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It's
easy to tell people to make exercise part of their daily routine.
It's not so easy to tell them what to do. Some folks like to run
marathons or climb mountains. But if you would rather care for your
body without risking life or limb or increasingly creaky joints,
you might consider Tai Chi Chuan, the ancient martial art that looks
like a cross between shadow boxing and slow-motion ballet.
Not to be confused
with Falun Gong, a quasi-religious and political movement that uses
similar exercises, Tai Chi combines intense mental focus with deliberate,
graceful movements that improve strength, agility and particularly
important for the elderly balance.
Practitioners
praise Tai Chi's spiritual and psychological benefits, but what
has attracted the attention of Western scientists lately is what
Tai Chi does for the body. In many ways, researchers are just catching
up to what tens of millions of people in China and Chinatowns around
the rest of the world already know about Tai Chi. Scientists at
the Oregon Research Institute in Eugene reported last week that
Tai Chi offers the greatest benefit to older men and women who are
healthy but relatively inactive. Previous studies have shown that
Tai Chi practiced regularly helps reduce falls among healthy seniors.
The next step, from a scientific point of view, is to determine
whether Tai Chi can help those who are already frail.
There are several
styles of Tai Chi, but most of them start with a series of controlled
movements, or forms, with names like Grasping the Sparrow's Tail
and Repulse the Monkey. There are many good how-to books to get
you started, or you can choose from among the growing number of
classes offered at rec centers and health clubs across the U.S.
(These have the added benefit of combining instruction with a chance
to meet new people.) Either way, the goal is to move at your own
pace. As Tai Chi master Martin Lee of the Tai Chi Cultural Center
in Los Altos, Calif., puts it, "Pain is no gain."
It can take
a few months for the effects to kick in, but when they do they can
act as a gateway to a new lifestyle. "Once people start feeling
better, they often become more active in their daily life,"
says Dr. Karim Khan, a family-practice and sports physician at the
University of British Columbia.
Any form of
exercise, of course, can do only so much. "For older individuals,
Tai Chi will not be the end-all," says William Haskell, an
expert in chronic-disease prevention at Stanford University. "But
Tai Chi plus walking would be a very good mixture." Younger
people probably need more of an aerobic challenge, but they can
benefit from Tai Chi's capacity to reduce stress.
The best thing
about Tai Chi is that people enjoy it, so they are more likely to
stick with it long enough to get some benefit. It helps when something
that's good for you is also fun.
Article
Written by CHRISTINE GORMAN, Senior Writer, TIME
Christine
Gorman joined TIME in September 1984 as a reporter-researcher, became
a staff writer in 1988 and was promoted to her current position
as a senior writer in 1998. That same year she inaugurated the magazine's
personal health section with her award-winning "Your Health"
column, which helps readers make use of the week's top health and
medical news.

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