Traditional Culture: The Proper Way to Sit in Ancient China


(Clearwisdom.net) Ancient Chinese people emphasized how to sit properly because it is an important part of good manners. There were three main postures before chairs were commonly used. The Fu position was sitting cross-legged. Similar to the lotus position in Buddhism, it is also called Jiafu. In the Qiju position both legs extend straight forward in front of the body like a dustpan. The Ji posture requires sitting on one's knees with the buttocks resting on one's lower legs and feet. When there were no guests present, people could sit casually in the Fu and Qiju positions, but if one was talking to a respected older person, talking to friends, talking about important issues, eating at dinner parties or banquets, or treating guests, one had to use the Ji posture.

Many records in ancient Chinese teachings mention sitting positions. In the Xihan Dynasty (207 B.C. to 25 A.D.), the two noblemen Song Zhong and Jia Yi were listening to a prophet explaining his prophecies. He was very knowledgeable, talked about things very rationally and convincingly, and made these two noblemen instantly feel respect. They immediately straightened their clothes and sat up straight to pay their respect to this prophet.

In Chinese history, the emperor and his helpers were all very careful to pay attention to their virtue and manners. Even in daily life they had to discipline their own words and actions. Mr. Tao Kan, a famous courtier during the Dongjin Dynasty (317-420), followed the principle of "Even when it is leisure time, still sit straight." Mr. Sima Guang (1019-1086) during the Song Dynasty (960-1279) always sat straight with a solemn altitude in his daily routine. The great Emperor Kangxi (1654-1722) in the Qing Dynasty (1636-1912) was good both at managing the country and fighting on the battlefields. He was very grand, and he always sat on the dragon throne very straight, looking down at sentient beings. He had cultivated this strict style for a long time. He recalled his childhood by saying, "Eating, moving, and speaking were all regulated. Although I always lived alone, I still dared not to go overboard." After he became the Emperor, he always sat straight in discussions with his courtiers, when studying in the palace study, and even while chatting and laughing with his family. His manner was established in early childhood, and he observed strict self-discipline during his daily life.


Chinese version available at http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2006/3/17/123054.html

 Yearly Archive   Printer Version


We welcome your comments and suggestions, please email:
feedback@clearwisdom.net


Related Articles

Article Review
New Witness: There Are Dozens of Similar Concentration Camps [3/30/2006]
Atrocities of the Sujiatun Concentration Camp -- A Clear Reflection of the Nature of the CCP [3/30/2006]
Waking up Chinese People's Conscience [3/30/2006]
Washington DC: Rally in Front of White House to Commemorate Fellow Practitioners Murdered by CCP (Photos) [3/30/2006]
FDI: Amidst the Evidence, Denying Sujiatun Organ Trafficking Must Not Stand [3/29/2006]
Manhattan: New Yorkers' Responses to the CCP's Barbaric Crimes at the Sujiatun Concentration Camp (Photos) [3/29/2006]
Call for International Organizations to Investigate the Murderers Jiang and Luo and Bring Them to Justice [3/29/2006]
Manhattan: Rally to Support Nine Million Withdrawals from the CCP and Condemn the Crimes in the Sujiatun Concentration Camp (Photos) [3/28/2006]
Manhattan, New York: Practitioners Hold Grand Parade in Manhattan to Expose Sujiatun Atrocities (Photos) [3/27/2006]
2006 New York Falun Dafa Cultivation Experience Sharing Conference Grandly Held, Master Comes to Teach the Fa (Photos) [3/27/2006]
America's Choice -- A Letter to President Bush [3/27/2006]
Give Up Illusions about CCP After Considering the Facts: Organ Removal from Live Prisoners, Cremation of Bodies to Destroy Evidence in Sujiatun Concentration Camp, Part 1 [3/24/2006]
Media Reputation and the Burden of Proof [3/24/2006]
China Claimed to Be a "Global Center for Organ Transplant" [3/22/2006]
Silent Agony and Tortured Conscience [3/22/2006]
Witness Continues to Reveal the Horrors of Organ Removal from Live Falun Gong Practitioners Inside the Sujiatun Concentration Camp [3/21/2006]
Witness Continues to Reveal the Horrors of Organ Removal from Live Falun Gong Practitioners Inside the Sujiatun Concentration Camp [3/20/2006]
Witness Confirms Sujiatun Concentration Camp Is at Liaoning Provincial Thrombosis Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine [3/17/2006]
Sujiatun, No Longer Just a Name (Photos) [3/17/2006]
WOIPFG: An Investigation Report on the Death Camp in Sujiatun, Shenyang City, Liaoning Province (Part I) [3/15/2006]
More Articles...