’s not religious. It’s a system — refined over thousands of years — for working with the energy that animates your body.
In traditional Chinese medicine, qi moves through pathways in the body called meridians. When it flows freely, you feel grounded, clear, and well. When it stagnates — from stress, injury, poor posture, emotional weight, or simply the wear of modern living — discomfort, fatigue, and tension follow. Qigong is how you restore that flow.
A typical Qigong session is gentle, slow, and quietly powerful. You stand (or sit, if needed), breathe deeply, and move through a sequence of soft, flowing motions — opening the chest, sinking the weight, rotating the spine, raising and lowering the arms in coordination with the breath.
Every Qigong practice integrates three elements:
• Movement — slow, deliberate, low-impact motions that open the joints and circulate energy.
• Breath — long, smooth, diaphragmatic breathing that signals the nervous system to settle.
• Intention — focused awareness on what’s happening inside the body, not what’s happening on your phone.
That third element is what separates Qigong from a stretch routine. The mind is part of the practice. You’re not just moving your body — you’re moving your attention with it.
Qigong is what happens when breath, body, and attention finally agree to be in the same room.
Qigong’s benefits aren’t just anecdotal. Decades of clinical research now back what practitioners have known for millennia.
Harvard Medical School has been one of the most prominent Western institutions to formally recognize the practice. Harvard Health Publications has called Tai Chi (Qigong’s flowing sister practice) “medication in motion,” and Harvard Medical School has endorsed both practices as effective for a wide range of conditions — including arthritis, hypertension, heart disease, low bone density, Parkinson’s disease, sleep problems, and stroke recovery.
The mechanism is elegant. Qigong’s slow, paced breathing stimulates the vagus nerve and activates the parasympathetic nervous system — your body’s “rest and restore” mode. This lowers stress hormones, reduces blood pressure, and shifts you out of the chronic fight-or-flight state most people live in without realizing it.
Research published through the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has documented Qigong’s measurable effects on heart rate variability, anxiety reduction, and autonomic nervous system balance. One study found that even a single session of Qigong significantly reduced anxiety and improved balance in the autonomic nervous system in older practitioners. Other randomized controlled trials have shown Qigong meaningfully decreases depression and anxiety symptoms across diverse populations — from cancer survivors to high school students.
In other words: the body recognizes this practice. It responds. Quickly.
In the early weeks of practice, most beginners notice the same handful of shifts:
• Sleep improves. The nervous system calms, and bedtime stops being a battlefield.
• Tension softens. The shoulders, neck, and jaw — three places most adults carry stress without knowing it — begin to release.
• Breath deepens. You stop breathing in your chest and start breathing in your belly, where the breath is supposed to live.
• Focus sharpens. Anxiety drops a notch. Mental clutter clears.
• A sense of warmth or tingling arises in the hands or limbs. This is often the first sensation of qi most people consciously notice.
You don’t need to chase these experiences. Show up consistently, breathe, move, and let the practice do its work. The benefits compound.
“I’m not flexible/young/coordinated enough.” Qigong is one of the most accessible practices on the planet. It can be done standing, sitting, or even lying down. Movements are slow and adaptable to any body.
“It’s a religion.” Qigong is a practice, not a religion. Practitioners of every faith — and no faith — use it freely. It works on the body and mind regardless of belief.
“It’s the same as Tai Chi.” Closely related but not identical. Tai Chi is technically a form of Qigong, originally developed as a martial art. Qigong is the broader system — simpler, more meditative, and often easier to learn first.
“It’s just stretching.” Stretching works the muscles. Qigong works the nervous system, the breath, the mind, and the energetic body — simultaneously.
The single most important step is finding a qualified, experienced teacher. Qigong is best learned in community, with eyes on your form and a guide who can answer the questions that arise as your practice deepens. Video is a supplement, never a substitute.
Beyond that, the principles are simple:
• Practice consistently. Ten to fifteen minutes a day will transform you faster than an hour once a week.
• Start where you are. No equipment, no special clothing, no prior experience needed.
• Be patient with the breath. Deeper breathing develops over time. Don’t force it.
• Stay curious. The practice reveals itself gradually. Trust the process.
If you’re ready to experience Qigong for yourself, you don’t have to figure it out alone.
Foundations for Wellness (Level 1) meets every Wednesday and is built specifically for beginners. You’ll learn the breath, the posture, and the foundational movements that anchor every Qigong practice — taught with patience, depth, and zero pressure to perform.
Form and Flow (Level 2) follows for those ready to deepen into longer sequences and more refined energetic work.
Both classes are available in-person in Philadelphia and online — so distance is never a barrier.
👉 Reserve your spot in this week’s class or book a free discovery call to talk through what practice could look like for you.
Your body has been waiting for this. Let’s begin.
© 2025 reverend Dr. Hasan Ali Rucker. All Rights Reserved.
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Unifying mind, body, spirit, energy, and emotional harmony through ancient wisdom and contemporary healing arts.
hasan.rucker@gmail.com
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