The Online Community of Salt Lake City Weekly Newspaper–News, Restaurants, Dining, Music, Nightclubs, Arts, Events & Entertainment.
Article Archive
Sign up for City Weekly's...
Newsletter - Free Stuff - Dining Info - Music Info

Email:

Text CITYWEEKLY to 10958
to receive updates on Free Stuff & Events
A Bar Named Sue, Area 51, Auravis Systems, Bakers C&C, Beehive Bail Bonds, Bingham Cyclery, Caffe Molise, City Dogs, Couterpoint Studios, Cucina Deli, Datatix, Designer Glass Works, Diamond Parking, Discovery Gateway, Fanzz, Fat's Grill, First Tracks (Bella Fleck), Fortis College, Gallivan Center, Got Lashes, Gracie's, Gundmundson, India House, Italian Villiage, Last Samurai, Light Touch, MacDocs, Mi Ranchito Grill, Michael Starks, Epic, Mountain Med Vein, Mulligans Golf, Park City Film Series, PC Laptops, Piper's Quilts, Red Maple Chinese, Red Wing Shoe Store, Rice Fusion, Jackie Williams Skin Care, Ruth's Diner, Salt Lake Art Center, SL Pizza & Pasta, Sky Bar, SLC Golf, Snow College, Snowbird, Sound Warehouse, Studio Soiree, Taj of India, Taste of India, Tavernacle, The Vault, Trails, Triumph of SL, U of U Humanities, U of U Science, U of U Cont. Education, Urban Lounge, Utah Grizzlies Hockey, Utah Imports, Utah Trailways, Westminster College, Zucca Trattoria,

CITY WEEKLY FREE MOVIE NIGHT
City Weekly & Brewvies present: Drop Dead Fred @ Brewvies, 677 S. 200 West, Wednesday Nov. 25, 8 pm. Arrive early, limited seating (21+).
d_d_f.jpg


PROUDLY SUPPORTS
Buy Local FirstHumane SocietyPlanned Parenthood
SLC Arts CouncilDowntown Alliance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Home / Articles / Features / 5 Spot /  World Tai Chi & Qigong Day
. . . . . . .
Wednesday, April 22,2009

World Tai Chi & Qigong Day

By Jerre Wroble

To mark the ninth annual World Tai Chi & Qigong Day, U of U Tai Chi professor Bill Parkinson is leading a free Tai Chi class open to the public at the U’s Marriott Library Plaza on Saturday, April 25, with activities beginning at 9 a.m.

Isn’t Tai Chi just slow-motion martial arts? How does slashing and punching create a more peaceful feeling?
It is a kung fu system. It’s martial arts. But it’s more on the “arts” than on the “martial.” Its focus over the years has become the movement, relaxation and meditative aspects of the art.

Why doesn’t America embrace the “free Tai Chi in the park” you see the Chinese engaged in?
In China, Tai Chi is so much a part of the culture that everybody does it and accepts it as a valuable art. Here, if they’re not paying for something, they figure it is not worth very much.

What’s on tap for Saturday’s celebration?
We’ll have as many as a half a dozen schools that will show up. I’ll probably have some of my current and past students show up. Usually, we’ll have less than 100 students that actually dance. From 9 to 10 a.m., there are warm-ups and socializing. The actual dance takes place at 10 a.m.; that’s part of a worldwide celebration of Tai Chi that happens in every time zone at 10 a.m. over a 24-hour period. From 10:30 until noon, there are demonstrations people can watch and participate in.

Why do you teach Tai Chi through the U’s theater department? Is it just an act?
(laughs) Yes, it’s just an act. Actually, it’s taught in almost every theater school around the country. When I first started with the U’s Actor Training Program in 1987, it was mainly for actors to help them with movement and relaxation and to deal with stress. Acting is a stressful profession because you’re job-hunting all the time. You have deadlines, and you’re in front of the public. And then we expanded it to the whole university because of its popularity.

It’s not just actors who are stressed out.
I know it’s going around, and it’s a little bit contagious. Stress really takes years off your life. More importantly, it takes time off the moment that you’re living. After I found out that stress is an epidemic (it’s even affected me in the last year), I’ve been more forceful in letting people know the benefits of doing Tai Chi, yoga and meditation for stress reduction.

 

  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
Close
Close
Close