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  • Fu Sheng Yuan Passes Away

    Fu Sheng Yuan Passes Away

    Fu Sheng Yuan (1931 – 2017), son of the famous Fu Zhong Wen has passed away. He was born in Yongnian, China, the birthplace of Yang style Tai Chi. He started learning the traditional Yang Family style of Tai Chi Chuan from his father at the age of 9 years old.

    Fu is a descendant of the Yang Family. His mother, Zou Kuei Cheng, was the great grand daughter of Yang Chien Hou (son of Yang style founder Yang Lu Chan). Fu taught the Yang style for many years in China. He wanted to pass the family’s art of Tai Chi to the world, but was unable to leave China in the earlier years due to government restrictions. After the Chinese government started to allow its citizens to immigrate to other countries, Fu Sheng Yuan moved to Australia with his family in 1989.

    Fu established a school in Australia, and from there he spread the traditions of the Yang Faily style of Tai Chi Chuan throughout the would with teaching seminars hosted in other countries. Fu Sheng Yuan taught thousands of students, and has disciples teaching in China, Australia, India, the United States continue to pass on his teachings to new generations of Tai Chi students.

    Fu Qing Quan (James), the son of Fu Sheng Yuan, took over the leadership of the World Yongnian Tai Chi Federation several years ago. He learned Yang style Tai Chi extensively from his grandfather Fu Zhong Wen when he was young as well as his father. Fu Qing Quan continues to teach many of his father’s students as well as his own.

    Our deepest condolences go out to the family of Fu Sheng Yuan, as well as his many students throughout the world.

  • The Pathway To Stillness

    The Pathway To Stillness

    Gary Irwin-Kenyon is a the founding Chair of Gerontoloy at St. Thomas University in New Brunswick, Canada, and an author. He is also a longtime Tai Chi practitioner and instructor.

    He was interviewed on the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) radio show “Shift” by host Vanessa Vander Valk about Tai Chi, and the ideas of stillness being used to benefit you in practice and everyday life. This is the subjest of his book: “Pathways to Stillness”. Click on the Listen button below to hear the interview.

    Gary is a teacher and practitioner of Tai Chi with more than thirty years experience. He designed a program, Tai Chi as Narrative Care, which he has been teaching for the past ten years to special groups, including residents in long-term care. He conducts workshops and seminars in Canada, The United States, Europe, and Asia.

    Excerpt from Gary Irwan-Kenyon’s website. To see the whole biography and his website click this Link

    His book, Pathways to Stillness, was published in 2016 and is available on Amazon.com.

    Click on the image below to see more of this interesting book.

  • International Tai Chi Park

    International Tai Chi Park

    On the northern shores of Lake Superior lies Thunder Bay, Canada. An unlikely place to have an International Tai Chi Park. However, such a place was built and completed in 2011 with a Moon Gate looking out over Lake Superior and the Sleeping Giant. Beside the Moon Gate lies a patterned stone pad 60 feet in diameter designed for groups to practice Tai Chi Chuan.

    Moongate

    International Taiji ParkThe city of Thunder Bay has had a long history of being active with Tai Chi Chuan, and is
    internationally known as “The Taiji City”. In 1990 Tai Chi master Peng Youlian came to Canada and soon started teaching Tai Chi. He built up a following of students and even brought them regularly to China to train in Tai Chi Chuan, as well as bringing Tai Chi teachers from China to visit Thunder Bay.

    A meeting of Tai Chi masters came to Thunder Bay in July of 2006. There were 7 masters of Tai Chi Chuan who came from China for the The International Forum on Taijiquan, which was hosted by Peng Youlian. They represented the different family styles of Tai Chi Chuan. Master Wu Wenhan, Master Yang Zhenduo, Master Chen Zhenglei, Master Sun Yongtian, Master Zeng Nailiang, Master Ma Hailong and Master Eddie Wu Kwong Yu travelled to Canada to demonstrate and give lectures on their different style of Tai Chi Chaun for the event.

    Framing Sleeping GiantMaster Peng Youlian came up with the concept of the International Tai Chi Park, and working together with the Form Architecture Engineering  firm, the project came to realization.  Peng Youlian regularly hosts training and events such as the World Tai Chi Day at the park.  Visit the website of master Peng Youlian to find out more about Tai Chi and the International Tai Chi Park in Thunder Bay, Canada.

    Please check out our other articles on designated Tai Chi parks!

  • Taking The Initiative In Taijiquan

    Taking The Initiative In Taijiquan

    Wu Yuxiang’s (武禹襄) Taijiquan (太極拳) classic states “You must act according to your opponent, not try to do things from yourself, for if you go along with your opponent, you can act spontaneously, but if you act from yourself, you will get bogged down.” and “If he takes no action, I take no action, but once he takes even the slightest action, I have already acted.” The Taijiquan classic attributed to Yang Banhou (楊班侯) says “The basic of basics is to forget about your plans and simply respond to the opponent.”

    These sayings (all as translated by Paul Brennan) emphasize the predominately counter-attacking approach of Taijiquan. But does this mean that practitioners cannot initiate actions against an opponent, and that they must wait until the opponent attacks?

    In many conflicts the aggressor has an advantage since the opponent needs to be able to understand the attack and then respond. The aggressor already knows their intent, but there is a delay for the recipient since they usually cannot determine what the aggressor intends until after the aggressor initiates their attack. This delay is what Taijiquan trains to eliminate.

    We want to know what the opponent intends, but not let them know our plans. By allowing the opponent to initiate the action, we can gain information about their intent. By “forgetting about your plans” the opponent cannot read or understand our intent.

    “Borrowing force” is commonly practiced in Taijiquan. We want to use the opponent’s actions to defeat them, emphasizing responding to the opponent rather than initiating actions ourselves. This is accomplished through “sticking.” In order to use Taijiquan’s principle of stick and adhere, connect and follow (zhan nian lian sui 粘黏連隨) we typically want to be in contact with the opponent. Can we induce contact, or must we await an advance from the opponent before we can touch them?

    What about when we are using weapons where contact is often broken? In the weapons sparring that I learned, in choreographed sparring sets, drills and free sparring, we are often separated, and we frequently attack openings even when we are not in contact with the opponent’s weapon. How then does this remain compatible with Taijiquan strategy?

    There are several ways to approach these questions.

    My understanding is that there are ways to interact with an opponent that do not require the opponent to initiate the actions. For example, there are sayings that refer to having simultaneously true and false attacks. We want an attack to be real, yet be able to change it into a feint, depending on the opponent’s response. This means that we attack an opening or weak area of the opponent, but when they change to respond, we can abandon our attack and change to respond to their new actions. Initiating an attack in this way can be used to connect with the opponent when they respond.

    Some schools refer to the interactions of push-hands (推手 tui shou) training as being like a question and answer conversation. You supply energy (an attack or feint) towards your partner (the “question”), and listen for their response (their “answer”). Your follow-up action would depend on theirs, continuing the attack if their response is wrong or, if their response is correct, changing your action in order to “ask” another question or to respond to their counter (their “question”). The person that “asks” is initiating the interaction, but what happens afterwards depends on the partner’s response (“answer”).

    This type of interplay reflects the simultaneous true and false attack because the follow-up depends on how the opponent responds to the initial attack. However, it does not require that one only respond (“answer”) without ever initiating (“asking”).

    Some schools train to continually flow towards the opponent’s spine when attacking, like a river flowing to the ocean. Using this approach, the goal is to control the opponent’s spine as a way of controlling their stability and movements. Any blocking by the opponent is like an obstacle in the way of the water’s movement, and should be flowed around, over washed, undercut, or worn away. This is another way of maintaining a responsive initiative during an interaction.

    Another quote from Wu Yuxiang (Brennan translation) is “If an opportunity comes from yourself, go ahead and shoot, but when force comes from your opponent, borrow it.” Here “shoot” likely refers to the Taijiquan principle of storing energy like drawing a bow, and then releasing the energy like shooting the arrow, and probably means, in general, to attack. This quote seems to indicate that, though it may be desirable to have the opponent move first in order to have them commit to some action that is then used against them (borrowing their force), it is not a requirement; we can still attack on our own initiative.

    Those who have faced a quality modern boxing jab know how difficult it is to stick and adhere, connect and follow when the jab and the return to the guard position are both so fast. But boxing blocks are relatively stationary, especially when they are of the covering type. This means that when they initiate their attacks using a jab, they are very difficult to connect and adhere to, but when we initiate an attack from non-contact, their defense often allows us to connect with them. Once we contact the opponent, we can employ the skills that are typically trained in push-hands practice, for as long as we maintain the contact.

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  • Tai Chi In The Movie “Killer Elite”

    Tai Chi In The Movie “Killer Elite”

    The 1975 movie “Killer Elite” stars James Caan as Mike Locken, an agent who works for a company that handles covert assignments for the CIA. His best friend (and fellow agent) George Hansen, played by Robert Duvall, ends up betraying Locken in a double cross.

    In one of the scenes of the movie, Locken meets an old friend who is practicing Tai Chi in a group which is led by Guang Ping Tai Chi Chuan master Kuo Lien-ying. At one point Kuo tries to teach Caan’s character Tai Chi, but he is soon called away.

    If you haven’t seen this movie yet, you can click on the image below to see more about it!

    Check out our other articles about Tai Chi in Films and TV!

  • Yuki’s Gift

    Yuki’s Gift

    Yuki Tanji is a Tai Chi practitioner and instructor based in Berlin, Germany. In this beautifully filmed video produced by Jhohan Planefeldt, Yuki demonstrates the flowing art of Tai Chi Chuan.

    GIFT from yuki on Vimeo.

    Yuki Tanji was trained in classical ballet in Japan for 14 years. in 1999, she left her homeland of Japan, and moved to Berlin. Starting in 2000 she began learning the Chinese Martial Arts, starting first with the Shaolin art of Nan Chaun. Yuki was able to see connecting lines between the Martial Arts and Dance.

    After becoming pregnant, Yuki began seeking softer methods of the Martial Arts. She began learning weapons, Tai Chi Chuan, as well as Qigong exercises. It was from the experiences and skills acquired from both Ballet and the Chinese martial arts, that she teaches Botan, a style of Tai Chi and Qigong with inspirations of Dance, which is clearly demonstrated in the above video.

    You can view Yuki Tanji’s Facebook page here, and the website MindBodyOnline.com with information for her classes at Chimosa, where she teaches in Berlin, Germany.

  • Bad Training Partners

    Bad Training Partners

    I recently wrote an article about four training mistakes often seen in Pushing Hands (Tui Shou or 推手). That article was intended to educate people so that they could strive to be better partners. But what happens when you’re the good one, but your training partner is not? Training with partners of any kind will eventually lead to being paired with someone that keeps making mistakes, has their own agenda, or is too caught up in their ego to be a good partner. What do you do then?
    Obviously before you say anything to your partner, you have to make sure that you aren’t guilty of the same problem behaviours. Sometimes it’s easy to fall into a competitive cycle, which escalates because of your own involvement. So, always remind yourself that you are there to learn how to avoid falling off balance, rather than to prove you are better than someone else is.

    Once you’re sure you aren’t instigating or escalating the troubling behaviours, the best solution is to talk to your partner. Tell your partner about your training goals and enlist their help in achieving them. Saying something like, “I need to go slowly today because I’m working on developing better timing,” is often all it takes to get your partner to stop and think.

    However, sometimes friction between partners comes about because one of them feels threatened by the other. If you find yourself in this position, it’s important to remember that your partner may not even be consciously aware of this. They may not realize how much you bring out the competitive streak in them.

    best solution to this problem is that you have to remove any threat they feel from you. In these cases, it’s helpful to say something like, “You keep pushing me over using this or that technique and I’m having real trouble defending against it. Do you have any suggestions?”

    By doing this, you’ve effectively announced that you’re not competing with them, but rather trying to improve your skills. When your partner isn’t feeling threatened by you, their behaviour can and often will significantly change.

    You also have to realize that you may be in a completely different place (emotionally, spiritually, and even training level) than your partner. Sometimes people are stuck at one phase of learning and aren’t ready to improve yet. It won’t help to get mad or impatient with your training partner if they keep repeatedly making the same mistakes. You have to realize that this is their challenge to overcome and they just aren’t ready yet.

    If this is happening, you sometimes just have to remind yourself that you aren’t going to Pushing Hands with this person forever, and just do your best while you wait for the next partner to come along.

    Sometimes you may find yourself paired regularly with a partner who just doesn’t get it, is too aggressive, or is otherwise a problem for you. If this happens, you may need to have a private word with your teacher, but don’t be accusatory or confrontational about it. Sometimes teachers pair partners together when they think that one or both can learn from the experience. Even if your partner is the one exhibiting bad habits, you may be the one who needs to learn how to deal with this without losing your temper.

    Even if your teacher didn’t pair you with a frustrating partner on purpose, you can often look at your work together as a way of overcoming your own anger and frustration issues. Often anger and frustration may be a big obstacle to your own skills advancing. Once you overcome your own frustration, you may find that whatever bad habits your partner was exhibiting don’t matter anymore. You may even find that, in dealing with your frustrations, you are now capable of neutralizing the techniques that were once a problem.

  • Tai Chi Helps The Homeless With Hope

    Tai Chi Helps The Homeless With Hope

    A library in Salt Lake City is giving the homeless an opportunity for exercise, and hope. The library offers free Tai Chi classes to the city’s homeless.

    Bernie Hart is the instructor of the morning Tai Chi program at the Salt Lake City Main Library. Hart initiated the program with the library to bring an opportunity of exercise and hope to the homeless in his city. There were only one or two people attending when the free classes started, and since then it has grown to around 40!

    You can view the original articles on this story here and here by KSL TV reporter Alex Cabrero,

  • Is Tai Chi The Answer To Back Pain?

    Is Tai Chi The Answer To Back Pain?

    Many people suffer from back pain. As individuals get older, the likelihood of having to deal with back pain from recent or older injuries becomes greater. The general method of first treating back pain with medication is now being looked at differently. The American College of Physicians, who now have new guidelines for treatment, suggest that the first course of treatment should be things like heat wraps, exercise therapy, methods to reduce stress.

    With its gentle movement and shifting of the weight, attention to alignment, and effects on reducing stress, Tai Chi would seem to be the ideal exercise therapy to deal with back pain. It would be important to be extra aware of how one’s movement, and not make any strenuous moves. It is also important to let your Tai Chi instructor know of any injuries or pain, so they may adjust your training to address any problems.

    The type of treatment for back pain will of course depend upon the injury to the back. It is best to consult with your doctor to insure that any exercise will not further the injury.

  • Taijiquan – Moving Through Molasses

    Taijiquan – Moving Through Molasses

    Some Taijiquan (太極拳) practitioners, especially those who are older or who primarily practice for health, tend to practice as softly as possible. Some instead practice as if moving or “swimming” through molasses. This article presents my understanding of the benefits of practicing Taijiquan as if moving through molasses. This practice can be more than simply moving slowly, benefiting also from using modest “resistance” against movement.

    First let’s examine potential benefits of moving slowly. Slowness allows for using mindfulness, providing time to concentrate on some of the myriad principles important to Taijiquan practice. Taijiquan is sometimes referred to as a moving meditation.

    It could be argued that the slowest “movement” is doing stationary postures in zhan zhuang (站樁 standing like a post), a fairly common practice in various traditions. Zhan zhuang for martial arts is not limited to commonly practiced postures like the tree hugging stance (撑抱 cheng bao), but can be any posture from one’s form(s).

    For a detailed explanation of zhan zhuang see:
    http://taichibasics.com/zhan-zhuang-pole-standing-different-qi-gong-meditation/

    While zhan zhuang can develop qi (氣 vital energy) and its circulation, I’ll instead present my understanding of zhan zhuang’s physical practice, since this is less often discussed and is more relevant to this article.

    When standing stationary for long periods of time, the body is learning to efficiently resist the force of gravity. This is training for the “stabilizer” muscles, which are often smaller (and powerful) muscles that can remain active for long periods of time, and are used to support the body rather than to move it.

    Stationary standing may also activate the passive energy structures, such as tendons and ligaments, which are able to participate in movement without the use of ATP (Ben Fisher, Physical Therapist, personal communication).

    Using “mobilizing” muscles instead of the stabilizers to hold stationary postures fatigues them relatively quickly, and can result in severe muscle pain, trembling, and other signs of stress during zhan zhuang training. This is why body builders often do worse at zhan zhuang than average healthy individuals. The body builder’s mobilizing muscles are greatly developed, but this often inadvertently leads to a weakening of the stabilizers because the mobilizing muscles become strong and may take over the job of the stabilizers, resulting in less use of the stabilizers which then become smaller and weaker and/or less coordinated.

    The current understanding for strengthening stabilizer muscles is to do numerous reps slowly. This fits well with Taijiquan’s emphasis on doing forms slowly for the duration of the rather lengthy form(s).

    Stationary practice trains the stabilizers against gravity, or vertical force, and helps practitioners to develop “rooting” or transferring force through their structure and into their feet, and therefore into the ground. But we want whole-body structural stability in every direction since interactions with other practitioners or opponents can come from almost any direction.

    All-direction stability can be facilitated through practicing solo forms with the modest resistance, against every surface of the body and in every direction, that visualizing moving through molasses provides.

    Another way of expressing a similar concept is practicing solo forms as if against an opponent. This imagery contributes modest resistance to pulls and pushes as a practitioner moves through the sequence of their solo form(s), and aids one’s mental focus, or intent (用意 yongyi). We want to develop a unified structure, utilizing the stabilizer muscles, tendons and ligaments, in relation to any incoming or outgoing force, in any direction.

    I often use the image of a properly inflated ball to express the six-direction force. The limitation here is that the air filling the ball only expresses energy outward, not inward (although the material of the ball contains the air and would therefore be like an inward force). In martial usage of Taijiquan, we want the stabilizers, tendons and ligaments to provide the unified structure for pulling and pushing, absorbing and projecting.

    By developing the ability to express force in all directions (or to maintain the potential in all directions simultaneously even when one or more direction is being emphasized during an application), practitioners will maintain their ability to change even when moving. This is especially difficult during the unpredictability of fighting.

    Maintaining six-direction force throughout one’s movements also helps to maintain “central equilibrium” (中定 zhongding). Using stabilizing muscles, tendons and ligaments to withstand/absorb incoming energy and for stabilizing the structure when issuing energy also leads to the resilient, whole-body unity that we seek in Taijiquan practice and application.

    If we properly use the stabilizing muscles, tendons and ligaments to maintain proper structure, then we can relax the mobilizing muscles, the flexors and extensors, which are the larger and more noticeable muscles generally located closer to the surface of the body (those that can “bulk up”). This is one way of understanding the use of internal strength rather than external strength. It also means that we are not losing our sensitivity due to tension in our outer musculature.

    While some practitioners understand internal strength as meaning that we should use energy rather than muscles, I think that this may be somewhat misinterpreted. My understanding is that internal and external are differentiated by what is or is not visible on the surface of the body. The larger muscles (as well as fat, etc.) that contribute to what we can visibly see on the surface of the body are considered to be external, whereas the smaller, deeper muscles, as well as tendons and ligaments whose effects do not visibly affect the surface of the body, are considered to be internal.

    From this perspective, the stabilizing muscles, which are generally smaller and located deeper in the body, would be considered as part of the internal system in addition to energy, spirit, intent, etc. The larger flexor and extensor muscles, typically located closer to the surface of the body, would be considered as being external. So we should be first training the energy and the stabilizer muscles, and only later, after the stabilizers are strong and resilient, should we add the “external” strength of the mobilizing muscles.

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