Testimonial
MAK JO SI,
My order comes with gifts again! I appreciate the gifts including the booster fu last time. Thank you very much for your geniune services and your powerful fu, they really work well. I am happy to find Tin Yat Lineage. The first time when I clicked your web that I felt so good, clean, peaceful and comfortable just by the color design. By the way, my 2 fu will be expired in June and I will let you know for new order later. Thank you for everthing.
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I do like the way you and Lau Jo Si present yourselves, happy, friendly, open, vivid, fun, wise and full of youthful energy. My youngest son watched your Tao Gun video last time he laughed loudly and said, "Mak Jo Si is so funny. He's a funny guy".
Thank you again for your powerful FU which made the ghost to move out from our home.
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Happy New Year!
Good business!
Grace Ting
Testimonial: Tao.Light is so good! - Tin Lui

I was skeptic about the Tao.light in the beginning, but when Jo Si told me to flick the BA20 (my first light) in a certain are of the factory I was shocked to see red dots literally that night. To confirmed, Tin wun saw grapefruit red balls and the kids saw red dots as well. Those red dots were revealed by JoSi as the summon evil god or/and army. Than we saw the same in our apartment but it was red "dashes" at the bathroom because the altar back in Taiwan had summon them to haunt us.
Tin Ling and Tin Lung were possessed several times and luckily I had the TD15 and M30 to get them back on track. What I did was when they got possessed, I made them drank the bottle water while shining the light below the bottle bottom. It amazed me to see them recovered and trust the light even more.
There was another time at the factory, I felted head pressure and the moment I wore the finger light it disappeared within several second.
It's hard to believe that such simple light can be used for medical recovery like in the star trek sitcom, but a recent study did proved scientifically that these led light do promote cell growth at multiple time rates.
http://www.enhancedlivingusa.com/biomat/Healing%20with%20Light.pdf
The BC 10 served the purposed to healing sickness. Therefore, not only did I felt the effectiveness myself even the scientist recently acknowledge the benefit of LED technology.
Bottom line these Tao.Light are highly sophisticated technology with specified usage purpose and yet we caveman are now discovering the basic use for it in a way.
To my knowledge ghost and spirit are energy field of technology that us human cannot explain so we can't deal with them. The Tao.light is a version of technology from the CR to wipe out these evil energy....just like a magnet wipe out the hard drive data through magnetic field process..hahaha
(An e-mail review by Tin Lui to Tin Yang, inspiring!)
Testimonial: Mike C

Transitions
He lived somewhere in southern China, and because of the heat, the humidity, and his intense martial arts training, he seldom wore a shirt. With head shorn as though a monk’s, he sported little more than a pair of white kungfu pants and – on an occasional off-day – a lightweight pair of kungfu shoes, even when he was sitting in front of his computer. Thus I imagined him in the early days, near the tail-end of 2008, when I first encountered him.
It was on a popular internet forum, where he wrote at length about some heavy-duty Taoism topics: exorcism, ghosts, deities, magic, curses, cases of possession… the kinds of things that mystical masters whisper in secret to their students. Creepy but intriguing stuff. Who was this guy -- seriously? I didn’t even know what his name, Mak Tin Si, meant, but whoever he was, he seemed to have volumes of information on Taoism. I couldn’t even place what lineage he must be from. Whatever the lineage, it must be obscure, and it was probably something no one in the West had ever heard of.
Utterly curious, I began to communicate with him via private messaging on the forum. One time, when I expressed sadness at how some forum members were attempting to verbally tear him down, he wrote back (and I paraphrase), “Emotions aren’t really a part of spreading Taoism.” Touché. This Chinese guy evidently ate nails for breakfast. Maybe I could learn something from him? When I noticed he had his own forum up and running in January 2009, I migrated there to learn what I could.
While some of his posts concerned practical, everyday tips that you could follow to live a healthier life (such as eating at the same times each day), other things he wrote verged on the extremely bizarre. I vaguely remember there being a post about using a talisman (fu) to dissolve some evil energy (or something?) from your house if a bird smacked into one of your windows. Huh? Was that some folk superstition that they had in China? I didn’t ask. I wasn’t Chinese, and I didn’t want to insult the man by decrying what may well be his culture. Those sorts of “earthy / folksy” topics didn’t vibe with me well, but I waded through them to reach more practical, usable advice (e.g., when best to practice qigong) or topics on supernatural matters that riveted my attention (namely, ghosts, evil spirits, and how to get rid of them).
At some point (February 2009, I believe), a man whose screen name was “Yoda” decided to join Mak Tin Si’s lineage, which was then “Ng Yin Do Pai.” I respected Yoda as someone who was very open-minded and spiritually adventurous. How would he do? He had been into ghost-possession qigong immediately prior to joining Ng Yin Do Pai, and his life had been steadily sinking into the gutters, but he seemed to improve his condition considerably with Mak Tin Si’s help and came back with fantastic stories of his successes. Enough. I’m in.
I joined “Stage 1” of Ng Yin Do Pai in March 2009. I didn’t even know what Mak Tin Si looked like, but by this time, I envisioned him as a strict, highly traditional Taoist master who never smiled, much less laughed. In my mind, I saw him as a thin, 40-something year old man who stood at just barely five feet tall, with old-fashioned, black-frame glasses as thick as the bottom of coke bottles; an oversized black mustache; and a flywhisk that he would use to beat you for any reason, at any time – or even for no reason at all – with a violence so blind that it would stop at nothing to inflict maximal harm to you.
My own history of child abuse did not help here. I was afraid to ask him questions directly. When he wrote in all caps, I took that as yelling, which reminded me of the pain of my childhood. At the beginning of Stage 1, he gave me a short audio file of the lineage’s poem in Cantonese, which I dutifully memorized (and can still repeat by heart today, nearly two years later, so many times did I say it). I heard no joy in his voice, only strictness, and the quality of the audio was discouragingly bad. It was a cold, mechanical reception into Stage 1, I thought… in essence it was: “Welcome to the lineage. Here is your audio file and a set of brief instructions. Memorize this Cantonese poem and recite it 49 times a day for 49 consecutive days. Show only the greatest of respect to your lineage and teachers.”
I remember the tremendous rush of clarity and energy I got on the night before my entrance into Stage 1, however. Indeed, I cannot adequately describe how wholly and astoundingly godlike it felt to get my first taste of the lineage’s energy, known in Cantonese as FAAT. My sword skills went through the roof. My mind was not stable – it was Unshakable. My mind was not clear – it was Immaculate. It felt like I could see through any evil and anything false, and nothing could harm me. There was nothing I couldn’t handle. Do you remember the scene from Princess Mononoke where Ashitaka uses a single hand to bend a samurai’s sword back in order to quietly step forward and retrieve San? “Step aside,” he calmly said, effortlessly bending the sword away. That’s how it felt. I could say, “Step aside” to any obstacle I faced, no matter how large or dangerous. The elevated state lasted for only a few days, but it remains a peak experience in my spiritual searching – and in my life more generally, for that matter.
The months rolled by, but my relationship with Mak Tin Si would often falter. He still seemed distant, cold, unwilling to give anything but the barest instructions. Indeed, one set of instructions was simply a hand-drawn picture on a single piece of paper. Given minimal explanations, I would sometimes inadvertently ruin what the instructions were supposed to be for. Because I had so little money, my mistakes were a huge hit to me, both financially and psychologically: I paid for fu, waited patiently for them to come through the mail, but ended up wasting them for lack of clear and complete instructions. It was hard not to feel as though Mak Tin Si didn’t care enough to provide essential details. He may not even have cared about me as a student. I really tried to like the lineage, but I still felt entirely at the mercy of a hostile stranger who saw me as a nuisance.
In November 2009, our relationship got so bad that we were trading digs with one another via email. I remember that bitter time with remorse. This wasn’t what I wanted. I felt scammed, hurt, and betrayed. At any rate, neither of us seemed to understand the other, and I felt like the lineage was a place I didn’t belong and in which I wasn’t wanted. I was ready to walk away.
Later that month, however, he made a video just for me and gave me the link to download it. Out of sheer curiosity, I watched all five minutes of it. It was my first time seeing what Mak Tin Si really looked like and hearing his voice in high-quality audio. He stood in stark contrast to the figment of my imagination. For one thing, he smiled, even laughed. His air was altogether one of friendliness, helpfulness, and warmth. No mustache, no flywhisk waiting to beat me, just openness and kindness…. His video profoundly took me aback.
Did I need more instructions? All I had to do was ask… that’s it….
How grievously I had misjudged him…. In shame, I wept for what must have been an hour. I had dishonored myself so tremendously that I sincerely wanted, in true Bushido fashion, to die by my own sword. I thought about it, but Mak Tin Si said it was better to live having learned what I had.
The next month, I wanted to enter Stage 2, but my limbic brain had not forgotten the nightmarish Tin Si of my imagination, under whom, after all, I had suffered for about nine months. No, the limbic brain takes much longer to revise than the neocortex…. I can describe my condition only as having a split mind. On one hand, I “knew” Mak Tin Si was helpful, powerful, and good, but on the other, I still had a heavy, dark cloud in my psyche toward him. I kept vacillating between entering Stage 2 and walking away. Long story short: In late December 2009, I was expelled. Not even in Stage 1 anymore.
It was not until March 2010 that I had any further communication with Mak Tin Si. I wanted to know if he would still be willing to have me as a client if not as a student. From my past experiences, I knew his fu worked if they were used properly -- but that was the trick: You had to use them properly. Most of his services were now “by distance” – you didn’t need to get fu through the mail. This gave me hope. If he were doing the services, there was zero chance I could be at fault for messing them up. So, would he take me as a client? The answer was fortunately yes.
And thus, for most of the spring and summer of 2010, I got cleaned up, spiritually speaking. I got exorcised of an evil spirit (from my former days of ignorantly practicing ghost-possession qigong), had some negative energy busted from me multiple times (each time to great effect), and had the evil magic of some psychic-attacking enemies busted wholesale, among other things. Over this time, I actually became friends with Mak Tin Si, whom I now know as Mak Jo Si. I see him now as generous, helpful, and still powerful, kind, and wise.
He teaches with his heart, and his heart is warmer than mine. Because my childhood was what it was, I have never had an authority figure in my life who knew me and freely cared about me. Never. I don’t mean to evoke anyone’s pity, and I don’t wish to be patronized, but I wanted to say that I can scarcely remember what it felt like to have someone truly and unpretentiously care for my well-being. He cares about me even more than I care about myself, truth be told. Can you imagine that? I don’t care much if I get sick; sickness happens, especially when you’re overloaded at work and aren’t sleeping much. But he cares. Lau Jo Si cares, too. I was taken aback by such a simple but powerful revelation – and the simple but powerful act of genuinely, deeply caring, without the slightest expectation of reward, for the welfare of another human being.
Mak Jo Si says he’s from the Heaven Realm. In my book, he’s right.
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Testimonial: Kyle B

I spent many hours praying, meditating, and studying various religions but was frustrated that I never had deep spiritual experiences. Then I came upon a spontaneous chikung practice that was able to open me up to the beginnings of genuine spiritual experiences along with channelings, spiritual guidance, crazy dreams, psychic abilities, etc.
At first I thought this was all positive but I noticed that I was becoming spacey, distracted, unfocused, negative, cold, creepy, fat, and poor. I noticed that I would start saying little white lies more and more often... involuntarily. Additionally, my young daughter was starting to do spontaneous motion chikung in her sleep and she was complaining about ghosts in the house as well. I didn’t see any ghosts but I knew that something wasn’t right.
I met Mak Jo Si online and I was impressed by his knowledge so I decided to ask him for a couple of cleansing FUs and some advice on the problems I was having.
He said my spontaneous motion practice was the primary negative influence. At first I couldn’t accept it... how can there be negative spirits and bad magic? If that sort of thing even existed, it had to be pretty rare. A nice guy like me would not get involved in any sort of evil practice like that. I even asked the “spiritual guides” I met through my spontaneous motion practice if they loved me and they said yes... so why would they want to steal my energy and freak out my kids?
After dozens of emails and asking hundreds of questions, I became convinced that Mak Jo Si was right and it was time to stop the practice and throw out all my love and light new agey books... there really are scammer spirits out there!
In the process of working with Mak Jo Si since then over the last two years, I’ve been blessed to have good chemistry with him and enjoy our many emails and have even met him and Lau Jo Si in person at their Temple in Toronto.
Mak Jo Si has an enthusiasm for Taoism that is unrivaled and impressive. Mak Jo Si never holds back and is constantly working on improving the lineage. He has learned a tremendous amount on many subjects and he’s only in his 20s! He responds to all emails at all hours with lots of detail and humor.
Mak Jo Si has put together a kungfu workout for me that has been very helpful. Of course the Taoguns... who would have guessed? They are a blast... literally! Who would have thought that a Tactical Mossberg Persuader 500 12 gauge shotgun would be a Taoism tool just like an exorcism sword? And playing video games sure beats meditation and prayer!
Recently the Tin Yat Altar has spread a huge amount of golden, positive energy into my life and home, inspiring many new thoughts and insights and has benefited my family and myself in many ways. My sincerest thanks to Mak Jo Si and Lau Jo Si for sharing the lineage plate... the Tin Yat Altar has been a real gift from heaven!
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Colt Defender (Tao.Gun) Testimonial: Kyle B

Mak Jo Si suggested that the Colt Defender Air Gun would be a good Tao.Gun for me to help me see evil activity more clearly, so I got a Colt Defender in the mail and got it all set up. I had fun shooting it... it is a powerful and nice looking BB gun! Even when just shooting with no BBs it can make the target move from across the room! So I shot at the target for a few minutes and then forgot about it and moved on to other things.
An hour or so later, out of nowhere, I suddenly discovered a coordinated black magic group from my childhood!
It centered around a boarding school that specialized in taking in rich teenagers with behavioral problems from all around the world.
Once a year my school had to play them in soccer until our school canceled playing against this school due to all the negativity, fights and vandalism that came with the games.
I was team captain and the star defender pitted against their star attacker so I got a lot of focus in these games... I never suspected evil magic was involved in the scene... I just thought they were bad kids and soon forgot all about them.
It's pretty obvious in retrospect... nasty, rich teenagers collected from voodoo infested third world countries who hated our usually victorious team?
Thanks to the Colt Defender, I was able to discover the residual evil magic and deal with it.

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Makarov (Tao.Gun) Testimonial: Mike C

Let me begin with a disclaimer: I'm not huge on guns. I prefer a sleek and powerful katana, my 18" bowie knife, and other such "home security systems." Even in video games, when given the choice, I'll take a melee fighter character -- a so-called scrapper -- over a blaster. I'd rather have a character who could smash a pack of heavily armored orcs down with his bare hands than someone who stays on the sidelines and shoots arrows. That's just me.
So, when Mak Jo Si first suggested that I get a Tao.gun, I was reluctant, not only because of the price but because it just didn't fit my style. However, I had years of GOO magic caked up on me, and he said that the Makarov Tao.gun could help me with exorcising it. Well, ok… let's try it out!
When the stout cardboard box from the airgun dealer arrived at my place, I tore out one side of it, thinking to use the box as a makeshift target later on. I carefully removed the Soviet-era Makarov replica airgun from its tiny box and felt the heft of it in my hand. Kinda foreign… and maybe a little on the light side. I admit it didn't feel natural in my hand. Anyway, after having the gun activated by Mak Jo Si, I packed the shipping box with some old, tainted books I had been meaning to replace (long story) and then fired four rounds into the box. Bang, bang, bang, bang! Loud little pistol!
I didn't feel any effects from this, though. Maybe four shots were too few to feel anything? The next day, however, I filled the Makarov's magazine with copper BBs and rapidly emptied it all into the trusty box. Instant dizziness! And this was a special and familiar kind of dizziness -- one that I will never complain about: "exorcism dizziness." I call it that because I have experienced this type of dizziness only with exorcism. It is distinctive, unique, unmistakable.
I continued shooting BBs that evening until I had used up the entire CO2 cartridge. The resulting exorcism-dizziness lasted about an hour. Some of that GOO had no doubt loosened and was drifting lazily off me, back to the people who used it on me.
It's too early to say what the long-term effects of using this Tao.gun will be, but as far as short-term effects go, it seems to be doing its job!
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SA177 (Tao.Gun) Testimonial: Mike C

The SA177 arrived in a dapper plastic shell. Modeled after the Glock 17, this was the evil-god killer and religious-magic buster. I needed this one badly because I live in a largely christian area – christian prayers are all over the place here. Driving along one of the main streets of my small town, you can see half a dozen churches. No joke. (Jesus would be proud…! Or, rather, not… as most churches today are basically social clubs that have little interest in anything other than getting more members and thus more power and more money. Priests in gold robes preach poverty and tell the poor how to live. Cute.)
Anyway, I had gone on a foray into a christian university in Texas. My mistake. I had thought the school was christian only in name, not in actual practice. But no. They require their undergraduates to attend chapel. REQUIRE. There’s more, but that should tell you a lot already about how serious they are about their religion. My Taoism sensors were going off like crazy there. In terms of energy, this place was like breathing the smoggy, choking air of Houston or Los Angeles. I ended up picking up quite a bit of christian magic from that place, too.
That was the crux of the problem.
Thus, within the same hour that I got my SA177 Tao.gun activated by Mak Jo Si, I began to fire it. I used up a whole CO2 cartridge, then, later, another. After the first cartridge, I didn’t feel anything until ten minutes after the shooting session. I felt that “sparkly clean,” fresh feeling that I felt months ago when Mak Jo Si first exorcised christian magic from me. Tension that I hadn’t even been consciously aware of left my body. My mind felt clearer, and I could work and move faster. Yes, this was all like it was back when I got a distance-ceremony exorcism from Mak Jo Si…. Unmistakable!
That just showed me again how harmful christian magic is. It can tense you up, slow you down, and cloud your mind. Now that I have this Tao.gun, however, I will relish in busting off christian magic from me. Such a useful tool! Those christians have no right to cast their magic on me, especially if it’s harmful.
As a bonus, I can also use this gun to exorcise buddhist magic from me – or any other religion-based magic! This Tao.gun provides a tremendous amount of utility for its price. I recommend it, especially if you live in a predominantly christian place, like I do. Don’t think you have to sit through their evil magic; you can bust it out!
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Review of past Lineage "Ng Yin Do Pai" - by Taoman
So I was in the Ng Yin Do Pai lineage for many months and enjoyed
it... the practice, a daily lineage poem recitation, was very nice.
It was very traditional Taoism format overall... Making regular tea
and incense offerings to the traditional Taoism altar and avoiding
beef were the main lifestyle components. In the end, though, the
lifestyle components did get boring. I haven't enrolled in the new
Tin Yat lineage but now the boring stuff has been eliminated and now
it's just the fun stuff like guns, kungfu, and video games!
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Review of Tin Yat Lineage and more... - by Amanda S.
Mak Tin Si and Lau Tin Si are both very serious about Taoism. Each offer their unique individual insight. Mak Tin Si is excellent at giving real examples of obstacles whereas Lau Tin Si offers more thought provoking concepts. Making you think about what the meaning is. Using Taoism magic from Tin Yat Lineage has been a powerful experience. The clearing effect it has on your everyday life brings great peace and comfort. The Taoism magic being performed now is significantly stronger than previous. Certainly more precise predictions. Obstacles are clearly being outlined as well as their solutions. Taoism is in your heart, simply put you either believe in it or you don’t. To believe is to be successful.
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From Cannot Eat beef to Beef Eater Again!
Jo Si,
Yesterday was Tin Lung b-day. We had a steak dinner and I was amazed Tin Wun ate a piece of beef!!!
I was really happy because now we can all enjoy food... any food as a family. What surprised me was she said the beef had no distinct beef smell, however there was...very strange. I ask her how she felt she said everything was fine no pain in the stomach. She said before the beef smell will make her puke and she can't even chew it. Victory YES Thank you Jo Si and Taoverse Deity!!!
Sincerely,
Tin Lui
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 10:54 PM
*Tin Wun is Tin Lui's wife, who cannot eat beef due the evil magic influence by some evil 5-in-1 religion she had ordained into since young. After 1.5 week of treatment of Tao.Taste from Lau Jo Si, she can eat it again!!! Amazing!
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Testimonials
Testimonial from Grace - About your FU
Tao.Light so good - Tin Lui
Article from Mike C
Article from Kyle B
Article from Kyle B-Re:Tao.Gun, Cold Defender
Article from Mikc C-Re:Tao.Gun, Makarov
Article from Mikc C-Re:Tao.Gun, SA177
Review from Taoman, Ng Yin Do Pai (past lineage)
Review from Amanda S. about Tin Yat Lineage and more...
Ordain to Taoism Tin Yat Lineage, Kyle -> Tin Yang
Cannot eat Beef from evil religion to a beef eater again! - Tin Wun |