JustSomePerson
Yellow Belt
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2016
- Messages
- 21
- Reaction score
- 6
I have been following a number of debates about the web on the issue of SLT and the speed at which it is performed and what that slower pace might engender in an individual.
As some of you know, I am sympathetic to many of the things Hendrik has shown and presented and the argument that bows should be taught from the outset to beginners rather than as something that many, particularly from the the Ip Chun and Ip Ching lineages, hold back for the most part despite the idea of the bows being in 'that little notebook'.
When performing meditative exercises and attending to each of the bows in, say, a lying down position, for many imagining moving the position of the joint and the vertices of the joints meeting to constitute the joint point, is to attend to a given bow/joint. Further by moving them slowly or 'intending' to move them and refining the point at which one does not move them despite the intent, once can fine tune attention to the bows and each of the muscles involved in their manipulation and loosen them.
When some of us perform SLT section 1 slowly we reach this fine line of small movements to the point that we can signal our intent and feel the movement about to begin but then stop the movement. In terms of static structure activating the signal to move will set in structures but also fine tunes control and looseness over each of the bows. In Siukee's book and his use of the term bow (compound bow to pardon the pun) as a unit of joints and tendons like an archer's bow, the ready state and that fine line between moving and not moving is what develops the 'flesh state' (tendons, muscles and connective tissue) for that elastic, springy and 'bow' like structure.
Practising SLT section 1 slowly is effective for beginners (and the advanced) in developing attention to each of the bows and enables great gains to be made in the meditative exercises Hendrik suggests, even the lying down one. And it is also effective in developing what Siukee sets out too.
For Hendrik I offer the following, spend a few months trying it out and see for yourself that what I am suggesting is perhaps valid, even by your own terms of reference.
As some of you know, I am sympathetic to many of the things Hendrik has shown and presented and the argument that bows should be taught from the outset to beginners rather than as something that many, particularly from the the Ip Chun and Ip Ching lineages, hold back for the most part despite the idea of the bows being in 'that little notebook'.
When performing meditative exercises and attending to each of the bows in, say, a lying down position, for many imagining moving the position of the joint and the vertices of the joints meeting to constitute the joint point, is to attend to a given bow/joint. Further by moving them slowly or 'intending' to move them and refining the point at which one does not move them despite the intent, once can fine tune attention to the bows and each of the muscles involved in their manipulation and loosen them.
When some of us perform SLT section 1 slowly we reach this fine line of small movements to the point that we can signal our intent and feel the movement about to begin but then stop the movement. In terms of static structure activating the signal to move will set in structures but also fine tunes control and looseness over each of the bows. In Siukee's book and his use of the term bow (compound bow to pardon the pun) as a unit of joints and tendons like an archer's bow, the ready state and that fine line between moving and not moving is what develops the 'flesh state' (tendons, muscles and connective tissue) for that elastic, springy and 'bow' like structure.
Practising SLT section 1 slowly is effective for beginners (and the advanced) in developing attention to each of the bows and enables great gains to be made in the meditative exercises Hendrik suggests, even the lying down one. And it is also effective in developing what Siukee sets out too.
For Hendrik I offer the following, spend a few months trying it out and see for yourself that what I am suggesting is perhaps valid, even by your own terms of reference.
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