
Taking something and making it your own makes a big difference. It's not just copying something, it's breaking it down, feeling what's going on and experiencing it for yourself.
(William Lewis)
Not all those who wander
are lost
We have been training martial arts for 30 years. Tai chi for the
last
20.
Every school of tai chi has their own
unique
way of exploring the art. We are no exception:
If you want a more detailed explanation, please browse the site or attend some lessons.
Our school has no
agenda, philosophy or political
position to promote. We are not salespeople.
We do not believe that our way is the only way. It is simply the way that
works for us and for the
people we teach.
Other schools and teachers should find their own way.
Our way is a quiet one, anonymous and unremarkable.
It is drawn from the long-term study of tai chi, taoism, zen and self
defence.
We will teach anyone who wants to learn and we will not impose our way upon
others.
If this site or any of our words are not to your liking, that is ok. It was
not written for you.
▲
We must always begin with
awareness.
Awareness is the act of
seeing. Of hearing. Of
feeling.
Awareness is the passive quality of
openness that enables us to experience
reality directly.
We want to be in the
here and now, in the moment, present and
experiencing.
We do not want to be
caught up in our
thoughts, opinions,
conditioning and
preconceptions.
Being in the
present moment is essential. We call this
condition 'meditation'.
▲
Being genuine
Modern culture has embraced
phoney behaviour. People forget how
liberating it is to be
simple and
honest.
Many people are
locked-up tight inside and profoundly uncomfortable with
themselves.
When you let your
barriers fall and learn how to be
yourself, it is very refreshing.
The pressure of maintaining a
front will vanish.
Until you
let-go and
express how you
feel, you cannot be spontaneous.
▲
Beyond form
There is more to
tai chi than
form.
Tai chi is about how we use the body. It is about moving naturally and
easily.
Without strain. Without
discomfort.
Your movements will be agile and your spirit of vitality will be high. You will begin to feel that your tai chi practice goes beyond simple form training, and you will be able to perceive things as energetic combinations rather than as static physical bodies.
(Yang Jwing-Ming)
Tai chi is also a martial art. It was designed to be used in
self defence.
Our
comprehensive syllabus aims to teach
people how to use tai chi effectively in modern times.
▲
Life presents us with many complex
situations.
There are countless
options, variables,
consequences and ramifications.
It is easy to worry, to panic, to become upset.
Anger must have something strong to hit against. If there is no response, no feedback, anger dissipates.
(John Lash)
We must aim to remain
calm,
detached and emotionally balanced.
This is not so easy.
In order for it to become a
habit we must gently challenge our capacity to
cope.
Stressful exercises and demanding
work
will not help you to stay
composed.
This is why we focus upon
fun.
Fun encourages
humour and you learn not to take life too
seriously.
If you
succeed, you succeed. If you
fail, you fail.
When you cease to worry about the
outcome you change.
When trying stops, things are
allowed to operate without
force.
Life becomes smoother and easier.
▲
We offer students a clear
path of progress through our
syllabus.
They know where they are, what they should be working on and have an idea of
what comes next.
At each stage of the curriculum the student possesses clearly defined skills
that can be proven in
self defence.
We know how to organise material in a
structured manner and teach it
systematically.
This way, each student is
free to progress at their
own pace.
▲
Talk is cheap in the modern world, so we
encourage direct
experience instead.
Nobody in the class is expected to take the
teacher's word for it. Find out for
yourself through practical
exercises.
Belief is not a requirement, nor is faith. You are not a
disciple.
We adopt a scientific approach. The evidence is to be
found in the doing and the proof in the
effect.
This is called 'empiricism':
Empiricism - finding valuable facts and discoveries through observation and experiment in the absence of any theory.
(Doug Marsh)
Discover the facts for yourself.
Feel it for yourself.
This is the heart of zen.
▲
Dynamic balancing
Balance is commonly seen as being a condition of
stillness and
rest.
Yet, people cannot reasonably find a fixed point of balance in their lives
because life is not static.
The changing nature of existence means that we need to be re-adjusting
constantly.
This process of continual re-adjustment is called 'dynamic balancing'
and occurs in relation to the changing
nature of what is happening.
We cannot expect to be 'balanced' because nothing in our
lives will ever remain stable and fixed.
▲
We offer innovative classes that challenge the student to understand the art
for themselves, on their own terms.
Students learn to be open, receptive and fluid.
Every single lesson is an opportunity to consider new ideas.
Students make connections and associations. They have new insights. They
explore possibilities.
People are constantly learning, evolving, incorporating and changing. So is
their tai chi.
Nothing is static.
▲
Tai chi uses
internal strength.
This is a unique
way of using the body, completely
unlike the external arts.
Internal strength does not require
tension. Strength is not pitted against strength.
The muscles remain
soft and loose, and the framework is
gently connected,
heavy and relaxed.
This sounds
easy in principle but is quite hard to
achieve in practice. It takes an awful lot of work to
accomplish and a lot of guidance.
We incorporate
50 internal strength concerns into our practice, with each new
quality strengthening
how the body works.
You may
know two hundred different martial arts but what is the quality of your
movements? It's still just movement, it doesn't matter how many forms you
know.
People with wisdom will use a tool properly, but a person with lower
knowledge will recognise only one function of the tool. In the same manner,
internal martial arts can be used for many functions because you use the
same tool. This training method is only one tool, but it has many different
uses.
You need to use one form for practice and include everything in it - mind,
structure, movement and qi. If you can easily do all of these within each
motion, that is the internal martial arts.
(Luo De Xiu)
It is difficult for many people to appreciate the nature of
softness, the power of yielding and the
liberty of gravity.
It seems to go against how we
typically use our bodies.
You need an
open mind. You need doubt. You need
curiosity. You need commitment.
▲
Martial arts people tend to thrust their limb at
a target and continue to push through upon
impact.
This approach is not good
physics.
Much of the kinetic
energy bounces back into the martial
artist, and fails to enter the opponent.
Inertia is the key to all tai chi
strikes in our school.
The arm is thrown out from the body, then the arm returns and the kinetic
energy continues.
Just like a whip.
The ability to
generate and project kinetic energy is one
of the principle skills in tai chi.
Your
muscles are used to
move
the arm in space, not push against the target.
Though the jing is soft, the damage is hard.
(Yang Jwing-Ming)
The study of energy and its effect upon somebody else is called 'jing'. Not
all jing are concerned with striking.
▲
You must learn how to work
with your body, rather than against it.
Martial arts stances and postures often
ignore the physics of the
body and exert constantly.
Tension is created as a consequence of
strain and the body is subjected to
sustained pressure.
Deep,
long, narrow, awkward stances... these can
lead to strain.
Tai chi
movements are really very simple but students insist upon making tai chi
difficult by adding extra moves.
Tai chi is not complicated; people are complicated.
(John Lash)
We need to feel where our
natural range is, and work within that.
We need to
be in our backs, legs and our torso, not
out in the hands.
Tai chi
can never simply involve
copying what somebody else is doing.
You must feel what is
right for your body. What is comfortable. What causes no
injury or
strain.
What
works.
We teach
spontaneous, comfortable, natural,
effortless, healthy movement.
▲
Neuroplasticity
There is growing scientific evidence that the brain can be kept healthy and
functioning as we grow older.
Challenging existing modes of thought, dropping long-held opinions and
learning new skills causes the body to grow new brain tissue to cope with
the demands of change.
Students come with less than perfect faith. It is important that students bring a certain ragamuffin, barefoot irreverence to their studies; they are not here to worship what is known, but to question it.
(Jacob Bronowski)
Our
syllabus encourages people to fundamentally change the way in which they perceive
reality.
This is one of the reasons why tao and zen study are so important.
We experience reality in our minds. All sensory data is processed and
interpreted by the mind.
This is where the tai chi study really takes place.
▲
Relationship
Tai chi and life involve constant
interaction with other people.
It is necessary to make these
relationships harmonious.
Being in
conflict with another
person is
unpleasant.
We look at how to
meet incoming force
softly, neutralise, re-direct, smother or
evade.
There are no blocks in tai chi. We never oppose force.
The equivalent
process to seeking the "Holy Grail" in internal arts is the ability to move
more slowly than your opponent and consistently win.
Slower speed that wins out requires three types of speed coming together
simultaneously:
1. Timing.
2. The signals required to maintain some level of conscious power.
3. The ability to release the internal gears of your body, which, if they
freeze up, can create a momentary mental gap that breaks the connection
between you and your opponent.
This method is referred to in the tai chi classics in the form of a
question:
"How is it possible that an old man can defeat a group of younger men?"
Obviously, elderly men, even the most talented, are not physically capable
of moving at the speed of young men. Virtually, by definition, the elderly
move with slowness, and yet those old men internal arts masters by slipping
in between the gaps, are justifiably well-known for defeating younger and
faster men.
(Bruce Frantzis)
Instead of moving within the framework of our rigid
thoughts, opinions, plans and
ideas, we
move with what is happening.
Every situation in life offers a tremendous number of
variables, possibilities and choices.
Learning how to
adapt, change and improvise is essential.
▲
Tai chi was developed in the
16th Century to address the
self defence needs of the time.
It can be just as relevant in the
21st Century if we remain practical.
Westerners have some very good ideals. One is that they like the guts, they
want to go to the heart of the matter and get the real stuff. They don't
care about all the fluff. How does it work? Tell me how it works, then I'll
do it.
The Chinese way is to have faith, do it a long time and maybe I'll tell you
how it works.
(Allen Pittman)
There is a functional martial art at the root of tai chi.
The repertoire is incredible and the possibilities considerable.
But you must keep your mind grounded in the
real. In the here and now.
Our students work through
simple skills at first.
They learn how to be loose, soft and sensitive. They use gravity and
balance rather than force.
They learn how to have
fun and be
exuberant without hurting one another.
▲
The
beginners syllabus considers self defence
at a very basic level.
Intermediate, experienced and advanced level students work through an extensive range of skills:
13 postures,
2 person form, 4 ounces
of
pressure,
central equilibrium,
chin na,
composure,
da lu,
defence against a knife,
fa jing,
folding,
freeform self defence, grappling,
gravity striking,
groundpath,
jing,
kicking,
monkey paws,
neigong,
opening & closing,
pushing hands,
qigong,
reeling silk,
seizing,
shen,
softness,
sticks,
sung,
uniting upper & lower,
wu nien,
wu wei,
yielding
and
yin/yang.
Over the centuries many variations of the movements have been taught, but provided the principles are adhered to there is no need for the student to doubt the authenticity of what he is being taught.
(Paul Crompton)
When you adhere
assiduously to the tai chi principles and
the tai chi
way of moving the body, the skills emerge
progressively.
▲
The style
The
Yang Cheng Fu form has been interpreted by
many schools in many
different ways.
Our school aims to present a fluid,
natural form that teaches internal
strength and pragmatic martial insights.
One can function freely and
totally if he is 'beyond system'.
The man who is really serious, with the urge to find out what truth is, has no
style at all.
He lives only in what is.
(Bruce Lee)
We learn how to employ its
principles and strategies in
self defence, and how to
maximise the health benefits.
Learning other
forms is
unnecessary.
This one
form can be studied for
decades and still offers new
insights and skills.
▲
Tai chi makes more sense
when considered in the
context of taoism and the
tai chi classics.
Understanding
taoism is not so easy. It requires a
commitment to study and an
open mind.
Students are not expected to buy
books and begin research
immediately.
This
website provides a start, a taster. Begin
here.
The
tai chi classics are a description of how
taoist
insights can be applied to the art of
movement and self
defence.
Comprehension takes
patience, and requires an opportunity to
experiment and
explore.
Your own study and experience, during which you ponder silently in your own mind, is the main source of improvement.
(Yang Jwing-Ming)
We provide this opportunity.
▲
(i) Learning a skill
We teach a relatively small, thorough syllabus which offers considerable
scope for deeper study.
Instead of learning things superficially, we encourage our students to look
more carefully.
Understanding takes time. It requires specialism.
(ii) Access to all
In our school the
stances are high and we focus upon
natural, comfortable body
movement.
This means that there is no strain, regardless of age. Anybody can learn the
skills if they put in the work.
Self defence is just the same. We do not rely upon size, strength or speed.
▲
Yielding is all about creating
space.
When you have room to move, to choose, to adapt - you can
cope.
The
pressure is removed and you have
time.
You have an opportunity.
Yielding also enables you to move with what is
happening.
This is not as easy as it sounds, and requires softness of mind and body. It
requires true sensitivity.
Yielding may hurt the ego, but the ego has no place in tai chi.
(John Lash)
Page created 9 September 1998