I want to talk more about Bagua today. Yesterday, I talked more about Taiji because that’s my first love and what I’ve been doing for fifteen years. Bagua is a Johnny-Come-Lately in terms of time doing it. I think it might be a year? Probably not quite. Time has absolutely no meaning now.
I was watching the video I’d done of my teacher (doing the Swimming Dragon Form) because my memory is so terrible now. Even though we went over a few new movements several times yesterday, my brain was like, “Nah, I’m not remembering that.”
I’m glad that I have an excuse for it–my stroke, I mean. Not to mention the fact that I’m just getting older. I will admit that it surprises me that I’m not upset about it because I used to be very proud of my exceptional memory. I could remember names, dates, and facts without putting any effort into it. It’s because that’s a small price to pay for being alive.
At least that’s what I thought at the time. Now, I’m not so sure. Not about the trade-off, but about being glad to still be alive. Here’s the thing–yes, me surviving was a miracle and a once-in-a-lifetime experience. But, just like anything else, it fades away with time. When I first got out of the hospital, I was marveling every day at being alive. I was supposed to be dead. I was not supposed to be alive. That’s sobering, I’ll tell you what.
But that was nearly three-and-a-half years ago. Day by day, the magic and wondered faded–just a litle bit. It had to, really, as it could not be sustained. When I first came out of my coma, my depression was down 90% and my anxiety was down roughly 60%. Now my depression has roughly doubled (so still down from where it was before, but not iudeal) and my anxiety is up 10% or so.
Taiji helps with all that. It’s the one thing that has kept me sane, frankly. Before my medical crisis and after as well. I thought it was all I needed because there was so much in it, you could study it for the rest of your life and just barely scratch the surface of it (if you don’t devoute several hours a day to it).
Then, Bagua entered my ilfe. Honestly, it came into my life a decade ago via my teacher showing me how to walkk the circle with DeerHorn Knives as an alternative to meditation because the latter was causing flashbacks. I was a pacifist at the time, but once as I was walking the circle (and focusing on the ‘enemy’ of the circle), I had a flash of, “If it’s you or me, then it’s you” so intensely, it shook me. That was the first time I had felt my life was worth fighting for (in that thought, I meant that if one of us was gonig to die, it would be the enemy/opponent).