The Trap Many Tai Chi Beginners Fall Into

Table of Contents

One of the most common traps Tai Chi beginners fall into has nothing to do with posture or form.

It starts with sensation.

As soon as people begin practicing Tai Chi and internal cultivation, they become deeply curious about every bodily change:

Why does it feel warm here?
Why does it suddenly feel cool?
Why is there soreness in this area, pressure in another?
Did I do something wrong?

At first, this curiosity feels responsible and diligent.
But very quickly, it turns into confusion, tension, and self-doubt.

Because sensations never stop changing.


Why Chasing Sensations Leads to Endless Confusion

Sensation is not stable by nature.

Today there is warmth, tomorrow there is none.
This moment feels light, the next feels heavy.
One area relaxes, another tightens.

If you try to analyze, label, and explain every sensation, you will never reach the end of your questions.

This often reveals a deeper mindset:
a strong desire for immediate results.

Beginners hope that unfamiliar movements will quickly produce clear benefits.
And the moment a sensation feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar, the mind becomes anxious:
Did I make a mistake? Am I practicing incorrectly?

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The First Principle to Understand: Impermanence

Before talking about technique, Tai Chi asks for a shift in understanding.

One essential principle is impermanence.

During practice, countless sensations will arise —
and they will continuously change.

This is not a problem.
It is the natural process of internal adjustment.

Once you truly understand impermanence, sensations lose their power over you.
The mind becomes calmer, softer, and more balanced.


What Are We Really Practicing in Tai Chi?

People often say Tai Chi is about “returning to nature.”

But this does not mean something abstract.

It means restoring the body’s natural capacity to heal and self-regulate.

  • We relax (song) to allow natural circulation
  • We become still to reduce unnecessary interference
  • We move slowly to observe and restrain unconscious habits
  • We stay soft to avoid rigidity and resistance

All of this serves one purpose:
to return the body to its original, natural state.


Why Sensations May Increase at First

In the early stages, coordination and integration are still developing.

You may relax one area while unknowingly tightening another.
You may calm one layer while agitation appears elsewhere.

As a result, sensations seem to “take turns” appearing.

This does not mean something is wrong.
It means the system is reorganizing.

When harmony and integration gradually stabilize, sensations also settle and soften.


The Most Important Attitude During Practice

During Tai Chi practice, no matter what sensation appears, your task is simple:

Notice it — without entangling with it.

Your focus should be on:

  • Remaining steady
  • Staying calm
  • Cultivating harmony
  • Allowing integration

When you immerse yourself in a harmonious internal atmosphere, sensations naturally resolve over time.


Why Urgency Blocks Healing

Tai Chi does not respond well to urgency.

The more you chase results, the harder harmony becomes.
The more you measure progress through sensations, the more unstable practice feels.

Healing grows from patience.

When harmony deepens, healing power strengthens on its own.

Give your body time.
Give yourself trust.

If you are no longer controlled by sensations,
you are already practicing correctly.

Written by Yunjiezi
Tai Chi · Internal Cultivation · Healing

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