4. The ideal of Immortality and related practices

Source 1

Excerpts from the Zhuangzi on longevity tecniques

(11)

You have only to rest in inaction and things will transform themselves. Smash your form and body, spit out hearing and eyesight, forget you are a thing among other things, and you may join in great unity with the deep and boundless. Undo the mind, slough off spirit, be blank and soulless, and the ten thousand things one by one will return to the root - return to the root and not know why. Dark and undifferentiated chaos - to the end of life none will depart from it. But if you try to know it, you have already departed from it. Do not ask what its name is, do not try to observe its form. Things will live naturally and of themselves."

(15)

Blowing and breathing with open mouth; inhaling and exhaling the breath; expelling the old breath and taking in new; passing their time like the (dormant) bear, and stretching and twisting (the neck) like a bird;-- all this simply shows the desire for longevity. This is what the scholars who manipulate their breath, and the men who nourish the body and wish to live as long as Peng zu, are fond of.

Translation  by James Legge
http://nothingistic.org/library/chuangtzu/index.html(02/09/2014).

Some excerpts on techniques for attuning with the Dao and attaining longevity from the Zhuangzi (Book of Master Zhuang), a Daoist foundational texts that bears the name of its author, Master Zhuang. Some older chapters date in the late 4th century BCE, while the other portions date from one or two centuries later.

Source 2

Excerpts from the Jiudan jing (Scripture of the Nine Elixirs)

1)

When you want to compound the Divine Elixirs you should dwell in the depths of a mountain, in a wide moorland, or in a place deserted and uninhabited for endless miles.[...]

2)

When you compound the great medicines, you should always stay in a quiet place in the mountain forests. Build the Chamber of the Great Medicines and hang four swords at its four sides.
[...]

3)

To prepare the Medicines, the fifth day of the fifth month is most auspicious, followed by the seventh day of the seventh month.
[...]

4)

When you start the fire you should perform a ceremony beside the crucible..
[...]

5)

To prepare [the Elixirs of the Nine Radiances], heat together and transmute the Five Minerals: cinnabar, realgar, alum, laminar malachite, and magnetite. Each mineral is submitted to five transmutations, and each transmutation produces five colors. There are five minerals and therefore twenty-five colors
[...]

6)

If you want to make yourself invisible, or to know beforehand what has yet to happen, or to stop the years without getting old, ingest a speck of the yellow elixir and you will obtain a long life without death.
[...]

7)

After you achieve gold, take one hundred pounds of it and arrange a major ceremony.

Translation of Fabrizio Pregadio, in Great Clarity: Daoism and Alchemy in Medieval China, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2006), pp. 88, 95-96,161-62,163-64, 169.

Excerpts from the Jiudan jing (Scripture of the Nine Elixirs), the earliest (2nd century CE) Alchemical text to be entirely extant.

Source 3

Daoist Immortal Lu Dongbin

A Japanese ink painting portraying the Daoist Immortal Lu Dongbin.

Lu Dong-bin By Sesson Shukei.
Muromachi period, 16th century
Ink on paper
The Museum Yamatobunkakan, Nara
Photo retrieved in: http://commons.wikimedia.org/...Dôhin_par_le_peintre_japonais_Sesson_Shukei.jpg 
(02/09/2014). Public Domain