Edwin J. Dingle was born in
Cornwall, England and became an orphan at nine. As a journalist, Dingle moved to Singapore (
Straits Settlements) in 1900 to cover the affairs of the Far East. He was one of the first Caucasians to go into China and to actually stay for a substantial period of time in a Tibetan Monastery. There, he learnt
meditation and
yoga from a teacher. In 1910, he travelled to
Tibet and stayed there for nine months. He claimed to have learned closely guarded advanced spiritual methods from the Tibetan
Lamas. These techniques included the "Eight Key Breaths", a form of
pranayama. He spent nearly 21 years in the Asia, in China,
India, Tibet and
Burma. During the
1911 Revolution, he was in Wuhan and then Shanghai. He witnessed the brutal civil wars in Hankou and Hanyang. He later wrote a book to tell his personal experience during the revolution. He spoke highly of Li Yuanhong, Yuan Shikai and Sun Yatsen. In many ways, he sympathised with the revolution but believed that Yuan could be able to be a unifier of the country. In 1917, the
North China Daily News & Herald of Shanghai published his
The New Atlas and Commercial Gazetteer of China, which was devoted to China's "geography & resources and economic & commercial development". The book served as a standard reference for years, and was described by the
Millard's Review of the Far East as "The biggest and best book on the resources of China". After his return to England, Dingle also wrote about his experiences in the East which were eventually published as the book
Across China on Foot by
Earnshaw Books. ==Institute of Mentalphysics==