Excerpt
From the Introduction andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Primitive man was free to explore his world without the constraints of a rigorously mechanized society to bind him; he was free to investigate his earth and discern its shape without preconception. The realm of dreams and that of the physical were not so far apart; indeed, the shaman, whose job it was to sojourn into the world of dreams and twilight, was an integral component of society. One could say that primitive man used his dreams as an extension of his five better-known senses. Even today, however, the dreams that dance in our subconscious mind can take shape in the physical world. Progressing as we do through life, we frequently come to find that the myths and legends of humanity, the stories our grandmothers told us, are indeed true. And then what? What do you do when a myth presents itself to you in the flesh? What do you do when a quaint folk belief, accepted by your ancestors but denied by our modern day, knocks at your door? Do you run away? Do you have a heart attack and collapse?andnbsp; andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I myself do not. Never having used drugs and being healthy in all respects, I do not doubt the testimony of my own senses. I do not run away. I do not hide. Nor am I afraid, for fear of ridicule, to share with others the revelations I unearth. Part of me is a warrior, you see, and loves a good fight--and as anyone who has given one knows, an academic presentation often turns into a good fight, played with the mind rather than with the fists, and against multiple adversaries at that.andnbsp; andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Welcome then, once again, to my world. It is a place where there are no limits, where whatever once had shape and form in the history of humanity has found a home. My world revolves around that forgotten part of our soul--that forgotten side of ourselves--that has been trod upon for reasons of control and domination, I believe, for the last four millennia of our development. What exactly is the forgotten side of ourselves? It is that portion of our heritage that is scoffed at as superstition or make-believe today. It is that part of our innermost being that quietly acknowledges aspects of reality we know to be true, yet hesitates to openly acknowledge them for fear of ridicule. It is our inner connection to those archetypal aspects of existence that primitive or less "modern" cultures continue to embrace, but that we Westerners look upon as quaint, or backward, or even as (shudder) "neat." 2 It is that side of ourselves that exists with open access to all that may defy our world's ideas of logic and reason.andnbsp; andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In 1994 I saw a documentary on television that changed my life forever. Called andlt;Iandgt;Ring of Fire: East of Krakatoaandlt;/Iandgt;, and produced by the brothers Lorne and Lawrence Blair in 1988, the film described their experiences in the Indonesian archipelago. Central to the documentary was a brief sequence with a shy and somewhat reclusive Chinese-Javanese acupuncturist who performed wonderful things, unbelievable things, for the camera. He demonstrated his full mastery of the phenomenon of andlt;Iandgt;ch'iandlt;/Iandgt;, or bioenergy, by generating an "electrical" current within his body, which he used first to heal one filmmaker of an eye infection, and then to set a newspaper on fire with his hand.andnbsp; andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;Iandgt;Ring of Fireandlt;/Iandgt; caused thousands to seek out this individual in pursuit of instruction; I was one of the successful ones. In the book andlt;Iandgt;The Magus of Javaandlt;/Iandgt;, I described my initial encounter with this master, whose true identity I have hidden behind the pseudonym John Chang (though John really is his name, and so is Chang, after a fashion).andnbsp; After many trials and tribulations, he finally accepted me as his student, and I have since been privileged enough to witness phenomena that most people can only dream of. In my years of study with John Chang, I have experienced pyrogenesis, telekinesis, levitation, telepathy, and things even more exotic. I have spoken with spirits and can testify to their reality. Equally important, I have learned my own teacher's story, and have been given permission to publish it. John Chang is a direct heir to the lineage of the sixth-century B.C.E. sage Mo Tzu, who was Confucius's greatest rival. His discipline, called the Mo-Pai, was, until now, little known in the West. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The method through which these incredible abilities are arrived at is called, in Chinese, andlt;Iandgt;nei kungandlt;/Iandgt;, or "inner power." It is the equivalent of the Hindu-Buddhist practice of kundalini yoga, though nei kung involves a martial art and martial practice. Central to the discipline is the transformation of sexual energy into pure unadulterated power, a force that the practitioner can use at will. The "cauldron" in which this formidable elixir is brewed is called the andlt;Iandgt;dantienandlt;/Iandgt; (elixir field) in Chinese, and is a bioenergetic nexus located four fingers below our navel. . . .