Just today, I was searching Youtube for an example of a Shaolin Broadsword video to show someone, and on a whim typed in 'wushu staff' as I had always wondered how the form had found its way into the SK system. It stuck out like a sore thumb, but I just assumed it was 'pretend Chinese' like most of the upper black belt forms. I was surprised to find out it was a real, honest to goodness contemporary wushu form.
I kept looking, and found a few more examples. I embedded them all in a post at my site, but essentially they are the same movements.
32 move basic wushu staff. Who knew?
Does anyone else have this one in their SKK curriculum? I'm actually relieved to find out we stole ... I mean incorporated... a real form.
I've always enjoyed this one, now I will with less guilt.
The only residual guilt is that I never bothered to ask anyone from outside the system about the origin, as pretty much any intermediate wushu student could have apparently set me straight.
I kept looking, and found a few more examples. I embedded them all in a post at my site, but essentially they are the same movements.
32 move basic wushu staff. Who knew?
Does anyone else have this one in their SKK curriculum? I'm actually relieved to find out we stole ... I mean incorporated... a real form.
I've always enjoyed this one, now I will with less guilt.
