In the spiritual traditions of China, Taoism,
         Confucianism and Buddhism, practices and disciplines for
         refinement of the spirit are common. Qigong is a primary
         system for spiritual attainment. The practice of Qigong, in
         this context, is aimed at the evolution and development of
         the inner being. The body is seen as a local representative
         of the entire universe. As in the hologram of modern
         science, the individual is, in a special sort of way, the
         whole cosmos.
         
         One description of Qigong is as a discipline to
         "refine the body of pure energy". The acupuncture centers on
         the front and back primary channels of the "microcosmic
         orbit" are like energy gates. When the gates are open the Qi
         develops and circulates. It spills out into all of the
         channels and circuits. This is called the circulation of the
         light. When the light is circulating to all of the organs,
         glands, limbs, tissues and cells the practitioner is filled
         with, acknowledges and celebrates the light. As the
         practitioner's attention is fixed on the body of light the
         dense body of substance becomes secondary. Rather than a
         physical body with a resonating energy field the individual,
         from this perspective, is an energy field that has a small
         dense body of flesh at its center.
         
         Thousands of years ago Chuang Tzu asked, "Is it Chuang
         Tzu asleep dreaming he is a butterfly? Or is it the
         butterfly dreaming he is Chuang Tzu." In the Qigong of
         transcendence it is asked, "Is the practitioner in the deep
         Qigong state a person in a moment of transcendent energetic
         experience, or is manifestation in a physical body actually
         a brief exploration into substance by an entity whose normal
         state is one of highly refined, resonating light energy".
         The post Einsteinian physics of the unified field has
         revealed that our world is composed of dynamic relationships
         of energy. Therefore, it is not that strange that the
         practice of transcendence should be as much a part of the
         Qigong tradition as calisthenics and breathing exercises
         that lower blood pressure.
         
         Richard Wilhelm's translation of "The Secret of the
         Golden Flower" is a translation of a beautiful Chinese
         classic of transcendence that focuses on the "circulation of
         the light and the backward flowing breath". "Compared to the
         great Way, heaven and earth are like a bubble and a shadow.
         Only the primal spirit and the true nature overcome time and
         space. The energy of the seed, like heaven and earth, is
         transitory, but the primal spirit is beyond polar
         differences. Here is the place where heaven and earth derive
         their being. When students understand how to grasp to the
         primal spirit they overcome the polar opposites of light and
         darkness and tarry no longer in the three worlds. Only the
         seeker who has envisioned human nature's original face is
         able to do this."(21)