Living Meditation: Bright Reflection in Taoist and East Asian Traditions

The Korean phrase Myung Sung literally translates as bright thought or clear reflection. In modern Korean, it is also the standard term for “meditation.” In English, the concept has been presented as Living Meditation, an embodied, everyday mindfulness woven into the fabric of ordinary life.

Although Myung Sung is distinctly Korean in name, its roots are Sino-Korean, derived from the Chinese characters 明 (ming, bright/clear) and 想 (xiang, thought/reflection). Comparable ideas appear across East Asian traditions: in Chinese Taoism, alignment with the Dao emphasizes clarity and flow; In Japanese, Meisō is the most direct equivalent, while Ichigyō Zanmai describes being fully absorbed in a single activity, similar to the idea of “Living Meditation.” Thus, “Living Meditation” is not confined to one culture, it is a shared practice of engaging fully and harmoniously with life.

This article critically examines the guiding principles of Living Meditation (Myung Sung), situating them within Taoist philosophy, Zen practice, and modern mindfulness research.

Taoist and Cultural Foundations of Living Meditation

Taoist philosophy views life as an ongoing process of aligning with the Tao, or the natural order of the universe. The Tao emphasizes balance, spontaneity, and effortless action (wu wei) (Kohn, 2020). In Korea, these ideas merged with Confucian ethics and Buddhist practices, producing unique expressions such as Myung Sung. In Japan, Zen Buddhism developed a parallel emphasis on mindfulness in daily activities, from tea ceremonies to martial arts (Suzuki, 1956).

The literal meaning of Myung Sung being “bright reflection” captures the essence of Taoist and Zen practice: illuminating the mind, clarifying perception, and cultivating awareness moment by moment. By viewing meditation as an active, daily process, Living Meditation stands apart from traditions that encourage withdrawal from worldly concerns. Instead, it insists that clarity, harmony, and enlightenment are found in the midst of life.

Mindfulness and Living Meditation

Western psychology defines mindfulness as “moment-to-moment awareness of one’s experience without judgment” (Kabat-Zinn, 2015, p. 148). Myung Sung aligns with this definition but extends it. Rather than being limited to seated practice, it emphasizes that every action, from working to communicating to parenting, can become an act of mindful clarity.

This mirrors Taoist teaching on yin-yang balance and Zen’s shikan taza (“just sitting”), but it goes further in emphasizing relational legacy. Myung Sung asks not only how one lives in the present, but also what seeds of goodness and compassion one leaves for future generations. This collectivist orientation aligns with East Asian traditions of intergenerational responsibility (Li, 2007).

Developments in mindfulness research indicate that these interventions can be successfully adapted to diverse environments, including schools, workplaces, clinical settings, prisons, and military contexts, confirming their wide applicability in contemporary society (Creswell, 2016).

1. Know Your True Self

Self-awareness is described as the foundation of all growth. To know the “true self” is to recognize both the visible and invisible aspects of being. Taoism encourages similar introspection, while Zen uses the term kenshō (“seeing one’s true nature”) to describe this realization.

2. The True-Right-Correct Method

Decision-making is guided by balancing the true (inner feelings), the right (socially beneficial actions), and the correct (harmonious integration of both). This echoes Taoist ethics of balance and the Confucian Doctrine of the Mean (zhongyong).

3. Stop Being Drunk on Your Own Thoughts

In Korean, the phrase Doe Chi literally means to be “drunk on” something or caught up, clouded, and overly attached to one’s own mental noise. This principle warns against excessive attachment to rigid beliefs. Taoism also cautions against clinging to fixed ideas, while Zen emphasizes detachment from discursive thinking.

4. How Will You Be Remembered?

Legacy is framed as the planting of seeds for future generations. Confucian philosophy similarly stresses filial piety and the continuation of virtue across time.

5. Seek Connectedness and Honor

All beings are interrelated, and honor means living with respect, integrity, and compassion. Taoist cosmology views humans as part of a larger web of qi (vital energy), while Confucian ren emphasizes relational humaneness.

6. Change Your Reality for the Better

Living Meditation insists that inner states shape external realities. Taoist practice of aligning qi with the environment parallels this principle, while modern psychology recognizes the transformative power of reframing thought patterns (Beck, 2011).

7. It Only Takes One Match to Light a Thousand

Small actions produce ripple effects. Taoist yin-yang dynamics and Zen karmic teachings both affirm that even minor choices influence larger outcomes.

8. Be Like Bamboo

Bamboo, strong yet flexible, symbolizes resilience. Taoist writings and Zen poetry both use natural metaphors to highlight adaptability, balance, and endurance.

The Three Pillars: Meditation, Medicine, and Movement

Living Meditation is supported by three interconnected practices:

  1. Meditation – continuous mindfulness integrated into daily activity.
  2. Medicine – natural remedies and holistic care, paralleling Chinese and Japanese traditional medicine.
  3. Movement – practices such as Qigong, Tai Chi, or martial arts, uniting body, mind, and spirit.

These three dimensions resemble integrative health frameworks that modern medicine increasingly recognizes (Rakel, 2017).

Conclusion

Though the term Myung Sung originates in Korea and literally means “bright reflection,” its essence transcends culture. Chinese Taoism calls for clarity and balance through the Tao; Japanese Zen offers expressions such as meisō, ichigyō zanmai, and kenshō. English captures it as “Living Meditation,” underscoring its practical, everyday application.

Across languages and traditions, the message is consistent: meditation is not withdrawal from life but illumination within it. By practicing Living Meditation, individuals cultivate clarity, resilience, compassion, and legacy becoming, in essence, living embodiments of bright reflection.

LanguageTermLiteral MeaningCommon Use / Context
KoreanMyung SungBright reflection, clear thoughtGeneral word for meditation; reframed as “Living Meditation”
ChineseMíng XiǎngBright reflectionClassical and modern meditation term
JapaneseMeisōClosing the eyes and reflectingGeneral meditation term, closest literal match to Myung Sung
JapaneseIchigyō ZanmaiSamadhi in one activityZen concept of mindfulness in everyday action, similar to Living Meditation
JapaneseKenshōSeeing one’s true natureZen awakening experience, parallels “Know Your True Self”
EnglishLiving MeditationPractical mindfulness in daily lifeTranslation/adaptation of Myung Sung for modern contexts

References:

Beck, J. S. (2011). Cognitive behavior therapy: Basics and beyond (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

Creswell, J. D. (2016). Mindfulness interventions. Annual Review of Psychology, 68, 491–516. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psych-042716-051139

Kabat-Zinn, J. (2015). Mindfulness. Mindfulness, 6(6), 1481–1483. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-015-0456-x

Kohn, L. (2020). The Taoist experience: An anthology. SUNY Press. https://archive.org/details/thetaoistexperienceliviakohn

Li, C. (2007). An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy: From Ancient Philosophy to Chinese Buddhism ? by JeeLoo Liu. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 34(3), 458–461. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6253.2007.00432.x

Rakel, D. (2017). Integrative Medicine: Fourth Edition. ResearchGate. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328497403_Integrative_Medicine_Fourth_Edition

Suzuki, D. T. (1956). Zen Buddhism: Selected writings. Grove Press. https://archive.org/details/zenbuddhismselec00dais

Mass Psychology, Hysteria, and the Wellness Perspective

Mass psychology, also called crowd psychology, examines how individuals’ behavior, thoughts, and emotions are shaped by being part of a larger group. Early thinkers such as Gustave Le Bon (1895/2002), Sigmund Freud (1922/1959), Leon Festinger (1954), and Floyd Allport (1924) explored phenomena such as emotional contagion, suggestion, and conformity, showing that people can act very differently in a group than when alone. Le Bon argued that when individuals join a crowd, they may lose critical judgment, become easily swayed by suggestions, and display heightened emotionality.

Understanding Mass Psychosis

Mass psychosis refers to collective disruptions in perception or judgment, when large groups of people adopt beliefs, behaviors, or emotions that seem disconnected from rational assessment. In such states, ego strength can weaken, leaving individuals vulnerable to overwhelming waves of fear or delusion.

A common precursor is what Freud (1922/1959) and later theorists described as free-floating anxiety; ageneralized fear or unease not tied to a specific cause. Contemporary research defines it as persistent anxiety without an identifiable object, often making individuals more susceptible to suggestion (Tyrer, 2018). When large numbers of people experience this form of anxiety, the psychological environment becomes fertile ground for collective panic.

Mass Hysteria Through History

Mass hysteria (sometimes termed collective hysteria or conversion disorder) involves groups manifesting physical or emotional symptoms without a medical cause, often triggered by suggestion or fear (Hacking, 2002). Historical examples include the Salem witch trials of 1692–1693, where accusations of witchcraft fueled widespread panic and executions (Norton, 2002).

More modern examples include the panic caused by Orson Welles’s 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds, in which many listeners believed an alien invasion was underway (Cantril, 1940). Other documented cases include fainting outbreaks in schools, unexplained illness among military units, and even the 2016 “clown sightings,” which spread rapidly across media platforms and heightened fear without clear cause (Romano, 2016).

Mass Formation and Collective Behavior

Psychologist Matthias Desmet (2022) reframed this dynamic as mass formation, a process that arises when four conditions converge:

  1. Widespread social isolation
  2. Loss of meaning and purpose
  3. Free-floating anxiety without clear cause
  4. Frustration or anger lacking a specific outlet

When these conditions are present, a unifying narrative or authority can provide focus, giving individuals a sense of belonging and solidarity. While this can create cohesion, it can also reduce critical thinking and increase conformity to potentially destructive patterns. Desmet (2022) argues that aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic illustrated this process, as widespread fear and social disconnection amplified collective susceptibility to authority and groupthink.

The Wellness Connection

From a wellness standpoint, understanding mass psychology, hysteria, and mass formation is essential for both individual and community health. Recognizing how free-floating anxiety and social isolation can feed collective fear allows us to take proactive steps toward resilience.

Practices such as mindfulness, meditation, stress reduction, and intentional community building counteract these forces (Creswell, 2017). Media literacy and critical thinking further strengthen individual autonomy, enabling people to resist being swept into narratives that thrive on fear. By cultivating self-awareness and balanced perspectives, individuals protect their mental well-being while also fostering healthier collective environments.

Examples of Mass Psychosis:

“War of the Worlds” radio broadcast (1938) — Newspaper headlines reported that thousands of Americans were plunged into panic over an Orson Welles radio play, convinced that America was under a deadly Martian attack.

Mount Pleasant, Mississippi (1976) — School officials suspected drug use after 15 students fell to the ground writhing, but no drugs were found and hysteria is assumed to be the culprit. At one point, one third of the school’s 900 students stayed home for fear of being “hexed”.

San Diego (1988) — The U.S. Navy evacuated 600 men from barracks; 119 were sent to San Diego hospitals with complaints of breathing difficulty. No evidence of toxins, food poisoning, or any other cause was found.

North Carolina (2002) — Ten girls developed seizures and other symptoms at a rural North Carolinian high school. Symptoms persisted for five months across various grade levels. Incidents tended to happen outside of class, with half of all incidents estimated to have occurred around lunch hour. Half of the affected were cheerleaders or former cheerleaders.

2016 clown sightings — Sightings of people in evil clown costumes in the United States, Canada, and 18 other countries were dismissed as a case of mass hysteria, stating that a fear of clowns (which is common in children and adults) may be an underlying cause.

References:

Allport, F. H. (1924). Social psychology. Houghton Mifflin. https://pure.mpg.de/rest/items/item_2246895_6/component/file_2281854/content

Cantril, H. (1940). The invasion from Mars: A study in the psychology of panic. Princeton University Press. https://archive.org/details/invasionfrommars0000hadl/page/232/mode/2up

Creswell, J. D. (2017). Mindfulness interventions. Annual Review of Psychology, 68, 491–516. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psych-042716-051139

Desmet, M. (2022). The psychology of totalitarianism (Els Vanbrabant, Trans.). Chelsea Green Publishing. https://ia600508.us.archive.org/25/items/the-psychology-of-totalitarianism-2022-mattias-desmet_202308/The%20Psychology%20of%20Totalitarianism%20%282022%29-%20Mattias%20Desmet.pdf

Festinger, L. (1954). A theory of social comparison processes. Human Relations, 7(2), 117–140. https://doi.org/10.1177/001872675400700202

Freud, S. (1922). GROUP PSYCHOLOGY AND THE ANALYSIS OF THE EGO (J. Strachey, Trans.). https://peachf.org/images/SoScience/PsyGroupAnalysisEgoFreud.pdf

Hacking, I. (2002). Mad travelers: Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses. Harvard University Press. https://archive.org/details/madtravelersrefl0000hack/page/2/mode/2up

Le Bon, G. (2002). The crowd: A study of the popular mind. Dover Publications. (Original work published 1895) https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/125518/1414_LeBon.pdf

Norton, M. B. (2002). In the Devil’s snare: The Salem witchcraft crisis of 1692. Vintage. https://archive.org/details/indevilssnare00mary

Romano, A. (2016, October 12). The great clown panic of 2016 is a hoax.  But the terrifying side of clowns is real. Vox. https://www.vox.com/culture/2016/10/12/13122196/clown-panic-hoax-history

Tyrer, P. (2018). Recent advances in the understanding and treatment of health anxiety. Current Psychiatry Reports, 20(7). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11920-018-0912-0

Holistic Health & Wellness Discussions

I have been learning, practicing and studying health and wellness for 45 years, teaching and sharing for 42 years. I feel that I have a lot to share that can benefit the mind, body & spirit. Watch my video of various venues that I have held holistic health discussions.

Contact me to discuss options for you, your business, your group, etc. Good health and wellness are a journey that doesn’t happen overnight. We will all experience some pain and suffering throughout our lives. Learn how to manage it before it comes it comes knocking at your door.

Jim Moltzan – 407-234-0119 or info@MindAndBodyExercises.com

The Dynamics of Kung

Essence, Training, and Mastery

Kung is the essential concentrated force, both mental and physical, that underlies all Chinese martial arts, particularly Kung Fu. It is not mere muscular power, but a highly focused and potent concentration of will, attention, and energy that amplifies every physical technique. Without Kung, even the most refined martial skills remain incomplete; with it, a practitioner achieves exceptional power, resilience, and mastery.

The information presented here is an overview of traditional Kung concepts and techniques as described in Kung Fu: History, Philosophy and Technique (Chow, 1978). While these methods are part of historical martial arts culture, they range from well-documented conditioning practices to legendary or symbolic feats.

Internal and External Kung

Kung manifests in two primary forms:

  • Internal Kung (Yin or Negative Kung) emphasizes the cultivation of Qi (ch’i, chi, ki, gi) the vital life-breath through breathing, meditation, and calm concentration. It often favors subtlety and passive defense, enabling the practitioner to mentally subdue an opponent without direct physical contact. Its effects may be invisible, yet profound.
  • External Kung (Yang or Positive Kung) focuses on physical strength and conditioning, with energy flowing outward through the body. It subdivides into Soft Kung (Yin) and Hard Kung (Yang):
    • Soft Kung is difficult to master, emphasizing invisibility, precision, and mental control, but is sometimes viewed with suspicion for its potential unethical use.
    • Hard Kung is overtly physical, conditioning muscles and nerves to withstand and counter heavy blows or weapon strikes.

A well-rounded martial artist seeks balance between these forms, harmonizing Yin and Yang according to Taoist principles.

Discipline and Moral Foundation

Kung is as much a moral and spiritual discipline as it is a physical one. Practitioners must adhere to behavioral and emotional codes designed to preserve vital energy and mental clarity:

  • Five Restrictions to avoid:
    • Frivolity
    • Conceit
    • Impatience
    • Negligence
    • Lasciviousness
  • Seven Detriments:
    • Fornication (energy depletion)
    • Anger (breathing harm)
    • Worry (mental numbness)
    • Over trust (emotional vulnerability)
    • Overdrinking (blood dilution)
    • Laziness (muscular weakness)
    • Tenseness (weak bones).

Violating these principles disrupts energy flow and undermines training. The Shaolin tradition stresses purification of spirit, breath regulation, and ethical conduct using Kung only for defense or just causes, never for malicious harm. Misuse inevitably leads to personal ruin.

Stages of Training

Mastery requires patience, persistence, and often decades of disciplined practice. Training typically progresses through:

  1. Skin and Muscle Stimulation – Vigorous rubbing to improve circulation and tone.
  2. Tendon Conditioning – Stretching and calisthenics to enhance elasticity and force transmission.
  3. Joint Strengthening – Weight training and impact drills for endurance and striking power.
  4. Qi Development – Meditation and breath control to cultivate and store vital energy, directing it for specific purposes.

This gradual progression ensures the body and mind are prepared for advanced techniques without risk of injury.

Qi: The Power Source of Kung

Qi transforms raw physical ability into directed, dynamic force. Concentrating Qi in specific body parts creates specialized capabilities, such as an iron abdomen, immovable stance, or penetrating strike. Its development must be patient and natural; forcing the process is ineffective and potentially harmful. In rare cases, Qi manifests spontaneously in emergencies, hinting at latent human potential.

Extraordinary Kung Techniques

Through disciplined training, practitioners can achieve remarkable feats, some practical, others legendary in reputation. These include:

  • Red Sand Palm – Yin Kung capable of inflicting damage without physical contact, developed through progressive conditioning from fine sand to heavy objects.
  • One Finger Kung – Focused finger strikes that can move heavy objects or extinguish flames from a distance.
  • Dragon Claw Kung – Grip strength and joint control using progressive resistance, applied to immobilize opponents.
  • Water Dividing Kung – Palm and arm strength sufficient to part rigid bamboo poles.
  • Hing Kung (Lightness Kung) – Ability to move silently and lightly, even on fragile surfaces.
  • Speed Running Kung – Leg and eyesight conditioning for swift, sustained movement.
  • Leaping Kung – Explosive leg power built by jumping from progressively deeper trenches or with added weights.
  • Wall Climbing Kung – Vertical and horizontal wall movement using elbows and heels.
  • Tsien Yin Kung – Qi-based internal protection of vital areas.
  • Bag Kung – Abdominal conditioning to absorb and redirect strikes.
  • Iron Forearm Kung, Fist Kung, Sandbag Kung – Impact conditioning for devastating strikes and multi-angle attack defense.
  • Iron Broom Kung – Powerful sweeping kicks to fell opponents or break obstacles.
  • Jade Belt Kung – Crushing arm strength developed through tree hugging and stone lifting.
  • Head Kung – Progressive hardening of the skull for safe head strikes.

Many of these require 10–15 years of committed training and precise energy control to master.

Health, Longevity, and Mental Clarity

Beyond combat, Kung offers profound physical and mental benefits. Long-term practice strengthens circulation, tendons, joints, and immunity; enhances concentration and calmness; and may contribute to longevity. It is both a martial art and a holistic health system.

Modern Rarity and Preservation

In ancient times, Kung masters devoted decades to perfection, often beginning in childhood. Today, the demands of modern life, coupled with the secrecy of true training, make genuine mastery rare. Most authentic techniques are still transmitted privately to protect their integrity. Demonstrations by skilled masters, such as generating heat without contact, bending steel, or breaking stone, attest to the enduring power of these methods.

Anyone interested in studying these skills should understand that:

  • Authentic instruction is rare. Many of these methods require years of careful, incremental training under a knowledgeable teacher who understands both the physical and internal aspects.
  • Improper training can cause harm. Without correct supervision, certain conditioning practices can lead to serious injury, long-term health problems, or mental strain.
  • Ethics matter. True Kung training is rooted in discipline, self-control, and moral conduct. Any instruction that promotes reckless aggression, neglects safety, or bypasses ethical principles should be avoided.
  • Due diligence is essential. Seek a reputable teacher with verifiable lineage, recognized skill, and a proven track record of developing students safely. Research the school’s philosophy, teaching methods, and student experiences before committing.
  • Respect your limits. Not every method is appropriate for every individual. Health conditions, age, and personal goals should all factor into how one approaches training.

Approaching Kung with patience, humility, and discernment will help ensure that the art becomes a source of growth and empowerment, not injury or disillusionment.

Conclusion

The Dynamics of Kung reveal that true Kung Fu mastery transcends physical fighting skill. It is a lifelong path of self-cultivation, uniting body, mind, and spirit through disciplined practice, ethical conduct, and the harmonious balance of internal and external forces. The extraordinary abilities it promises—whether practical, legendary, or symbolic—stand as testimony to the heights of human potential when effort, patience, and moral purpose are perfectly aligned.

Reference:

Chow, D., & Spangler, R. (1978). Kung Fu: history, philosophy and techniques. Lulu.com. https://archive.org/details/kungfuhistoryphi0000chow

“Do-chi” and Delusion

A Cross-Cultural and Linguistic Analysis

Language encodes cultural experience, shaping the ways in which human emotion, perception, and cognition are described and interpreted. The Korean term do-chi or dochwi offers a compelling example of how metaphorical language conveys emotional states. Typically translated as “intoxication” or “to be drunk on,” the word describes a form of deep emotional or aesthetic absorption. In contrast, the English term delusion signifies a fixed, pathological belief that diverges from reality and resists correction (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2013). Though both terms involve altered perception, they represent profoundly different cultural and psychological concepts. This essay explores the meaning of do-chi, contrasts it with the clinical construct of delusion, and considers their nuanced intersection in terms of distorted perception.

The Korean Concept of Do-chi

The term Do-chi derives from Sino-Korean roots: to, meaning pottery or transformation, and chwi, meaning intoxication. Its metaphorical sense emphasizes being “intoxicated” or “enraptured” by something positive, such as music, art, beauty, or triumph. In everyday Korean usage, one might hear “to be intoxicated by victory,” or “to be drunk on nature.” In both cases, the speaker describes an overwhelming emotional or sensory experience that elevates one’s state of being.

Importantly, do-chi is not regarded as pathological. Instead, it is often framed positively as immersion, joy, or aesthetic rapture. While the metaphor of intoxication implies a temporary loosening of rational control, the concept remains firmly grounded in human experience and emotional expression. Korean poetry and literature frequently employ do-chi to describe states of heightened awareness, creativity, or transcendence. Thus, the term embodies a culturally sanctioned and even celebrated condition of altered perception.

The English Concept of Delusion

By contrast, delusion is a term situated within psychiatry and clinical psychology. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), a delusion is defined as a “fixed belief that is not amenable to change in light of conflicting evidence” (2013, p. 87). Classical psychiatrist Karl Jaspers (1963) emphasized three criteria for delusions: (1) absolute certainty, (2) incorrigibility, and (3) falsity. Unlike do-chi, which describes temporary and often beneficial immersion, delusions are pathological, interfering with functioning and perception of reality.

Delusions occur across a spectrum of psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, delusional disorders, and mood disorders with psychotic features (Freeman, 2007). They can take many forms, such as persecutory delusions (“I am being watched”), grandiose delusions (“I am a prophet”), or somatic delusions (“My organs are rotting”). In every case, the defining element is a belief system disconnected from reality, impervious to logical refutation, and often impairing to social or occupational functioning.

Comparing Do-chi and Delusion

Although both do-chi and delusion involve altered states of perception, their similarities are superficial. Do-chi represents a metaphorical intoxication, a poetic description of being overwhelmed by positive effects. Delusion, in contrast, represents a clinical disorder of cognition, characterized by irrationality and resistance to evidence. The following table highlights these distinctions:

FeatureDo-chiDelusion
NatureMetaphorical, emotional intoxicationClinical, pathological false belief
Relation to realityGrounded in heightened but real experiencesDetached from reality, impervious to logic
DurationTemporary, situationalPersistent, often chronic
ValencePositive, celebratory, aestheticNegative, impairing, or distressing
Cultural contextPoetic, every day, literaryMedical, psychiatric, diagnostic

This comparison underscores the cultural gap between the terms. In Korean, do-chi enriches emotional vocabulary by describing states of absorption that bring joy and meaning. In English, delusion restricts the term to pathology, connoting impairment and danger.

Points of Convergence: Distorted Perception

Despite their differences, both terms share a loose thematic connection: the alteration of normal perception. To be do-chi is to lose oneself in joy, art, or triumph, such that ordinary reality fades into the background. Similarly, delusion involves the loss of alignment with consensual reality, though in a maladaptive way. Both reflect the human susceptibility to experiences that reshape perception and cognition. The divergence lies in whether this alteration is culturally celebrated (do-chi) or clinically condemned (delusion).

Conclusion

I have personally known and participated in groups that could be perceived as immersed in their own version of do-chi, intoxicated by their ideals to the point of losing touch with reality. Within such circles, members often became tone-deaf not only to the experiences of those inside the group but also to the perspectives of the wider public. In some cases, these groups even sought to rewrite history, clinging to their own narratives as though they were unassailable truths (Hobsbawm & Ranger, 1983; Janis, 1982). Yet, just because a group collectively sustains a belief does not require others to accept it as fact, especially when credible evidence proves otherwise.

The Korean term do-chi and the English concept of delusion illuminate how language and culture frame altered states of perception. Do-chi signifies a positive, aesthetic intoxication, celebrated in literature and daily speech as evidence of deep human feelings. Delusion, by contrast, describes a psychiatric symptom of false, fixed beliefs that resist correction and impairs functioning. While both terms capture the human capacity to move beyond ordinary perception, their meanings diverge sharply in cultural value and psychological consequence. Understanding these differences underscores the importance of cultural and linguistic nuance in interpreting states of mind across traditions.

References:

American Psychiatric Association, DSM-5 Task Force. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-5™ (5th ed.). American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596

Freeman, D. (2007). Suspicious minds: The psychology of persecutory delusions. Clinical Psychology Review, 27(4), 425–457. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2006.10.004

Hobsbawm E, Ranger T, eds. The Invention of Tradition. Cambridge University Press; 2012.

Janis, I. L. (1982). Groupthink Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascos. Boston Houghton Mifflin. – References – Scientific Research Publishing. (n.d.). https://www.scirp.org/reference/referencespapers?referenceid=2122583

Jaspers, K. (1963). General psychopathology (J. Hoenig & M. W. Hamilton, Trans.). University of Chicago Press. (Original work published 1913). https://archive.org/details/generalpsychopat0000unse/page/n7/mode/2up

National Institute of Korean Language (국립국어원). (n.d.). Korean-English Learners’ Dictionary. Retrieved from https://krdict.korean.go.kr/eng/