Tai Chi Article 4.5 / Interlude — What You May Be Feeling (And Why It’s Enough)
Tai Chi Article 4.5 / Interlude — What You May Be Feeling (And Why It’s Enough)
If you have been following the previous articles and actually standing, something subtle may have shifted.
Not in a dramatic way.
Not in a way that feels like progress.
More like something unnecessary quietly stopped.
This article is not instruction.
It is a recognition.
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You May Notice Less Effort
You may find that:
Standing feels simpler
You stop adjusting as much
You don’t feel the need to “do” anything
This is not laziness.
It is the beginning of internal coordination.
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You May Feel Heavier and Lighter
Some people notice:
Weight settling without collapse
A quiet density
A sense of support appearing from within
Others notice:
Ease
Spaciousness
Reduced strain
All of these are expressions of the same thing:
> The body is no longer fighting itself.
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Sensations May Be Uneven — or Not
You may feel changes in:
The arms
The legs
The hips
The spine
Or everywhere at once
You may feel nothing in particular.
There is no correct distribution of sensation.
What matters is continuity, not location.
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Your Posture May Begin to Change on Its Own
Without trying, you might notice:
Your stance adjusting
Your spine lengthening
Your shoulders settling
Your balance improving
If this happens, let it happen.
If it doesn’t, do not try to make it happen.
Alignment that matters cannot be imposed.
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You May Feel Less Impressed
This is important.
At this stage, Tai Chi often feels:
Less special
Less dramatic
Less performative
That is a good sign.
The art is leaving imagination and entering the body.
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If You Feel “Nothing Is Happening”
That may also be correct.
Many internal changes are subtractive.
When tension releases, there is often no sensation — just absence.
Absence is not failure.
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This Is the First Threshold
If any of this sounds familiar, you have crossed the first internal threshold.
Not into power.
Not into technique.
Into honesty.
From here on, practice becomes less about acquiring and more about revealing.
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What Not to Do Next
Do not:
Add exercises
Seek confirmation
Compare yourself to others
Try to progress
Let this stabilize.
Stand as before.
Two to five minutes is enough.
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Continue When Ready
The next article is #5, where we will address:
Why shifting weight feels difficult at first
Why pain sometimes appears at internal “gates”
And how to meet those gates without forcing your way through
Return when standing feels unremarkable — and trustworthy.
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