Over the years I have heard people of varying levels of exposure to taiji, hsing-i and bagua make something like the following statement: "The three recognized internal arts are at root all basically the same".
They are and they are not. I remember doing a hsing-i exercise where wood energy is defeated by metal, metal defeated by fire, fire defeated by water, water defeated by earth. Around and around we would go ( teacher had studied with Kenny Gong on the east coast ) endlessly repeating these attack and defense movements. Just going across the room doing one of those elements in a straight line was significantly different than any taiji training I have had.
So the whole thing about them "all being the same thing", makes me wince. The primarily forward energy of hsing-i can be found in taiji, but it is emphasized in hsing-i. Yes, circular aspects of bagua are in taiji too, but not emphasized as much. Taiji works at the opponent "falling into emptiness". Developing that skill is a lifelong challenge, and many teachers, even on the mainland from what I gather, have practiced hsing-i and bagua too. I once read a quote from an acknowledged taiji master that at some point the taiji player must walk the circle with their taiji postures to fully understand. That opened my eyes. I am rambling a bit and have to get back to work.
I hope you find a good balance among the many arts you know, Xue Sheng, for a practice that fits your needs now.
I suspect you will.
They are and they are not. I remember doing a hsing-i exercise where wood energy is defeated by metal, metal defeated by fire, fire defeated by water, water defeated by earth. Around and around we would go ( teacher had studied with Kenny Gong on the east coast ) endlessly repeating these attack and defense movements. Just going across the room doing one of those elements in a straight line was significantly different than any taiji training I have had.
So the whole thing about them "all being the same thing", makes me wince. The primarily forward energy of hsing-i can be found in taiji, but it is emphasized in hsing-i. Yes, circular aspects of bagua are in taiji too, but not emphasized as much. Taiji works at the opponent "falling into emptiness". Developing that skill is a lifelong challenge, and many teachers, even on the mainland from what I gather, have practiced hsing-i and bagua too. I once read a quote from an acknowledged taiji master that at some point the taiji player must walk the circle with their taiji postures to fully understand. That opened my eyes. I am rambling a bit and have to get back to work.
I hope you find a good balance among the many arts you know, Xue Sheng, for a practice that fits your needs now.
I suspect you will.