Across cultures and long before written history, traditions of healing, personal transformation, and even the pursuit of immortality have taken shape. Within early Chinese traditions, these ideas evolved into the paradigm of the Three Treasures: Jing, Qi, and Shen, and the ideal of integrating body, breath, and mindful awareness to cultivate profound inner “elixirs.” This all began more than 100,000 years ago, in the context that the human race has existed for over 2 million years and has refined constantly through the millennia. In modern times, emerging scientific research increasingly affirms the relevance and benefits of cultivating the Three Treasures. Practitioners of Chinese Medicine, in many ways, are also practitioners of Taiji and Qigong. They carry this tradition forward through personal cultivation, the integration of these principles into clinical practice, and the guidance they offer patients. Whether through movement instruction, breathwork, or discussion of Qigong and Taiji principles during treatment, or cases where practitioners help patients engage practices tailored to their unique constitutions and conditions. Through movement, breath, clinical insight, or patient instruction, these traditions continue to evolve—transforming ancient practices into living medicine for the modern world.