The trigram wind (Cai) represents the Chinese concept of the wood.
The wind is what sets in motion the nature, fertilize, seed and giving life moving. So it is associated with the color green buds plantas.Es a dynamic force that expressed in medical terms, it makes people get moving and make things. Those with a natural wood are naturally active and found in the action, a way to release energy, they need to keep moving, sedentary them generates anger, emotion pathological madera.Conectarse this trigram is connected with action.
If you have difficulty making important decisions, or take them but can not implement them, should exercise Cai.
It was thanks to the liver, muscles were able to stay strong and movements were made with synchronicity. It was thought that the body administering the body's energies. Modern physiology studies confirm that, indeed, the liver is responsible absorption of glycogen and this acts as fuel for muscles. Without this substance, our forces would fall and we would invade a great state of weakness and exhaustion.
The Nei Ching, the classic book of internal medicine of China, corresponding to the time of the Yellow Emperor, refers to the liver as a partner with the eyes, with the ability to see at night and collect all five colors.
The liver is associated with the ability to capture light. The rods and cones, the eye bodies perceive the image and project to the cerebral cortex, require large amounts of vitamin A, otherwise the person with vitamin A deficiency may be suffering ceguera.A the vesicle pool is awarded in addition to bile secretory function, a psychological type. It is said that if this body operates in a balanced way, the decision power increases and the hesitation disappears.
trigram Action in Tai Chi Chuan Cai
Cai's position requires firmness in decision and integration of all the muscles of the body so, pull down (action Cai trigram) is effective and not Let us be unbalanced, favoring our opponent. Cai
immediately should be complemented with another technique (quick decision) to complete the action, since one only serves to unbalance.
the book: "Tai Chi Chuan Transformation and Change for the welfare" of Professor Mario Schwarz