Y
yentao
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7starmantis said:I went back to some research I did a while back to see why it is I believed the way I did about taiji and kung fu. Here is basically what I had uncovered.
TAI CHI:
Many believe the "founder" of Tai Chi as we know it was Chang San-feng. There are those who believe his existence as literary, but acording to Ming-shih (the official chronicles of the Ming dynasty) he probably lived in the period from 1391 - 1459. Tai Chi being "created" sometime during this period.
However, many believe true taiji to have been created much earlier. In the early sixth century BC, there are writings from Lao Tsu which many believe are the beginings of taiji. Lao Tsu wrote:
Yield and Overcome;
Bend and be straight.
He who stands of tiptoe is not steady.
He who strides cannot maintain the pace.
Lao Tsu's entire writings reflect philosophical underpinnings of taiji. There are also accounts of a physician around 220 - 265 AD who not only relied on medicine but taught movements to strengthen the entire body. He believed that the body needed to be regularly exercised to help with digestion and circulation and only by doing so could a long and healthy live be achieved. Between these two historical "stories" many attribute the creation of taiji.
Kung Fu:
Not until the sixth century AD do we see the existence of Bodihdharma who is credited as developing the kung fu styles for the shaolin monastery. We all know that story.
Here is where my opinion begins, I think the principles of kung fu are also those of tai chi. I believe the writings of Lao Tsu are as much applicable to taiji as kung fu. The reason I say kung fu was influenced by taiji is that these "movements" were practiced medicinally before we see them being applied as martial arts. Honestly you could say the beging of CMA as a whole was writings like Lao Tsu's, but I choose to make the distinction because there was a different goal in mind for these movements from one time period to the next. When talking with my kung fu brothers and sisters we don't usually make this distinction because we all believe that taiji and kung fu are basically one, you learn the principles of 7* and those of taiji and they are identical. In our school we dont really care about what came first as we focus on truly learning it all. However, when addressing those outside my school where people get involved in researching historical documents and such its a must that we have some historical beliefs of when these things were created, so we stick to these beliefs.
JMHO,
7sm
I believe tai chi evolves from Chi Kung and Hsing I. The concept came from the book of changes by lao tzu.