Xue Sheng
All weight is underside
Figured out something last night while training Piquan on a heavy bag.
I have read a few books on Xingyiquan and in at least one of the old translations and another form Di Guoyong, they talk about the striking force of Piquan and how it can move the person being hit quite a long way backwards. This is not magic or Qi it is how the body reacts to being hit, structure and physics.
The force is said to go downward, forward and then upward (This all happens rather fast by the way). And it is that upward force and forward that breaks the root and causes the other person to fall down, or fly backwards. The initial downward/forward causes the person being hit to resist and push back, this to helps with the breaking of the root using the forward and upward force.
The downward and forward are pretty obvious but I could not figure out where the heck the upward came from or how you got any force in it without moving differently after the strike and still maintain structure. I think last night I figured it out and it all has to do with the trailing foot and the hitting of the ground with no backward movement that does it.
Now as I said, I think I figured it out, and I have done it slow, but I am in no way able to apply it yet with speed and power...only took me about 20 years (of non-contiguous training) to get here, so I have no idea how long it will be till I can make it work like the old translation and Di Guoyong say it is supposed to work
I have read a few books on Xingyiquan and in at least one of the old translations and another form Di Guoyong, they talk about the striking force of Piquan and how it can move the person being hit quite a long way backwards. This is not magic or Qi it is how the body reacts to being hit, structure and physics.
The force is said to go downward, forward and then upward (This all happens rather fast by the way). And it is that upward force and forward that breaks the root and causes the other person to fall down, or fly backwards. The initial downward/forward causes the person being hit to resist and push back, this to helps with the breaking of the root using the forward and upward force.
The downward and forward are pretty obvious but I could not figure out where the heck the upward came from or how you got any force in it without moving differently after the strike and still maintain structure. I think last night I figured it out and it all has to do with the trailing foot and the hitting of the ground with no backward movement that does it.
Now as I said, I think I figured it out, and I have done it slow, but I am in no way able to apply it yet with speed and power...only took me about 20 years (of non-contiguous training) to get here, so I have no idea how long it will be till I can make it work like the old translation and Di Guoyong say it is supposed to work