silatman
Blue Belt
Where does Falung Gung and Yoga come into the internal arts? Are they just other forms of Tai Chi?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
brothershaw said:If I remember correctly the original form/style tai ji / tai chi was created from several other pre existing martial arts styles, much later on this splintered into the various versions existing today.
Very true. Shaolin Ssu is only about 60 Km as the crow flies from Chen Village across the Yellow River. Some of the earlier Chen records talk about their practice of Cannon Fist (Pao Chui) coming from Shaolin.Matt Stone said:Taijiquan, in all its incarnations, has far more to do with the older Shaolin derivative styles than it does with Yoga... Many of the classical Taiji postures are found, unchanged, in Shaolin forms as well. Taiji most certainly did not come about as a result of yogic study. Even the creation myth of Taiji, attributed to Chang San-feng (known to be false, but widely circulated nonetheless), is one of combat, not meditation.
There were boxing styles like Hong Quan (Red Boxing) around the Shaolin area before the Da Mo legends. What Da Mo brought was supposed to aid the monks there in their more austere practices of meditation.Matt Stone said:Certainly Da Mo brought yogic practices with him (as well as martial arts; I forget the name, but he was known to have been adept at an Indian empty handed system as well as yoga and meditation), but it wasn't the first exposure the Chinese had to meditation or the concept of qi.
Bingo...Matt Stone said:Qi and qigong are far less important to the study of Taijiquan than they are to yoga. Taiji is a fighting art that employs the use of qi; it is not an exercise art that is applied for fighting.
matt, i agree with the second statement, but may be misinterpreting the context of the first. looks contradictory ???Matt Stone said:Qi and qigong are far less important to the study of Taijiquan than they are to yoga. Taiji is a fighting art that employs the use of qi; it is not an exercise art that is applied for fighting.
Matt Stone said:You can have great "soft" technique, and do no qigong, and have great skill. (true)
You can have great "qi", but poor technique, and all the qi in the world won't change the fact that your technique sucks... (true)
Qi and qigong supplement and reinforce. They are by products and secondary practices, not the primary focus. That would be similar to saying that loading a rifle is far more important that actually firing it and paying attention to the things that go into good marksmanship...
Qi is very important, but it "can" be done without. I'm not saying to do without, I'm saying that technique is far more important... The importance of qi has been overdone by the new age tree huggers who want to learn the martial art of non-fighting...
(for the internal stuff chi and technique go hand in hand, thats the point of an internal style, or part of the point)
Note the character next to my name... it is "qi," so it'd be odd of me to completely downplay it's importance, don't you think?
brothershaw said:This post is very clarifying of your views.