

Chiu Tien, Yen Yuan, Rei Sheng, Pu Hua, Tien Tsun More information on these techniques in his books, listed under Sources at theĮnd of this page. He calls "invocations," or short Chinese phrases used forĬontemplation and meditation. The large and somewhat rambling body of his writings. Nevertheless, a number of interesting ideas and techniques are scattered through Within his family and might not be typical of other Taoist practitioners. Some of his practices were apparently passed down as oral traditions Has assimilated common elements of the world's religious traditions in addition to He refers to his teaching as the Integral Way, because he One quirk of Ni's writing is that he rarely identifies the sources of his Teacher of natural spiritual truth by his own spiritual attainment rather than

The other hand that he "is fully acknowledged and empowered as a true Wisdom passed down to him through many generations of his family," and on The one hand stating that he is "heir to an unbroken succession of Taoist

L.A., teaching spiritual practices and traditional Chinese medicine. Hisīook jacket biographies give somewhat varied impressions of his background, on Born in China, he laterĮmigrated to Taiwan and then the United States, where he currently resides in Invocations from Ni Hua-Ching: Taoist Chant, Mantra, and InvocationsĪuthor on Taoism and related subjects in English.
