Self Defence


 

Surely, there's nothing permanent about you except what you think is permanent;
but your thinking is also transient, is it not?
And has truth a fixed place, without any movement?.


(Krishnamurti)

The way

Tai chi is not just an exercise routine. It is a system that combines health, meditation and self defence.

Yet it goes further than this...

The
art offers the individual the opportunity to find harmony with existence itself, to find your place in the world.
A variety of oriental disciplines have this same purpose in mind: calligraphy, tea ceremony, flower arrangement, zen
gardening, Japanese archery and swordsmanship.

Most Western students never go below the
surface of tai chi and consequently never know the richness of the art.

Eating the flowers

The tai chi form, qigong and pushing hands practice represent aspects of tai chi but do not represent the entire system.
Beginners often become overly-concerned with the peripheral, and spend little time focussed upon the core.
Lao Tzu warns us to eat the fruit, not the flowers.
We must not become enmeshed in the more superficial components of tai chi.


Eating the fruit

A good
tai chi syllabus is drawn straight from the pages of Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu.
It presents
taoist insights in the context of the tai chi classics.
Students are encouraged to explore their relationship with their bodies and other people.
They are given the opportunity to re-evaluate received
knowledge in the face of ancient Chinese wisdom.

Ideally, you will come to see the truth for yourself.

The
insight becomes apparent and you realise why things are done a certain way or why the choices you once saw were only a limited part of the available whole.




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Page created 18 January 2007