MaFuYee
11-01-2001, 05:27 PM
> From Master Mantak Chia
> “The Taoist Canons describe how a group of Aryans were shipwrecked on the
> South China shore thousands of years ago. They did not die, or have
> children, and became known as the Shining Ones. They transmitted their
> secret magical and healing practices to the shamans When Buddhism came to
> China, shamans were persecuted, like witches in the West, so they became
> Taoists, rivals to the Buddhists, and continued their practices in secret,
> using only internal energy, internal alchemy, without the use of
> accessories to identify themselves. The saying goes you cannot tell a sage
> by his clothes. They were also known as magicians, wizards, and sorcerers.
> Yes, Taoism is magic.”
Why would you say that I am insane? I wouldn't say that I've lost my mind simply because I've heard the voices and seen the godless things moving in the woods. If anything, I think more clearly now than ever before. - Ash
> “The Taoist Canons describe how a group of Aryans were shipwrecked on the
> South China shore thousands of years ago. They did not die, or have
> children, and became known as the Shining Ones. They transmitted their
> secret magical and healing practices to the shamans When Buddhism came to
> China, shamans were persecuted, like witches in the West, so they became
> Taoists, rivals to the Buddhists, and continued their practices in secret,
> using only internal energy, internal alchemy, without the use of
> accessories to identify themselves. The saying goes you cannot tell a sage
> by his clothes. They were also known as magicians, wizards, and sorcerers.
> Yes, Taoism is magic.”
Why would you say that I am insane? I wouldn't say that I've lost my mind simply because I've heard the voices and seen the godless things moving in the woods. If anything, I think more clearly now than ever before. - Ash