Annoucement: Qigong Meditation class

25/03/202617:51(Xem: 418)
Annoucement: Qigong Meditation class
qigong-class

qigong classqigong class-2qigong class-3qigong class-5

THÔNG BÁO
LỚP THIỀN KHÍ CÔNG


Nam Mô A Di Đà Phật

Kính thưa quý Phật tử,

Nhằm giúp quý vị có thêm phương pháp chăm sóc sức khỏe thân tâm, Tu Viện Quảng Đức trân trọng giới thiệu lớp Thiền Khí Công – một hình thức “thiền trong chuyển động”, kết hợp hài hòa giữa thân và tâm, phù hợp cho mọi lứa tuổi.

Thông qua sự hướng dẫn của giảng viên, quý vị sẽ được:

  • Thực tập các bài Khí công giúp thư giãn, điều hòa thân thể
  • Học các huyệt đạo căn bản trong bấm huyệt trị liệu
  • Tiếp cận các động tác dưỡng sinh và Thái Cực quyền
  • Nuôi dưỡng sự an tĩnh nội tâm và tăng trưởng năng lượng tích cực

Thời gian khai giảng:
Thứ Bảy, ngày 18 tháng 4
Từ 11:00 sáng đến 12:30 trưa

Hai buổi học đầu tiên được miễn phí.
Từ buổi thứ ba trở đi, đóng góp $10 mỗi buổi để duy trì lớp học.

Liên hệ ghi danh:
-0402 741 639 – Cô Hồng Hạnh (Tu viện)
- 0418 396 996 – Richard (Huấn luyện viên Khí công)

Kính mời quý Phật tử Đại Gia Đình Quảng Đức hoan hỷ tham gia để cùng nhau rèn luyện sức khỏe, nuôi dưỡng thân tâm an lạc.

Trân trọng thông báo.
TT Trụ Trì Thích Nguyên Tạng

🙏🙏🙏🌼🍁🌺🍀🌹🥀🌷🌸🏵️🌼🍁🌺🍀🌹🥀🌷🌸🏵️

ANNOUNCEMENT: QIGONG MEDITATION CLASS
(For the Quang Duc Buddhist Community)


Dear respected Buddhists,

With the intention of supporting the well-being of both body and mind, Quang Duc Monastery is pleased to introduce a Qigong Meditation class – a form of “moving meditation” that harmonizes body and mind, suitable for people of all ages.

Under the guidance of an experienced instructor, participants will have the opportunity to:

Practice Qigong exercises for relaxation and physical balance
Learn basic acupressure points for healing
Explore gentle movements including Qigong and Tai Chi forms
Cultivate inner calmness and positive energy

Commencement:
Saturday, 18 April
From 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM

The first two classes are offered free of charge.
From the third session onward, a contribution of $10 per class is requested.

Registration contact:
-0402 741 639 – Ms. Hong Hanh (Monastery)
-0418 396 996 – Richard (Qigong Instructor)

We warmly invite all members of the Quang Duc Buddhist community to join us in cultivating health, balance, and inner peace.

With kind regards.
Senior Venerable Thich Nguyen Tang
🙏🙏🙏🌼🍁🌺🍀🌹🥀🌷🌸🏵️🌼🍁🌺🍀🌹🥀🌷🌸🏵️

Gửi ý kiến của bạn
Tắt
Telex
VNI
Tên của bạn
Email của bạn
28/02/2014(Xem: 8706)
There are three fundamental modes of training in Buddhist practice: morality, mental culture, and wisdom. The English word morality is used to translate the Pali term sila, although the Buddhist term contains its own particular connotations. The word sila denotes a state of normalcy, a condition which is basically unqualified and unadulterated.
28/02/2014(Xem: 7381)
According to the Buddhist monastic code, monks and nuns are not allowed to accept money or even to engage in barter or trade with lay people. They live entirely in an economy of gifts. Lay supporters provide gifts of material requisites for the monastics, while the monastics provide their supporters with the gift of the teaching.
28/02/2014(Xem: 8261)
This year, at the summer retreat, Vien Tu and Minh Hanh, the two novice monks, took turns to prepare the congee offering each evening. Many Buddhists were curious to know why the congee was offered but not the cooked rice or others. This article is writing about the congee services to the spirits.
28/02/2014(Xem: 10026)
According to the Oxford English Dictionary the word ‘chant’ is both a noun and a verb, also (now Scottish) chaunt, compared with the late 17th Century, old and modern French verb, ‘with chant’ which is derived from the Latin, ‘cantum’.
28/02/2014(Xem: 6918)
My dear friends, suppose someone is holding a pebble and throws it in the air and the pebble begins to fall down into a river. After the pebble touches the surface of the water, it allows itself to sink slowly into the river. It will reach the bed of the river without any effort. Once the pebble is at the bottom of the river, it continues to rest. It allows the water to pass by.
28/02/2014(Xem: 7316)
We all know what happens when a fire goes out. The flames die down and the fire is gone for good. So when we first learn that the name for the goal of Buddhist practice, nibbana (nirvana), literally means the extinguishing of a fire, it's hard to imagine a deadlier image for a spiritual goal: utter annihilation.
28/02/2014(Xem: 6266)
This script was written and edited by: John D. Hughes, Arrisha Burling, Frank Carter, Leanne Eames, Jocelyn Hughes, Lisa Nelson, Julie O’Donnell, Nick Prescott, Pennie White and Lenore Hamilton. Consider a water tank as a model of understanding. When the water in the tank gets too low, you get sick and eventually die. For you to stay alive, the tank must be consistently replenished with water.
28/02/2014(Xem: 6024)
When we do walking meditation, the point is not to get somewhere, but rather to practice, using walking as the object of our attention. Even when we do have to get somewhere and must drive to do so, there is an opportunity for practice. Thich Nhat Hanh, Vietnamese Zen master and poet, has written a number of gathas, or brief verses, for enhancing our mindfulness during everyday activities, even driving a car.
28/02/2014(Xem: 6785)
The word Buddhism is derived from Buddha, meaning the Enlightened One or the Awakened One. Buddha is not a proper name, but a generic term or appellative, referring to a founder of a religion, one who has attained supreme enlightenment and who is regarded as superior to all other beings, human or divine, by virtue of his knowledge of the Truth (Dhamma).
28/02/2014(Xem: 7436)
Lama Thubten Yeshe gave this teaching during a five-day meditation course he conducted at Dromana, near Melbourne, Australia, in March, 1975. Edited by Nicholas Ribush. This teaching appears in the November/December 1997 issue of Mandala Magazine.