The Yin and Yang of Taijiquan
The Yin and Yang of Taijiquan
The Yin and Yang of Taijiquan
Taiji Theory
Taiji theory has its roots in ancient Chinese philosophy, and its origin dates
back at least 2500 years. It is likely that the basic concepts of Taiji theory are
rooted in Chinese mysticism which predates formal Chinese philosophy by
many thousands of years, although there are no historic records to document
this.
Students of taijiquan should be concerned with Taiji theory as it lies at the
very center of their art. Yang Cheng-fu taught that the entire universe is one
great Taiji, and that the human body is a small Taiji. As practitioners of the
art of taijiquan, it is, therefore, important to understand what Taiji theory
encompasses and how this theory relates to the study of the art that bears its
name.
The Chinese characters which make up the word Taiji (or T’ai Chi in the
Wade-Giles system) are usually translated as “supreme ultimate.” This
translation, however, does not capture the deeper meaning of Taiji theory. An
alternative translation, “grand terminus,” is more indicative of the
significance of both Taiji theory and of the Taiji symbol, which will be
addressed later in this section.
A terminus is a beginning or ending point. Think of a bus terminal or a train
station. Journeys, both literal and figurative, begin and end at such locations.
Similarly, in Taiji theory the two mutually supportive energies of yin and
yang have their beginnings and their endings within Taiji. Indeed, Taiji
theory is based on the interplay of yin and yang, and any discussion of Taiji
theory must explore the concept of yin/yang in detail.
Taiji theory is based upon the concept of the duality of yin and yang, which
are customarily represented as polar opposites. However, treating yin and
yang simply as opposing energies or qualities does not completely capture the
essence of the relationship between them. Nonetheless, it is beneficial to
consider these two energies as dialectically opposed for now. Within Chinese
philosophy, yang is typically associated with the following entities and
qualities: heaven, sun, fire, day, light, heat, dry, masculine, strength,
exhalation, and expansion. Yin, on the other hand, is associated with: earth,
moon, water, night, darkness, cold, wet, feminine, weakness, inhalation, and
contraction.
According to this representation, yin and yang oppose each other and strive to
succeed or overthrow one another. However, because each is equally
powerful, neither can succeed in dominating the other, and so their mutual
interaction continues in an infinite interplay of opposing energies. This
concept is best illustrated by considering the cycle of day and night, each
following the other but neither able to suppress the other.
Although yin and yang are in opposition, Taiji theory posits that they are also
mutually supportive. For example, day supports night; man supports woman
(or, more realistically, woman supports man!); inhalation supports exhalation.
Within the art of taijiquan, yang relates to the substantial and yin relates to
the insubstantial. One of the fundamental principles of taijiquan is to
“distinguish between the substantial and the insubstantial.” For example, the
Yang style posture of Ward-Off, shown below in Figure 1-1a is a yang
posture, while its counterpart, Rollback, depicted in Figure 1-1b, is a yin
posture.
Figure 1-1a
Figure 1-1b
However, the relationship between yin and yang pervades every aspect of our
art. Consider the posture of Ward-off Right, shown above in Figure 1-1a;
although it is a yang posture, it contains both yin and yang aspects. Further,
the yin aspect of the posture supports the posture’s primarily yang role. The
right arm is substantial, or yang, while the left arm is yin. The left, downward
facing yin arm supports the right, outward facing yang arm. Similarly, the
right, warding-off arm is supported by the yielding, or yin, left leg.
Furthermore, the substantial, or yang, right leg is balanced by the counter-
weight of the yin left arm.
The spiraling chan ssu jin energy characteristic of Chen style taijiquan also
contains both yin and yang energies. The energy of chan ssu jin can be
divided into two aspects, ni chan and shun chan, which together constitute a
complete circle. Shun chan encompasses the first half of the circle and is used
for neutralizing or redirecting an incoming force. Ni chan comprises the
second half of the circle and is employed to control an opponent using his
own energy against him. According the yin/yang theory, shun chan is yin, and
ni chan is correspondingly yang. Figure 1-2 depicts these complimentary
spiraling energies in the movements of the hands in silk-reeling training as
they trace the Taiji symbol. The diagram on the left represents the left hand’s
movements, while the diagram on the right depicts the right hand’s
movements. As either hand moves up from the bottom of the diagram to the
top, it is executing shun chan; and when either hand turns down at point 3, it
switches to ni chan.
Figure 1-2
In Sun style taijiquan, the interplay of yang and yin are seen most clearly in
the opening and closing movements which are a distinguishing feature of this
style. In his classic treatise on taijiquan, A Study of Taijiquan, Sun Lutang
explained that opening is employed to expand and to move, whereas closing
is used to contract and to be still. Opening, expanding, issuing, or moving is
yang and closing, withdrawing, contracting, or becoming still is yin.17 Figure
1-3, shown below, depicts the complementary postures of Opening Hands
and Closing Hands in the Sun style of taijiquan.
Figure 1-3
Wu style taijiquan similarly employs the dual concepts of rou and gan in
order to express the coaction yin and yang in both the form and in tuishou.
Wu Chian-chaun, emphasized the special quality of the interaction of rou
(softness) and gan (power) which is in accord with the theory of the mutually
supporting energies of yin and yang.18 Figure 1-4 illustrates this mutual
relationship between yin (figure in white) and yang (figure in black) during
tuishou, or pushing hands.
Figure 1-4
You should discover these balanced yin/yang relationships in every posture
of your form. Indeed, this is such an important consideration in mastering the
art of taijiquan that Chapter Eleven is dedicated to explaining these
relationships within specific postures taken from a variety of family taijiquan
styles.
When discussing the properties of yin and yang, it is important to recognize
that there is no inherent “yinness” or “yangness” in a concrete sense. You
cannot see yin; you cannot taste or smell yang. However, one can detect the
yin quality of the color green as compared to the yang quality of the color
red, for example. Also, you can clearly taste the yang quality of a jabanero
chile as compared to the yin quality of a cucumber. Furthermore, yin and
yang are not absolute. It is possible for one thing to be more yang than
another. When comparing two red colors, for example, you can determine
that one is more yang than the other.
Clearly, the qualities of yin and yang are relative, both to each other and to
themselves. Considering the example of day and night, it would be pointless
to say that day is yang if night did not exist to be yin in contrast. So, the yang
quality of day is relative to the yin quality of night. Moreover, within both yin
and yang, there can be gradations. Something can be more or less yang than
another thing. This is equally true of the quality of yin. For example, although
day is considered to be yang, the weak daylight experienced in northern
climes during the winter months is clearly less yang than the long, hot days of
those same locales during the summer months.
Taiji theory dictates that yin and yang should exist in equilibrium, with
neither dominating the other. While yin and yang ideally coexist in balance
and harmony, it is possible for one to temporarily overwhelm the other. This
is evident with regard to the weather. If the sun shines unimpeded on a region
for too long, the land becomes hot and dry, and the ocean temperature rises.
This is an excess of yang. However, eventually the rising temperature of the
ocean will cause evaporation, creating clouds that will in turn coalesce into
thunderstorms. The relative heat differential between the land mass and the
ocean will create wind currents that will drive the thunderheads onto the land,
where they will generate rain, thus obscuring the sun and cooling the land.
Ultimately, the natural environment will be brought back into balance. This
concept of excess returning to equilibrium is a key principle of Taiji theory.
As you are probably aware, the Chinese written language is based upon
ideograms. From the earliest examples of Chinese writing, the Chinese have
relied upon symbols not only to stand for actual objects, such as “man,”
“tree,” and “mountain,” but also to represent abstract concepts. One symbol,
more than any other from Chinese culture, has become universally
recognized: the Taiji symbol. This symbol, an example of which is shown
below in Figure 1-5, represents the interplay of yin and yang within Taiji.
Figure 1-5
Conveyed within the twin semicircles of the Taiji symbol are the mutual
production of yin and yang, the complementary exchange of hard and soft,
the thousand changes, and ten thousand transformations. This is the basis for
taijiquan. Indeed, taijiquan is the embodiment of the Taiji symbol. Besides
the representation of the Taiji symbol shown in Figure 1-5, there are
numerous symbolic depictions of Taiji. The representation presented above is
one of the most common and includes several features important to Taiji
theory. The first prominent feature is the division of the circle into two equal
portions. The white half on the left represents yang, which is symbolic of
light, day, the sun, etc. The black half on the right represents yin, which is
represents of darkness, night, the moon, and so on.
Another prominent feature of the Taiji symbol as presented above is that the
circle is not merely divided vertically into two perfect semicircles. Instead,
the white half bulges slightly into the right half at the top of the circle,
whereas the black half bulges slightly into the left half at the bottom of the
circle. The curved aspect of each semicircle is meant to indicate that there are
times when yang dominates yin and times when yin dominates yang. Taken
as a whole, however, it is apparent that yang and yin coexist in perfect
harmony and balance.
The curvilinear shape of the yang portion of the Taiji symbol also represents
the concept of yang arising out of extreme yin. At the bottom of the circle,
when yin has reached its maximum, yang emerges, albeit weakly at first.
Yang then grows in strength on the left-hand side of the circle to a point
where yin and yang are balanced (in the center of the circle.) Ultimately, yang
reaches its zenith, a condition known as “extreme yang,” at the top of the
circle. Just as extreme yin is unsustainable, so extreme yang gives rise to
weak yin, which follows a parallel progression on the right-hand side of the
circle.
We find ample evidence of extreme yang giving rise to weak yin and vice-
versa in the transitions between the postures of the form. Consider the
transition from the Yang style posture of Ward-Off Right into the posture of
Rollback, presented previously in Figures 1-1a and 1-1b. As discussed above,
when one completes the Ward-Off Right posture, the right hand is in a yang
state. Even though this hand is supported by the left, yin hand, its yang state
cannot be maintained for long. However, rather than directly withdrawing the
hand, the practitioner allows it to become even more yang by extending it
slightly out and to the right.
At this point, the right hand as well as the entire Ward-Off posture has
reached a point of extreme yang, which cannot be sustained. The practitioner
must withdraw from this position of extreme yang and transition into
Rollback. The right hand becomes yin, as does the right leg; and the
previously yin left hand takes over the substantial, or yang role as we
intercept and guide the opponent’s energy down and to our left. Similarly, the
left leg assumes the yang role previously held by the right leg, which now
becomes yin or insubstantial.
A similar transformation from yang to yin occurs during the Chen style
transition from Lazily Tying the Coat into Six Sealing and Four Closing. In
the finished position of Lazily Tying the Coat, the right hand is substantial, or
yang, and the left hand is yin in support of the right hand. Taking into account
the chan ssu jin aspect of this posture, the outward spiraling energy (ni chan)
has reached its apex in the leading edge of the right hand. The right hand is
then pulled back and withdrawn to return the spiraling energy into the
dantien (shun chan). This corresponds to the yin portion of the Taiji circle. At
the same time, the left, or yin hand, turns over and becomes more yang as we
step outward into the new posture of Six Sealing and Four Closing. This can
be readily observed in the sequence illustrated below in Figure 1-6.
Figure 1-6
In Chen style taijiquan, the legs must also be assigned yang (substantial) and
yin (insubstantial) roles in each posture. Especially during the transitions
between postures, the changes between substantial and insubstantial that
occur between the two legs reflect the interchange of yin and yang in the
lower portion of the body. Throughout the practice of the form, one leg must
be substantial, supporting the larger portion of the body’s weight, while the
other is insubstantial and acts in support of the substantial leg. This unequal
distribution of the body’s weight enables the practitioner to easily transfer the
weight from one leg to the other when transitioning between postures.
As the preceding examples illustrate, in addition to distinguishing between
yin and yang within the postures themselves, students of taijiquan need to be
able to make the transitions from yang to yin and from yin to yang during the
transitions from one posture to the next. Chapter Ten, which presents
individual postures and their transitions, will assist you in developing this
essential skill.
Yet another significant feature of the of the Taiji symbol shown in Figure 1-5
is the location of a smaller circle of contrasting color within each of the larger
semicircles. Located at the top of the white yang semicircle is a small, black
yin circle. Similarly, located at bottom of the black yin semicircle is a small,
white yang circle.
The pictorial representation of Taiji provided by the simple Taiji symbol
allows us to visually apprehend many of the principles of Taiji theory. A
second alternative translation of the Chinese characters that comprise Taiji is
“great union.” The great union of yin and yang is readily apparent within the
Taiji symbol. This is especially true if the two curvilinear semicircles, with
the smaller inscribed circles, are viewed as a pair of fish. With a bit of
imagination, these two semicircles, each with a small circle located within,
appear to be a pair of intertwined fish, swimming in an infinite circle. The
two fish, one male and one female, are forever joined in a cosmic dance, one
chasing the other into infinity.
Figure 1-7
The significance of the two small circles within the larger semi-circles is as
follows. Taiji theory specifies that within yang there is always some yin, and
that within yin there is always some yang. It is the presence of this small
amount of yin at the point of extreme yang that allows yin to emerge on its
own. Equally, the presence of a small amount of yang within extreme yin
enables yang to emerge on its own.
The presence of yin within yang and vice-versa is an important concept in
tuishou (pushing hands), especially within the execution of the push. If we do
not withhold some of the energy of the push, whether it be li strength or
internal fa jin power, a skilled opponent will be able to borrow the yang
energy of the push and use it to roll us back. However, by keeping some
reserve, or yin, in the push, we are able to detect if the opponent is attempting
to borrow our pushing energy and can instead change the push into shoulder
stroke or some other response to their attempt to roll us back. In so doing, we
learn not to overcommit to our attack.
Yet another element of Taiji theory suggested by the Taiji symbol is that of
movement or change. In the traditional Taiji symbol, the white yang
semicircle seems to rise up from the bottom of the symbol, while the yin
semicircle appears to descend downwards. The image of the two fish, shown
above, represents this sense of motion even more graphically.
Change is the inherent nature of the universe. Without movement and change,
the universe would not exist. Taiji theory states that Taiji emerged from Wuji,
the formless void, when Wuji began to move. This movement generated Taiji,
which consisted of heaven and earth, whose characteristics are yang and yin
respectively. This transition is depicted in Figure 1-8 below. The interplay of
heaven and earth gave rise to humankind (“man” in traditional Chinese
philosophy). From these original three arose all “the ten thousand things”
which make up the cosmos.
Figure 1-8
When we practice the taijiquan form, we begin by standing in wuji posture.
Within this posture, there is no distinction between yin and yang. There is no
substantial leg and no insubstantial leg; no substantial arm and no
insubstantial arm. There is no separation between the upper body and the
lower body. Most importantly, there is no movement. The entire body is still.
Nonetheless, the potential for movement is present within this wuji posture.
Indeed, the Classics state that the entire form is contained within the
beginning wuji posture. Sun Lu-tang commented specifically upon the
importance of reaching a state of complete calm and emptiness by standing in
the wuji posture for some period of time before stepping out into the taiji
posture to commence the form.
Once we have the idea in our heart/mind to begin the form, the simple
intention of moving spurs yin and yang to separate. If we move from the taiji
posture directly into Ward-Off Left, as the form developed by Yang Cheng-
fu originally did (that is to say, without the raising and lowering of the hands
that one normally associates with the opening of the Yang style form), then
one side of the body becomes yang and the other side becomes yin as
described previously. Further, the extreme yang of Ward-Off Left gives rise
to a slight neutralizing, or yin aspect to the left side as we transition into
Ward-Off Right. Throughout the form yang arises and diminishes, giving rise
to yin, and vice-versa.
Regardless of family style, all styles of taijiquan share the common feature
that the sequence of postures transitions from yang to yin and from yin to
yang. One begins the form by standing quietly in wuji posture and then
transitions into the commencement of the form, proceeding from one posture
to the next, on and on until one reaches the conclusion of the form, finishing
by settling once again into wuji posture. Thus it is apparent that the taijiquan
form truly is an embodiment of Taiji theory. When one practices the form,
one is actually practicing Taiji.
Advance: Brush Knee, Twist Step (Yang style); Advance Step, Deflect,
Parry and Punch (Sun style); Six Sealing and Four Closing (Chen style)
Retreat: Step Back to Repulse Monkey (Yang and Wu styles); Retreat
Step and Lazily Tying the Clothes (Sun style); Step Back and Whirl
Arms (Chen style)
Look Left: Wave Hands Like Clouds (Yang and Wu styles); Single
Whip (Sun style); Dash Leftward (Chen Style)
Gaze Right: the turning to the right in Wave Hands Like Clouds (Yang
and Wu styles); Jade Lady Works the Shuttles (Sun style); Dash
Rightward (Chen style)
Central Equilibrium: the Opening and Closing postures of the various
styles.
Bagua Theory
When the ancient Chinese wanted to represent the concepts of yin and yang,
they chose simple ideograms. They employed a single, unbroken horizontal
line to represent yang and a broken horizontal line to represent yin. See
Figure 1-9 below.
Figure 1-9
The ancient Chinese sages realized that by combining these yin and yang
lines, they could represent various situations. By combining two lines, we get
the following four groupings:
Figure 1-10
These same ancient sages realized that four descriptive categories were
insufficient to describe all natural events and human affairs, so they added a
third line to create eight unique groupings. These groupings, known as
trigrams, became the Bagua. The eight trigrams are presented below, along
with their Chinese names, their shape names, and the aspect of nature which
they represent:
In its infancy, the art of divination, or geomancy, relied upon the eight
trigrams in order to predict the future as well as to advise on the action to be
taken in a given situation. However, eight situations proved very limiting, so
the eight trigrams were further arranged into pairs, giving rise to sixty-four
hexagrams. The sixty-four hexagrams formed the basis of the I Ching, or
Book of Changes, which has served as the standard tool for divination in
China for more than 2,500 years.
Each of the sixty-four hexagrams are named and described in the I Ching
along with a short commentary on the meaning and application of the
hexagram to various situations. Skilled geomancers would employ the I
Ching after performing a ritualized ceremony involving the casting of yarrow
stalks to help decide upon a course of action arising out of a given situation
or even to predict the future.
The I Ching describes the formation of the eight trigrams, or Bagua, as
follows: First there was the Taiji, or the Grand Terminus, which generated
the two forms, or Liung-Yi. Those two forms generated the four symbols, or
Ssu-Hsiang. Those four symbols divided further to generate the eight
trigrams, or Bagua.
Figure 1-11
The sixty-four hexagrams became the basis for the I Ching, which is the most
widely referenced book in classical Chinese culture. However, the basic eight
trigrams of the Bagua also remained very influential in Chinese thought. The
relationships between the eight trigrams and their application to natural
phenomena as well as to human affairs forms the basis of Bagua theory,
which has had a significant influence upon classical Chinese culture.
The Chen family adapted Bagua theory to provide a theoretical construct
which, in conjunction with the Five Steps, provided a classical theoretical
foundation for the Original Thirteen Postures. This knowledge was passed on
to Yang Lu-chan from Chen Chang-xing and became a cornerstone of Yang
style taijiquan. Yang Chen-2 explicitly stated in his The Essence and
Applications of Taijiquan, that taijiquan is based upon the Taiji theory and
Bagua theory, and also specifically referred to the I Ching.19
The eight trigrams were referred to as the “eight gates,” and each gate was
assigned a posture from the Original Thirteen Postures along with a cardinal
point. According to the Yang family classification scheme, the eight trigrams
were assigned as follows:
Conclusion
This chapter has provided a basic introduction to the theoretical foundation of
the martial art of taijiquan. This foundation is based upon Taiji theory, Five
Elements theory, and Bagua theory. The coverage of each of the three
theories presented here is by no means complete. For further discussion of
each of these theories, the reader is referred to Jou Tsung Hwa’s excellent
text, The Tao of Tai-Chi Chuan. While there is great controversy among
scholars of taijiquan as to when and who originally attributed these theories
to taijiquan, it is nonetheless clear that the all the major family traditions
consider Taiji theory, Five Elements theory, and Bagua theory to be
fundamental to their art. Understanding the theoretical foundations of
taijiquan will add depth and dimension to your understanding and practice of
this sophisticated and complex martial art.
As fundamental as these three theories are to the art of taijiquan, in many
ways the philosophical foundation provided by Taoism, particularly the Tao
Te Ching, is even more important to the formulation and development of
taijiquan. The following chapter presents an introduction to the relationship
between Taoism and taijiquan. Along with Taiji theory, Five Elements
theory, and Bagua theory, an appreciation of the philosophy of Taoism is
essential to understanding the art of taijiquan.
Chapter Two
The art taijiquan stands upon two pillars, one theoretical and one
philosophical. The theoretical foundation is derived from Taiji theory, Five
Elements theory and Bagua theory, which were presented in the previous
chapter. The philosophical foundation of taijiquan is based primarily on
Taoism, particularly the seminal writings of Lao Tzu as recorded in the Tao
Te Ching. The close relationship between taijiquan and Taoism manifests
itself through numerous references to Lao Tzu and the Tao in the Taijiquan
Classics as well as in the writings of the original masters, their descendants
and their disciples. Professor Cheng Man-ch’ing, a disciple of Yang Cheng-
fu, often stated that the fundamental principles of taijiquan were derived from
the teachings of Lao Tzu.22
The influence of Taoism also can be seen in the circular movements and in
the continual interchange of hard and soft, open and closed, substantial and
insubstantial that occur in Chen style taijiquan. The principles that underlie
Chen taijiquan theory closely reflect the Taoist ideas of the separation of yin
and yang and distinguishing between insubstantial and substantial.
One of the key concepts of Taoism is that softness overcomes hardness. This
is also a key concept in taijiquan. The legend of the origin of taijiquan
recounts that Chang San Feng, a Taoist hermit, witnessed a bird attacking a
snake. Rather than rigidly resisting the bird’s attacks, the snake evaded the
bird's beak and talons by withdrawing, coiling, and then suddenly striking.
Figure 2-1
From this incident, Chang San Feng reputedly developed a complete martial
art based on the concept of soft overcoming hard. From his observation of the
combat between the bird and the snake, he received a revelation. The coiled
form of the snake was like the Taiji symbol and the actions of the snake
embodied the principle of the soft overcoming the hard. When the crane
attacked the snake’s head, it withdrew its head and counter-attacked with its
tail. If the crane attacked the snake’s tail, it withdrew its tail and struck with
its fangs. According to legend, Chang San Feng developed taijiquan based
upon the sinuous movements of the snake.
As many taijiquan masters of his generation, Sun Lutang also ascribed the
origin of taijiquan to Chang San Feng. In his book, A Study of Taijiquan, he
related that Chang San Feng cultivated the Tao at Wu Dang Mountain. He
stated that Chang San Feng practiced the Taoist practices of Tendon
Changing and Marrow Washing, as well as utilizing Zhou Zi’s Taiji symbol.
Sun Lu-tang claimed that Chang San Feng followed these natural principles
in order to develop the art of taijiquan.23
Modern historians and scholars of the art of taijiquan dismiss the origin myth
of Chang San Feng and attribute the actual development of taijiquan to the
Chen family, beginning with the Chen Wangting in the 17th century AD.
Regardless of its origins, it is undeniable that the art of taijiquan is deeply
imbued with principles and concepts derived from Taoist philosophy. When
you practice the art of taijiquan you are, in essence, following the Tao or
“Way” of the natural world. For this reason, all students of taijiquan should
at least read the Tao Te Ching and attempt to internalize the wisdom of this
ancient handbook of Taoist philosophy. This chapter provides a brief
background on Taoism and relates the concepts and principles of Taoism to
the art of taijiquan.
This simple statement, consisting of a brief ten words, defines the principle of
wu wei concisely.
Another cornerstone of Taoism is the principle of yielding, of softness
overcoming hardness. In verse 36 of the Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu states, “The
soft and weak overcomes the hard and strong.”25 The meaning of this simple
statement is that it is better to be yielding than to be rigid. When using
taijiquan for self-defense, if your opponent use hard force, you should
employ softness to neutralize it. When your opponent attacks fiercely, you
should rely upon stillness and yielding to neutralize the attack. Extreme
softness and stillness are the embodiment of yin. When extreme yang
encounters extreme yin, the yang will always be defeated.
There are numerous references to this principle in the Tao Te Ching. Verse
76 states:
Man at his birth is supple and weak;
at his death, stiff and hard.
Trees and plants are born tender and pliant;
at their death, dry and withered.
Firmness and strength are the concomitants of death;
softness and weakness, the concomitants of life.
Hence, he who relies on the strength of his force
does not conquer.
And a tree that is strong will not fill out the outstretched arms
and thereby invites the feller.
Therefore the place of what is firm and strong is below,
and that of what is soft and weak is above.26
The Taoist metaphor for softness is water. While water possesses the quality
of softness, the power and destructiveness of water cannot be overlooked.
The Tao Te Ching expresses this concept succinctly in Verse 78:
There is nothing in the world
more soft and weak than water.
Yet for attacking things that are firm and strong,
When practicing the art of taijiquan, whether it be flowing the form, working
with weapons, playing pushing hands, practicing or dalu, or engaging in
sparring, we must keep to softness and stillness and avoid excessive, hard
force and jerky or uneven movements. Yang Chen-fu stated that the most
important principle in taijiquan is the presence of stillness within motion. He
instructed his disciples to seek stillness in every movement and to proceed
evenly from one posture to the next.
The martial art of taijiquan is based upon skill and sensitivity rather than
reliance upon brute force and strength. The practitioner relies upon softness,
yielding, and neutralizing to overcome hardness and aggression. The
Taijiquan Classics advise the practitioner to look to the method of using four
ounces of energy to control a force of a thousand pounds. The effectiveness
of taijiquan does not depend on force to overcome force, or hardness to
overcome hardness. In the past, the old masters were able to successfully
defend themselves against many younger, stronger opponents at once. They
did not depend upon strength and quickness, but instead relied upon softness
and stillness to overcome their opponents.
Above all, as students of taijiquan we are also students of the Tao. Practicing
of the art of taijiquan, we learn to balance yin and yang and to find harmony
within ourselves and with others. By learning to become loose and relaxed in
the face of stiffness and aggression, we learn to remain calm in the face of
adversity. Cultivating our “mighty qi,” we improve our health and vitality.
The great benefit from our daily practice is to increase longevity and enjoy a
“springtime of eternal youth.”
Conclusion
As the title of this book states, the art of taijiquan combines the civil with the
martial. The civil component of taijiquan encompasses both the health and
spiritual aspects of the art. In contrast, the martial component of the art
includes the combat applications of the postures, along with pushing hands,
weapons and sparring. Taken together, these may be considered to be the yin
and the yang of taijiquan. Many other martial arts also claim to promote both
martial skill and health. Unlike those other martial arts, however, taijiquan
contains an underlying element of spirituality. This is evident in the
numerous references to the “spirit” in the Taijiquan Classics as well as in the
writings of the taijiquan masters.
An example from the Classics is the instruction to “thread the spirit to the
crown of the head.” As we practice the solo form, engage in pushing hands,
or even undertake actual combat, we should always maintain this intangible
and yet very real connection with heaven. At the same time, we must
maintain our connection to the earth through the technique of “rooting.”
The practice of taijiquan, therefore, serves to integrate our human nature with
the natural forces of heaven and earth. In so doing, the Three Treasures of
heaven, earth and humanity are brought into balance and harmony. This is the
way of the Tao. By actively incorporating the Tao into our practice, we
cultivate the highest degree of civil pursuit, that of spiritual attainment. The
ancients taught that the human body represents the universe in miniature, i.e.
a microcosm. If we can learn to cultivate and nourish our ching, qi and shen,
then we will become strong and vital and will enjoy health and vigor
throughout our lifetime. When the Three Treasures of each human being are
vital, then we will comprise in microcosmic form the Three Treasures of the
Tao, which are heaven, earth, and humankind. This is our birthright and our
destiny.
When one practices taijiquan as an expression of the Tao, then taijiquan
becomes a spiritual practice. The highest attainment of the practice of
taijiquan is the integration of heaven, earth and humanity. In order to reach
this highest level of achievement, however, one must practice correctly.
Having presented the theoretical and philosophical foundations of taijiquan
in this and the preceding chapter, it is appropriate to consider next the proper
practice of the art.
Just as Taiji theory and Taoism each have their own first principle, so too
does the art of taijiquan. Although individual masters, past and present, may
emphasize different important principles for practicing taijiquan, it is
commonly agreed that the universal first principle of the art is to be song. The
concept of song is of primary importance in the practice of taijiquan. This
important first principle is explained and investigated in detail in the
following chapter.
Chapter Three
It has been said that Yang Cheng-fu constantly exhorted his students to
“relax.” Professor Cheng Man-ch’ing, one of Yang Cheng-fu’s disciples,
recounted that his teacher must have repeated the instruction to “relax” many
times each day.29 Yang Cheng-fu taught that the entire body had to be relaxed
in order for the postures to be correct. There is an expression in the taijiquan
community that relates to this: “Ninety-nine percent relaxed is one hundred
percent wrong.” Indeed, it is not an exaggeration to state that the first
principle of tajiquan is to be relaxed.
The original Chinese word employed by both the Yang and Chen families to
denote the concept of “relaxation” is song (also transliterated as sung).
Unfortunately, if one takes the literal translation of song to mean “relax,”
then one misses entirely the point of this seminal principle of the art of
tajiquan. It is important for students of tajiquan to understand the true
meaning of the word song and also to distinguish between song and “relax.”
The term song conveys the sense of openness, fullness, expansion, and
sinking down into the earth while simultaneously welling up from the earth.
Song also entails loosening the ligaments and tendons which hold the skeletal
system together. In this sense, one can use the word “relax” as it relates to the
muscles, tendons and ligaments. It is important, however, to distinguish
between relaxing and collapsing. When relaxing the muscles and loosening
the ligaments and tendons, we don’t want to collapse our physical structure.
Rather, we want to substitute soft internal energy, or jin, for hard external
energy which involves muscular tension.
The concept of song is central to all styles of tajiquan. Chen Zhenglei, a
contemporary Chen family lineage holder, also teaches that, in order to
achieve the state of song, the practitioner must relax the whole body. All the
components of the body, including the muscles, the skeletal structure, the
internal organs, the skin and even the hair must all relax. Chen Zhenglei
refers to development of song as yangsong gong.30 Other Chen family
members employ the term fansong. In Chen style training, the quality of song
is considered to have four components: relaxation of the mind, extension and
expansion of the ligaments and tendons, sinking the energy and the weight
into the lower half of the body, and pliancy (which implies the ability to
move with agility.)
With regard to the opening of the joints through the loosening of the
ligaments and tendons, there are nine primary joints to loosen: the wrists, the
elbows, the shoulders, the ankles, the knees, the hips, the back, the waist, and
the neck. In fact, all the joints in the body, as well as the muscles and
tendons, should be loosened and stretched. This expansion should extend
even to the joints of the fingers and the toes.
Many students misunderstand the concept of song and fall into the bad habit
of “spaghetti arms,” wherein one or both arms are held limp, like cooked
spaghetti. Consider for a moment the Beginning posture from the Wu (Chian-
chuan) style taijiquan, (which is the equivalent of Ward-Off Left in
traditional Yang style taijiquan). The left arm should be relaxed, but not so
relaxed that it can’t repel, or ward off, an intruder. Similarly, the right arm
should be held up in a supportive position behind the right arm, relaxed but
able to come to the aid (both structurally and energetically) of the left arm in
order to ward off an attack.
In order to provide the proper structure and internal energy in this posture,
the arms must be song, not limp. This means that the joints of each arm
(shoulder, elbow and wrist) must be open; the ligaments and tendons of the
arm must be loose but connected; and the internal energy, peng jin in the case
of the left arm, must flow freely and fully through the arm and into the hand.
Song is often associated with the related concept ch’en, translated as “sink.”
Sinking means to allow the entire weight of the body to sink down into the
feet. This creates a sense of stability and rootedness. The upper body is light
and insubstantial, while the lower body, the legs and feet in particular, are
heavy and substantial. If one can relax completely, then this is ch’en. When
the muscles, ligaments and tendons relax completely, then the whole body
sinks down.
From the above we see that song actually consists of being both relaxed and
sunk. Basically, ch’en and song are the same thing. One cannot be song
unless one is able to sink, and one cannot sink unless one is able to be song.
This concept is also central to the principle of fansong in the Chen style.
When properly executed, sinking creates the quality of heaviness, or zhong. It
is not hard or rigid, but is characterized by external softness supported by
internal strength.
The importance of song cannot be over-emphasized in the practice of
tajiquan. Song relates to all aspects of our art, from practicing the form, to
engaging in pushing hands, playing with weapons, and emitting jin. This
chapter includes several basic standing exercises designed to assist you in
developing these dual qualities. However, it is necessary first to explore this
important principle of tajiquan in more detail.
The ability to be song is necessary in order for the qi to fill the lower dantien
and circulate throughout the body. Qi travels through the body via twelve
meridians and eight channels. Many of the meridians and channels pass
through the joints of the body. As such, if the joints of the body are bound up
or tight, then the qi will not be able to flow freely.
The Taijiquan Classics state that the mind moves the qi and the qi moves the
body. Since the art of tajiquan relies upon the flow of qi, and the flow of qi
depends upon the joints being loose and open, it is essential that we learn to
be song if we want to promote the circulation of qi. Proper and unrestricted qi
flow is the basis for both the practice of tajiquan as well as overall good
health and longevity.
Song is also essential if we want to develop the underlying power of tajiquan.
In martial arts terminology, tajiquan is classified as an internal martial art.
That means that our art relies upon internal power, or jin, rather than external
force, or li. Li can be thought of as brute or muscular force.
Think of the most basic form of attack in tuishou: the push. One who has not
mastered internal power will attempt to push his opponent using the
shoulders and arms and possibly leaning into the opponent as well to gain
additional leverage. While such an attack may prove effective against an
inexperienced opponent, an advanced student of tajiquan will easily detect
and neutralize such a primitive attack and redirect the attacker’s energy in
such a way as to send him flying backward, repelled by his own brute force.
The proper way to push an opponent is to connect with her center, follow her
to a place where she is vulnerable, and then use internal power, or jin, to
propel her backward. When using jin, the muscles are not engaged, the body
does not lean into the opponent, and there is no hard, physical force to be
borrowed by the opponent. Rather than relying upon muscular tension, jin
relies upon the compressed qi in the ligaments and tendons and especially in
the spine. When this compressed qi is suddenly released, it is experienced by
the opponent as a powerful, almost electric force that is almost impossible to
neutralize. (The term “almost impossible” is used here, because very
advanced tajiquan practitioners are able to receive and neutralize jin, based
upon their high degree of song.)
Jin is the highest skill in the art of tajiquan and is not developed in a day, a
month, or a year. It takes many years to fully develop jin to the point that it
can be employed effortlessly in martial applications. Further, it is an
oversimplification to simply talk about jin, as there are many types and
applications of jin. Since the development and application of jin rely upon
one being song, it makes sense that one should start with learning how to be
song. Over centuries of experimentation and investigation, the taijiquan
masters of old developed various exercises and practices intended to develop
the quality of song. Collectively, these practices are often referred to as song
gong, which may be translated as song cultivation.
The foundation of song is proper posture, which relies upon correct postural
alignment. Correct postural alignment is essential for the ligaments and
tendons to be loose and flexible. The Ten Essentials of Yang Cheng-fu
instruct us to lift the head as if suspended from above, drop the chin slightly,
hollow the chest, raise the back, sink the shoulders, drop the elbows, hang the
hands from the wrists, tuck in the pelvis, loosen the waist and the kua, and
round the crotch.
The best way to begin practicing correct postural alignment is to assume the
wuji posture. Figures 3-1a and 3-1b illustrate proper standing in wuji posture
from both a frontal and side view. Note in particular that the ears, shoulders,
elbows, wrists, hip bones, and ankles are vertically aligned in Figure 3-1b.
This alignment allows the joints to sit one on top of the other. The only joints
that do not conform to this vertical alignment are the knees. We need to have
a slight hollowing of the knee joints when standing in wuji posture.
Otherwise, the knees will be stiff and our stance will be too rigid.
Figure 3-1a
Figure 3-1b
Of particular importance when standing in wuji posture is that the pelvis be
leveled and the coccyx be tucked under. This allows the spinal column to be
lengthened. Many individuals describe the proper alignment of the spine as a
column of vertebrae stacked one on top of the other. However, this analogy is
somewhat misleading. While it is true that proper spinal alignment relies on
the vertebrae being “stacked,” the stack is not perfectly linear. Our vertebrae
should not line up like a stack of poker chips.
The spine has a natural curve to it which should be maintained whenever we
are erect. So, the vertebrae are stacked, but slightly off-center one from the
next. We can think of the spine as a series of Jenga blocks, each one slightly
off-center from the one below, but all supporting one another.
Consider the drawing of the spinal column in Figure 3-2. You can easily
observe the natural curvature of the spinal column. In fact, the spinal column
actually consists of three curves, the cervical curve in the neck region, the
thoracic curve in the upper back, and the lumbar curve in the lower back.
Collectively these three curves comprise the overall curvilinear shape of the
spinal column.
You can also see that the top of the spinal column is vertically aligned with
the coccyx. When we say that the spine should be straight and the vertebrae
should be “stacked,” this is the image that we should visualize. The curvature
of the spine also enables the spine to act like a shock absorber, which enables
the spine to store and release energy.
Figure 3-2
Exercise 1: In this first exercise, you are going to stand in wuji and work on
aligning the head, the shoulders, the elbows, the wrists, the spine, the pelvis,
the knees, and the ankles. To begin, you need to stand with feet parallel and
hip-width apart. Most people think they are standing with their feet hip-width
apart, but typically their feet are wider, approximately shoulder width apart.
To ensure that your feet are, indeed, hip-width apart, begin with your two feet
together as shown in Figure 3-3a. Now, rotate your right foot ninety degrees
outward by pivoting on the right heel until the feet are in the position
indicated in Figure 3-3b. Next, pivot on the ball of the right foot and swing
the right heel backward until it is behind and parallel with the left foot, as
shown in Figure 3-3c. Finally, slide the right foot forward until it is even with
and parallel to the left foot, as shown in Figure 3-3d.
Look down and make sure that your feet are parallel. People commonly think
that their feet are parallel when, in fact, there feet are somewhat splayed
outward. It is imperative when standing in wuji posture that the feet are
perfectly parallel. Standing with the feet splayed out even slightly puts undue
stress on the knees and hips and will prevent the body from attaining proper
alignment.
Now that your two feet are parallel and hip-width apart, you can address the
vertical alignment of the body. This requires you to work simultaneously on
the skeletal structure and the soft tissues. The soft tissues, which include the
muscles, tendons, ligaments, and the fascia, maintain the alignment of the
skeletal structure. When the bones and joints are properly aligned, the
muscles, ligaments, and tendons which hold the bones and joints in place
don’t need to work as hard in order to maintain your overall vertical shape.
Only then are these soft tissues able to lengthen and relax. In complementary
fashion, when the muscles, ligaments, and tendons are relaxed, the joints can
open and the bones can find their proper alignment.
The goal in postural alignment is to establish an overall straight line from the
head down to the feet. In order to accomplish this, you will need to stretch
out and lengthen the spinal column by elongating the curvature of the spine.
Note, you don’t want to eliminate the curvature altogether, but rather to “seek
the straight in the curved.” Lengthening the spinal column means drawing out
the three individual curves: the cervical, thoracic and lumbar curves
mentioned previously.
Although you want to align your skeletal structure from the top of the head to
the feet, it is best to start with the pelvis. Most people stand naturally with
their pelvis rocked slightly forward. To correct this, you should begin by
consciously tucking your pelvis under by engaging your hip flexors and your
abdominal muscles. This will reduce the lumbar curve. You don’t want to
force the tucking, but a slight tension in your core will probably be needed in
order to level the pelvic bowl.
Next, you can work on suspending your head. The classic example given by
Cheng Man-ch’ing is to imagine that the head was held aloft by a long queue
of braided hair. Those of us who are “queueless” will have to imagine a string
attached to the top of the head. As with the pelvis, most of us don’t have a
level head-top. However, unlike the pelvis, which is typically tilted forward,
most of us jut our chin out, tilting the head backward and placing undue
strain on the neck. So, you need to tuck your chin under in order to level the
top of your head. This will lengthen your neck and reduce the cervical curve.
Now that your pelvis and head are level, you need to work on your shoulders.
Another postural defect that most individuals need to overcome is holding the
shoulders back so that the shoulders are behind their ears. This is the typical
military posture, in which the shoulders are thrown back and the chest is
jutted forward. You may need to reverse this military posture by relaxing and
dropping the shoulders, slightly rounding the shoulder yoke, and hollowing
the chest. This will reduce the thoracic curve which will result in lengthening
the entire curvature of the spine.
If possible, stand sideways to a full-length mirror so you can check to see that
your shoulders and ears are vertically aligned. It is very helpful to use a
mirror at the beginning when practicing standing exercises. Many of us need
the visual cues provided by a mirror in order to see and correct the various
misalignments in our structure. Once you learn what it feels like to stand in
alignment by checking yourself in the mirror, you can perform an overall
body alignment with your eyes closed and allow yourself to “see” the body
with your inner eye: that is to say, through your own self-awareness.
Once your shoulders are relaxed and aligned with your ears, you can hang
your arms at your sides, relaxing both the elbows and the wrists and allowing
the fingers to extend somewhat from the hands. Now your ears, shoulders,
elbows, and wrists should be aligned as in Figure 3-1b.
While maintaining the vertical alignment of the upper body, you can begin to
work on relaxing your thighs and rounding your crotch. Soften your knees
and imagine that there is a tennis ball behind each knee. This will bring the
knees slightly forward. The knees are the only joints that do not align
vertically in the wuji posture. However, the ankles should line up with the hip
bones, which in turn should line up with the shoulders, the ears, the elbows,
and the wrists.
When standing in wuji, or for that matter when practicing any aspect of
tajiquan, it is best to curl the tip of the tongue upward to rest against the soft
palate in the roof of the mouth (located just behind the upper front teeth.)
This connects two major qi channels, also called “vessels,” in the body: the
Governing Vessel (du mai) in the back and the Conception Vessel (ren mai)
in the front. The importance of these two “extraordinary vessels” will be
explained in Chapter Eight, but suffice it to say that connecting these two
vessels facilitates the uniform and continuous flow of qi during the practice
of both standing meditation and moving tajiquan.
Once you have placed all the joints into their proper alignments, you should
continue to stand in wuji posture for at least five minutes per session. As you
stand in wuji posture, you can make slight adjustments to your posture as you
scan your body looking for any defects. Scan internally and try to feel if any
part of the body is out of alignment. Rock slightly to and fro on your feet and
shift your weight from side to side in order to determine the correct weight
distribution. Adjust your head, shoulders, back, pelvis, hips, knees, elbows,
wrists and ankles until you find the proper postural alignment that allows you
to stand with minimal effort in order to maintain your upright posture.
At this stage of your standing practice, you should focus your awareness
solely on your alignment. Breathe naturally without placing undue attention
on the breath. Eventually, you can use the wuji posture to practice Taoist
breathing and other meditative practices. However, you first must master the
simple act of standing effortlessly. This takes time and effort (gongfu) and
progresses gradually over time.
You should incorporate wuji standing into your daily tajiquan practice. The
best time to stand in wuji is after your warm-up exercises but before form
practice. Having completed your warm-up exercises, your body will be
loosened sufficiently for you to be able to correctly align the joints. Doing
your form practice after standing in wuji posture enables you to better
perform each of the postures of the form. It is said that Sun Lu-tang
interspersed periods of standing in wuji posture with rounds of the form,
practicing in this manner for as much as eight hours per day. From this
example, it is clear that standing in wuji posture supports the practice of the
form.
Standing in wuji takes practice, patience, and diligence. The key to success is
continuity. Try to stand for at least five minutes daily. You can increase the
time spent standing as you feel more comfortable holding the wuji posture
without feeling fatigue. As you stand regularly in wuji posture, you will find
that you are able to stand longer and with less effort. Eventually, you will be
able to locate and eliminate the various tensions that cause your ligaments
and tendons to be tight. Standing in wuji literally teaches you to relax and let
go of tension and stiffness. This is the first step in learning to become song.
Exercise 2: Exercise 2 builds upon the work accomplished in Exercise 1.
You should spend at least a week simply standing in wuji as described in the
preceding exercise before proceeding to the second exercise. Remember to be
patient with your practice. The vertical alignment of the joints described in
Exercise 1 is essential to making headway in Exercise 2. You will know you
are ready to advance to the second exercise when you are able to stand
comfortably in wuji posture for at least five minutes without feeling tension,
strain, or needing to come out of the posture because you can’t hold it any
longer.
In Exercise 1, the goal was to learn the technique of stacking the components
of the body one on top of the other. The head was stacked upon the torso; the
upper arms were stacked upon the lower arms, and the lower arms were
stacked upon the wrists; the individual vertebrae of the spinal column were
stacked on top of each other; the torso was stacked upon the pelvis; the pelvis
was stacked upon the thighs; the thighs were stacked upon the knees; and the
shins were stacked upon the ankles.
In this exercise, while standing in wuji posture you will learn how to allow
the weight of each of the body’s components to sink, or fall into, the next
lower component. The key element of this exercise is that the combined
weight of all components above a given joint will fall into that joint. This
involves a process that may be referred to as “releasing, and then releasing
again.” In order to accomplish this sequential releasing, you will begin with
the head and work your way down to the feet.
The sequence is as follows: the weight of the head falls into the neck joint;
the weight of the upper arm falls into the elbow; the weight of the upper and
lower arms falls into the wrists; the weight of the entire arms plus the hands
falls into the fingers. Next, the combined weight of the head, both arms, and
the torso falls into the hip joints; the weight of the head, arms, torso, and
pelvis falls into the two thighs. Then, the combined weight of the head, arms,
torso, pelvis, and thighs will be transferred into the lower legs. The next to
the last step is to open the ankle joints and to allow the entire weight of the
body to fall into the two feet equally while standing at hip-width apart as
described previously.
Think of the individual joints of the body as functioning like gates. By
relaxing the neck joint, you are able to open the neck gate and enable the
weight of the head to fall into the upper back; by relaxing the hip joints, you
allow the weight of the upper body to fall into the lets, etc. What you are
doing in this exercise is opening gates, one after the other, until all the gates
of the body have been opened and the combined weight of the body has
fallen into the feet. The ankle joint is the last major joint in the body, so you
should be finished at this point, right?
In fact, there is one more gate that you need to open. This gate is not a joint
in the physical sense. Instead, it is an “energy gate.” There a number of
energy gates in the body, and you need to discover and learn how to open
each of them in order to attain a high level of skill in the art of tajiquan. The
energy gate you will be working with here is the yongquan point located on
the sole of each foot. Figure 3-4 shows the location of the yongquan point.
Figure 3-4
Having opened all the other gates of the body, and with the combined weight
of the body evenly distributed between the two feet, the final step is to open
the yongquan point in each foot and to allow the combined weight of the
body to fall into the ground. This is no easy task and requires both physical
relaxation of the muscles in the feet as well as mental concentration to open
the yongquan points.
In order to relax the muscles of the feet, lightly press the entire bottom of the
foot onto the surface on which you are standing. You can do this either
barefoot or shod, as long as you are wearing shoes that are comfortable and
non-restrictive. Allow the muscles in each foot to soften and simultaneously
widen and lengthen. Try to imagine each foot as a hand and spread the
“palm” of the foot outward and then press it downward gently yet firmly.
Make sure that the foot is not weighted solely (no pun intended) over the toes
or the heel, nor pressed too much either on the outer or inner edge of the foot.
You want the entire underside of each foot to bear fifty percent of the weight
of the body. In this way, it is easier for the yongquan points in both feet to
open.
Using the power of your heart/mind, or hsien, imagine that each yongquan
point is an energy vortex that you are opening to allow yourself to connect to
the energy of the earth. Visualize the vortex in each foot opening and
expanding. Try to feel the energy of the body dropping down through these
two vortices and combining with the earth’s energy.
The process of sinking the combined weight of the body through the feet and
into the ground is called “rooting.” When you practice rooting, you are
figuratively planting roots into the ground. This gives the body greater
stability. Learning to open the yongquan points is one of the most important
steps in developing true skill in tajiquan. This takes time and mental effort.
However, you will know when it happens, because you will actually feel the
two yongquan energy gates opening. Initially you may feel a spongy feeling
in the balls of the feet, followed by a tingling in the yongquan points.
Eventually you will feel the earth’s energy welling up into these points. For
this reason, the yongquan points are referred to as the “Bubbling Well”
points.
To begin your rooting practice, assume the wuji posture as described in
Exercise 1. Then use the following instructions to open each of the major
structural gates in the body. You may want to record these instructions so you
can listen to them while you practice. In this way you won’t have to
concentrate on remembering the sequence and can focus instead on simply
relaxing and loosening each section of the body.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your neck. Allow the weight of your
head to fall onto your shoulders.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your shoulders. Allow the weight of
your shoulders to fall into your upper arms.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your upper arms. Allow the combined
weight of your upper shoulders and upper arms to fall into your elbows.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your elbows. Allow the combined
weight of your shoulders and upper arms to fall into your forearms.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your wrists. Allow the combined
weight of your shoulders, upper arms and forearms to fall into your
hands.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your finger joints. Allow the combined
weight of your shoulders, upper arms, forearms and hands to fall into
your fingers.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your neck. Allow the combined weight
of your head and shoulders plus your arms and hands to fall into the
upper back.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your upper back. Allow the combined
weight of your head, shoulders, arms and upper back to fall into your
middle back.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your middle back. Allow the
combined weight of your head, shoulders, arms and upper and middle
back to fall into your lower back.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your lower back. Allow the combined
weight of your torso to fall into the pelvis.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your hip joints. Allow the combined
weight of your torso and your pelvis to fall into your thighs.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your knee joints. Allow the combined
weight of your torso, pelvis and your thighs to fall into your lower legs.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax your ankles. Allow the combined
weight of your body to fall into your feet.
Breathe in, breathe out, and relax the yongquan points in your feet.
Allow the combined weight of your body to fall through the yongquan
points and into the ground.
Once you have opened up the yongquan points, continue standing in wuji
posture and allow the weight of your body to sink deeper into the ground. As
you become more effective at relaxing each joint in your body and permitting
the combined weight of each component to fall onto the one below, you will
begin to experience the sensation that your head and torso are light, almost as
if they are floating. Your thigh and calf muscles will burn at first, but as you
continue to learn how to open the yongquan points you will eventually reach
the point where your rooted feet are supporting your body and the weight-
bearing work of your thighs and calves will be diminished.
As with the first exercise, you should make this rooting training a daily
component of your tajiquan practice. With each passing day, week, and
month you will feel a greater sense of rootedness and connection to the earth.
You will also experience the entire body becoming looser and more song. As
you move out of your standing practice and into your form practice, try to
incorporate both the sense of rooting and song into each posture of the form.
Try to emulate the example of Sun Lu-tang, whose standing practice formed
the foundation of his high level of civil and martial attainment.
Conclusion
The importance of song is fundamental to the study of taijiquan. Whether
you practice taijiquan for exercise, health, longevity, or as a martial art, the
benefits you derive will largely depend upon your ability to be song. As with
the qualities of yin and yang, song is a relative state. Yang Cheng-fu taught
his students that they had to pass through definite stages over a many years of
practice.31 Chen Xiaowang also places great emphasis on the developmental
progression of the practitioner through the “Five Levels of Skill.”32
Although we say that song is relative and that one can become more song
over time, song can also be considered to be a discrete state. In this sense,
one is either song or not song. This is just one more example of the
seemingly contradictory aspects of the art of tajiquan. Recall the dictum from
the beginning of the chapter that “Ninety-nine percent song is one hundred
percent wrong.” Despite this strict assessment, however, you should not be
discouraged with the incremental nature of your progress. It simply means
that you must practice faithfully as the ancients taught: every day, morning
and evening, winter and summer. In this way, your success will be assured.
This chapter has described the principle of song and has introduced the
simple practice of standing in wuji posture as a tool for developing song and
rootedness. Although you can increase your ability to be song through
standing exercises, standing alone is not sufficient to become completely
song in all aspects of the body. The ability to be song not only requires
proper alignment through relaxation and sinking down. It also depends upon
the ligaments, tendons and sinews of the body being stretched and loosened.
In order to accomplish this, the students of tajiquan must engage in a daily
routine of stretching and loosening exercises.
Chapter Four, which follows, provides a simple but effective stretching
routine. Chapter Five includes instructions on how to perform the five
loosening exercises developed by Huang Sheng Shyan. Chapter Five also
presents a series of exercises known as “silk-reeling.” Through the daily
practice of the exercises presented in these two chapters, you will gradually
be able to lengthen, strengthen and loosen the muscles, ligaments and
tendons, which will, in turn, enable you to deepen your ability to be song.
Chapter Four
Stretching Exercises
After several years of studying taijiquan, many students still appear wooden
and mechanical when practicing the form. Accordingly, they lack skill in
neutralizing their partners’ energy during pushing hands and instead hide this
defect by stiffly resisting any attack and attempting to crudely repel their
opponents using hard, muscular force. The fault in such cases often lies in the
underlying rigidity of their musculoskeletal system. They are unable to relax
tight muscles and ligaments and must learn how to loosen stiff tendons and
joints.
In order to become song, one must first become supple and limber. This is
challenging, especially for individuals who have led a sedentary lifestyle,
causing their ligaments and tendons to shrink and their joints to become tight
with disuse. However, not only sedentary individuals have difficulty in
loosening up. Many individuals who have been very active find that the same
over-developed musculature that is the result of their active lifestyle actually
becomes a hindrance when attempting to stretch and loosen the muscles,
ligaments, and tendons. The same joints that have become tight in the case of
sedentary individuals through underuse can become similarly bound up in the
case of active individuals as a result of overuse.
The secret to developing supple and flexible ligaments and tendons and to
opening all the joints of the body is to engage in a regular and extensive
regimen of stretching and loosening exercises. Most tajijquan instructors
allocate a segment of each class to such exercises. However, in many cases
the perfunctory ten minutes or so of gentle stretching is insufficient to
overcome the accumulated years of tension and stiffness brought about by
poor posture and inactivity or excessive muscular development. To further
worsen matters, most students neglect stretching at home altogether and only
practice the form when not in the classroom. Unfortunately, such students
typically spend no more than ten minutes stretching once or twice per week.
A suitable warm-up routine should consist of two portions: a stretching
session lasting about fifteen minutes and a loosening session lasting another
ten to fifteen minutes. This chapter presents a comprehensive stretching
routine, which will be described in detail in the following section. Chapter
Five presents the loosening routine, which includes a series of loosening
exercises followed by a sequence of chan ssu jin, or silk-reeling exercises.
This combined stretching and loosening routine, or a similarly
comprehensive stretching and loosening routine, is recommended for all
students who are serious about improving their tajijquan practice.
You may want to go through the stretching routine gently for the first few
times in order to get a feel for each exercise and to determine how far you can
stretch without undue strain. You may also choose to undertake the stretching
and the loosening routines separately to avoid becoming overtired (and
overwhelmed). Carefully begin to stretch the muscles, ligaments and tendons
a little past their normal limits in order to increase your range of motion. You
don’t want to overdo it and run the risk of injury. Take it slow and easy; you
will know when you can push yourself a little further. Realistically, you
should begin to see some increase in flexibility and range of motion within
about two weeks. What you’re seeking here are gains measured in
millimeters, not inches.
Try to make stretching and loosening a regular part of your daily taijiquan
practice. You should strive to perform each of the exercises with the same
awareness and concentration that you dedicate to the form. For example,
when you are standing in order to perform neck rolls, stand as if you are
preparing to begin the form. Concentrate on rooting the feet and relaxing the
upper body. When you are standing in bow stance in order to swing the arms
to loosen the shoulders, make the bow stance long, wide, and deep. When
rotating the arms like propellers to loosen the elbows, engage the entire torso.
Maintain your focus on each exercise and don’t allow your attention to drift
off. Be present with each exercise, conscious of your body and how each
joint works (or doesn’t) the way it is supposed to.
It is best to stretch before loosening, and to stretch and loosen before
commencing form practice. If you only have a little time and you want to
launch directly into form practice, at least do a little stretching and loosening
first. That way you will not only avoid the risk of injury but will also enable
the qi to flow more freely and thereby receive greater benefit from your form
practice.
1. Neck rolls - Stand erect with your feet parallel and hip width apart.
Drop your head forward and proceed to rotate it to the right, back, to the
left, and forward again. Keep the motion circular and smooth. Repeat
eight times clockwise and then reverse and perform eight repetitions in a
counter-clockwise direction.
2. Turn your head left and right: Remain standing and look straight
ahead. Turn your head to the left until you feel a slight strain on the right
side of your neck. Keep your head level. Hold for an eight-count and
then return your head to look straight ahead. Now perform the same
exercise looking to the right. Repeat each side one time.
3. Tilt your head left and right: Position your head to look straight ahead.
Push your right shoulder down slightly and then tilt your head over to
the left side until you feel a slight strain in your right shoulder and neck.
Hold for an eight-count and then return your head to look straight ahead.
Now perform the same exercise tilting your head to the right. Repeat
each side one time.
4. Tilt your head front and back: Look straight ahead. Push both of your
shoulders down slightly and then tilt your head forward until you feel a
slight strain in the back of your neck. Hold for an eight-count and then
return your head to look straight ahead. Now perform the same exercise
by tilting your head backward until you feel a slight strain in the front of
your neck. Repeat forward and backward one time.
5. Shoulder shrugs: Stand erect as before and pull both of your shoulders
up as high as you can. Inhale and hold the breath and your shoulders in
place for an eight count. Exhale and simultaneously release all the
tension in your shoulders, dropping them down with an audible “Ha!”
sound. Repeat a total of four times.
6. Rotate both shoulders forward: Stand erect with feet hip width apart.
Rotate both of your shoulders forward simultaneously. Make as large a
circle with your shoulders as you can. Repeat for a total of eight times.
7. Rotate both shoulders backward: Perform the same exercise as above
but change direction to roll your shoulders backward eight times.
8. Rotate alternate shoulders forward: Perform the forward shoulder
rotation with one shoulder leading the other. Both of your shoulders
should be in motion, but out of sync by 180 degrees. Repeat for a total
of eight times.
9. Rotate alternate shoulders backward: Perform the same exercise as
above but change direction to alternately roll your shoulders backward
eight times.
10. Swing your arms forward and backward: Stand in a left bow stance
(archer’s stance) with your left foot forward. Loosen your right shoulder
and swing your right arm forward in a large, vertical circle as shown in
Figure 4-1. Repeat for a total of eight times. Next, reverse the direction
of your swinging arm to make circles in reverse for a total of eight
backward circles. Change to a right bow stance and repeat the exercise
with your left arm.
Figure 4-1
11. Horizontal elbow circles forward and backward: Stand erect with
your feet hip width apart. Hold both of your arms in front of your body
at chest height as shown in Figure 4-2. Circle your arms horizontally
outward, one following the other, for a total of eight times. Imagine that
your arms are the blades of an old-fashioned reel lawn mower. Now
reverse the direction of the circles and repeat for a total of eight times.
Figure 4-2
12. Vertical elbow circles clockwise and counter-clockwise: From the
preceding exercise, change your arms to a vertical orientation and make
vertical circles clockwise with one arm following the other a half-circle
behind. See Figures 4-3a and 4-3b. Imagine that your arms are twin
propellers. Repeat for a total of eight clockwise circles. Now reverse the
direction of the vertical circles and perform eight counter-clockwise
circles.
Figure 4-3a
Figure 4-3b
13. Fling your arms outward: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart.
Bend down slightly allowing your arms to hang downward. Imagine that
you are dipping your hands in a washbasin filled with water. Now rise
up quickly and, as your legs straighten, bring your arms in slightly to
your body and then fling them outward as if you are flicking water off
your fingers. Repeat for a total of four times. See Figures 4-4a and 4-4b.
Figure 4-4a
Figure 4-4b
14. Fling your arms downward: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart.
Rise up and circle your arms out, around, and then in upward. Drop
down quickly and fling your arms downward as if you are trying to flick
something sticky off your fingers. Repeat for a total of four times. See
Figures 4-5a and 4-5b.
Figure 4-5a
Figure 4-5b
15. Wrist rolls: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart. Clasp your
hands together lightly with the fingers interlaced. Roll your hands
around the wrists eight times clockwise. Change direction and repeat
eight times counter-clockwise.
16. Figure Eights: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart. Extend your
arms out from the shoulders and rotate your arms so that your two wrists
are facing each other. Form mirror-image figure eights with each hand,
concentrating on the circular motion of the wrists. Perform eight series
of figure eights. Reverse the direction of each hand and repeat for a total
of eight figure eights.
17. Push your wrists down: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart.
Clasp your hands together at chest height as if you are praying. Keeping
your hands vertical and together (don’t let them drift forward or apart)
pull your hands down until you feel a slight strain in your wrists. Try not
to lift your shoulders as you do this exercise. Hold for an eight count.
Repeat four times.
18. Pull your wrists up: Turn your hands over with the fingers pointing
down. Pull your hands up until you feel a slight strain. Again, don’t let
your hands drift outward or separate, and be sure not to engage your
shoulders. Hold for an eight count. Repeat four times.
19. Turn your wrists in: Now point your hands outward. Turn your hands
over to point inward until you feel a slight strain in your wrists. Hold for
an eight count. Repeat four times.
20. Fingertip pushups: Place the tips of the fingers of each hand in contact
with the fingertips of the other hand. Keep your palms apart.
Maintaining some tension in the fingers, press your palms together,
separating the fingers and splaying them outward. Hold for an eight
count. Repeat four times.
21. Shake it out: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart. Allow your
arms to hang down from your shoulder sockets. Bounce gently up and
down and allow your arms to shake with the movement of the torso.
Completely loosen your arms from the shoulders down to the fingers
with each “shake”. Repeat for a total of eight “shakes.”
22. The bear wakes up: Stand erect with your feet shoulder width apart.
Hang your arms down at your sides. Now rotate your hips and shoulders
first to one side and then the other. Allow your arms to swing up and
wrap around your torso to lightly tap front and back. Imagine that you
are a bear emerging from hibernation and want to work out the kinks by
slapping yourself awake. Don’t force your arms; instead allow them to
remain loose and use the centrifugal force of the rotation of your torso to
propel your arms. See Figures 4-6a and 4-6b.
Figure 4-6a
Figure 4-6b
23. Forward bends: Stand erect with your feet hip width apart. Inhale and
raise your hands high overhead. Now exhale and bend forward, leading
with your head, until your hands are hanging straight down. Relax your
neck and your lower back. Hang for an eight count, breathing naturally.
Then, inhale and roll up, leading with your lower back and stacking the
vertebra one on top of the other until you are again standing erect. Float
your arms over your head and repeat once more. See Figure 4-7.
Figure 4-7
24. Twisting forward bends: Stand with your feet hip width apart and float
your arms over your head. Twist to your right and bend forward as
before. Hang downward with your hands on the right side of your feet
and relax. See Figure 4-8. Breathe naturally and hold for an eight count.
Now, while still bending over, rotate forward until you are hanging with
your hands in front of your feet. Then, slowly roll up one vertebra at a
time as in the preceding exercise.
Figure 4-8
25. Backward bends: Stand with your feet hip width apart and press your
palms against your lower back, fingers facing downward. Use your
palms to push your pelvis forward. Then lean back slightly. See Figure
4-9. Don’t lean backward too far until you are sure of your own
limitations. Hold for an eight count and breathe naturally. Using your
palms to support your lower back, slowly return to an upright position.
Repeat one time.
Figure 4-9
26. Side bends: Stand with your feet wide apart. Place your left hand on
your left hip with the fingers forward and the thumb behind. Raise your
right hand over your head with the palm facing up. Try to maintain a
curve in your right arm. See Figure 4-10. Now press your pelvis
sideways toward the right as you incline your torso over to the left. The
trick here is to push your pelvis sideways before inclining your torso.
Hold for an eight count. Return to vertical, reverse your hands, and
perform the exercise pushing your pelvis to the left as you incline your
torso to the right. Repeat the exercise one additional time on each side.
Figure 4-10
27. Hip circles: Stand with your feet hip width apart and place the palms of
both hands on your hips. Bend your knees slightly and then rotate your
hips in a clockwise direction. Try to keep your torso and especially your
head erect as you rotate your hips. Complete eight clockwise circles and
then reverse and complete eight counter-clockwise circles.
28. Knee circles: Stand with your feet together and place the palms of both
hands over your knees with the fingers pointing down. Bend your knees
between fifteen and forty-five degrees, depending upon your level of
flexibility. Using your palms to support your knee joints, press your
knees together and then rotate your two knees as a single unit in a
clockwise direction for eight rotations. Rise up and then bend down
again and rotate your knees together in the counter-clockwise direction
for eight rotations.
29. Push your knees back: From the preceding exercise, keep your palms
on your knees and rise up. Press your knees backward, extending your
legs fully. Hold for an eight count.
30. Squat down: From the preceding exercise, squat down as low as you
are able without placing undue strain on your knees. Again, use your
two hands to both support your knees and press them together. If you
can squat all the way down to rest your buttocks on your ankles that is
ideal. If not, use the strength in your thighs to support yourself in the
squatting position. See Figures 4-11a and 4-11b for both options. Hold
for an eight count and then rise up.
Figure 4-11a
Figure 4-11b
31. Ankle circles: Stand with your feet approximately hip width apart but
with your right leg extended forward and outward as shown in Figure 4-
12. Place the toes of your right foot on the ground. Rotate your right foot
around the ankle joint for a total of eight rotations. Repeat for your left
foot and ankle.
Figure 4-12
32. Achilles’ tendon stretches: Stand in the same posture as the previous
exercise. This time place the heel of your right foot on the ground. Lean
forward and grasp the toes of your right foot with both hands and pull
upward. See Figure 4-13. If you are unable to reach your toes with either
hand, grasp your ankle or even your calf and pull up. Hold for an eight
count and then release. Change legs and repeat on the left side.
Figure 4-13
33. Bent toe stretches: Stand with your feet hip width apart. Then extend
your right foot backward approximately two feet. Place the toes of your
right foot on the ground and then lift the right heel off the ground. Bend
both knees approximately forty-five degrees and sink down. This will
cause your right toes to flex. Bounce and flex the toes of your right foot
eight times. Then change legs and repeat for the toes of your left foot.
34. Hamstring stretches: Stand close to a wall and place your hands on the
wall at approximately shoulder height. Place your left foot and knee
against the wall. Extend your right leg backward as shown in Figure 4-
14. Press your left knee against the wall and push your right heel
backward to create a lengthening of your right leg. Hold for an eight
count. Reverse the stance and repeat with your left leg extended
backward.
Figure 4-14
35. Achilles’ tendon stretches: Stand on a door ledge or similar elevation
(not too high). The photo shown in Figure 4-15 employs a specially-
designed apparatus for performing this stretch. Hold onto the door frame
or a banister if possible. Placing all the weight on your right foot, press
the heel of your left foot downward to create a stretch in the sole of your
left foot. Hold for an eight count. Reverse feet and repeat.
Figure 4-15
36. Triangle forward bends: Stand with the feet slightly wide apart. Bend
forward and place both of your palms on the floor at approximately
shoulder width. Lean forward and downward, supporting your weight
with your hands as shown in Figure 4-16. Try to separate your feet a few
more inches by duck walking them further apart. Hold for an eight
count. Now walk your feet closer together until they are approximately
shoulder width apart. Then come up by rolling up one vertebra at a time.
Figure 4-16
37. Hip flexor stretches: Stand with your feet hip width apart. Place the
entire weight of your body on your right foot and lift your left knee up
until the thigh is parallel with the ground. Allow your left shin and foot
to hang down naturally as in Figure 4-17a. Now, keeping the thigh
parallel to the ground, rotate your entire left leg outward ninety degrees
until it is in the position shown in Figure 4-17b. Drop your foot to the
ground and bring your foot back to hip width distance facing forward.
Repeat for a total of eight times. Then change legs and repeat, standing
on your left leg and lifting and rotating your right leg eight times.
Figure 4-17a
Figure 4-17b
38. Extended leg toe circles: Stand with your feet hip width apart. Place the
entire weight of your body on your right foot and bend your right knee
slightly. Extend your left leg forward with the toes pointing out. Hold
your arms out to your sides for balance as shown in Figure 4-18. Make
small vertical circles, approximately twelve inches in diameter, in the air
with the toes of your left foot. Make eight clockwise circles and then
reverse to make eight counter-clockwise circles. Change legs and repeat.
Figure 4-18
39. Heel kicks: Stand with your feet hip width apart. Place the entire weight
of your body on your right foot and bend your right knee slightly. Raise
your left leg until your left thigh is parallel with the ground. Allow your
left shin and foot to hang down naturally. Cross your arms in front of the
body with your left arm in front. Now lift your left foot up with the
entire sole of the foot facing outward as in Figure 4-19a. Then extend
your left foot slowly outward, leading with the heel, to execute a slow-
motion heel kick. At the same time, open your arms in two crescent-
shaped curves to finish in the position shown in Figure 4-16b. Hold a
few seconds in this extended position. Then withdraw your extended left
leg and return your arms back to the position shown in Figure 4-19a.
Repeat for a total of eight times and then change legs and perform eight
slow-motion heel kicks with your right leg.
Figure 4-19a
Figure 4-19b
40. Crescent kicks: Stand with your feet hip width apart. Angle your right
foot outward approximately thirty degrees. Place the entire weight of
your body on your right leg and bend your right knee slightly. Lift your
left leg up with the toes pointed outward and sweep it first to the right
side of your body and then across your body to the left side in a
sweeping crescent-shaped curve. The apex of the curve should reach at
least shoulder height. As the leg is sweeping up, over and across the
body, extend your arms outward palms down and try to slap the bottoms
of both sets of fingers with the tops of your left toes. See Figures 4-20a
and 4-20b. Repeat for a total of eight times and then change to the other
leg for an additional eight repetitions.
Figure 4-20a
Figure 4-20b
41. Cross-legged squats: Begin with your feet hip width apart. Step out
with your left foot and place it on the ground turned outward
approximately thirty degrees. Bend your left knee approximately thirty
degrees. Now bend your right knee and squat down until your right knee
is nestled behind your bent left knee. Continue to squat down until you
can sit down with your right buttock resting upon the elevated heel of
your right foot. Rest your hands comfortably on top of your left knee.
See Figure 4-21a. If you can’t sit down completely, don’t worry about it.
Just support the weight of your body using the muscles of your right
thigh and left calf. Every time you perform this exercise, try to sink a
little lower. Eventually you will be able to sit with the right buttock
resting on your right heel. As an additional challenge, before sitting
down, extend your arms outward and cross your left arm over the right.
Grasp both of your hands together with the fingers interlaced. Then, as
you sit down, fold your arms back toward your body so that your
clasped hands are pointing up with your right hand forward as in Figure
4-21b. Repeat twice on each leg. Please note that, if you feel any strain
or sharp pain in either knee, rise up and try again holding on to a chair or
other stable object and lower yourself again slowly. If the pain persists,
skip this exercise.
Figure 4-21a
Figure 4-21b
42. Squatting hurdler’s stretches: Stand with your feet wide apart and
pointing outward as in a duck stance. Bend your right knee and squat
down onto your right foot while extending your left leg. Squat as low as
you are comfortable. Try to keep your upper body erect. See Figure 4-
22. Repeat twice on each leg. As in the preceding exercise, if you feel
any strain or sharp pain in either knee, rise up and try again holding on
to a chair or other stable object and lower yourself again slowly. If the
pain persists, skip this exercise.
Figure 4-22
43. Standing hurdler’s stretches: Find a parallel bar, the back of a high
couch, or a counter-top. Stand on your right leg with your right toes
parallel to the bar and approximately three feet apart. Lift your left leg
up and place the heel of your left foot on the bar. Lean forward and wrap
the fingers of both hands around the erect toes of your left foot. See
Figure 4-23. Hold the stretch for an eight count. Release your hands and
then release the heel of your left foot from the bar. Lower your left leg.
Repeat twice on each leg.
Figure 4-23
This completes the stretching routine, which will serve to lengthen, loosened
and, for some muscle groups, strengthened all the major muscles, ligaments
and tendons of the body. In addition to this stretching routine, it is highly
recommended to include the loosening and silk-reeling exercises presented in
the following chapter prior to beginning your standing and solo form
practice.
Conclusion
The stretching routine presented in this chapter is very comprehensive.
However, this routine does not include all the possible stretches that could
precede your taijiquan form practice. Many teachers and advanced
practitioners perform different stretches from the ones included here. Please
don’t feel slighted if a favorite stretch that you have been performing for
years is not included. Every teacher has his or her preferred stretching
routine. Feel free to mix and match your favorite stretches with the stretching
exercises presented in this chapter. Just be sure to include at least one stretch
for each muscle group and joint in the body, from head to toe. Don’t leave
any area out, as that is bound to be the muscle or joint that will hold you back
in your form practice.
Some teachers will tell you that “You don’t have to do a lot of stretching. It’s
all in the form.” However, this is not the case. Although the form is the
foundation of our art, it will be greatly enhanced if you take the time to
prepare yourself properly prior to practicing the form. Remember that the
goal of taijiquan is to cultivate and circulate the qi throughout the entire
body. In addition to solo form practice, standing, stretching, and loosening
will significantly increase the flow of qi throughout your body. By engaging
in these preparatory exercises on a daily basis, you will ensure the greatest
benefit from practicing the solo form.
Chapter Five
Silk-Reeling Exercises
As a final warm-up exercise, it is beneficial to finish with anywhere from five
to ten minutes of silk-reeling, or chan ssu jin. As the Chinese name implies,
chan ssu jin is a form of energy. It is the soft energy of pulling a silk thread
off a silkworm’s cocoon. Imagine that you have a silkworm’s cocoon pinned
to a rotating spindle. If you can grasp the end bit of silken thread between
your thumb and forefinger, you should be able to unwind the cocoon by
pulling with a gentle but steady pressure on the silk thread. As you pull
continuously, the cocoon gently rotates and the silk thread slowly grows
longer and longer. The trick is to pull with a steady and even pressure. You
can’t jerk the thread or speed up and slow down; otherwise the delicate silken
strand will break.
Silk-reeling exercises emphasize the internal energy we want to develop and
express in our tajijquan practice. That is to say, we want our outer
movements to reflect the inner qualities of slowness, constancy, and rotation.
In Chen style tajijquan, chan ssu jin is an important and separately-trained
skill that is reflected outwardly in the coiling and uncoiling of the torso and
the extremities in many of the movements. The coiling movements of chan
ssu jin often precede the sudden strikes and kicks of this style of tajijquan,
especially in the more explosive Canon Fist form.
While external coiling and explosive movements are not part of the Yang,
Wu and Sun styles of taijiquan, nonetheless many of the postures of these
styles do involve circular rotation and winding up prior to opening and the
releasing of jin, albeit in a slower manner. For example, when setting up to
perform Brush Knee and Twist Step Left in Yang style, we first rotate the
waist to the right and draw up the left arm to the right shoulder in preparation
to step out with the left foot and subsequently unwind the waist. The right
arm is also wound up to the right ear, much as a pitcher performs a wind-up
prior to throwing a pitch. The unwinding of the waist provides the
momentum for the left arm to brush down and the right arm to push forward.
Similar winding and unwinding occur in the Wu Chiang-chuan style as well.
Although such winding and unwinding is not as overtly expressed in the Sun
style, the characteristic opening and closing of this style also lends itself to
the practice of silk-reeling, as will be demonstrated in Silk-Reeling Exercise
1.
Whereas in taijiquan form practice the feet are constantly engaged in
stepping, when practicing silk-reeling exercises we adopt a fixed stance. You
can actually employ the movements from any taijiquan form to train silk-
reeling. You could, for example, stand in a left bow stance and repeat the
motion of Brush Knee and Twist Step Left from the Yang style. This would
entail repeatedly winding up the movement and then unwinding to complete
it. The following three silk-reeling exercises adapt a single posture from each
of the Sun, Yang, and Chen styles as the basis for training the Three External
Harmonies and the use of the intent (yi) to lead the qi into the extremities.
The additional exercises presented in Silk-Reeling Exercise 4 and Silk-
Reeling Exercise 5 are not specific to any style, and can be practiced
effectively by adherents of all family styles of taijiquan.
Silk-Reeling Exercise 1: One of the characteristic movements (actually a
pair of “postures”) from the Sun style is the sequence of Opening Hands and
Closing Hands, which appears a total of thirteen times in the traditional long
form of this style. We can adapt this sequence to the practice of silk-reeling
by repeatedly performing Opening Hands followed by Closing Hands, as
shown in Figures 5-9a through 5-9c. These two movements are deceptively
simple. Externally, not much appears to take place aside from the separating
and then the returning of the open hands to their original position in front of
the chest. However, internally the intent (yi), is directing the qi to expand and
contract while simultaneously creating the mutually supporting feelings of
fullness and subsequent emptiness within the body.
To perform this sequence, stand in a narrow parallel stance. Using as little
external muscular tension as possible, raise your forearms up with your
elbows hanging down and your open palms held up facing each other as
shown in Figure 5-9a. Sun Lutang indicated that your thumbs should be
approximately one inch apart at this point. Use the technique of abdominal
breathing to expand your torso like blowing up a beach ball. The expansion
of your torso (not just the chest, as would occur in “chest breathing”) will
cause your hands to separate outward to a distance of approximately eighteen
to twenty-four inches apart. Use your intention (yi) to send the qi up from
your dantien and outward into your arms and hands as they separate. At the
same time, direct the yi to create an overall sense of expansion and fullness
throughout your entire body. When separating your hands, keep the image of
pulling strands of silk between fingers and thumbs of each hand. Your
posture should now resemble Figure 5-9b.
Figure 5-9a
Figure 5-9b
Figure 5-9c
Having fully expanded your torso and opened your hands on the inhalation,
allow the breath to naturally flow out. This will cause your torso to collapse
inward somewhat. Accompanying the exhalation, use the yi to draw the qi
back from your hands and into your arms and lead it down into your dantien.
Your hands will be drawn back to their original position, as shown in Figure
5-9c. When the exhalation has completed, your body should feel temporarily
empty, light and nimble. You may repeat the sequence of Open/Close for
several minutes or longer if you are so inclined. The goal is to achieve a
feeling of overall lightness and looseness in your upper body that is
accompanied by a sense of sinking and heaviness in your lower body.
Sun Lutang taught that one should not only be aware of the Three External
Harmonies, but should also harmoniously link the mind with the qi and the qi
with the power, or jin. When practicing this simple silk-reeling exercise, be
sure to use the yi to lead the qi according to the instruction from the Taiji
Classics: “The mind leads the qi (yi yi yin qi.)”
Silk-Reeling Exercise 2: The posture from the Yang and Wu styles most
suitable for silk-reeling training is Cloud Hands. This posture, which is really
a continuous sequence of movements, utilizes the turning of the waist in both
directions and therefore lends itself particularly well to silk-reeling training.
The description and photos that follow are taken from the Yang style. The
Wu style version would be very similar, with the inclusion of the
characteristic sideways inclination that occurs in the Wu style Cloud Hands.
The actual performance of the Cloud Hands silk-reeling exercise is also
deceptively simple. Stand with your feet parallel and hip width apart. First
shift your weight onto your left leg and rotate your waist to the left. Next
raise up your right arm horizontally in front of your chest as if to begin the
Cloud Hands sequence. Your left arm should curve down and in front of your
waist. See Figure 5-10a.
You are now wound up in preparation to wave your hands like clouds as they
pass across the front of your body. Shift your weight onto your right leg, then
slowly rotate your waist to the right. Use the waist rotation to draw your right
arm across your torso in a horizontal path while your lower, left hand draws
an arc across your waist and groin. Figure 5-10b shows the intermediate
position as the right arm has travelled halfway across the torso. Continue
rotating to the right and allow your right arm to extend laterally out to the
right, with the palm finishing facing down as shown in Figure 5-10c. In this
finished position, you have fully unwound the waist energy stored in the
initial position (Figure 5-10a).
Figure 5-10a
Figure 5-10b
Figure 5-10c
This completes one half of the Cloud Hands movement. Then change the
position of the arms to set up for the return rotation back to the left. See
Figure 5-10d. You are now wound up on the right side of your body, and can
proceed to unwind to the left as shown in the sequence from Figures 5-10d
through 5-10f. Note that unwinding to the left involves a weight shift onto
your left leg and the turning of your waist to the left in a mirror image of the
unwinding to the right. This will complete the second half of the Cloud
Hands movement.
Figure 5-10d
Figure 5-10e
Figure 5-10f
The above instructions describe the movement of Cloud Hands in the actual
Yang style form with one crucial difference: the feet don’t move. This means
that you can repeat the sequence of Cloud Hands indefinitely (although three
to five minutes should suffice.) The purpose of the exercise is to train a
number of important principles of taijiquan without the distraction of having
to concentrate on stepping.
First of all, you want to concentrate on the qualities of slowness, steadiness,
and softness in the movement of both the waist and the arms. The pace of
your hands as they move across your body should be constant. Imagine that
each hand is connected to a silkworm’s cocoon. Try to pull the silk thread off
each cocoon without causing any breaks.
Second, you want to focus your attention on shifting your weight and rotating
your waist. Many teachers instruct their students to combine the weight shift
and the waist turn into a single coordinated movement. In practical terms, it is
best to first shift the weight and then turn the waist. The act of shifting the
weight onto the opposite leg first provides a more stable vertical axis for
performing the waist turn. When performing this movement, the sequence
should be to shift the weight and then turn the waist. Remember that the
power and grace of this movement is generated in the legs and controlled by
the waist, and is only expressed through the lightest and gentlest movements
of the hands.
Third, you want to embody the principle: “When one part moves, the entire
body moves.” That is to say, once you have performed the weight shift, as
you execute the waist rotation the entire torso, arms included, moves as a
single unit. In particular, you don’t want your head to move independently of
your torso. Again, the instruction “Nose and navel in alignment” is helpful
here. In particular, many students get caught up in following the hands with
the eyes, especially at the conclusion when the leading hand drifts out to its
full lateral extension. This is incorrect and should be avoided. Doc Fai
Wong’s injunction “Don’t be a palm reader!” applies in this exercise.
Although the principle “When one part moves, the entire body moves.”
applies to this and all of the movements in taijiquan, this does not mean that
the arms and the hands should not complete their trajectories across the body.
In fact, it is correct for the leading hand and especially the fingers of that
hand to drift out to the side at the conclusion of the waist turn. They are
simply completing the motion set up by the turning of the waist. Similarly,
the downward arm should allow the momentum of the waist turn to draw it
upward at the conclusion of the movement in preparation for the turning of
the waist in the opposite direction.
While the analogy of drawing silk from a cocoon is apt when describing the
motion of the hands in Cloud Hands, it may also be helpful to employ the
image of the hands as two Chinese brushes making elegant strokes in the air.
Imagine dipping the fingers of each hand into a pot of ink and then making
sweeping brush strokes on an invisible sheet of rice paper suspended in the
air in front of you.
As a variation on this exercise, you can train in a lower horse-riding stance.
In this case, you will need to turn your feet out slightly. Otherwise, the
completion of the waist turn will place undue strain on the knees. Just as the
instruction “Nose and navel in alignment” applies to the torso, so should the
instruction “Knee and ankle in alignment” apply to the joints of the leg.
Training in a low, horse-riding stance will strengthen the legs and increase
your endurance. It also will help you to develop the quality of song.
Silk-Reeling Exercise 3: As stated at the beginning of this section, silk-
reeling energy, or chan ssu jin¸ is a characteristic feature of Chen style
tajijquan and is part of the intelligent design of Chen Wangting’s original
martial art. Chen Wangting combined hard and soft movements and
incorporated both internal twining and external coiling into the individual
postures of his art.
The source of the spiraling movements of the body (the external) is the
internal turning of the lower dantien. The technique of turning the lower
dantien takes time to develop. This topic will be addressed separately in
Chapter Seven, which deals with qi cultivation. Suffice it to say that, at this
stage of your training, you should be aware of the lower dantien as you
practice Chen style silk-reeling exercises, and you should strive, according to
your level of development, to employ internal dantien rotation in order to
drive the turning of the waist, which in turn will drive the spiraling
movements in the arms and legs.
In order to execute silk-reeling correctly in the Chen style, you must also be
cognizant of the two phases of every silk-reeling movement. These are
referred to as shun chan and ni chan. Shun chan represents the collecting of
the internal energy, or qi, from the extremities back into the lower dantien. Ni
chan completes the cycle by sending the qi out into the extremities. In both
shun chan and ni chan, the qi follows spiral pathways as it draws inward or
expands outward.
The spiral pathways followed in the shun chan and ni chan hemicycles are
often represented in drawings such as the one reproduced below in Figure 5-
11
Figure 5-11
The following silk-reeling exercise is well-known and commonly-practiced in
the Chen style of tajijquan. Chen Zhenglei refers to this exercise as Single
Wave Hand in his book, Chen’s Taichi for Health and Wellness.33 Unlike the
Yang style Cloud Hands silk-reeling exercise described in the preceding
section, this exercise is performed on either the left or the right side
separately. In this example, the left side will be presented. The right side can
be performed in a mirror image and will not be included here.
To begin, stand in a Chen style left bow stance. The body’s weight should
fall sixty percent onto your left (substantial) leg and forty percent on your
right (insubstantial) leg. Rest your right hand on your right hip and extend
your left arm outward on your left side with the palm facing out as shown in
Figure 5-12a. Turn your head slightly to the left and direct your gaze toward
your left hand. From this position, shift the body’s weight onto your right leg
and curve your left hand down in front of your abdomen to the position
shown in Figure 5-12b. This should be accomplished in a downward
scooping motion.
Continue to rotate your left arm through the circular path upward and to the
right side of your body with the palm of your left hand facing out and to the
right. Your head should now be turned slightly to the right with the gaze
fixed upon your left hand as shown in Figure 5-12c.
From this position, shift the body’s weight back onto your left leg and use
your waist to turn your torso back toward the left side of your body. Allow
your left arm to drift horizontally across the front of your body in conjunction
with the turning of your torso until your left hand reaches the level of your
left shoulder. At this point, your left knee should be aligned vertically over
your left ankle. See Figure 5-12d. This is as far as your body should move to
the left. To complete the movement, allow the momentum of the weight shift
and the waist turn to direct the movement of your left hand up and out to the
left as if pivoting on the left elbow until it returns to its original position
shown in Figure 5-12a.
Figure 5-12a
Figure 5-12b
Figure 5-12c
Figure 5-12d
The above sequence constitutes one repetition of the Left Single Wave Hand
exercise with the inclusion of both the shun chan and ni chan hemicycles.
The movement of your left arm and hand from the position shown in Figure
5-12a through Figure 5-12c constitutes the shun chan half of the cycle. The
passage of your left arm and hand back from Figure 5-12c through Figure 5-
12d and ending in the beginning position shown in Figure 5-12a comprises
the ni chan half of the cycle. Remember to drive the movements with your
legs and direct the movement of your hand using your waist rather than
simply turning your shoulder. Keep in mind the Three External Harmonies
and the sequential opening of the three joints in the legs and the three joints
in the arms.
When performing the movements of the Left Single Wave Hand exercise,
attempt to use your yi to rotate the lower dantien in order to direct the turning
of your waist and torso and the curving movement of your arm and hand. If
you are unable to accomplish this at your present level of ability, don’t be
discouraged. Simply try to perform the movements smoothly and with
coordination and continuity. As you develop greater awareness of the lower
dantien and the circulation of your qi, you will eventually develop the ability
to rotate the loweer dantien and circulate the qi at will in order to drive the
external movements of this silk-reeling exercise.
Silk-Reeling Exercise 4: Another silk-reeling training exercise entails using
one hand to trace the pattern of the Taiji symbol. This training exercise is
common in Chen style, in which the hands are specifically engaged in
twining and spiraling movements, but is just as relevant to any other style.
Figures 5-13a and 5-13b depict the patterns for both the right and the left
hands.
Figure 5-13aFigure 5-13b
A good way to practice this exercise is to attach a large poster of the Taiji
symbol to a wall at torso height. Select the hand you want to employ and
trace the symbol as shown in the illustration above, beginning at the bottom
of the symbol. Follow the pattern in Figure 5-13a for the left hand and use the
pattern in Figure 5-13b for the right hand. The key to performing this
exercise correctly is to keep the wrist loose and flexible and to rotate the wrist
as it traces the pattern. It is helpful to imagine that your fingertips are the
bristles of a calligraphy brush tipped with ink and that you are tracing the
Taiji symbol with them, much as you would paint the symbol using brush and
ink.
Once you are able to trace the pattern by following the Taiji symbol on the
wall, you can dispense with the visual aid of the poster and simply trace the
Taiji symbol in the air. Also, as you become more proficient in using your
wrist to direct your fingers in tracing the pattern, you can engage your entire
torso in guiding the movement of your hands and fingers. Eventually you
should initiate the motion from your feet. As with the preceding exercise, you
should feel your intrinsic energy coiling up out of the feet, spiraling up the
legs and torso, and then coiling around the arms and out into the wrist and the
hands as you trace the pattern of the Taiji symbol. You should have the sense
that your entire body is involved in tracing the Taiji symbol
Make sure you train equally with both hands, as you want to balance silk-
reeling energy on both sides of the body. If you are ambitious, you can try the
same exercise while tracing the Taiji symbol with the toes of each foot. This
trains silk-reeling energy in the lower extremities and is very helpful in
loosening the sinews of the ankle. This also develops strong legs and good
overall balance, since you will need to stand on one leg while the other leg is
elevated as the foot and the toes coil around the Taiji symbol.
Silk-Reeling Skill Training Exercise 5: As a final silk-reeling skill training
exercise, you may want to try working with the taiji ball. There are many
exercises that one can practice with the taiji ball. The exercise presented here
will provide you with an introduction to this type of silk-reeling training. You
can investigate this subject on your own if you find this introductory exercise
valuable. In actual practice, a taiji ball should measure approximately eight
inches in diameter. Also, traditionally the taiji ball was constructed of wood
and often wrapped in a metal covering such as brass. However, to begin with
you can work with a child’s inflatable ball until you get the hang of moving
the ball in your hands. Once you become comfortable with the basic
movements, you can look for a wooden ball that will fit into your hands
comfortably.
To begin, stand with your feet between hip width and shoulder width apart.
Hold the ball between your two palms, paying particular attention to the two
lao gong points in your palms as they press against the ball. See Figure 5-
14a. Before moving your torso, try rolling the ball around between your two
palms using a gentle pressure to rotate the ball. You can turn the ball over
from top to bottom and also from one side to the other. Once you are
comfortable moving the ball within your two hands, try twisting to your right
side and simultaneously rotating the ball so that your left hand is on top and
your right hand is underneath as shown in Figure 5-14b. At this point the
body’s weight is shifted onto your right leg, and your torso is turned to the
right.
Now begin to shift your weight onto your left leg as you rotate your waist and
turn your torso to the left. Simultaneously begin rotating the ball between
your hands so that, as you face forward, the ball is held between your hands
as in the beginning position. See Figure 5-14c. As you continue rotating your
waist and turning your torso to the left, keep turning your hands so that, when
you complete the waist turn to the left, your right hand will be on top and
your left hand will be underneath as shown in Figure 5-14d.
Figure 5-14a
Figure 5-14b
Figure 5-14c
Figure 5-14d
Continue shifting your weight, rotating your waist, turning your torso, and
moving the ball from side to side until you can complete the changes fluidly
and continuously. As with the preceding exercises, try to open all nine of the
joints consecutively; focus on shifting your weight and rotating your waist.
Be conscious of the coiling of your hands as they turn the ball over from one
side to another and keep the image of pulling silk as your turn the ball.
This basic exercise of turning over the ball is the simplest pattern you can
perform with the taiji ball. You can experiment with more complex patterns
and rotations which engage your hands, your arms, and your entire torso. You
can, for example, stand in a bow stance and move between Rollback and
Press while holding and rotating the ball between your two hands. The
variations are endless and fascinating. When you become accustomed to
working with an inflatable ball, you can switch over to a solid wooden ball
(these can be found online) in order to deepen your taiji ball gongfu.
Conclusion
The two preceding chapters, which focused on developing song and
stretching, and the material presented in this chapter collectively constitute a
foundational system of stretching, opening, and loosening the muscles,
tendons, and ligaments of the body in order to prepare you to engage for
training in the art of tajijquan. Many, if not most, tajijquan practitioners
either ignore these foundational exercises or pay them little heed. This lack of
basic foundational development is evidenced in their corresponding lack of
song and the presence of angular, disjointed movements in their tajijquan
form practice. Those individuals who eschew regular stretching, loosening,
and song gong either are too rigid and mechanical in their movements, or
else, at the opposite extreme, are too floppy and soft. The proper state of
fullness, openness, calmness, and fluidity is only achieved by those
practitioners who grasp the importance of and consequently devote
themselves to the consistent and dedicated practice of standing, stretching,
loosening, and silk-reeling exercises.
As you can see from the standing, stretching, loosening, and silk-reeling routines presented in this text,
the warm-up portion of your daily tajijquan practice should encompass anywhere from a half an hour to
forty-five minutes. For most of us, this means we should spend at least as much time in preparation as
we spend in actual form and weapons practice. Although these routines may seem boring and
repetitive, they are essential to the gongfu of taijiquan training. It is best to keep in mind the adage:
“One day’s practice; one day’s benefit. One year’s practice; one year’s benefit.”
Chapter Six
Chapter Three introduced the topic of song and suggested that one way to
develop song is to stand in wuji posture on a daily basis. Chapters Four and
Five presented a complete warm-up routine consisting of stretching,
loosening, and silk-reeling exercises to further enhance your ability to
become song. Now it is time to take your practice to the next level through
the introduction of zhan zhuang.
The term “zhan zhuang” translates roughly as “standing post.” Zhan zhuang
practice entails standing still and rooted, like a post planted deep into the
ground. Zhan zhuang is common to many Chinese martial arts and is not
unique to taijiquan. Rather, it is a universal practice that confers benefits to
practitioners of all martial arts
Whether you practice taijiquan for health or for its martial applications, zhan
zhuang practice will greatly enhance the results you will obtain from this art.
The health benefits derive from both the improved cardiovascular function
resulting from working the legs as well as the increased qi flow which
improves the health of all the organs of the body. The martial benefit that is
obtained from this practice arises out of the rooting ability which accrues
over time. In addition, the ability to store and issue energy (fa jin) is directly
related to the circulation of qi.
The practice of zhan zhuang may employ a variety of taijiquan postures,
including the wuji standing posture introduced in Chapter Three. This chapter
presents several new standing postures. Here the emphasis is not only on
sinking down into the postures but also on the internal processes that take
place when standing in the postures. In addition, the topic of rooting is
discussed in greater detail. The mental gongfu that is needed in order to open
the qi channels and meridians that permeate the body is also examined.
Finally, some of the spontaneous experiences which may arise out of the
practice are explored.
Although not all taijiquan teachers include zhan zhuang as part of their
curriculum, many taijiquan practitioners do include zhan zhuang as part of
their training. Those who do include such training universally report that their
overall skill and understanding of the art is enhanced. There is a saying in the
taijiquan community: “No standing; no understanding.”
Zhan zhuang practice is also frequently included in the study of qigong.
Qigong is the internal cultivation and subsequent circulation of qi. Chapters
Seven and Eight present some specific qigong exercises that require the
practitioner to stand in the zhan zhuang posture of Embracing the Tree. While
zhan zhuang conveys benefits on its own without including qigong
techniques, the combination of qigong and zhan zhuang provides the best
results.
Students often ask: “Where is the best place to practice zhan zhuang?” The
simple answer is that, wherever you are, you can stand. However, in practical
terms, it is best to practice zhan zhuang in a tranquil location where you are
unlikely to be disturbed or draw attention to yourself. If weather permits, a
scenic outdoor spot may inspire you to stand longer. Many practitioners
prefer to stand adjacent to a large tree in order to take advantage of the tree’s
deep roots in order to lead their own roots downward into the ground. With
regard to the ground, it is good to begin by standing on level ground and
better to stand on raw earth, grass, or a wooden floor as opposed to standing
on concrete or carpeted flooring. Wear warm clothing and try to wear a long-
sleeved shirt and long pants in order to keep the qi close to the skin. You can
wear any flat-soled shoes or you can stand barefoot if weather permits.
Once you begin spending time in standing practice, you may be tempted to
cut back on the time you spend in the stretching and loosening exercises
presented in the preceding chapters. This would be a mistake. The stretching,
loosening, and silk-reeling exercises are the external aspect (waidan) of your
training, whereas zhan zhuang represents the complementary, internal
component (neidan) of your training. Neither is as effective practiced
separately as when practiced in conjunction.
Embracing the Tree
After you have been practicing standing in wuji posture for at least one
month, you can elevate your standing practice by adopting a slightly more
challenging posture. The Embracing the Tree posture takes its name from the
position of the arms, which are held up and circle outward as if embracing a
tree. Some practitioners refer to this posture as “holding the ball.”
Figure 6-1a illustrates the basic posture as seen from the front. In particular,
note the height of the hands and the fact that the elbows are dropped down
slightly. You want your hands to be held up around chest height, palms
facing in, fingers relaxed but not curled, with a small gap between the fingers
of your left and right hands. Be sure to keep your elbows dropped. Mid-torso
height is a good level for your elbows; any higher and you place strain on
your shoulders, which in turn will restrict the flow of qi down and out into
your arms and hands.
Figure 6-1b shows the Embracing the Tree posture as seen from the side.
Notice that the knees are flexed to a greater extent than in the wuji posture
introduced in Chapter Three. As you practice more advanced postures in zhan
zhuang you should begin dropping down into your legs, engaging the thighs
and calf muscles. This will increase your leg strength and also assist in
developing root. There is another expression related to zhan zhuang in the
martial arts community: “No burn, no earn.”
Figure 6-1a
Figure 6-1b
With regard to the width of the feet, there are three basic stances: narrow, hip
width, and shoulder width. It is best to start off standing with your feet hip
width apart. As your stamina and leg strength improves, you can widen your
stance to shoulder width. A narrow stance is actually more challenging than a
hip width or shoulder width stance and should be reserved for advanced
standing practice.
To begin, stand with your feet together and your hands hanging down
comfortably at your sides. Shift your weight onto your right leg and step out
to hip width with your left foot. Place the weight onto your left leg until you
come to a 50/50 weighted stance. Flex your knees somewhat and round the
groin. Drop down into your legs and lower your buttocks as if you are sitting
onto a high stool. Level the pelvic bowl, drop the shoulders, round the back,
and hollow the chest.
Once your body is settled, float your arms up and outward in front of your
body as if you were performing the opening of the taijiquan form. Then,
rotate your wrists so the backs of your hands are facing forward. Finally, drop
your elbows slightly and allow your hands to remain suspended
approximately two feet in front of your chest. Don’t let the fingers of your
two hands touch, but allow them to point toward each other with a gap of
about an inch between the two index fingers. Although some practitioners
maintain a wider gap, up to a foot between the fingers, it is better at the
beginning to keep the fingers of your two hands fairly close together. This is
due to the fact that it is easier to feel the qi connection between the two hands
when the fingers are nearer to each other. It is important that the thumbs also
point in toward each other and do not stick up. You want to establish a qi
connection between all the fingers (including the thumbs).
When standing in zhan zhuang, you can either close your eyes or leave them
open. Most beginners prefer to close their eyes during the initial stage of zhan
zhuang practice, as it enables them to direct their awareness inward. If you do
opt to leave your eyes open, place your gaze on something in the distance.
You should also “soften the gaze.” This means that you should not
concentrate the vision on any particular object. Some practitioners say that
closing the eyes during zhan zhuang practice promotes serenity, whereas
opening the eyes and gazing out into the middle distance enhances the martial
spirit, which is expressed through the eyes.
Once you are in the Embracing the Tree posture, go through the joint-by-joint
relaxation exercise described in Chapter Three until you have relaxed and
opened all the joints of your body. Allow the full weight of your body to drop
through your feet and into the ground by opening the yongquan points in the
feet.
Now the real work begins. You are going to engage in neigong, which is
internal effort. This internal work is presented below in four stages. It is best
to spend considerable time, several weeks or more, on each stage before
proceeding to the next one. As you become more comfortable with each new
stage of your standing practice, you should also increase your standing time
according to the recommendations included in the following instructions.
Stage 1 – Opening the Joints: In this stage you will focus your intention on
opening all the joints of your body. If you have been standing daily in wuji
posture, you are already familiar with the overall body relaxation exercise
introduced in Chapter Three. This relaxation exercise is a helpful way to
create an overall state of relaxation. However, it is not intended to target
specific regions of the body to facilitate their complete opening.
At this new stage of your development, you need to begin focusing on
opening specific joints as completely as possible. This is a process that takes
place over time and cannot be accomplished in one or two sessions of zhan
zhaung. The ultimate goal of this lengthy process is to create a body that is as
relaxed and pliant as that of an infant.
To reach a deeper and more fundamental level of relaxation and to focus on
opening specific joints in the body, you will need to increase the time of
standing from five minutes per day to ten minutes per day. If your arms get
too tired, drop them down for a brief respite and continue to stand in the basic
wuji posture for a minute or so before raising them up again to embrace the
tree. If you do need to rest your arms, be sure to relax your shoulder muscles
before raising the arms again.
In this stage of practice, there are two specific parts of the body that require
particular attention. These are the shoulder joints and the hips joint, which are
the two most important joints in taijiquan and are also the most difficult to
open up. It is best to start with the opening of the shoulder joints. In order to
open and loosen your shoulder joints, you will need to work on the entire
shoulder girdle. This is a group of muscles, ligaments, and tendons that
surround each shoulder joint and that both support the joint as well as enable
it to move in a variety of directions. Orthopedists generally agree that the
shoulder is the most complex joint in the body.
The shoulder girdle includes a number of important muscles, such as the
pectoralis major and pectoralis minor, the rhomboid, and the trapezius, to
name a few. You can find many excellent illustrations of the shoulder girdle
online. Basic familiarity with the anatomy of this area will assist you in your
efforts to loosen and open the shoulder joints.
Rather than focus on specific muscles, it is more useful to focus on the five
sub-regions of the shoulder girdle: the anterior or front, the superior or top,
the outer side, the inner side, and the posterior or back. Your task is to relax
each of these five sub-regions in turn, beginning with the posterior sub-
region. It is important to work on all of the five sub-regions in each standing
session. You need to ensure that the overall relaxation of this area is balanced
and complete. Otherwise, you may create imbalances that will lead to
postural problems and blockages to the free flow of qi. When addressing the
shoulders, you can work on each shoulder separately, or you can address both
shoulders at the same time. In the beginning, you will want to work on one
sub-region at a time, advancing through the five sub-regions as described
below.
To begin, stand in the Embracing the Tree posture and perform the overall
body relaxation exercise. Spend several minutes establishing your connection
to the ground through the yongquan points in your feet. Now, bring your
awareness to bear on your shoulder region. First, feel the entire shoulder
region. Perform an overall scan of the region, looking for stiffness, tightness,
pain, numbness, or any other indication of physical or mental tension.
Next, place your awareness specifically on the posterior sub-region. Focus on
the area underneath the shoulder blades. Use your intention to relax the
muscles and ligaments that bind the shoulder blade to the rest of the shoulder
girdle. Use your breath to assist you in this endeavor. Inhale into the area and
then exhale as you direct the muscles and ligaments to relax. You can
imagine that you have a small balloon inserted behind each shoulder blade.
Inflate the balloon on the inhale to expand the tissues and deflate the balloon
on the exhale to relax the tissues. Do this for several minutes until you feel
the muscles, ligaments, and tendons begin to relax and to release any stored-
up tension in this area.
Now move onto the tops of the shoulders. Focus on relaxing and releasing the
muscles and ligaments in this sub-region. Again, you can use the balloon
imagery here to inflate and expand and then deflate and relax the tissues of
this region. Spend several minutes on this region as well before moving on to
the front sub-region.
The anterior sub-region contains several important muscles associated with
shoulder function. Some are accessible from the surface; that is to say that
you can feel and manipulate them easily with your fingers and hands using
basic massage techniques. Others are deeper and much more difficult to reach
using standard massage techniques. That is why zhan zhaung is so important
in achieving the deep release we are striving for.
Superficially, the muscles and ligaments that create the visible indentation
below the top of the shoulder in this sub-region are referred to as the
“shoulder nest.” It is very important that you relax the shoulder nest as this
will open the entire shoulder joint and provide greater flexibility and range of
motion. Use the breath and the balloon imagery to relax this region. Then,
before moving on to the inner and outer sub-regions, place your awareness
deeper into this area and work on relaxing and releasing the deeper muscles
of this sub-region. There is much work to be done here. You will need to
devote multiple sessions to the shoulder area in order to achieve the desired
result of song in the shoulder area.
Finally, move on to the inner and outer sub-regions, working on the outer
sub-region first and then on the inner sub-region. Use the breath and the
balloon imagery to relax and release the muscles, ligaments, and tendons in
each of these sub-regions. When employing the balloon imagery on the inner
sub-region, you can actually allow the arm to expand outwards slightly with
the inflation of the balloon.
You should spend a week or more standing in zhan zhuang and working
solely on the shoulder girdle and opening the shoulder joint on each side of
the body. One sign that you are making progress is that your hands will hang
lower at your sides when you stand in wuji posture. When you feel
comfortable with the progress that you have made in opening your shoulders,
you can move on to the elbow joints and then proceed to the wrist joints. You
can view the anatomy of these two joints online, but they are both relatively
simple joints to open using the techniques described above. Professor Cheng
Man-ch’ing used to tell his students that, once the shoulder joints were
opened, the elbow and wrist joints were easy to open by comparison.
The other major joints that need to be addressed in this stage of standing
practice are the hip joints. Like the shoulder joints, the two hip joints are
surrounded by another girdle, which is referred to as the “pelvic girdle.” As
with the shoulder girdle, the pelvic girdle consists of a number of muscles,
ligaments, and tendons. The muscles involved on each side of the pelvic
girdle include the iliacus and the psoas muscles, the hip flexors, the
abductors, the adductors, and gluteal muscles. That’s a lot of muscle, and it’s
all connected through complex attachments of ligaments and tendons, many
of which are typically either frozen or tight.
Your job is to work on loosening and releasing these muscles and their
associated ligaments and tendons. Similar to the shoulder joints, the each hip
joint consists of sub-regions on each side of the pelvic bone. In this case there
are four sub-regions that should be considered: the anterior, inner, outer, and
posterior. When working on the hip joints, you should begin with the anterior
sub-region of each hip. This sub-region includes both the psoas and the
iliacus muscles. If these muscles are tight, they tend to tilt the pelvis forward,
which causes the hip joint to bind up. This in turn reduces flexibility and
range of motion. From a martial aspect, this means that you are not free to
rotate and neutralize effectively using Rollback for example
The difficulty in working with both the psoas and the iliacus muscles is that
they are deep muscles and are not easily accessible using traditional massage
techniques. That means you are going to have to use neigong, or internal
effort, in order to work on loosening them in order to open up the hip joints.
As with the shoulder joints, you will address these deep muscles through
standing in the Embracing the Tree posture.
To begin, assume the Embracing the Tree posture and settle yourself using
the overall body relaxation sequence. Stand for several minutes and allow
yourself to sink into the earth through the yongquan points in your feet. As
you do so, try to round the crotch by exerting a slight outward pressure on
each inner thigh. The groin area may be likened to an inverted bowl. The
rounder the bowl, the more open the groin. In fact, you have two bowls in the
mid-section of the body. The first is the upright pelvic bowl, which sits on the
overturned bowl created by rounding the crotch. You want both of these
bowls to be as round and as level as possible.
Now you can address the anterior sub-region of the pelvic girdle. The trick to
loosening and lengthening the muscles, ligaments, and tendons in this region
is to create dynamic tension. That is to say, you need to pull up with your
lower abdominal muscles while simultaneously pulling down with the
muscles of your upper thighs. This is a bit like pulling taffy, in which you
pull from both ends to stretch out the taffy in the middle. At the same time as
you are pulling up with your abs and down with your quads, you should
imagine the tissues in between as stretching out like the taffy in the taffy-
pulling analogy.
While it may seem counter-intuitive to employ muscular tension in order to
develop song, this is exactly what you need to do. Of course, you don’t want
to use excessive strength when engaging the muscles above and below the
pelvis, as this will negate any opening you gain in the pelvic girdle itself.
Spend several minutes trying to find the right degree of tension while
simultaneously relaxing the underlying tissues that connect the front of the
thigh bone to the pelvis. Over the course of several zhan zhuang sessions you
should begin to feel these underlying muscles, ligaments, and tendons begin
to release and lengthen.
Next, move on to the posterior sub-region. Again, you will need to employ
dynamic tension here to level the pelvic bowl from the back. Assuming that,
like most people, your pelvic bowl is tipped forward, you will need to pull it
down from the back by engaging your gluteal muscles. However, if you only
tense these muscles you will not achieve the desired result of permanently
releasing the pelvis. Therefore, at the same time as you are pulling down with
your buttocks you need to exert a certain degree of tension in the muscles of
your abdomen in order to pull up on your pelvis and counteract the
downward pulling effect of tightening your buttocks.
As with the dynamic tension created in the anterior sub-region, this requires a
delicate balancing act between the muscles of your abdomen and your
buttocks. You will know that you have reached the proper balance when your
pelvic bowl appears to hang or float in the level position without undue
strain. Because of the complexity of both the anterior and posterior sub-
regions of the pelvic girdle, you should spend at least three minutes on these
sub-regions in each zhan zhuang session devoted to this area.
The inner and outer sub-regions of the pelvic girdle are addressed similarly to
the inner and outer sub-regions of the shoulder girdle. They are much less
complicated and can be addressed in a straightforward fashion once the
pelvic bowl has been leveled by balancing out the anterior and posterior sub-
regions.
To restate, both the shoulder region and the hip region are very complex, and
each will require multiple sessions of zhan zhuang in order to fully address
any issues you may have. You should expect to spend from one to two weeks
on each area before moving on to the other areas of the body. This assumes
that you do not have any specific injuries in either of these two areas. There
is a school of thought that believes that even long-standing injuries can be
either healed or at least ameliorated through zhan zhuang. Whether or not
zhan zhuang will be efficacious in addressing such issues in your case, it is
certain that you will derive overall benefits from standing in zhan zhuang and
working on opening the joints.
Once the hip joints are opened, you can move down to the knees and the
ankles. Although each of these joints are easier to work on than the hip joints,
nonetheless you will probably need to spend a bit more time on the knee
joints than on the elbow, wrist and ankle joints. Like the shoulder joints and
the hip joints, the knee joints are also rather complex. You should review the
anatomy of the knee joint before working on your knees in zhan zhuang. In
order to open the knee joints, you can use the expansion/contraction balloon
imagery presented above.
As part of your zhang zhuang practice at this stage, be sure to address all the
major joints of the body. Don’t neglect the cervical (neck) joint or the sacral
joint at the base of the spine. When working on the neck region, you need to
be very careful not to push up with force as you attempt to lengthen and open
the vertebrae in the neck. When standing in zhan zhuang and working on the
neck region, it is best to imagine that the head is suspended like a helium
balloon. One by one, allow each vertebra to gently separate from the one
below as the head floats up.
With regard to the sacrum, you may employ a small amount of muscular
force as you tuck your tailbone under. This is usually accomplished in
conjunction with the leveling of the pelvis. You may want to visualize
attaching a four-ounce fishing weight to the bottom of your spine. Imagine
the weight of your sacrum gently pulling downward on the base of your
spine.
You will also want to spend some time working on your upper, middle and
lower back in order to lengthen and straighten your spinal column. When
standing in zhan zhuang, you can concentrate on each region of your spine
separately. Starting with your lower back, imagine each vertebra as pulling
up gently in order to create a small space between itself and the vertebra
below. Again, be careful to use imagination and the intent rather than
muscular force in order to separate the vertebrae in your spine. You can
employ the balloon imagery here. Imagine that there is a small balloon
occupying the space between two vertebrae. Use your breath and your
imagination to inflate the balloon and so increase the space between each pair
of vertebrae.
Overall, you should spend at least one month in this first stage of your zhan
zhuang practice before moving onto the second stage, which entails
deepening your root. Remember that you have a lifetime ahead of you and
nothing to be gained by moving on to the next stage of your development
before the present work is completed. Have patience and focus on what you
are trying to accomplish in each stage rather than anxiously rushing on to the
next stage of your training.
Stage 2 – Deepening Your Root: Once you have achieved noticeable
progress in opening all the joints of the body, you are ready to continue on to
the second stage of zhan zhuang practice: deepening your root. Of the many
rewards derived from zhan zhuang, this benefit most directly relates to the
martial aspects of taijiquan. Rooting clearly is relevant to fixed-step pushing
hands practice, but “moving root” is also important in moving-step pushing
hands as well as in sparring.
Both wuji standing and the zhan zhuang standing described above entail a
certain degree of rooting. Now, however, you will really begin to extend your
roots deep into the ground. The reason for postponing rooting practice until
you have completed the practice of opening all the joints of the body is that
you need to be able to allow the full weight of the body to sink down into
your feet and then be transferred further into the ground through the
yongquan points. This can only take place when the joints are sufficiently
open to allow the weight to fall through them and into your feet. The process
of dropping down into your feet should proceed sequentially from your neck
and shoulders, down through your upper, middle and lower back, further
down through your sacro-illiac joint and into your hips, from your hips down
through your knees, and finally into your ankles and feet.
Rooting practice requires absolute relaxation and openness throughout the
entire body along with deep mental concentration on the task of dropping the
weight of the body down into the ground. This internal work, or neigong, is
not easy to achieve and will require many days and even weeks to accomplish
completely. However, the benefits to be derived from attaining a deep root
are well worth the effort. It is important to understand that, in order to deepen
your root, it is necessary to increase your standing time in this stage from ten
to fifteen minutes per session.
The reason for this is that root grows slowly, just like the roots of a tree. The
longer you stand in each session, the deeper your root will penetrate into the
ground. If you stand for five minutes, you will create a root “five minutes”
deep. If you stand for fifteen minutes, you will create a root “fifteen minutes”
deep. Dedicated students of the Chinese martial arts will often stand for up to
an hour in order to develop truly deep and penetrating roots.
To begin working on deepening your root, stand in the Embracing the Tree
posture. Go through the overall body relaxation exercise. At this stage of
your development, you should be able to fully open all the joints of the body
in just a few minutes. Now when you stand, you don’t have to work on
releasing the individual joints anymore. Instead, you can place your
awareness on your feet, paying particular attention to the yongquan points.
However, you should also be aware of the toes, the heel, and the outer and
inner edges of each foot.
Some practitioners advocate distributing the weight over the entire bottom
surface of the foot. This is a basic way to stand. However, if you shift your
weight just slightly forward of the center of the foot, you will place additional
pressure on the yongquan point. The additional pressure will aid in opening
this energy gate. You will need to experiment during standing in order to
determine what weight distribution works best for you. You can do this by
ever-so-slightly shifting forward and backward, paying close attention to
whether you feel more stable and grounded as the weight shifts from back to
front. You can also roll each foot from side to side, again with the purpose of
finding your own personal “center” within each foot.
The most important aspect of this stage of zhan zhuang training is that you
send your awareness down below the ground and not focus on the bottom
surface of the foot nor on the surface of the ground (or floor) upon which you
are standing. Start by placing your awareness (or your intention, if you will)
an inch or so below the ground. Use your will to drop your weight through
each foot until it reaches the spot directly below the ground where you are
standing. Stand like this for five minutes or so. Then transfer your awareness
even deeper, say two to three inches below the ground. Again, drop the
weight of the body down to the point below each foot where you have placed
your awareness. Stand for another five minutes or so with your root sinking
to this depth. Finally, try dropping your awareness down six inches into the
ground and stand with your roots at this depth for a final five minutes. In this
way you can gradually extend your roots deeper into the ground.
With each rooting session you should try to extend your roots a little deeper.
The goal is to sink your roots down at least a foot. The deeper the better. As
you stand in zhan zhuang with your attention focused on rooting, you will
likely feel your body getting both heavier and lighter. How can this
seemingly contradictory state of the body exist? The heaviness is the result of
the weight sinking down. You will feel this heaviness primarily in your lower
body, but this sensation may well rise as high as the midriff. The lightness is
the result of the qi spontaneously and naturally rising upward. This lightness
will be felt mostly in your upper torso and particularly in your arms,
shoulders, neck and head.
Both the sensations of heaviness and of lightness are signs of overall
progress. However, you should not intentionally try to become either heavy
or light. Just focus on dropping the weight of the body into your feet, opening
the yongquan points, and allowing the body’s weight to fall through your feet
and into the ground as described above. In zhan zhuang practice, there is no
trying, only allowing.
You may also experience a variety of sensations associated with opening the
yongquan points. These may include warmth, tingling, and a sense that the
energy of the earth is rising up into your feet through the yongquan points.
Remember that the yongquan point is referred to as the “Bubbling Well.”
Once the Bubbling Well points are opened, the qi of the earth will naturally
rise up to fill your feet. Eventually this qi will rise up from your feet and into
your lower extremities, eventually reaching the level of your lower dantien.
As with Stage 1, you should spend some time in Stage 2 of zhan zhuang
practice. It is recommend that you spend at least two weeks in this stage
before moving onto Stage 3. The deeper your roots, the easier it will be to
stand for longer periods in the later stages of practice. It is important to
understand that the longer you are able to stand while you are learning to
focus your awareness on the breath, the dantien and the qi in Stage 3, the
more your overall taijiquan practice will improve.
Stage 3 – Focusing the Awareness on the Dantien and the Breath: Having
developed the ability to open and loosen the joints of the body and also
having arrived at the point in your practice where you can extend your roots
into the ground, you are now ready to direct your focus on the lower dantien
and the breath. The lower dantien is the energy center located approximately
three finger widths below the navel and approximately two finger widths
behind the muscles of the abdominal wall.
Use the technique known as abdominal breathing (also called “baby
breathing” or “Buddhist breathing”) to inflate your abdomen as you inhale
and to deflate your abdomen as you the exhale. Keep your mind quietly
focused on your breathing and the lower dantien energy center. Spend at least
five minutes standing in the Embracing the Tree posture, breathing naturally
and easily into your lower dantien region. Your breath should be long, slow,
thin, quiet, and deep. Try counting slowly to eight on each inhalation and
using another eight-count on the exhalation.
If your attention wanders, bring it back to the breath and the lower dantien.
At this stage of your practice, don’t get caught up in what the rest of your
body is doing. If your arms begin to ache or tremble, just ignore them. Even a
beginner can put up with a little discomfort in the arms for at least five
minutes. If you find your arms tiring easily, it is often a sign that your elbows
are too high. Try dropping them down a bit more.
Practice in this way for five minutes a day until you can stand comfortably
without tiring and without losing the focus on your breath and the lower
dantien. Pay attention to the sensations in your abdominal region. Do you
feel this region getting warmer? Do you feel as if the lower dantien is
expanding, contracting, or starting to rotate on its own or in conjunction with
the breath? Do you feel energy beginning to radiate outward or upward from
the lower dantien?
These are all indications that the qi is starting to accumulate in the lower
dantien. Although these are common signs of qi development, don’t be
concerned if you do not experience any of these sensations at the beginning
of your practice. Each individual develops at his or her own pace, and it does
no good to try to force the qi into the dantien. Just let it develop naturally.
Once you are able to maintain your stance naturally and your focus easily,
you can move on to the next level of energy awareness. As you stand in the
Embracing the Tree posture, imagine the qi rising up your back to the dazhui
point in your upper back, midway between your two shoulder blades. Move
the qi up your spine on the inhale; then move it across the tops of your
shoulder blades, over your shoulders, down your arms and into your hands
and fingers on the exhale.
At first you probably won’t feel any energy movement. Instead you will have
to rely upon your imagination. Eventually you will begin to feel the qi rise
out of the lower dantien and move up your spine. The qi may move either
slowly or it may seem to surge up. Allow the qi to move at its own pace, but
be sure to coordinate the movement of the qi with your breath as described in
the preceding paragraph.
Some students initially have difficulty moving the qi up their spine and out
into their arms. This may be due to blockages in their spine or in their
shoulders. It may also be due to their reliance upon the analytical mind rather
than drawing upon the power of the hsien or heart/mind. Rather than thinking
about qi in the abstract, try imagining the qi as heat, or light, or electricity.
Lead the light or the heat or the electricity with your imagination. Let the
movement of the qi be a challenging game instead of a difficult task.
You will know that you have met with success in this endeavor when you
begin to feel a tingling sensation in the fingers of your hands. You may even
feel the energy extending outward from the fingers and meeting in the space
between your two hands. This normally occurs first in the space between the
two middle fingers, as they are closest to each other. Eventually the gaps
between the other fingers will fill with energy as well. The two thumbs are
usually the last digits to participate in this energetic connection. Be sure that
you don’t have any tension in the thumbs. They should point toward each
other just like the other fingers and should not stick up at an angle from the
back of your hands.
The Taijiquan Classics provide us with many important principles that guide
the practice of taijiquan:
The principles contained within the Classics, along with the essential points
expounded by the founders of taijiquan, provide the framework for the
practice of our art. Underlying all these principles, however, are two
fundamental touchstones:
If a student adheres to all the other principles of taijiquan but ignores these
two, his or her practice will lack the true essence of the art. That is to say, it
will not be the true taijiquan as practiced by the originators of the different
styles of this unique, internal martial art.
In his Thirteen Treatises on T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Cheng Man-ch’ing included a
chapter entitled “Developing the Qi to Attain Suppleness.” This chapter
includes a reference to the Tao Te Ching, in which Lao-tzu described the
process of developing the qi in order to achieve suppleness. Professor Cheng
concluded that the appropriate location in the body to develop the qi is the
lower dantien.36
Chen Zhenglei also explains the importance of accumulating the qi in the
lower dantien. He emphasizes the importance of being naturally relaxed and
calm while coordinating the movements of the entire body. When the body is
in motion, all of the components of the body must move in a coordinated
manner. When the body stops moving, all of the components of the body
need to settle together into stillness. He further explains that the breathing
and the movement should be coordinated under the direction of the mind, or
yi. He emphasizes the necessity for persistent and ongoing practice in order to
reach the state in which the qi accumulates in the dantien. From this focussed
practice, the qi will become substantial and powerful.37
As was asserted in the Introduction, the vast majority of taijiquan
practitioners do not keep their awareness in the dantien, nor do they actively
direct the qi in order to move the body. These individuals may be relaxed,
they may have acquired some limited root, and they may even have
developed a certain degree of song. However, without the ability to cultivate
and mobilize the qi, their taijiquan practice will forever remain at a
superficial level.
It is essential to be relaxed, rooted, and song when performing the form.
These are important qualities in the practice of taijiquan and are prerequisites
for the cultivation and mobilization of qi. Just as relaxation is essential for
developing song, so song is an essential condition for cultivating and
mobilizing the qi. Students who have learned to relax, established some root,
and developed a degree of song can justifiably be proud of their
accomplishment. However, they should not stop at this point but rather need
to advance forward to the real gongfu of qi cultivation and mobilization.
Many students report experiencing a warmth and tingling in the hands and
fingers at some point in their study of taijiquan. Although this is a good sign,
it is nothing more than the presence of localized qi. The phenomenon of
localized qi will be addressed in the following section. Experiencing
localized qi, however, is not the same as cultivating the qi in the dantien and
then mobilizing and circulating the qi out to the extremities of the body. To
accomplish this takes months and even years of serious gongfu, preferably
under the tutelage of a knowledgeable and experienced teacher.
Understanding Qi
Before one can learn to cultivate and mobilize the qi, one must first
understand what qi is. According to Chinese tradition, qi is an invisible yet
tangible energy that permeates the universe. The ancient Chinese believed
that everything in the universe, both living and inanimate, contains qi. With
regard to living entities such as plants and animals, qi can be considered to be
the basic life-force which supports existence. If the qi is weak, the individual
(plant or animal) will be weak. If the qi ceases to function entirely, the entity
will die.
One may well ask how inanimate objects can contain qi if qi is considered to
be a life-force. The answer is that the qi of inanimate objects is contained
within the energy that inhabits those objects. An analysis of the Five
Elements reveals how inanimate objects are embued with their own unique
type of qi. Wood for example, can be burned, releasing its qi as heat. Water’s
qi has the power to dissolve small objects and even to wash away large
boulders. A rock’s qi may be bound up in the minerals it contains. For
example, iron ore can be melted to release the metal contained within it.
There are many ways to categorize qi. However, the most common
classification is to refer to the three categories of qi as follows: heaven qi,
earth qi, and human qi. These three types of qi are collectively referred to as
the Three Treasures of the universe, or san pao. It is important to understand
these three types of qi and to know how to combine them harmoniously.
Heaven qi, or tian qi, consists of the heavenly forces that exert their influence
upon humans and the earth. It has long been known that heavenly bodies,
such as the sun, the moon and the stars, all influence both the earth and the
individuals that inhabit the earth. Heaven qi is present in both sunshine and
moonshine (especially the liquid variety!) Exposure to heaven qi in the right
amount is essential to our health and vitality.
Heaven qi is also present in the air that we breathe. Clearly, the quality of the
air we breathe has direct influence upon our health and well-being. Chinese
Traditional Medicine counsels us to avoid air that is too dry, too humid, too
hot or too cold. We must also avoid breathing air that contains harmful
substances, such as pollution or sulfurous vapors, etc.
The ancient Chinese believed that heaven qi was responsible for the weather,
particularly such events as typhoons and tornadoes, and also influenced the
tides. Astrologically speaking, heaven qi was also thought to influence
human affairs. The Chinese developed elaborate systems of divination in
order to understand and predict the influence of heaven qi on present and
future events. The I Ching is the best known of these systems.
Below heaven is earth. Earth qi, or di qi, is influenced by heaven qi, although
earth qi also acts independently from heaven qi. Earth qi includes the earth's
magnetic field as well as geothermic energy. Earth qi also encompasses the
energy contained in rivers, oceans, lakes, mountains, and forests. As with the
weather, the ancient Chinese believed that natural disasters such as
earthquakes, landslides, floods, and tidal waves were the result of imbalances
in earth qi. The well-known art of geomancy, or feng shui, is based upon the
study of earth qi.
Humankind stands between heaven and earth. As such, human qi, or ren qi, is
influenced by both heaven qi and earth qi. As stated previously, human qi is
affected by the quality of the air we breathe (kong qi), the food we eat (gu qi)
and the water we drink. Human qi is further categorized as pre-birth qi (hsien
t'ien qi) and post-birth qi (hou t'ien qi). Pre-birth qi is the qi we receive from
our parents. In modern scientific terms, pre-birth qi is the equivalent of our
DNA. Post-birth qi is the qi that animates our lives and which is influenced
by heaven qi and earth qi and also the qi of air, food and water.
We can do nothing to change our pre-birth qi, although there are exercises we
can perform to maintain the vitality of our pre-birth qi. Our post-birth qi, on
the other hand, is largely under our control. We can engage in practices that
nourish this qi, such as breathing good, fresh air; eating healthy, nourishing
food in the proper quantities; drinking pure, clean water; and engaging in
stimulating and invigorating exercise. We can also choose to live in
environments where the qi of heaven and earth exerts a healthy influence
upon us, such as in the mountains or beside a lake or the ocean.
As well as these natural activities, we can also engage in specific exercises
designed to enhance and nourish our qi. The ancient Chinese sages developed
many such exercises, which are collectively known as qigong. Several of
these exercises will be introduced in the following sections of this chapter.
In addition to devising qigong exercises, the venerable Chinese sages were
able to map out the pathways within the human body along which the post-
birth qi travels. They were also able to analyze human anatomy and establish
the relationships between the various organs. Organs were classified as either
yang or yin, and the qi pathways, or meridians, associated with each organ
were identified. The science of Traditional Chinese Medicine is based upon
these organ classifications and the meridians associated with them.
Diagnoses for various illnesses were developed based upon the knowledge of
the organs and their relationships. Specific treatments involving the
placement of needles at key acupoints along the meridians were devised.
Herbal remedies were also created based upon the special healing qualities, or
qi, of certain plants and animal parts. In addition, specific qigong exercises
were established for the purpose of stimulating or strengthening individual
organs in order to combat diseases and deficiencies within the body.
In addition to qi, each human being possesses two other vital energies or
essences: ching and shen. Ching is the sexual energy which enables
procreation. Ching is normally associated with the testes in men and with the
ovaries in women. Shen is the spiritual energy that each human possesses.
This is not the same concept as the Western notion of the soul. Rather, one’s
shen is their spirit of vitality, that is to say the brightness of their personality,
the essence of their being. Someone who has a vibrant shen is said to have a
“great spirit.”
As with heaven, earth, and humanity, which together make up the Three
Treasures of the universe, qi, ching, and shen make up the Three Treasures of
humankind. These three human treasures are mutually supportive and
dependent upon one another. It is said that ching supports qi, qi supports
shen, and shen supports ching. This circular, tripartite relationship is referred
to as the Three Internal Harmonies. One style of qigong, which is internal,
seeks to strengthen and unite these Three Treasures.
When the qi, ching, and shen are united, the spirit of vitality rises to the upper
energy gate located on the top of the head (the bai hui, or Heaven's Gate),
resulting in a state of elevated spiritual awareness and ultimately in
enlightenment. The Taoists refer to this union as “the three flowers meet on
the top” (san hua ju ding).
Just as pre-birth qi is associated with either the testes or the ovaries, post-
birth qi is associated with the kidneys. It is said that the kidneys are the
source of post-birth qi. For this reason it is important to maintain the health of
the kidneys above all other organs. Many qigong exercises are intended
specifically to strengthen and energize the kidneys in order to generate
strong, healthy post-birth qi. Note: for the rest of this discussion, the term
“post-birth qi” will be abbreviated to “qi.” When the term “qi” is used
without any qualification, it is assumed to mean “post-birth qi.”
Although qi is generated in the kidneys, it is stored in the lower dantien. As
discussed previously, the lower dantien is the energy center located in the
abdominal cavity. It is situated three finger widths below the navel and two
finger widths toward the interior. This Chinese term is often translated as the
“field of immortality” or the “field of elixir” where “elixir” refers to the “qi.”
There are many qigong exercises whose purpose is to increase the store of qi
in the lower dantien.
Within the human body, there are three circulatory systems: the qi circulatory
system, the blood circulatory system, and the lymph circulatory system. The
qi and blood circulatory systems are closely related. In Cultivating the Ch’i,
Chen Kung stated that, between the blood and the qi, the qi is the more
important in that the qi serves as the master to the blood because it directs the
blood to reach all the tissues of the body.38
The close relationship between the blood and the qi is often referred to in
China as the relationship between a brother and a sister. In this analogy, the
qi is the brother and the blood is the sister. Traditional Chinese Medicine is
based on the premise that the qi leads the blood. Where the qi goes the blood
follows. If the qi is blocked or stagnant, then there will be a deficiency of
blood in that region of the body. Also, if the qi flow stops completely, then
the individual will die.
Although the qi will flow naturally of its own accord, it may become
subjected to blockages as stated above. These blockages can be released
through acupuncture. It is also possible to open qi blockages through either
external qigong exercises or through internal qigong exercises. The basis for
both external and internal qigong is the principle of yi yi yin qi, “the mind
leads the qi.” Just as where the qi goes the blood follows, it is also true that
where the mind (intention) goes, so the qi follows.
The mere mental act of focusing the intent on a particular region of the body
can cause an increased accumulation of qi in that region. When the qi flows
strongly to a specific location, the blood naturally follows. It is this increased
blood flow that individuals sometimes experience as warmth or tingling when
practicing taijiquan. This sensation most frequently occurs in the fingers and
palms of the hands. Although this is a valid experience, it is not a direct
experience of the qi, but rather the experience of the blood following the qi.
Furthermore, the qi that is experienced in these cases is localized qi.
Localized qi is important and can be useful in both martial applications and in
healing. However, if we want to master qi cultivation and mobilization, we
need to learn to work with the qi in the lower dantien. Without learning how
to cultivate the qi in the lower dantien and then mobilize and circulate this qi
throughout the body, our experiences of the qi will only be of the local
variety. Hence we say that the experience of qi is superficial as opposed to
deep and all-pervasive. The exercises presented in the final two sections of
this chapter are intended to be used for this purpose, i.e. to aid in cultivating
the qi in the lower dantien and then to circulate the qi out from this field of
elixir.
To conclude this discussion of qi, we need to consider one final topic. Some
people mistakenly believe that there are two types of qi: yin qi and yang qi.
This is incorrect. There is only qi. However, it is true to say that all qi,
whether it be derived from heaven, earth, or an individual, may have the
quality of being yin or yang.
We see this everywhere in nature. For example, the fierce rays of the midday
sun are said to be yang, whereas the cold light of the moon may be
considered to be yin. The same is true of the qi in the human body. The qi
that travels within the stomach meridians is normally yang in nature. On the
other hand, the qi that travels within the kidney meridians is normally yin in
nature. If, for some reason, the qi in the kidney meridians becomes yang in its
aspect, then the kidneys will become overheated and disease will arise.
Disease in the kidneys may also arise if the qi in the kidney meridians
becomes too yin. Thus it is important not only to have strong qi overall but
also to have the right quality of qi in each of the meridians. Again, many
qigong exercises have been devised to both strengthen and balance the qi
associated with specific organs so that it is neither too yin nor too yang.
Conclusion
This chapter began with a discussion of the importance of the two
fundamental principles of taijiquan. The first is to “Guard the mind and the qi
together in the dantien,” and the second is “The mind moves the qi, and the qi
moves the body.” To assist the practitioner in realizing the first of these two
principles, several neidan techniques were presented that will enable you to
focus your yi on the dantien and to accumulate the qi in the dantien. By
practicing neidan qigong on a daily basis, you will be increase your store of
qi in the dantien, which in turn will enable you to circulate your qi
throughout the body according to the dictates of your intent, or yi.
Whether you are more interested in the civil or the martial aspect of taijiquan,
it is essential that you learn to cultivate your qi. The cultivation and
circulation of the qi are the fundamental practices upon which all other
aspects of taijiquan are based. If you aren’t able to build up a store of qi in
the dantien, you won’t be able to circulate the qi throughout the body during
the practice of the form. It is this circulation of your qi that revitalizes the
organs, bones, and muscles of the body and keeps you healthy and vigorous.
The accumulation and circulation of the qi are also necessary for the proper
application of the martial techniques contained within the form. Both the
defensive and the offensive techniques rely upon the development and
application of jin in order to be effective. Jin, or intrinsic energy, is in turn
reliant upon the accumulation and circulation of the qi. Chapter Eleven and
Chapter Twelve address the different types of jin and how to develop jin.
Chapter Eleven focusses on defensive jin, and Chapter Twelve investigates
various offensive jin. In these two chapters you will learn about the integral
relationship between qi and jin.
Remember that it is not only necessary to cultivate the qi. It is also necessary
to be able to mobilize the qi. Again, this is true whether you are interested in
the civil or the martial application of taijiquan. Keep in mind the second
fundamental principle introduced in this chapter: “The mind moves the qi,
and the qi moves the body.” In order for the qi to move the body, it must be
able to circulate freely. The following chapter presents a number of Taoist
practices designed to enable you to circulate the qi that you have accumulated
using the techniques described in this chapter. In combination, the techniques
for cultivating and circulating the qi presented in this book will provide you
with the necessary foundation for practicing the true art of taijiquan.
Chapter Eight
Reverse Breathing
As noted in the preceding chapter, there are two main types of breathing that
are employed in qi cultivation. The first and more natural of these breathing
techniques is abdominal breathing. As you may recall from that chapter,
abdominal breathing is sometimes referred to as “baby breathing,” because
this type of breathing in adults duplicates the natural breathing of newborns
and infants.
Abdominal breathing is very relaxing, which is why it is often the first
breathing technique taught to beginning qi cultivators. Abdominal breathing
draws the awareness down into the lower abdomen, which is where the lower
dantien is located. For this reason, abdominal breathing is helpful in training
practitioners to focus their yi on the dantien.
The problem with relying solely on abdominal breathing is that abdominal
breathing draws the awareness down on the inhalation and up on the
exhalation. There are times when we want our awareness to ascend on an
inhalation and to descend on an exhalation. This is the case in when
practicing dantien rotation and the Microcosmic Orbit. For this reason, it is
important to learn the breathing technique employed by the Taoists in the
practice of these and other qi cultivation exercises.
The principle behind reverse breathing is quite simple. Instead of pushing
down and forward with the diaphragm when inhaling, the diaphragm initially
is pulled upward and inward. For this reason, during reverse breathing the
lungs fill from the top downward. On the exhalation, the diaphragm is
allowed to relax and return to its original position. This allows the lungs to
deflate, which in turn causes the breath to escape the lungs in an exhalation.
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming provides an explanation of reverse breathing in his
book, The Essence of Taiji Qigong, in which he explaines that, with reverse
abdominal breathing you withdraw the abdomen and hold up the huiyin when
you inhale, and then expand the abdomen and gently relax your huiyin when
you exhale.43
Although the principle is relatively easy to grasp, you will probably need
some time to master this breathing technique, especially after having recently
learned and become comfortable with the technique of abdominal breathing.
When first practicing reverse breathing, it is best to sit upright in a chair or on
a cushion with your legs crossed. It is important to keep your spine erect and
to hold your head up with the crown horizontal and the chin slightly tucked
under. It is also important to place your tongue against the upper palate,
located on the roof of your mouth. This will prevent you from breathing
through the mouth and will also keep your mouth from drying out.
Begin by taking a few deep abdominal breaths to settle your body and your
mind. Then switch to reverse breathing as follows: Use your abdominal
muscles to pull in and lift the diaphragm up and at the same time pull it back
toward your spine. Fill your lungs by inflating them from the throat
downward. As the lungs inflate, you will need to rotate your upper abdominal
muscles forward and outward in order to accommodate the air that begins to
fill the lower lungs. At first, you may only be able to fill the upper lungs.
However, with practice you will learn to make your inhalations longer,
thereby filling the lungs all the way.
When you feel pressure building up in the lungs due to their expansion and
the need to exhale arises, simply relax the abdominal muscles and allow your
diaphragm to drop. Releasing the tension in your abdominal muscles and
relaxing your diaphragm will cause your inflated lungs to deflate
automatically. This will result in an exhalation. In the initial stage of this
practice, it is only necessary to focus on the inhalation, as the exhalation is a
natural process and needs no special attention on your part.
When you are first learning how to engage in reverse breathing, the
inhalation phase of a reverse breath will take longer than the exhalation
phase. Once you learn to regulate your breathing, however, you should strive
to slow down the exhalation until both the inhalation and exhalation are of
equal duration. You might try counting on the inhalation and then slowing
down the exhalation to the same count. A six-count is a good starting point.
With a slow six-count, you will take six seconds to inhale and six seconds to
exhale. This equates to five breaths per minute, which is slightly less than the
normal breath rate for an adult at rest. Over time, you can increase the
duration of both the inhalation and the exhalation.
As taijiquan practitioners, we want to go beyond normal breathing. Try increasing the duration of each
eight-count and match that count on the exhalation. When you
inhalation to an
feel that you can comfortably extend your inhalations and exhalations to a
slow eight-count, extend your durations to a ten-count. This will slow your
breathing down to three breaths per minute. This is a good goal to strive for,
as it will provide you with the time you need on a single breath in order to
visit all the important energy points on the Microcosmic Orbit.
As your breathing slows, you will find that your heart rate and metabolic rate
slow down as well. For this reason, the ancient Taoists referred to this style
of breathing as “tortoise breathing.” Tortoises are venerated in China, as they
live a long time and are perceived to be both calm and humble. The tortoise is
frequently employed in Chinese literature and art to represent longevity. You
will also notice that, when engaging in reverse breathing, the chest hollows
out slightly and the back raises and rounds out a bit, just like a turtle’s
carapace. Recall that hollowing the chest and raising the back are included in
Yang Cheng-fu’s Ten Essential points.
It is important to spend the time necessary to master reverse breathing before
attempting the qi circulation exercises presented in the remainder of this
chapter. Most individuals can become proficient in reverse breathing in as
little as one or two sessions. It is recommended that you practice reverse
breathing until you can at least maintain a six-count on both the inhalation
and the exhalation before proceeding. A six-count for inhalation and another
six-count for exhalation is sufficient for practicing dantien rotation. As you
practice dantien rotation over time, try to extend the duration of your
inhalation and exhalation to an eight-count in preparation for practicing the
Microcosmic Orbit.
Conclusion
In this chapter you have been exposed to several techniques that can be
practiced in order to mobilize and to circulate the qi throughout the body. It is
important to remember that these techniques will only be effective if your
mind is calm and focused. In his book, The Essence of Taiji Qigong, Dr.
Yang, Jwing-ming emphasizes the importance of being emotionally calm and
employing the intention, or yi, to lead the qi during the practice of qigong.45
A calm and focused mind leads to the accumulation and subsequent
circulation of the qi in meditation. However, our ultimate goal as
practitioners of taijiquan is to lead the qi into the extremities while practicing
the empty-hand and weapons forms as well as employ qi circulation in order
to issue intrinsic energy, or jin, during pushing hands and sparring. In
Cultivating the Qi, Volume One, Chen Kung wrote of the need to cultivate the
mind and body simultaneously; otherwise the training of seated meditation
alone accomplishes little.46
It is essential to recognize that the attainment of skill in the art of taijiquan is
dependent upon cultivating both the mind and the body simultaneously. That
is to say that both the civil and the martial aspects of the art are to be
developed equally. Avoid focusing on only one aspect of the art at the
detriment of the other. Also be wary of the temptation to “take the door of
shortcuts.” Student who truly desire to excel in this art would be well-served
to heed Chen Kung’s invaluable advice.
The following chapter presents many more important pieces of advice from
the original taijiquan masters as well as their disciples. These precious words
of wisdom collectively form the fundamental principles of the art of
taijiquan. No one can seriously study taijiquan without understanding and
internalizing these fundamental principles. Just as the civil and the martial
complement one another, so the principles and the practice support one
another.
Chapter Nine
As has been previously discussed, taijiquan differs from most other martial
arts in that it includes both civil and martial components. The civil
component consists of the health benefits that accrue from the physical
movements involved in practicing the form as well as the circulation of the qi
throughout the body. At the highest level of attainment, the civil component
also results in the elevation of the spirit, leading to enlightenment and
immortality. The martial component consists of the martial applications
embedded within the empty-hand form as well as the various weapons forms.
These applications are trained via tuishou (pushing hands), dalu, and
sparring.
The breadth and depth of the art of taijiquan is due to its tripartite
foundations in philosophy, theory and principles. The philosophical
foundation of the art is Taoism, and the theoretical foundation comes from
Taiji theory, Five Elements theory, and Bagua theory. These philosophical
and theoretical foundations have already been addressed in previous chapters
of this book. This chapter presents the third foundational column of the art of
taijiquan: the fundamental principles that underlie the art and that distinguish
it from other martial arts in both character and quality.
These fundamental principles can be found in the written, formerly secret,
documents of the Chen and Yang families, along with subsequent published
texts produced by later members of the Chen and Yang families and those of
the Wu family and of Sun Lutang. We also have access to a number of texts
written by the close disciples of these family members, such as Fu Zhongwen
and Cheng Man-ch’ing (of the Yang family lineage) and Ma Yueh-liang and
Zee Wen of the Wu Chian-chuan family lineage, to name just a few. Finally,
we have the collective writings of a number of taijiquan scholars of the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, such as Wu Yu-hsiang and Wong
Chung-yua, which are commonly referred to as the Taijiquan Classics.
The principles expounded by the founders of the various family styles of
taijiquan formulate the basic concepts of the art as well as provide specific
guidance for its practice and application. No student of taijiquan should
practice this art without also studying the principles that form its foundation.
Yang Cheng-fu himself stated that the true essence of taijiquan is not found
in the external postures of the form, but is based upon the principles, the
internal energy, and the movement of the qi. Only when practitioners have
understood the principles of taijiquan and thoroughly assimilated them into
their practice will their art be complete.47
This chapter provides a general introduction to the fundamental principles of
the art of taijiquan. Dedicated students of this art are encouraged to obtain
copies of the texts listed in the bibliography of this book and to study the
principles presented therein diligently and frequently. However, more
importantly than simply reading about the fundamental principles of
taijiquan, students of this art must strive earnestly and constantly to
internalize these concepts and guidelines in their daily practice. It is further
recommended that practitioners expand their investigation of the principles of
the art beyond their particular family style of taijiquan. While it is true that
each family style has its distinguishing characteristics, the principles that
underlie the art of taijiquan are, for the most part, universal and applicable to
all family styles.
Before continuing on to a discussion of the individual principles of taijiquan,
one further issue must be addressed. Throughout the writings of the
originators of our art and their disciples as well as within the Taijiquan
Classics, there are references to the “other,” or to the “opponent,” or to
“him.” These references apply specifically to either the martial applications
of the art or to the practice of pushing hands. Because each of these topics is
considered in a separate chapter, the principles of taijiquan that pertain
specifically to the practice of pushing hands or to the martial applications will
be presented in Chapters Thirteen and Fourteen, which address these two
topics in greater detail. In the present chapter, the discussion is limited to
those principles that are more general in nature. These general principles
apply to all aspects of the art of taijiquan, including empty-hand form
practice, weapons practice, pushing hands, and martial applications.
First Principles
The concept of first principles, which is widely employed in both philosophy
and science, was introduced in Chapter Two. To review, first principles are
the seminal concepts from which a philosophy or science or even an art form
arises. Every teacher of taijiquan likes to identify one or more fundamental
principles of the art and elevate them to the status of first principles. Chapter
Seven identified two touchstones for the art of taijiquan:
Conclusion
The fundamental principles of taijiquan presented in this chapter have been
selected from the many principles identified and elaborated upon by the
creators of the various family styles, their disciples, and those past scholars of
the art whose insights and understanding resulted in the Taijiquan Classics. It
is difficult to identify a perfect subset of all such principles. This chapter has
attempted to identify and include those general principles which collectively
serve to describe and to define taijiquan as unique from all other styles of
martial arts.
Also, as stated in the introduction to this chapter, the general principles
presented in this chapter do not include those specialized principles that relate
specifically to the martial applications of the postures, the practice of pushing
hands, or to the development and issuing of qi in the form of jin. These more
narrowly defined principles will be presented in subsequent chapters in this
book as appropriate.
The following chapter includes a selection of the individual postures taken
from the solo forms of the Chen, Yang, Wu (Chian-chuan), and Sun styles.
Many of the principles introduced in this chapter will be employed to explain
the external structures as well as the internal dynamics of each of these
postures. Only when the principles of the art have been understood and
internalized can students truly undertake a study of the individual postures.
This presentation should prove invaluable to all practitioners of the art of
taijiquan, regardless of whether they are interested primarily in either the
civil or the martial aspect of the art.
Chapter Ten
Concerning the breath, the breathing technique when performing the form is
somewhat different than the breathing technique that was introduced in
Chapter Seven. In neidan practices, the breath is both drawn in and expelled
out through the nose. When practicing the form, the breath should be inhaled
through the nose but exhaled through the mouth. The mouth should appear to
be closed, but must maintain a slight opening through which the breath can
be exhaled. Regarding this point, Fu Zhong-wen wrote that the mouth seems
to be open but is not really open. He instructed the practitioner to breathe
naturally by inhaling through the nose and exhaling through the mouth. If this
natural breathing produces saliva, it should be swallowed, as this saliva is
very regenerative.117
Beginning students are counseled to follow Fu Zong-wen’s advice and to
breathe in a natural way. When learning the postures and transitions initially,
it is not necessary to focus one’s attention specifically on the breath.
However, more advanced students should become aware of the role of the
breath in executing the postures. In general, one should inhale on a
withdrawal or a closing and exhale on an expansion or opening. The specific
breathing for each posture will be described in the discussion related to that
posture in the sections below.
Ward-Off Left: The Ward-Off posture, on either the left side or the right
side, represents one of the Four Sides of the Eight Gates of the Bagua. As
stated previousy, the Four Sides are Ward-Off, Rollback, Push and Press. The
Chinese terms for these postures are peng, lu, ji and an. The Ward-Off
posture relies upon expansive peng jin energy to protect the body by warding
off a frontal attack. Peng energy feels like a large, inflated ball held in front
of the chest. If someone were to push against this ball or attempt to strike it,
they would be repelled by the expansive energy stored within the ball.
Like an inflated ball that utilizes the stored energy of the compressed air
contained within it, peng relies upon the stored energy that is “compressed”
within the ward-off arm. The secret to employing peng effectively is to
eschew physical strength or force in favor of expanding one’s intrinsic energy
out into the warding off arm. Perhaps more than any other posture, Ward-Off
relies upon the stored energy of the Five Bows to repel an incoming force.
The student must keep the idea of peng in mind when holding either the
Ward-off Left or Ward-off Right posture.
Figure 10-2a shows the posture of Ward-Off Left. To hold this posture
correctly, the practitioner should stand in a bow stance with the left foot
pointing forward and the right foot pointing out at about a forty-five degree
angle. Figure 10-2b shows the positioning of the feet for this posture. In this
posture, the left leg is considered to be the weight-bearing leg. The student
should place between sixty and seventy percent of the body’s weight on this
leg, with between thirty to forty percent of the weight reserved in the back
leg.
Figure 10-2a
Figure 10-2b
Note that the feet form a rectangle that is longer than it is wide. This
rectangle defines the limits of the posture. In particular the ward-off arm, in
this case the left arm, should not extend beyond the forward edge of this
rectangle. Note also that the shin of the front leg is vertical and not extended
forward beyond the toes of the front foot. If either the left arm or the left knee
extends beyond the front edge of this rectangle, then the student will be
overextended. Overextension should be avoided for two reasons. First, when
you are overextended, it is easy for an opponent to borrow your energy and
uproot you. Second, by overextending the knee, you run the risk of injuring
your knee.
For all postures except the Opening and Closing postures, the student must be
able to distinguish between the substantial arm and the insubstantial arm. In
Ward-Off Left, the left arm, which expresses peng energy, is substantial,
while the right arm is insubstantial. In this case, the left arm is considered to
be yang and the right arm is said to be yin. This corresponds to the qi flow,
which is directed to the outside of the left arm and to the back of the left
hand. The qi flow for the right arm is down the inside of the arm and into the
palm of the right hand.
Likewise, the practitioner must be able to distinguish the substantial leg from
the insubstantial leg. Recall that the leg bearing the majority of the body’s
weight, which in this case is the left leg, is be considered to be the substantial
leg. As has been discussed previously, if the substantial arm and the
substantial leg are on the same side of the body, this creates a situation of
double-weighting, which causes the practitioner to become overcommitted on
that side. Nonetheless, in certain postures, including the posture of Ward-Off
Left, both the substantial leg and the substantial arm are located on the same
side of the body. In order to compensate for the substantial left arm and the
substantial left leg in the Ward-Off Left posture illustrated in Figure 10-2a
above, there must be a strong energetic connection downward from the rear,
right leg into the ground. Although the back leg in Ward-Off is technically
insubstantial, its role in counterbalancing the substantial left arm and
substantial left leg is significant.
In the case of Ward-Off Left, it is the right leg that provides both structural
and energetic support to the ward-off energy in the left arm. If an opponent
were to push against the left arm, the energy of that push would be directed
through the body, down into the back, right leg, and then into the ground. It is
primarily the right leg that provides the root for the ward-off energy of Ward-
Off Left. The front, left leg, which indeed bears a greater percentage of the
weight, acts as the pivot point in case one needs to turn in order to redirect
the incoming energy of the opponent to either the left or right side of the
body.
When considering the role of the two legs in any posture, it is useful to think
of one leg as the “stake” and one leg as the “pillar.” In this case, the right leg
is the stake: it is planted deep into the ground and acts like a buttress. The left
leg serves as the pillar. The pillar is perfectly vertical, and permits rotation,
whereas the stake may be planted at an angle in order to better receive the
incoming energy of a push. When one leg serves as the pillar, the the foot of
that leg connects to the ground via the yongquan point. The foot of the leg
that acts like the stake is connected to the ground through the heel.
In the posture of Ward-Off Left, the jin flows up the back of the right leg,
continues up the spine, crosses over to the left shoulder and then flows out
the back of the right arm and into the back of the right hand. This continuous
arc of energy provides the peng jin that enables one to ward-off or repel a
frontal attack. This corresponds to the adage from the Taijiquan Classics
which states that the energy is rooted in the feet, released by the legs,
controlled by the waist, and expressed in the arms and the hands. It should
also be recognized that this same path can be followed downward in order to
root an incoming push. In this case, the energy is received in the hand and
arm, is controlled (directed downward) by the waist, absorbed by the (right)
leg, and rooted into the ground through the (right) foot.
With regard to the arms and hands, many students only pay attention to the
front, left arm and hand in the posture of Ward-Off Left. Consequently, their
right arm and hand can be seen dangling uselessly at their right side.
Although the right arm is insubstantial, this does not mean that the arm and
hand have no energetic role in the posture. There must be a complementary
flow of energy up the inside of the left leg, up the spine, into the right armpit,
and finally down the inside of the right arm to the laogong point in the palm
of the right hand. Just as the yongquan point of the left foot and the heel of
the right foot are energetically connected to the ground, so too is the laogong
point in the palm of the right hand connected energetically to the ground.
This energetic connection through the laogong point of the right palm to the
ground enhances the root provided by the left and right feet. An additional
function of the downward curving right arm and hand is to provide protection
to the right thigh and groin from any low punches or sweeping kicks directed
to that side of the body. This protection is only present if the right arm and
hand also contain peng energy.
Recall that Ward-Off is one of the Four Sides. As such, this posture should
face forward. This requires that both the hips and the shoulders be squared
off to the forward direction. Although many practitioners correctly hold the
ward-off arm in front of their bodies, they get lazy and don’t fully square
their hips and their shoulders when completing this posture. If the hips and
shoulders are not facing forward along with the warding off arm, then the full
effect of peng energy cannot be expressed. The peng jin of Ward-Off is the
combined jin of the whole body, not just of the arm. Rather than thinking of
only the arm as containing peng, it is best to think of the entire body as an
inflated ball. In this way, one is able to use the whole body to ward off an
opponent.
It is necessary for the practitioner to carefully analyze both the physical
structure and the internal energy of the Ward-Off Left posture. The
practitioner should be able to determine the balance between substantial and
insubstantial on both the physical and the energetic levels. If the substantial
and the insubstantial are not balanced, yang and yin will not be in harmony,
and the posture will suffer from a variety of faults, such as being one-sided,
double-weighted, off-balance, overextended, etc.
Ward-Off postures are considered to be open postures. This relates to the
principle of Open/Close, which will be discussed further in the subsequent
section on Rollback. With regard to the breath, since Ward-Off Left is an
open posture, the posture should be completed on an exhalation. The
inhalation that precedes this exhalation should take place during the transition
from Opening posture to Ward-Off Left.
Ward-Off Right: Ward-Off Right incorporates the same concepts as
described in Ward-Off Left above. The only difference has to do with the
position of the insubstantial left hand, which is held up in support of the
substantial right hand. The positioning of the two hands for this posture is
represented in Figure 10-3 shown below. One point to attend to in Ward-Off
Right is that the space between the laogong points of the two hands should
contain an energetic ball. Although the two points do not have to align
physically, they should nonetheless connect energetically.
Figure 10-3
As with Ward-Off Left, Ward-Off Right is an open posture and should also
be completed with an exhalation. The preparatory inhalation takes place
during the transition between Ward-Off Left and Ward-Off Right. Note that,
since two open postures follow each other, the transition between them must
include a closing both energetically and physically. This closing action
occurs during the transition between the two Ward-Off postures, when arms
come together to hold the taiji ball on the left side of the body and the right
foot steps in slightly.
Ward-Off Right is the first posture in the four-posture sequence in the Yang
style form known as Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail. The complete sequence
consists of the following: Ward-Off Right, Rollback, Press, and Push, which
includes the energies of peng, lu, ji, and an respectively. Many teachers make
the mistake of trying to relate the name of this sequence to an actual martial
application, such as using Rollback to grasp the tail of a bird and pull it
backward. This is unfortunate, since the phrase Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail has
nothing to do whatsoever with the four postures or their applications.
The derivation for the name, Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail, has been examined by
scholars who have studied this point. Stuart Olson provides a good
explanation for the derivation of this term in his book, The Intrinsic Energies
of Taijiquan.118 His explanation for this term is that at some point the Yang
family desired to come up with unique names for the postures, which had
been modified from the original Chen style. One of the Yang family members
(or more likely one of their literate students) invented new ideographs to
represent certain of the postures.
The ideograph that was created to represent peng included two sub-
characters. One sub-character looked like a hand and the other was shaped
like a stylized bird’s tail. Those literate Chinese who had never seen this new
ideograph interpreted it to mean “grasp the bird’s tail.” Thus, in Yang style,
peng, and later the entire sequence of peng, lu, ji and an, became known
collectively as Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail. As a result, this poetic term became
part of the lexicon of Yang style taijiquan and is used universally today, even
though the phrase bears no relationship to the applications of the postures in
the sequence. It would be best if students of Yang style taijiquan not
perpetuate the incorrect interpretation of the name, Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail.
Ward-Off Right maintains the same structural and energetic principles that
apply in Ward-Off Left. The only difference between Ward-Off Left and
Ward-Off Right is the position of the insubstantial hand. In Ward-Off Left,
the insubstantial hand is the right hand, which is held in a guarding position
adjacent to the right thigh where it protects the thigh and the groin against an
opponent’s crescent kick. In the Ward-Off Right posture, the insubstantial
hand is the left hand, which is held just back of the substantial right hand as
shown in Figure 10-3. Although the two laogong points of the two hands are
not necessarily aligned physically, they should support each other
energetically. In particular, the pressing jin of the left hand supports the ward-
off jin of the right hand.
Rollback: Rollback is considered to be the signature move of Yang style
taijiquan. Rollback is visibly the most obvious expression of the neutralizing
aspect of taijiquan. Rollback incorporates the intrinsic energy of lu jin. Many
beginning students misunderstand the concept of intrinsic energy, or jin, and
consider jin to be explosive, or at least expansive, and only used for offense.
They typically think of fa jin or peng jin when conceptualizing intrinsic
energy. However, as you will learn in Chapter Eleven, there are many
different types of jin, and lu jin is one of the first intrinsic energies that you
need to understand and internalize if you want to practice taijiquan correctly.
Lu jin is a specific type of neutralizing energy, or hua jin. It represents
another of the Four Sides and also underlies the second posture in the
sequence of Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail. Rollback, which is considered to be a
closed posture, follows Ward-Off Right, which is considered to be open by
contrast. Recall from Taiji theory that extreme yang gives rise to weak yin.
This is important to understand when transitioning from Ward-Off Right into
Rollback. Figures 10-4a through 10-4c illustrate this transition into the
finished posture.
Figure 10-4a
Figure 10-4b
Figure 10-4c
Note in Figure 10-4a that the yang energy of peng jin has been expanded
outward and slightly to the right. This is the ultimate expression of the peng
energy of Ward-Off Right and represents a state of extreme yang. One cannot
expand any further without seriously overextending. At this point, the
extreme yang of Ward-Off Right must give rise to the weak yin that signals
the beginning of Rollback. The body begins to withdraw, leading the two
arms backward and downward on the left side of the body to terminate in the
position shown in Figure 10-4c.
The transition from Ward-off Right to Rollback involves the principle of
Open/Close. Recall that Open and Close are related in much the same way as
yang and yin. Throughout the form, open postures are followed by closed
postures, just as closed postures are followed by open postures. In this case,
Ward-Off Right is an open posture, and Rollback is a closed posture. Thus,
the principle of Open/Close is upheld in the sequence of Ward-Off Right and
Rollback.
The transition from Ward-Off Right to Rollback also includes an element of
Store/Release. If you look carefully at Figure 10-4a you will see that the torso
has rotated about thirty degrees to the right. This rotation creates a degree of
torque in the waist that may be referred to as the “wind-up.” The rotational
energy stored in the wind-up is then released at the beginning of the Rollback
movement and adds power to the waist rotation that causes the body to roll
backward onto the back leg. Note also in Figure 10-4c that, although the feet
have not moved, the weight distribution has shifted onto the back leg.
Energetically, the peng energy of Ward-Off Right continues to flow out to the
hands as yang expands to extreme yang, as can be seen in Figure 10-4a. In
Figure 10-4b, the energy of peng converts to lu and returns back down and
into the legs as extreme yang gives rise to weak yin. This weak yin in turn
grows into the fully developed yin of Rollback, which reaches its maximum
in Figure 10-4c. Remember to turn the torso backward by rotating the waist,
not by turning the shoulders. Store the compressed energy created by rolling
backward and shifting the weight onto the back leg in the heel of the left foot.
As with all postures that include transitions between Open and Close or Close
and Open, the breath coincides with the opening and the closing. On the close
there is an inhalation and on the open there is an exhalation. Since Rollback
is a closed position, you should inhale as you Rollback. Use the inhalation to
guide the intrinsic energy from the outstretched hands shown in Figure 10-4a
back down and into the legs and feet as shown in Figure 10-4c.
The finished posture of Rollback is illustrated in Figure 10-4c. This
represents the position of the body after rolling back an opponent from a
frontal attack. In this position, the imaginary frontal attack has been
neutralized and the hypothetical opponent has been rolled back to the left side
of the body. It is apparent that the substantial leg is the left, weight-bearing
leg, and the insubstantial leg is the front, right leg. The substantial arm is the
left arm, which has been used to connect to the opponent and roll him back.
The right hand has functioned in a supportive roll in assisting in the rolling
back of the opponent, so it is the insubstantial arm.
Note that throughout the transition from Ward-off Right into Rollback, the
torso is maintained in an upright position, with the niwan and the huiyin
points in alignment. There is no leaning or bending over to the left side of the
body. The upright torso acts as the vertical axle and the waist as the wheel in
facilitating the rotational action of rolling back. The other four postural points
introduced at the beginning of the section on Yang style postures are also
evident. As stated at the beginning of this section, it is important for
practitioners to review each of these five points when correcting individual
postures. As suggested previously, reviewing one’s postures in a floor-length
mirror is helpful in making such self-corrections.
Press: The posture of Press represents another of the Four Sides. Like Ward-
Off, Press is used to repel an opponent. The difference, however, is that Press
is more focused in its effect. Press relies upon the concentrated energy of ji
jin. Although Press can be performed with any part of the body, in the
sequence Grasp the Sparrow’s Tail, Press is implemented using either the two
hands pressed together or the inside hand pressed against the outer forearm.
See Figures 10-5a and 10-5b.
Figure 10-5a
Figure 10-5b
When the two hands are pressed together, as in Figure 10-5a, the combined
energy of the two laogong points can be issued into the opponent. This
creates a more concentrated form of ji jin that can cause serious injury to the
opponent if issued against his sternum or ribs. A gentler and kinder approach
is to place the laogong point of the inner palm against the inside forearm of
the outer arm, as illustrated in Figure 10-5b. This method employs the entire
forearm as the pressing surface, which spreads out the ji jin and is less likely
to cause serious injury to the opponent when the jin is issued.
Press is an open posture and follows Rollback, which is a closed posture.
This conforms to the principle of Open/Close or, in this case, Close/Open.
The transition from Rollback to Press occurs when the yin of Rollback
reaches its maximum and transforms into weak yang. This can be seen in the
setup for Press, which is depicted in Figure 10-5c. The leading arm in the
Rollback movement is the left arm. As the practitioner rolls back into
position 10-5c, the intrinsic energy of lu is stored in the heel of the back foot.
The energy that is stored in the rear leg is then gathered in the two arms. This
is like drawing back the two arm bows. This stored energy is finally released
as ji jin in the Press posture depicted in Figure 10-5d.
The action of the waist in Press is critical. In Rollback, the waist was used to
turn the torso to the side. When this rotation reaches its furthest point, the
hips begin to rotate back toward the front. The forward rotation of the waist
and hips imparts centrifugal force to the left arm and causes it to swing
around in an upward arc to the position shown in Figure 10-5c. The rotation
of the left arm upward occurs at the end of the inhalation that began with
Rollback. Finally the breath is exhaled as the hands press forward in Figure
10-5d.
Figure 10-5c
Figure 10-5d
Like Ward-Off, the hips and shoulders in Press should be squared off to give
maximum effect to the ji jin issued by the two hands or the hand/forearm
connection described above. Figure 10-5d shows the final position of the
Press posture. As with Ward-Off, don’t allow the pressing hands or
hand/forearm connection to extend beyond the toes of the front foot to avoid
the error of overextending.
Because the feet have not moved since the beginning of the Grasp the
Sparrow’s Tail sequence, you don’t have to concern yourself with placement
of the feet as you transition from Rollback into Press. However, do make sure
to distinguish between the substantial and the insubstantial in both the arms
and the legs. With regard to the arms, the right arm is substantial and the
supporting left arm is insubstantial. As with the Ward-Off Left and Ward-Off
Right postures, the front leg bears more weight than the rear leg. However,
again as in the two Ward-Off postures, it is the rear leg that is generates the
jin by supplying the upward energy from the ground to support the energy of
Press.
Push: The posture of Push represents the fourth of the Four Sides and
employs an jin, or Push energy. The application of an jin is to intercept an
opponent’s incoming attack and to push it downward and then upward and
forward in order to prevent it from reaching your body. Push is the
appropriate response to use when the opponent attacks with Press. Many
students of Yang style taijiquan do not realize that Push includes a downward
component and simply apply Push as a linear, horizontal force.
In addition to the downward aspect of Push, the posture of Push in the Grasp
the Sparrow’s Tail sequence also includes a withdrawal prior to the execution
of the push. This component of the movement is demonstrated in Figure 10-
6a. The purpose of the withdrawal is to entice the opponent to overcommit to
his attack. Combined with the downward aspect of Push, the withdrawal
neutralizes the incoming energy and causes it to dissipate. The neutralization
that occurs in Figure 10-6a occurs on both a physical and an energetic level.
This neutralization is accomplished by inhaling on the withdrawal while
drawing the opponent’s energy downward through the arms, into the spine,
and then down into the back leg and into the heel of the back foot. In order to
accomplish this without using force, you need to attach energetically to the
opponent’s body (or hands, arms, etc.) and gently lead him inward and
downward using a small amount of downward pressure to neutralize the
onslaught of his frontal attack. It is important to understand that the intrinsic
energy of an jin includes both a downward and a horizontal component. The
downward component of Push occurs during the withdrawal and can be seen
in Figure 10-6b. Once the opponent has expended his energy without effect,
he will realize that he is overextended and will attempt to retreat. At this
point, you can connect with his body and add the horizontal component of
Push to send him flying backward. See Figure 10-6c.
Figure 10-6a
Figure 10-6b
Figure 10-6c
Cheng Man-ch’ing referred to the combination of withdraw and push as ti
fong. This technique is highly effective in pushing hands. The correct
application of ti fong enables a smaller player to push a larger player with
apparent ease by adding his own pushing energy to the larger player’s
retreating energy. The smaller player only has to add a small amount of
additional energy in order for the resulting push to have a powerful effect.
Again, the key here is to adhere to the principle of using four ounces to repel
a thousand pounds.
The posture of Push contains both Close and Open. As such, it is complete in
and of itself. Recall that Press is an open posture. If Push were to follow
Press without the withdrawal component, together they would constitute two
sequential open postures. This would violate the principle of Open/Close.
However, by incorporating the withdrawal between Press and Push (Figures
10-6a and 10-6b), the two postures of Press and Push constitute a sequence of
Open, Close, and Open, and the integrity of the principle is maintained. The
breath in this case follows the principle of inhaling on the withdrawal and
exhaling on the push. In accordance with the breath, the intrinsic energy is
withdrawn into the back leg as hua jin on the inhale and expressed outward
as an jin on the exhale.
As with Press, it is important for both the hips and the shoulders to be
squared off to the front in order for the push to achieve its maximum effect.
With regard to the substantial and insubstantial legs, the front leg is the
substantial and the back leg is insubstantial, just as in the postures of Ward-
Off and Press. The back leg functions like a spring: it is loaded, or
compressed, on the withdrawal and unloaded, or released, on the push. In the
push phase, in which both arms appear to be equal, we can look to the legs in
order to determine which arm is substantial and which is insubstantial. Since
the right leg is energetically substantial, we must treat the left arm as
substantial and the right arm to be insubstantial. The practitioner needs to be
careful not to emit jin equally in both arms in order to avoid the fault of
double-weighting.
Recall that when energy is expended equally on both sides of the body, the
result is double-weighting. Most students know not to be double-weighted in
the legs, but ignore the injunction against being double-weighted in the arms,
especially when applying Push. A double-weighted push is just as bad as a
double-weighted stance in that the person applying the push is easily
controlled. If both sides are full, how can one neutralize an opponent’s
counterattack? For this reason, it is important to push primarily with one arm
and employ the other arm in a supporting role only.
Figure 10-17
When beginning taijiquan students first read about the Original Thirteen
Postures in the Taijiquan Classics, they often set about identifying the
postures in the their particular style that are associated with each of the
Original Thirteen Postures. In their naiveté, they often conclude that the
posture of wuji, which occurs at the beginning of the form, must be the
posture that represents the thirteenth original posture, that of Central
Equilibrium. In actuality, the so-called “posture” of Central Equilibrium
occurs not in a single posture, but rather is present throughout the form and in
every posture. Ping-Siang Tao, author of the beautifully written and highly
informative book, Taiji Push Hands – The Secret of Qi in Taiji Quan,
explained that being stable like a mountain is zhong ding. In actuality, real
zhong ding is present at all times and in every posture.137
Clearly, zhong ding is more a quality of practice rather than a specific
posture. The quality of Central Equilibrium is a recurrent theme in Sun
Lutang’s commentaries on the postures of his style of taijiquan. Indeed, it
can be said that the quality of zhong ding is one of the defining characteristics
of this style of taijiquan. Other styles emphasize roundness, or fullness, or
spiraling energy. These are all important qualities in Sun style as well. But, as
the photos in this section and Sun’s own commentaries reveal, it is the special
quality of Central Equilibrium which stands out among all other
characteristics of this style.
Conclusion
This chapter has provided a survey of four family styles of taijiquan: Yang,
Wu (Chian-chuan), Sun, and Chen. Although the Wu/Hao style has not been
directly represented, some of the flavor of this style is reflected in the other
four styles. Regardless of one’s style of practice, the principles outlined in
Chapter Nine should be the guiding factor in one’s practice of the solo form.
The primary purpose of this chapter has been to present selected postures
from four different family styles of taijiquan with the intention of revealing
the common features between them rather than emphasizing their differences.
These commonalities are based upon the fundamental principles established
by the founders of the various family styles and articulated in their own
writings, in the writings of their disciples, and in the Taijiquan Classics. To
ignore these central principles is to ignore the core of the art itself.
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang wrote that, with their combined experience
of sixty years of teaching, they had observed that the majority of taijiquan
practitioners failed to achieve real progress in the art despite their excellent
physical condition and long-term practice. They concluded that this was most
often the result of ignoring the fundamental principles of the art.148 The
importance of practicing taijiquan according to the fundamental principles of
the art cannot be over-emphasized. However, it is not sufficient to understand
these principles intellectually. One must also put those main essential
principles into practice. This requires a great deal of disciplined self-study
(i.e. gongfu), as well as instruction from a knowledgeable teacher.
In one’s practice, it is not enough to be able to execute the form correctly in
its outward appearance. There are many practitioners whose form is beautiful
and whose low postures and high kicks garner many accolades. However,
when one touches hands with most of these practitioners, one finds them
lacking in the intrinsic energy that must accompany any true performance of
the external form. Each practitioner must understand that every posture
consists of a series of external bodily movements that are driven by the
internal movement of the qi and the jin. Without the internal cultivation of the
qi and the ability to mobilize and issue jin, the external performance of the
form becomes nothing more than physical exercise and may be considered to
be dancing rather than true taijiquan.
The cultivation and circulation of the qi has already been presented in
Chapter Seven and Chapter Eight. The following two chapters, Chapter
Eleven and Chapter Twelve, present a detailed discussion regarding the
development and application of intrinsic energy, or jin. Many taijiquan
practitioners have a basic, conceptual understanding of the sudden, explosive
fa jin associated primarily with Chen style taijiquan. However, as will be
explained in Chapter Eleven, there are many types of jin. These various jin
can be conveniently categorized as either defensive or offensive in nature. In
Chapter Eleven, the defensive jin are presented and analyzed. Chapter
Twelve focusses on offensive jin. The sequence of these two chapters is
crucial, because in taijiquan one cannot effectively employ offensive jin
without first applying one or more defensive jin. Indeed, it is the
development and resulting skill in applying both defensive and offensive jin
that distinguishes advanced practitioners of taijiquan from their peers.
Chapter Eleven
Conclusion
This chapter introduced the subject of jin and specifically described the
defensive jin of Sticking/Adhering, Listening, Interpreting, Receiving, and
Neutralizing. The main thrust of this chapter was to provide training exercises
to assist you in the development of these five defensive jin. The application
of defensive jin comes into play during pushing hands, sparring, and the
martial applications of the postures of taijiquan.
Defensive jin such as those described in this chapter are essential to the
execution of offensive jin, such as fa jin. Yang Jwing-Ming summarizes this
succinctly in his discussion of Neutralizing jin, in which he states that one
must neutralize an opponent’s incoming force before one attempts to
counterattack. If the opponent’s force is not neutralized effectively, how can
one’s own counterattack be expected to succeed?179
The importance of developing defensive jin cannot be overemphasized. You
need to be able to stick and adhere, listen to, interpret, yield, and neutralize
your opponent’s attack. Otherwise you will be at her mercy. Your first
response to any attack should be to apply these defensive jin in the following
order: first stick to the opponent’s attacking arm or leg; then listen to and
interpret her intent; yield to her incoming force; and finally neutralize that
force through a combination of internal and external neutralization. Often
simply applying defensive jin will be sufficient to nullify the opponent’s
attack and to discourage her from further aggressive action. However, if the
opponent continues to attack you, you may need to respond with offensive jin
in order to prevent her from doing you harm. In such cases, you will need to
follow up your defensive jin by applying offensive jin.
Offensive jin are discussed in the following chapter. There you will learn
about more aggressive jin such as Issuing jin, Drilling jin and Seizing jin.
These and other offensive jin may be applied with devastating effect when
dealing with aggressive and non-compliant opponents. While the defensive
jin discussed in this chapter may be likened to the yin aspect of taijiquan,
these offensive jin represent the yang side of the art. It is essential that you
learn both sides of the art. Otherwise, your development and understanding of
the martial applications of taijiquan will be incomplete. Far too many
students only study the defensive applications of this art with the result that
their skill is one-sided.
There are also practitioners who tend toward the opposite extreme and focus
exclusively on the training and development offensive jin. These individuals
typically are drawn to the martial aspect of taijiquan and usually come from a
background in other hard styles of martial arts. Individuals who ignore the
training of defensive jin in favor of only training offensive jin will never
plumb the depths of the art, and their development and application of
offensive jin will always remain at a superficial level. As with individuals
who only engage in defensive jin training, their skill will also be one-sided
and therefore limited.
The essence of taijiquan is that it is a balance of yin and yang, of defense and
offense. Without the yin of defensive jin, the yang of offensive jin will be
incomplete and lacking in balance. Remember that the Taiji symbole contains
both yin and yang in equal measure. As you train and develop jin, be sure to
train both defensive jin and offensive jin equally. Only then can you begin to
fathom the true taijiquan as practiced by the past and present masters of the
art.
Chapter Twelve
The preceding chapter introduced the subject of jin and focused upon the core
defensive jin which form the cornerstones of the martial application of
taijiquan. One of the central precepts of our art is that softness is used to
overcome hardness. The application of deflecting a force of one thousand
pounds with four ounces is based upon this essential principle. However, it is
also important for students to recognize that taijiquan is a martial art. As
such, it contains both defensive and offensive applications. Thus, our art
incorporates the yin and the yang of Taiji theory upon which the art of
taijiquan was founded.
Just as the defensive applications of taijiquan rely upon defensive jin, so the
offensive applications of the art rely upon offensive jin. It is equally
important from a martial perspective to study both the defensive and the
offensive aspects of the art. To this end, this chapter presents a survey of key
offensive jin and provides various training exercises designed to assist the
student in developing these jin.
As cautioned in the preceding chapter, it is important to understand that,
when using taijiquan for self-defense, the practitioner must always employ
defensive jin first in order to receive and neutralize an attacker’s incoming
force before attempting to apply any of the offensive jin presented in this
chapter That is why defensive jin are trained first. Only when students have
attained a basic level of understanding and development of the defensive jin
of Sticking/Adhering, Listening, Interpreting, Receiving, and Neutralizing
should they begin training in offensive jin.
Conclusion
Many martial arts schools teach hundreds of applications, which their
students spend dozens of years learning. However, masters of these arts will
tell you that in an actual self-defense situation, they are likely resort to only a
handful of their most basic defensive and offensive applications. Those are
the applications that they have studied most extensively and are, therefore,
the most instinctive. This is also the case in the application of jin. If you can
use Sticking/Adhering jin, Listening jin, Interpreting jin, Receiving jin, and
Neutralizing jin effectively for defense and Issuing jin and Seizing jin for
offense, you will be able to defend yourself in any situation that requires you
to confront one or more aggressors.
The defensive and offensive jin identified in the sequence ting, hua, na, and
fa constitute an arsenal of intrinsic energies, or jin, that give the art of
taijiquan its unique character. Along with the aspect of song and principle of
guarding the yi and the qi in the dantien in coordination with the circulation
the qi throughout the body, it is these jin that constitute the essence of the art.
All students who wish to master the martial art of taijiquan should undertake
the study of these jin as part of their training. Chen Kung wrote that to reach
the top you must begin at the bottom, and to travel far you must begin at the
near.194
This chapter has provided not only a theoretical description of the basic
offensive jin of taijiquan, it has also included training exercises designed to
assist students in the development of Issuing jin and Seizing jin. Many of
these exercises are solo exercises, although several do require a willing
partner. These training exercises, while essential, are not the end of the road,
however. They merely open the door to the actual application of these jin. In
order to learn how to apply both defensive jin and offensive jin, you will need
to engage in two-person practices such as pushing hands and sparring. To
continue with the travelling metaphor employed in the preceding paragraph,
the next step on your journey is to begin practicing pushing hands with
willing and cooperative partners. It is through this practice that you will
really begin to develop and learn to apply both the defensive jin introduced in
the previous chapter and the offensive jin described in this chapter.
The following chapter introduces the principles and the practice of pushing
hands, or tuishou. In that chapter, you will be introduced to those principles
of taijiquan which relate specifically to the relationship between the taijiquan
practitioner and an opponent. In addition, you will be introduced to a number
of tuishou patterns which will enable you to put the principles of pushing
hands into practice. Finally, you will be given some helpful hints and
suggestions for improving your free-hand pushing hands skill.
Chapter Thirteen
Any student who wishes to study taijiquan as a martial art should spend time
developing and refining the skill of pushing hands. Pushing hands, or tuishou,
is not an end in itself. Rather, it is a training exercise that is practiced in order
to develop the skills of Sticking/Adhering, Listening, Interpreting, Following,
and Neutralizing. The practice of pushing hands also helps to develop the
Four Sides skills of Ward-Off, Rollback, Push, and Press as well as the Four
Corners skills of Pull-Down, Split, Shoulder-Stroke, and Elbow-Stroke.
Additionally, moving step pushing hands trains the practitioner in the
stepping skills of Advance, Retreat, Look Left, Gaze Right, and Central
Equilibrium. Taken together, the Four Sides and Four Corners along with the
Five Steps constitute the Original Thirteen Postures enumerated in the
Taijiquan Classics.
For this reason, it is important to master pushing hands if one seeks to
understand and practice the true taijiquan of the masters of old. Given the
importance of pushing hands to the development of high-level taijiquan skill,
it is surprising how few teachers emphasize this aspect of the art. Many of
those who do include pushing hands practice in their curriculum allow, and
even encourage, their students to engage in fierce shoving matches. In these
schools, one participant pushes forcefully against a partner who stubbornly
refuses to budge in the name of rooting.
True pushing hands has nothing to do with either pushing in the Western
sense of the word or of stiffly resisting as a form of so-called “neutralizing.”
Instead, the goal of pushing hands practice is to develop softness, sensitivity,
and skill in neutralizing. The softness, sensitivity, and neutralizing skill
developed through pushing hands practice can then be employed in sparring
and, more importantly, in actual self-defense situations.
In his popular and influential book, The Tao of Taijiquan, Jou Tsung Hwa
included an excerpt from an earlier work by Yang stylist Chen Yen-lin. In
this work Chen stated that the basis of all achievement in taijiquan is the
practice of pushing hands. He advised all practitioners to spend as much time
as possible practicing and studying pushing hands. Jou Tsung Hwa himself
stated that understanding the principles of pushing hands enables one to
balance yin and yang in in all aspects of life. In this way, the quality of life as
a whole will be enhanced.
Ma Yueuh-liang stated that practicing the form is the way of self-practice,
while practicing pushing hands is the way for two people to train
cooperatively. He added that the practice of the solo form is the foundation,
and pushing hands is the application. On the subject of pushing hands, Sun
Lutang stated that the solo form is the body and pushing hands is the use.
Together, the body and the use form a complete art. According to Sun,
practicing the form is the gongfu of understanding the self, and practicing
pushing hands is the gongfu of understanding others. The concept of
understanding others through the practice of tuishou is said to have originated
with Chen Wanting, the founder of Chen style taijiquan. In the Song of the
Canon of Boxing he wrote: “Nobody knows me, while I know everybody.”
Chen Xiaowang, a contemporary Chen style grandmaster, stresses the
importance of pushing hands in developing true taijiquan skill. He has stated
that pushing hands and form training are inseparable. Any defects in the form
will be revealed during pushing hands as a weakness that can be taken
advantage of by an opponent. According the Chen Xiaowang, pushing hands
is the only way of reliably testing the effectiveness of one’s solo form.
From the words of these masters, we can see that pushing hands practice is
essential to the complete mastery of the art of taijiquan. Individuals who only
practice the solo form have no way of really testing their gongfu. Externally,
their solo form may appear technically correct, fluid, and graceful. However,
as Ping-Siang Tao expressed it, these same practitioners often find
themselves being dominated when playing pushing hands. For this reason, all
serious taijiquan practitioners should engage in regular pushing hands in
order to test themselves. Practicing pushing hands enables one to measure the
degree of one’s own achievement in becoming, as Dr. Tao puts it: light,
nimble, and strung together.
It is important, however, that students do not engage in pushing hands until
they have a good foundation in the traditional solo form. It is difficult to
attempt to incorporate the principles of taijiquan in pushing hands until the
student already has learned to incorporate those principles when moving
through the solo form. Further, once students are introduced to the activity of
pushing hands, their initial practice should be limited to engaging in
repetitive two-person drills such as those introduced in Chapter Eleven. After
developing some rudimentary skill in these simple drills, students can
advance to one or more standardized patterns such as the Four Hands pattern
described later in this chapter.
Practicing repetitive pushing hands patterns, both with single hands and with
double hands, helps to develop the skills of Sticking/Adhering, Listening,
Interpreting, Following, and Neutralizing. Only after an extensive period of
practicing the solo form and pushing hands patterns should the student begin
to engage in freestyle pushing hands. Those students who have already been
practicing freestyle pushing hands without sufficient exposure to formalized
pushing hands patterns would do well to find a teacher or a partner who
knows these patterns. Such students are advised to learn and practice these
basic patterns in order to overcome the deficiencies and bad habits that they
have developed through the practice of undisciplined pushing hands play.
There are a number of important principles that should be observed whenever
practicing pushing hands. These are discussed in the following section.
Unless students heed the principles delineated by the masters and also those
elucidated in the Taijiquan Classics, they are unlikely to make any
meaningful progress in the practice of pushing hands.
It is often difficult for individuals with five or ten years of freestyle pushing
hands experience to admit that their pushing hands skills are limited and that
they need to learn the basic skills of pushing hands. However, in many cases
that is exactly what must take place in order to unlearn bad practices and to
develop the proper skills (and attitude) necessary for the correct practice of
pushing hands. This is analogous to individuals who learned to play tennis
without proper instruction at the beginning stages. Such individuals may be
competent tennis players, but they are likely to have many bad habits and
also to have gaps in their skill set that only can be addressed through
corrective instruction from a skilled tennis professional. Whether you fit into
the category of a beginner who is just attempting to learn pushing hands or
consider yourself to be an old hand at this practice, you will be well-served to
review the following section which explains the principles of pushing hands.
It would also be beneficial at this stage to review the two-person exercises
outlined in Chapter Eleven. Finally, you should learn and practice the basic
pushing hands patterns presented at the end of this chapter.
Leaning backward or bending forward at the waist are referred to as the dual
errors of “leaning and butting.” These and other deficiencies, such as double-
weighting, are to be avoided when practicing any aspect of taijiquan. Each of
these errors is addressed individually in this chapter. As a general rule, when
practicing pushing hands one should avoid any posture that is not present in
the empty-hand form. When practicing the empty-hand form, the practitioner
does not lean forward or backward, so why would she do so when playing
pushing hands?
Unfortunately, many experienced pushing hands players resort to bending at
the waist in order to hollow out or lean backward in an attempt to evade an
opponent’s incoming force. While such efforts may yield the immediate
benefit of avoiding getting pushed off, this style of Gumby pushing hands
directly violates the principle of maintaining central equilibrium as can be
seen in Figures 13-1c and 13-1d. Figure 13-1c illustrates the error of leaning,
and Figure 13-1d portrays the error of butting.
Figure 13-1c
Figure 13-1d
Individuals who rely primarily upon this style of pushing hands may
experience some initial success and even some renown as skilled players.
However, these same individuals will never advance to higher levels of skill
in which the waist and the kua are employed in order to neutralize an
opponent’s incoming force. More advanced pushing hands players will know
to simply follow the retreating player’s center until he has no more capacity
to hollow out or lean backward. Then, a small amount of pressure will suffice
to topple such individuals, who have no real root and who have compromised
their structure.
Be Light, Nimble, and Threaded Together: The Taijiquan Classics instruct
us to be light, nimble, and threaded together so that the qi can penetrate the
body like a silken thread passing through a nine-holed pearl. Ping-Siang Tao
uses the phrase “light, nimble, and threaded together” to describe the basic
qualities of taijiquan. While these qualities are important in the practice of
the solo form, they are essential in pushing hands practice.
Lightness is necessary for the development of Listening skill, or ting jin. We
must become so light that “a feather cannot be placed nor a fly alight.”
Lightness is developed through the use of the yi to lead the qi to the
extremities. Techniques such as opening the pores and feeling the hairs on
one’s skin can be utilized to develop lightness and sensitivity. However, real
progress in developing lightness can only be made by working with willing
partners while practicing pushing hands patterns.
Nimbleness means that we immediately respond to any touch or pressure. “If
the opponent attacks the right, immediately empty out the right and fill in the
left. If the left side is attacked, empty the left and fill the right.” This principle
relates directly to the origin legend of taijiquan, in which Chang San-feng
observed a bird attacking a snake. When the bird attempted to strike at the
snake’s head, it withdrew its head and whipped around to attack with its tail.
When the bird strove to peck at the snake’s tail, it withdrew its tail and
counterattacked with its head. As with lightness, the best way to develop
nimbleness is to practice pushing hands patterns.
Being threaded together means that all of the joints of the body, from the
ankles and toes out to the wrists and fingers, must be connected together like
links in a chain. The chain is a good analogy to use when practicing pushing
hands. When yielding and neutralizing, one should allow each link in the
chain to give way individually, starting with the wrists and working
backward through the elbows, the shoulders, the spine, the waist, the hips, the
legs and finally the ankles. When issuing jin, the links should be connected as
if welded together at the moment of issuing the jin. Otherwise, the jin will be
loose and disconnected. It is important, however, only to weld the links
together for the briefest moment in time, otherwise one will become stiff and
unresponsive to the opponent’s counter-attack.
Don’t insist; don’t resist: Another important principle of pushing hands is:
“Don’t insist; don’t resist.” This principle warns the practitioner against
insisting on pushing the opponent when the act of pushing does not produce
the desired result. Consider, for example, the student who wishes to push her
partner’s front, ward-off arm in an attempt to uproot him. However, if her
partner has a good root and has sufficient peng jin in his arm, her initial push
will have no effect. Should she continue to push against her partner’s arm, he
is likely to turn and roll her back, or alternatively he can ti fong by leading
her into emptiness and then repelling her backward. In either case, her partner
will be borrowing the energy which she has foolishly provided to him. Rather
than insisting on pushing against his ward-off arm, she should desist pushing
against his arm and look for a place to push where her partner is empty rather
than full.
The second half of this principle is equally important. Consider the partner
who uses his ward-off arm to resist his partner’s push. While Ward-Off is an
important skill, it should not be used to resist an incoming push. Rather,
Ward-Off is a way to initially receive a push and then to redirect it. If the
individual using Ward-Off resists his partner’s push, she may be strong
enough to overcome his resistance and push him over anyway. Further, by
standing resolutely in a fixed-position and relying upon his ward-off arm and
his root to resist his partner’s push, the individual creates a situation in which
he is committed to this position. He cannot easily give up his Ward-Off
stance for fear of being pushed off. In essence, he is stuck. He may not be
pushed off, but neither is he free to change to any other position in order to
take advantage of his partner’s potential weaknesses.
When two partner’s engage in the contrary behavior of insisting and resisting,
both partners are stuck. In such cases, if the pusher is stronger, she will
eventually overcome the partner who is resisting. If the individual resisting
has a better root and a stronger ward-off arm, he will be able to stand there all
day without getting pushed off. However, neither is the victor here as neither
has given up their ego in order to “follow the other.”
Give up yourself to follow the other: This important principle is what
distinguishes taijiquan from external styles of martial arts such as Shaolin
kung fu, the Japanese art of karate, or the Korean art of tae kwan do. The
principle of giving up oneself to follow the other is a logical extension of the
principle: “Don’t resist; don’t insist.” When the practitioner commits to give
up herself (i.e. her own intention to push her partner) and instead to follow
her partner, she no longer places herself in an adversarial role relative to her
partner. In this way, she is free to react to whatever action her partner takes.
If her partner acts offensively and attempts to push her, she can follow his
energy and redirect it so that it has no place to land. If her partner attempts to
withdraw in reaction to his failed attempt to push her, she merely follows him
to a place where retreat no longer serves and he feels stuck. Often times, at
such a juncture her partner will seek to extricate himself from his awkward
position and will uproot himself. Even if her partner does not uproot himself,
she will be able to borrow his retreating energy in order to uproot him with
minimal effort on her part.
If one player ignores this principle and insists upon pushing his partner, she
will be able to borrow the energy of his push to either roll him back or
recirculate the energy of his push back into him. In either instance, his
insistence on pushing will lead to his own defeat. In a similar vein, if he
resists his partner’s attempt to push him, he will become rigid and stuck. In
this case, it will be easy for an experienced player to take advantage of his
stiffness and rigidity and to uproot him. Only by giving up himself and
following his partner in whatever action she takes will he be able to apply the
skills of Sticking/Adhering, Listening, Interpreting, Following, and
Neutralizing. Without the willingness to give up himself and follow his
partner, the insistent player will be left to rely upon brute force to overcome
his partner and clumsy attempts to escape from her advances.
Practice Listening to Force: The ability to “follow the other” requires one to
be able to hear what the other is doing. Although we use the word “hear” to
describe this ability, what is actually being sensed is the subtle movement and
even the intent of the other person. This so-called “hearing” is accomplished
through the sensitivity of the skin. Our skin must become our ears. Dr. Tao
stated that Listening jin is a crucial skill in the practice of pushing hands. He
explained that listening is not simply a matter of feeling with the hands.
Rather, it is an expanded tactile awareness that involves all of the sensory
nerves of the skin over the entire surface of the body.
In order for our skin to become our ears, we must become completely song.
Not only must we become song in the body, we must also become song in the
mind. If the muscles, ligaments, and tendons of the body are stiff, then the
skin can’t relax. In a similar fashion, if the mind is preoccupied, focused on
winning, or fearful of losing, then the mind can’t relax. Only when both the
body and the mind are relaxed can we “hear” the opponent’s subtle
movements and interpret his intent.
Ma Yueh-liang also wrote regarding what he referred to as the ability to
“listen to force.” He stated that, in order to understand the opponent’s force,
one must rely primarily upon the sensitivity of feeling. This sensitive feeling
is a type of intrinsic energy, or jin, and is only fully developed after many
years of practicing taijiquan. Ma referred to this sensitivity feeling as
“audible strength,” which he explained is closely connected to peng jin.
The audible strength to which Ma Yueh-liang referred requires many years to
develop. However, it is definitely attainable by all students of taijiquan who
practice pushing hands on a consistent basis. This is also in accordance with
Dr. Tao’s own experience. He wrote that, after many years of practice, the
practitioner will develop an invisible web or net that covers the entire body.
This web is sometimes referred to as “guardian qi,” or wei qi. When one’s
wei qi is sufficiently developed, it is possible to sense an incoming force even
before that force connects with the skin. At this advanced level of Listening
skill, it is easy for the practitioner to know others without being known by
them.
While it is absolutely imperative to work with partners in order to develop
Listening skill (ting jin), practicing the solo form can play an important
supporting role. If practitioners pay particular attention to the feeling of the
air on their skin as they move through the form, they can begin to develop a
degree of what may be termed “skin sensitivity.” Over time, they can even
feel the air as it gently touches the hairs on their neck, arms, and hands
(assuming that they are wearing short sleeves.) This training technique is
related to the approach to practicing taijiquan known as “swimming in air.” If
practitioners can develop sufficient sensitivity to feel the air against their skin
while performing the solo form, they should have no difficulty feeling
another person’s touch on their skin when practicing pushing hands.
Use softness to overcome hardness: This key principle relates to the
requirement of being light, nimble, and threaded together. According to Dr.
Tao, anything that is not light, nimble, and threaded together is brute force.
The quality of softness derives from the ability to be song. One must first be
song in the arms. Many push hands players are tight in the arms. This error
usually can be traced to tightness in the shoulders and, to a lesser degree, in
the elbows. Next one must be song in the waist and the hips, specifically in
the area known as the kua. Individuals who are song in the arms but are
unable to turn aside effectively in order to neutralize pushes are usually tight
in the waist and the hips. Lastly, one must be song in the legs. Failure to
achieve song in the legs is normally the result of stiffness in either the knees
or the ankles. Stiffness in the knees is often due to weakness in the thighs,
whereas stiffness in the ankles may be due to weakness in the calf muscles.
Stiffness in the arms, the waist and hips, and the legs can only be eliminated
through the consistent practice of song gong. This practice includes
stretching, loosening, and standing in zhan zhuang meditation. There are no
shortcuts, and the benefits accrue over time. The concept of song and the
practices that are proven to develop song were presented in chapters Three
through Six. One specific benefit of standing in zhan zhuang is that the
muscles of the thighs and calves become stronger. This takes the pressure off
the knee and ankle joints and allows them to move more freely in order to
assist the waist and the hips in neutralization.
Song gong training is essential to attaining success in the practice of pushing
hands. Those individuals who are unwilling to invest in song gong will
invariably continue to encounter problems with stiffness and the inability to
neutralize their opponent’s pushes. However, those individuals who make the
effort to train song gong will, in time, enter “the gateway to the miraculous.”
They will achieve the ability to neutralize and transform their opponents’
incoming energy without resorting to stiff resistance. Further, they will be
able to push opponents at will without relying upon brute force, or li.
Recall that, in taijiquan, there exist both rou (softness) and gang (hardness).
In the practice of pushing hands, one must apply the principle of softness
overcoming hardness. This is achieved by diverting the opponent’s force in
order to make it empty. Having neutralized the opponent’s incoming force,
one can seize the advantage of a favorable position for counterattack. It is
important to recognize that rou is a type of strength, just as gang is a type of
strength. The difference between rou strength and gang strength, specifically
with regard to pushing hands, is that rou strength is reserved and not exposed
to the opponent. The key to rou strength is peng jin. Peng jin is the first jin
that should be applied whenever one comes in contact with an opponent.
It is essential to apply peng jin rather than hard force, or li, whenever one is
engaged in pushing hands with an opponent. It is the ability of experienced
tuishou players to utilize rou strength, both in neutralizing and transforming,
and also in pushing that enables them to use softness to overcome hardness.
Failure to utilize softness to overcome hardness will limit the practitioner to
the level of employing “old buffalo force.”
Use a force of four ounces to deflect a thousand pounds: One way to apply
the principle of using softness to overcome hardness s to follow the corollary
principle of using a force of four ounces to deflect a thousand pounds. There
is a close relationship between these two principles. Taijiquan emphasizes
both using softness to overcome hardness and using four ounces to throw off
a thousand pounds. The technique of using a force of four ounces to deflect a
thousand pounds involves applying the principle of centripetal force. The
image of a floating sphere, such as an inflated beach ball, can help to
visualize this principle. If a beach ball is floating in the air and someone
attempts to bat at it, the ball will simply rotate in the direction of the hand’s
trajectory, and the hand will essentially land on nothing. Even if the hand
strikes the ball directly in line with the ball’s center, the ball will simply be
propelled away. In either case, the ball is not damaged nor is it deformed
from its spherical shape.
When practicing pushing hands, if one player receives another’s push, no
matter how forceful, she should apply Listening skill in order to measure the
strength and directionality of the push. This is referred to as “strength
perception.” Having listened to and understood her opponent’s strength (and
thus his intention), she can neutralize the incoming force by turning her body
in a direction that will deflect his force away from her center. In so doing, she
may need to assist in this neutralization with a slight pressure from one or
both of her hands. (See Figures 13-2a and 13-2b below.) However, the
assisting pressure that she employs should not “weigh” more than four
ounces. If she applies more than four ounces, her opponent may be able to
use this additional strength to support himself and recover from his initial
error.
Figure 13-2a
Figure 13-2b
The application of the dual principles using softness to overcome hardness
and applying a force of four ounces to deflect a thousand pounds enables the
skilled pushing hands player to lead the opponent into emptiness. Leading the
opponent into emptiness is the skill of neutralizing and transforming an
opponent’s attack so that it has nowhere to land. Usually this results in the
opponent being placed in a disadvantageous position, providing the
neutralizing player the opportunity to counterattack with great effectiveness
while relying upon very little physical strength.
Maintain two points of contact: Another important principle in pushing
hands is to maintain two points of contact with your partner at all times.
Whether you are practicing formalized patterns or engaging in freestyle
pushing hands, you should always have either your two hands or one hand
and a forearm or elbow in contact with your partner. Ideally you should have
one hand in contact with the back of your partner’s wrist and the other in
contact with your partner’s elbow. This position is shown in Figure 13-3a. In
this way, you can redirect an incoming push by either deflecting his hand
(using his wrist) or redirecting his arm (using his elbow). These two points of
contact can also be used to apply a joint lock to the partner’s arm, which will
enable you to connect to his center and thereby give you control over him.
See Figure 13-3b.
Figure 13-3a
Figure 13-3b
Since controlling your partner’s wrist and elbow puts him at a disadvantage,
most experienced pushing hands players will move their hand or forearm so
as to remove any solid connection to these two joints. However, if you are
adroit you can still maintain contact with one or both of his forearms with
your two hands even as he attempts to elude you. Even better would be if he
drops his guard and allows you to make contact with his upper arm or torso
with one or both of your hands. If you can slip past his guard and place both
of your hands on his upper body, you will be in an advantageous position to
apply either Push or Press against him.
Be aware, however, that you should never disconnect in order to change
points of contact. The error of separation results from disconnecting with the
opponent. Separation is undesirable, as it means that the ability to listen to
and respond to the opponent’s changes has been temporarily suspended. If,
for example, you have one hand on your opponent’s forearm and you see an
opening on his chest, don’t separate your hand from his forearm and then
place it on his chest. During the time when you are disconnected, your
opponent may take advantage of this temporary gap in connection to
counterattack according to the adage: “My opponent leaves first but I arrive
first.” In order to reach a more advantageous point of connection, you must
be sneaky and slide your hand up from your opponent’s forearm to his upper
arm or chest.
Following the same principle, you should never disconnect with your
opponent in order to remove one of his hands from a point on your arm or
body that you consider to be threatening. If, for example, he has placed a
hand on your shoulder and you want to remove it, don’t separate your
opposite hand from its point of contact in order to wipe his hand off your
shoulder. When you disconnect your hand, he can use that moment of
disconnection in order to issue into your shoulder and uproot you. Instead,
turn your body and slide your opposite hand into a position where you can
wipe his hand off your shoulder.
Avoid the errors of leaning and butting: As stated in the section on
maintaining central equilibrium, the Taijiquan Classics advise us to avoid the
errors of leaning and butting. Leaning means that the entire torso is inclined
either forward or backward. Butting is defined as leading with the head,
which means that the head is tilted forward. These are errors of deviation
from the vertical alignment of the head-top, or baihui, with the perineum, or
huiyin. In order to rotate freely, the head-top must be vertically aligned with
the point in the crotch between the two legs known as the perineum, or
huiyin. These two points are represented in Figure 13-4, shown below:
Figure 13-4
If you lead with the head, then the head will act as a weight and will cause the
entire torso to become misaligned. If your opponent senses that your head is
tilted forward, she can use this to easily pull you forward and uproot you. See
Figure 13-5a. If you lean your entire torso forward, the effect is magnified
and it will be that much easier for your opponent to pull you forward as
shown in Figure 13-5b. Leaning to either side or leaning backward in order to
avoid being pushed are equally dangerous as these structural misalingments
make it much easier for your opponent to push or pull you in the direction of
your leaning. More importantly, once you have butted your head or leaned
your torso, you lose your central axis and thus the ability to turn the waist
“like a millwheel, grinding fast and slow.”
Figure 13-5a
Figure 13-5b
Butting may be considered to be a venial sin in the realm of pushing hands.
Leaning forward or backward, however, must be treated as a mortal sin and
should be avoided at all costs. In the Yang Family Forty Chapters, it is
explained that either bending forward or bending backward represents a
serious flaw. Bending over from the waist usually results from an opponent’s
attempt to push or pull you down. In response to such attempts, you must
sink your entire body down rather than simply bending forward from the
waist. This requires you to open your hip joints and bend your knees in
response to the downward force of the opponent. This sinking down will
maintain your vertical central axis. At the same time as you sink downward
you should rotate the torso around its central axis in order to deflect the
downward force of your opponent’s push or pull. The correct responses to
either being pushed downward or pulled forward are illustrated in Figures 13-
5c and 13-5d.
Figure 13-5c
Figure 13-5d
Avoid the fault of double-weighting: The Taijiquan Classics advise us to
avoid the fault of double-weighting. Double-weighting is often viewed as the
error of distributing the weight equally between the two feet. This equal
weight distribution occurs at the beginning and ending of most solo forms.
However, during the remainder of the form, the weight should not be evenly
distributed between the two feet. Rather, one foot should bear a greater
percentage of the weight, with the other bearing less. This conforms to the
principle: “Distinguish the substantial from the insubstantial.”
The reason for placing most of the weight in a single leg is that the weight-
bearing leg serves as a vertical axis that permits the waist and torso to rotate
horizontally. When one stands with the weight evenly distributed between the
two legs, it is more difficult to react to an attack (or, in the case of pushing
hands, a push) to one or the other side of the body. Instead, one is caught flat-
footed, as it were. The T’ai Chi Lun of Wang Tsung-yueh explains that
sinking to one side is responsive and that being double-weighted is sluggish.
Wang stated explicitly that practitioners who are unable to neutralize their
opponent’s incoming force have not overcome the fault of double-weighting.
Most practitioners of taijiquan know to avoid the fault of double-weighting in
their legs. However, when engaged in pushing hands it is also important to
avoid the same fault in the hands and arms. This error is particularly common
when an inexperienced player attempts to push her partner. Even if she has a
good position from which to push, say with both arms placed against the
partner’s forearm, if she pushes forward equally with both hands, then she is
guilty of double-weighting. A more experienced partner will simply turn his
body to one side and lead her into emptiness or respond with Withdraw and
Push in order to redirect her own push back upon her. When using both hands
to execute a push, the proper technique is to push primarily with one hand
and use the other hand as a supporting hand. In this way, if the opponent
attempts to turn to one side to neutralize the push, the pushing hand can
release its forward momentum and the supporting hand can then intercede to
capture the opponent in the act of turning. Figures 13-6a and 13-6b
demonstrate the proper use of the hands in Push.
Figure 13-6a
Figure 13-6b
The ability to push with one hand while reserving the other hand in a
supportive role is one of the most difficult concepts for a novice player to
apprehend. This skill is based upon the principle outlined previously of
maintaining two points of contact at all times. Maintaining two points of
contact in turn relies upon the skill of Sticking/Adhering, which was
described in Chapter Eleven. As stated in that chapter, the skill of
Sticking/Adhering gives rise to the skills of Listening and Interpreting. When
the student is able to listen to her partner’s changes and to interpret, or
understand, his intention, then she will be able to use her two hands
effectively in either offense (Push, Press, Split, etc.) or in defense (Ward-Off,
Rollback, Pull-Down, etc.). No matter what response she utilizes, she must be
conscientious in avoiding the fault of double-weighting when applying her
two hands to her partner’s arms or body. She must always keep one hand
substantial and the other hand insubstantial when applying various hand
techniques.
Stand like a balance and rotate actively like a wheel: This statement from
Wang Tsung-yueh’s T’ai Chi Lun occurs in the same stanza of as the
statement referring to the fault of double-weighting. From the placement of
these two statements together in the same stanza, it is clear that they are
closely related. One may consider the two principles as corollaries. The
instruction to “stand like a balance and rotate actively like a wheel” relates to
the concept of “sinking to one side,” which is the opposite of being double-
weighted. As stated in the preceding section, when one sinks to one side, the
supporting leg on that side serves as the foundation for the vertical axis
around which the waist and torso can rotate horizontally.
The vertical axis created by the weight-bearing leg allows the body to stand
like a balance scale. A balance scale is a measuring device with a central,
vertical axis and a horizontal beam from which two weighing pans are
suspended by thin chains at opposite ends of the beam. The two sides of the
horizontal beam are analogous to the two arms that extend from the torso. If
so much as a feather’s weight is placed upon either of the arms, a sensitive
practitioner will immediately respond. In the case of the balance scale, one
arm of the scale will tip down and the other will lift up. In the case of the
experienced pushing hands practitioner, the response will be to rotate actively
like a wheel. This rotation refers to the turning of the waist and torso. In this
way, one can neutralize an incoming force, deflecting even a thousand
pounds with a counterforce of only four ounces. If the student is unable to
stand like a balance and rotate actively like a wheel through the fault of
double-weighting, she will be unable to execute Rollback and neutralize the
incoming force of either Push or Press.
The substantial and the insubstantial should be clearly differentiated:
This instruction from the Taijiquan Classics relates to the preceding
principle. When the practitioner stands like a balance, she must be able to
distinguish which of her arms is receiving more pressure from her opponent.
Let’s say that she is standing in a right bow stance with her right arm held up
in Ward-Off. Her partner places his two hands upon her right forearm with
his right hand pressing against the back of her wrist and his left hand cupping
her elbow. His intention is to push her. However, because he wants to avoid
the fault of double-weighting, he pushes with his right hand and reserves his
left in a supportive capacity. In this situation, she correctly distinguishes that
her partner’s right hand is substantial and executes Rollback to her left side,
thereby neutralizing his push. Were her partner to push with his left hand, she
would identify that hand as being substantial and would execute Rollback to
her offside (i.e. her right side). Refer to the photos in Figures 13-2a and 13-2b
for examples of both open side and offside Rollback.
The ability to distinguish between an opponent’s substantial and insubstantial
hands enables one to be able to rotate actively like a wheel in order to turn
and deflect an incoming push. However, what happens when an
inexperienced opponent pushes with equal force in both hands? In this case,
the correct response is to execute Withdraw and Push. That is to say that the
student should allow the incoming push to enter without resisting and to lead
her partner into emptiness. This is usually accomplished by hollowing out the
torso while simultaneously attaching to the attacker’s two arms. Once her
partner’s incoming push has been neutralized and he has lost his root, she
will be free to return his energy back to him in the form of her own push.
This is the technique of ti fong which was taught by Prof. Cheng Man-ch’ing.
Figures 13-7a and 13-7b illustrate how to apply the technique of ti fong in
pushing hands. When applying the technique of ti fong, the practitioner may
simultaneously step in with her front leg to assist in applying her push. Prof.
Cheng was notorious for stepping in to add additional momentum when he
executed ti fong. Stepping in is not necessary, however, in order for this
technique of ti fong to be effective, as the photograph in Figure 13-7b
illustrates.
Figure 13-7a
Figure 13-7b
When practicing pushing hands, the principle of “distinguish the substantial
from the insubstantial” applies to both offense and defense. It is important not
to push against any substantial part of the opponent’s body. Rather, it is the
job of the practitioner to identify places where the opponent is insubstantial.
These points may be viewed as holes, places where the opponent is empty
rather than full. These holes are analogous to the tiny fissures within a granite
cliff face into which water can seep. When the water freezes, the pressure of
the expanding ice causes cracks to develop in the granite, and eventually rock
slabs separate and fall from the face of the cliff. Similarly, the practitioner
penetrates the holes in her partner’s defensive posture and then expands using
peng jin, an jin, or ji jin in order to open up his defenses and uproot him.
Empty the left whenever a pressure appears, and similarly the right:
This principle is really an extension of the preceding principles. Obviously,
when engaging in pushing hands, you don’t want to resist any pressure
applied by the opponent. The correct response when pressure (such as a
pressing hand) builds up on the left side of your body (say the left arm or
shoulder) is to rotate the waist like a wheel in order to deflect this pressure. It
is said: “A feather cannot be placed, and a fly cannot alight.” When
practicing pushing hands, try to imagine that your entire body is made up of
silk cloth. If someone were to push against a piece of silk cloth, the cloth
would simply fold with the pressure of the push. The cloth lacks the capacity
for resistance. Similarly your body should fold and give when any pressure
applied to it.
The trick to this is to fold in such a way as to both lead the opponent into
emptiness while at the same time improving your own position. Many
beginning pushing hands players only understand the concept of softness and
yielding without understanding that retreating must lead to a position of
advantage. By yielding and retreating without seeking advantage, they allow
their partners to back them into a corner from which there can be no escape.
The Classics state that “If your emptiness does not conceal fullness, it is not
effective emptiness.” It is also said that that “Advance includes retreat, and
retreat includes advance.” The sequence depicted below in Figures 13-8a
through 13-8d illustrate how to yield in order to obtain a more advantageous
position.
Figure 13-8a
Figure 13-8b
Figure 13-8c
Figure 13-8d
There is no single technique that students can learn in order to yield in such a
way as to both lead the opponent into emptiness and simultaneously improve
their own position. Rather, this is a guiding principle that should be followed
whenever practicing pushing hands. Students must learn through trial and
error which yielding techniques work to their advantage and which
techniques result in being backed into a corner. The most important thing is
to continue practicing with the principles foremost in mind and to learn from
the many mistakes that they invariably will make as they advance in the
pursuit of excellence in pushing hands.
Don’t push outside of the square: The concept of the square as defined by
the two feet when standing in a bow stance was introduced in Chapter Ten.
As was explained in that chapter, the so-called “square” is actually a
rectangle. The leading edge of the rectangle is delineated by the position of
the toes of the front foot, and the trailing edge is delineated by the heel of the
back foot. In Chapter Ten it was explained that, when executing the posture
of Push, neither the front knee nor the palms should extend beyond the toes
of the front foot. This is contrary to the postures assumed by many taijiquan
practitioners in which both the knees and the palms can be seen to extend far
beyond the toes of the front foot when executing the Push posture. Figure 13-
9a shows the correct position of the front knee and the palms in the position
of Push.
When the palms extend beyond the toes of the front foot in the execution of a
push, the practitioner is said to be “pushing outside of the square.” This error
is not immediately evident when performing the solo form. However, this
fault has direct consequences when practicing pushing hands. When the
palms (and often the entire forearms) extend beyond the toes of the front foot,
it creates a situation in which the opponent can easily borrow the forward
energy of the extended upper limbs and can pull the errant pusher off his or
her root. Pushing outside of the square is an example of overextending, which
should be avoided at all costs. Figure 13-9b illustrates the an example of
applying a push in which the front knee and the palms of the hands have been
allowed to extend beyond the front toes. Figures 13-9c and 13-9d
demonstratesthe consequences of “pushing outside the square” and allowing
the opponent to borrow one’s energy.
Figure 13-9a
Figure 13-9b
Figure 13-9c
Figure 13-9d
Some practitioners justify their overextended Push postures in the solo form
by claiming that the opponent has already been pushed and that the position
of their palms is the result of following the opponent as he is pushed
backward. However, the Taijiquan Classics state: “The energy (jin) is
broken, but the mind is not broken.” The meaning of this sentence is that the
energy of Push (an jin) breaks off at the front of the foot so as not to be
borrowed. The intent, or yi, however, does not break off and continues to
follow the opponent as he is pushed backward. Further, if one has developed
even a rudimentary ability to issue (fa jin) into the opponent, there is no
reason for the palms to extend beyond the toes of the front foot in order to
send the opponent flying backward as a result of executing a push.
The injunction not to push outside of the square applies equally to the
postures of Ward-Off and Press in the solo form and also to the execution of
Ward-Off energy (peng jin) and Press energy (ji jin) in pushing hands. The
explanation is the same as for executing Push. The practitioner should not
provide excessive forward momentum that can be borrowed by the opponent
when executing either Ward-Off or Press. What is not as obvious is that the
practitioner should pay equal attention when executing Rollback. It is just as
dangerous to rollback beyond the rear boundary of the square as it is to push
forward outside of the square. If the practitioner executes a large rollback, the
opponent may be able to follow her by stepping in as she rolls back, thereby
uprooting her by combining his forward momentum with her backward
momentum.
If the practitioner chooses to execute a large rollback in response to a
dramatic forward attack on the part of the opponent, she should accompany
such a rollback with a backward step. The practice of dalu, or “large
Rollback,” was developed specifically for practicing the execution of a large
rollback accompanied by a backward step. However, in most cases it is not
necessary when practicing pushing hands to step backward when executing
Rollback as long as the practitioner conforms to all the principles of pushing
hands and plays accordingly.
The entire body is hands: One of the most common mistakes made by
students when they begin to practice pushing hands is to push with their arms
and hands and not with the body. This stems from the Western notion of
pushing, in which arms and hands are the primary tools employed in pushing
an object. At best, we might add the shoulders and the back when the arms
and hands alone are not strong enough. Of course, as any professional
strongman or weight-lifter will tell you, the key to pushing is found in the
legs rather than in the hands and arms. The The Essentials of the Practice of
the Form and Push-hands by Li I-yu explains that the jin rises from the feet,
is powered by the legs, is commanded by the waist, is moved through the
shoulders and the arms, and is expressed in the hands. The upper part of the
body connects to the two arms and hands, and the lower part of the body
follows the legs and feet.
When pushing, beginning students only employ the hands or maybe a
combination of the hands and the arms. Gradually they must learn to push
from the ground by pushing up from their feet. The trick to pushing out of the
ground is to push down into the back heel while simultaneously pushing up
with the leg. Once students know how to push out of the ground, they can
begin to incorporate the waist and the kua into their pushes. Finally, they
learn how to integrate the feet, the legs, the waist (in conjunction with the
kua), and the back in order to execute pushes that involve the entire body.
When the force of the entire body can be directed into the arms and the
hands, then the entire body functions like a hand. Partners who experience
this type of push describe it as the sensation of being overcome by a powerful
wave. Just as an ocean wave can be an irresistible force that is simultaneously
soft and powerful, a push executed by a practitioner who uses her whole body
as a hand is equally overpowering.
If the opponent’s movement is quick, then quickly respond; if his
movement is slow, then follow slowly: This principle follows as a
consequence of giving up oneself to follow the other. Through the practice of
formalized pushing hands patterns, the student learns to match her
movements to those of her partner. In the Four-Hands pattern, also known as
“sawing the log,” two partners take turns executing peng, lu, an and ji while
moving to and fro. These matched movements have been likened to two
woodsmen using a two-handed saw in order to saw a log in half as depicted
in Figure 13-10. In order for the saw to pass smoothly through the tough
wood, they must evenly match their pulling and pushing. If one woodsman
pushes harder than his partner pulls, the saw’s teeth will become stuck in the
wood. The same result occurs if one of the woodsmen pulls harder than his
partner is pushing.
Figure 13-10
When playing freestyle pushing hands, the same axiom applies. If the student
moves quickly while her partner moves slowly, she will disconnect from him.
This violates the principle of maintaining two points of connection at all
times. If, on the other hand, her partner moves quickly while she continues to
move slowly, then he will be able to gain the advantage and she will find
herself trapped. For this reason, experienced pushing hands practitioners pay
close attention to even the smallest movements of their partners in order to
respond either quickly or slowly to changes in both position and speed of
their partners’ movements.
The opponent does not know me; I alone know him: If pushing hands
players learn to follow all the principles outlined above, they will attain the
exemplary condition referred to by Chen Wangting: “The opponent does not
know me; I alone know him.” This principle can be considered to be the
ultimate goal of pushing hands. If practitioners can master this one principle,
they will have no need for all the other principles. Of course, acquiring this
ability takes many years of dedicated practice. The result, however, is the
ability to fathom the intent of the opponent while hiding one’s own intent
from the opponent. The Taijiquan Classics state: “To become a peerless
boxer results from this.”
The ability to know the opponent arises from a highly-developed
combination of Sticking/Adhering, Listening, and Interpreting skill. Chapter
Fifteen of the Yang Family Forty Chapters describes this level of interpreting
skill as approaching the level of spiritual illumination. Once the practitioner
has developed his or her senses to respond to the changing conditions on the
part of the opponent, the practitioner’s mind achieves perfect clarity, the
practitioner’s entire body becomes highly sensitive, and the practitioner’s
movements become dexterous and responsive. When the practitioner’s skill
reaches this level, he or she can move intuitively and without thinking.
The above description details the marvelous skill of Interpreting energy that
is acquired when the practitioner attains the level of “spiritual illumination.”
The ancillary skill of hiding one’s own intention is just as important and also
results from the spiritual illumination that can be achieved after many years
of concentrated practice. The obvious question that arises from these two
points is: “How does one develop such high-level skill?” The answer is
actually fairly simple. In order to know the opponent, you must know where
his center is located. If you can locate his center and control it, then you will
“know” him and be able to do with him what you wish without effort. To this
end, you should constantly be seeking out your partner’s center when
practicing pushing hands. At the same time, you must make every effort to
hide your own center from your partner’s attempts to find it.
Initially, your attempts to find your partner’s center are likely to be clumsy
and ineffective. Your attempts to hide your own center also may prove to be
ineffectual at first. However, with time you will become more astute at
finding your partner’s center while simultaneously becoming more skillful in
hiding your own center. As you become more adept at finding and controlling
your partner’s center, you will discover that you require less and less effort
(read “force” here) in order to uproot and move him wherever you desire.
Your partner will also realize that your partner has greater difficulty in
locating your center and therefore will be less and less likely to uproot you
and move you.
Sanshou
For those individuals who are interested in moving-step pushing hands but
are concerned about the possibility of injury, a related two-person exercise,
called “sanshou,” may be practiced instead. In sanshou, partners follow a set
pattern of movements in which each player has an assigned role. For
example, one player steps forward in order to execute a stylized attack, such
as a punch, while the other player matches the attacker’s advance and
employs the programmed response, such as Rollback. Many individuals will
find that this stylized, two-person approach to stepping and matching may
satisfy their interest in moving-step pushing hands without running the risk of
personal injury to themselves or their partners. There are a number of two-
person sanshou sets. The photographs presented below in Figures 13-18a
through 13-18d illustrate several of the matched movements taken from the
Yang style two-person set developed by T. T. Liang, a disciple of Professor
Cheng Man-ch’ing.
Figure 13-18a
Figure 13-18b
Figure 13-18c
Figure 13-18d
Individuals who are interested in learning sanshou will need to seek out a
qualified and experienced teacher. Unfortunately, here in the West there are
very few taijiquan schools that include sanshou in their curriculum. It is
possible for experienced taijiquan practitioners to learn a sanshou routine by
following an instructional video if no qualified instructor is available. The
sanshou routine referred to above, for example, includes eighty-eight two-
person interactions. It will take two individuals, working cooperatively
together, anywhere from three to six months to learn the movements of this
routine and to be able to execute it smoothly and with good control.
Dalu
Dalu is another two-person practice that involves stepping. The term “dalu”
is usually translated as “Large Rollback.” Dalu routines are intended to train
the Four Corners hand techniques of Pluck, Split, Elbow-Stroke and
Shoulder-Stroke. In some ways, dalu is similar to sanshou. Each player has a
specific role in the two-person interactions. However, in dalu there are only
four basic interactions, illustrated in Figures 13-19a through 13-19d below.
Also, in dalu the primary stepping directions are toward the four corners
(northeast, southeast, southwest, and northwest) rather than the four sides
(north, east, south and west). Yang Chengfu wrote that “four corners pushing
hands” refers to the directions of dalu, and that the stepping should proceed
toward the four corners. In this way, dalu is different from the cardinal
directionality of moving-step pushing hands. Taken together, moving-step
push hands and dalu address all eight sides of the Bagua symbol.195
In dalu, each action has a pre-determined response. For example, when one
partner executes tsai the other partner responds with kao. The stepping is also
matched. When one partner steps backward to execute tsai, the other partner
steps forward diagonally to execute kao. In this aspect, dalu differs from
other moving-step routines and trains a very important stepping technique.
Rather than stepping directly to the rear in order to neutralize an attack,
which does not change the dynamic between the two individuals, in dalu the
individual who retreats actually steps back diagonally in order to gain a more
advantageous position relative to his partner. This can be seen in the
photographs shown in the sequence below. The attacking partner must then
adjust her step accordingly.
In a single sequence of dalu, each partner assumes the role of both attacker
and defender. In the first half of the sequence, the partner who initiates the
attack advances three steps. If both partners are facing each other in left bow
stances, as shown in Figure 13-19a, Partner A will advance with her right
foot and attempt to strike with her right hand. See Figure 13-19b. Partner B
will step back with his right foot while pivoting on his left foot and rotating
his waist to turn away from Partner A’s advance. This first rotation should
complete a clockwise turning of forty-five degrees.
While stepping back, Partner B will also intercept Partner A’s right hand with
his own right hand, as shown in Figure 13-19b. Partner A will then take
another step, this time with her left foot, in order to adjust her position
relative to Partner B. Partner A must adjust the direction of her second step
by forty-five degrees in order to be square relative to Partner B. This is
shown in Figure 13-19c. Partner B does not step at this point, as Partner A’s
second step is an adjusting step rather than an advancing step.
Finally, Partner A steps in with her right foot and attempts to execute
Shoulder-Stroke. Partner B responds by stepping back again with his right
foot, again pivoting forty-five degrees in a clockwise direction, and executes
Pulldown by attaching to Partner A’s right wrist with his own right hand and
connecting to Partner A’s right elbow with his left hand. See Figure 13-19d.
Figure 13-19a
Figure 13-19b
Figure 13-19c
Figure 13-19d
When Partner A realizes that her attempt to apply Shoulder-Stroke has been
neutralized by Partner B’s Pulldown, Partner A will step back with her own
right foot, and Partner B will step forward with his right foot and attempt to
strike with his right hand. This begins the second half of the sequence, with
the roles of attacker and defender reversed. Each half of the sequence of
attack and retreat completes an arc of forty-five degrees. When the entire
sequence has been completed, with each partner assuming the role of both
attacker and defender, they will have stepped through an arc of ninety
degrees, which is a quarter of a full circle.
If the partners begin facing each other in a north/south configuration, then
one partner will wind up facing the southwest, while the other partner faces
to the northeast. This completes the first half of the sequence. The partners
then reverse rolls to complete the second half of the sequence. At this point,
the partners will be facing east and west. If the sequence is repeated again,
the partners will have switched their original orientations and will now be
facing south/north. A total of four sequences will return the partners to their
original positions.
It is difficult to explain in detail how the dalu sequence is executed, as
anyone who has read either Yang Chengfu’s or Fu Zhongwen’s descriptions
can attest. Even photographic sequences, such as the one presented above, do
little to clarify written descriptions of this form. The best way to learn dalu is
to receive instruction from a qualified and experienced teacher. As with
sanshou, it may be possible for experienced taijiquan practitioners to learn
the basic sequence of dalu from an instructional video. However, unlike
sanshou, the sensory learning that takes place when practicing dalu with an
experienced teacher cannot be replicated in a video.
Dalu requires precise timing and appropriate responses. Also the
directionality of both the advancing steps and retreating steps is difficult to
convey precisely, even in a video. Nonetheless, dalu is an important practice
for those who are interested in mastering the complete complement of martial
skills in taijiquan. For this reason, it is important to make the effort to
encounter and train with a teacher or advanced practitioner who can impart
the Four Corners skills to you through hands-on training.
Conclusion
For those who seek to master the martial aspect of taijiquan, the various
practices of pushing hands described in this chapter represent the gateway. It
is absolutely crucial to study pushing hands in order to understand the
essence of taijiquan as a martial art. As Yang Chengfu wrote in The Essence
and Applications of Taijiquan, the martial art of taijiquan employs pushing
hands in order to convey the meaning of its applications.196 Although
practicing pushing hands is an essential step in acquiring martial mastery in
taijiquan, it is important to understand that tuishou, in and of itself, does not
directly train the martial applications of taijiquan. Rather, tuishou helps
practitioners to develop the sensitivity, lightness, nimbleness, and
responsiveness that are necessary to the application of the taijiquan postures
in actual combat.
Practicing basic pushing hands patterns trains the muscle memory and the
sensitivity that enables partners to both listen to and respond to various
attacks that may be encountered in actual sparring or combat. Fixed-step
pushing hands helps players develop root and the ability to neutralize without
relying upon stepping back to avoid an attack. Limited-step pushing hands
begins to develop the ability to either step forward in order to gain advantage
or to match an attacker’s advance by stepping backward. Moving-step
pushing hands simulates the unrestricted stepping that individuals would
encounter were they to be engaged in either sparring or combat. Finally, the
stylized sequences of sanshou and dalu aid in training both the stepping
methods and the hand techniques which would be employed in sparring or
fighting.
Having emphasized the importance of pushing hands practice in developing
basic hand techniques and stepping skills, it must be stated unequivocally that
pushing hands practice will not prepare the practitioner to apply taijiquan in a
martial setting. In order to use the principles and applications of taijiquan in
either sparring or real combat, it is necessary to practice the individual
postures in two-person drills and then in unstructured two-person sparring.
This is a challenging proposition and absolutely requires the supervision and
guidance of an experienced teacher. It also demands that partners be willing
to subject themselves to some rough treatment. Of course, if the individuals
engaged in such training have extensive backgrounds in pushing hands, they
will have developed a degree of softness and sensitivity that will enable them
to both give and take the simulated attacks and defenses that must be
practiced in order to apply the principles and postures that have been
rehearsed thousands of times during both solo form and pushing hands
practice.
The following chapter presents the martial applications of a number of
postures that have been chosen from the Chen, Yang, Wu (Chiang-chuan),
and Sun styles of taijiquan. These applications will prove instructive whether
you want to actively practice them to develop martial ability or merely have a
more academic interest in the martial applications of taijiquan. Even those
individuals who do not actively seek to master the martial applications of
taijiquan will find it interesting to see how the empty-hand postures that they
have been practicing for many years can be applied in actual combat
situations. It is recommended that all practitioners of the martial art of
taijiquan have at least a working familiarity with the martial applications of
the form that they practice. To exclude the martial applications from the
study of the taijiquan is to diminish it as a martial art and limit it to the
superficial level of mere physical exercise. One would be just as well-served
by practicing yoga, Pilates, or aerobic dancing.
Chapter Fourteen
The use of weapons in Chinese martial arts has a long and venerable history.
Indeed, it is no exaggeration to state that Chinese martial arts as we know
them today began with the development of and training in various types of
personal weapons. The weaponry developed in ancient China until the
invention of gunpowder included a vast array of both cutting and blunt
weapons and also included the bow and arrow as well as various throwing
weapons. Because Chinese history and culture extend backward into the
Bronze, Iron, and Stone Ages, the long history of the development of
weaponry in China has given rise to a wide range of different types of
weapons used in martial conflict.
The weapons used in the earliest times in China almost certainly evolved
from hunting weapons, such as the bow and the spear, and also from certain
agrarian tools, such as hoes, sickles, scythes, shovels, axes, and the like. As
Chinese society and culture evolved out of early primitive agrarian
settlements, struggles over land and resources inevitably arose, and conflicts
ensued. This gave rise to the formation of armed groups that banded together
for self-defense as well as for attacking and pillaging. As civil society
progressed, these small bands grew into formal armies who served local
warlords, regional leaders, and ultimately the emperor.
With the evolution of civil society, armed conflicts became more common
and weapons intended strictly for war were developed. Swords, both single-
and double-edged, were designed specifically as weapons of war. Halberds
evolved out of simple axes, and the primitive hunting bow matured into a
sophisticated long-distance weapon. The basic training of soldiers would
certainly have included practice in the use of swords, spears, bows, and
halberds. Hand-to-hand combat would also have been included in a soldier’s
training, but only as an adjunct to weapons training. The training of empty-
hand fighting would have been secondary to weapons training. Martial
engagements would have been fought first with bows, then with halberds, and
subsequently with short-range weapons such as swords. Hand-to-hand
fighting would only occur in close quarters, and even then only if a soldier
somehow lost the use of his sword or saber.
When most of us think of Chinese martial arts, we don’t immediately think of
armed soldiers involved in large-scale military engagements. Rather, we
visualize some form of solo martial art, such as Shaolin or White Crane style
kung fu, or taijiquan, bagua zhang, or xinyi quan. We typically identify these
empty-hand fighting systems as “traditional Chinese martial arts.” It is
important to understand that the weapons forms practiced in these traditional
Chinese martial arts have their origins in the art and science of warfare.
Weapons such as the bow, the halberd, the spear, the sword, and the saber all
have practical application for the purpose of cutting, stabbing, shooting, or
bludgeoning one or more opponents while engaged in group combat.
If we exclude from this discussion the bow and throwing weapons, then we
can focus on the weapons most commonly practiced in traditional Chinese
martial arts. These weapons may be classified according to their length as
follows: short weapons, such as sticks, knives, fans, hammers, edged rings,
and scythes; medium-length weapons, such as swords, sabers, canes, and
short staffs; and long weapons, such as spears, halberds, staffs, and long
poles. Most traditional Chinese martial arts systems will include training in a
variety of weapons from each of these three categories.
The blade, or jianti, of a jian consists of three distinct sections, each with its
own function. The forward section, which is the thinnest, sharpest and most
flexible, is the qianren. This portion of the sword is used for cutting and
stabbing. The qianren includes the sword tip, or jianfeng. The middle section,
which is the longest section, is the zhongren. This section is used for blocking
and deflecting. Recall that it is best to use the flat side of this section when
engaged in defending. The section of the blade closest to the guard is the
jiangen, or root of the jian. This portion of the sword is typically not
sharpened and is used in conjunction with the guard as a last line of defense
against an opponent’s attack.
Ideally, an opponent’s blade would never reach the jiangen nor the hushou.
However, should an opponent find an opening in your defenses, you must be
able to employ your jian’s root and guard to capture his blade and render it
harmless before it has a chance to touch your body. Learning to use the three
sections of the jianti is an important part of any sword practitioner’s training.
Modern straight swords come in three basic weights: combat steel, spring
steel, and wushu steel. Combat steel swords are the heaviest and are meant to
simulate the weight and heft of an actual jian that might have been used in
combat in the era before the advent of gunpowder. Unless the blade of a
combat steel jian is very finely forged, it is likely not to be flexible even at
the tip. The blade most commonly used for taiji jian practice is made from
spring steel. Spring steel blades have quite a bit of flexibility in the qianren,
less flexibility in the zhongren, and almost no flexibility in the jiangen.
Wushu steel blades are extremely flexible and can even be bent completely
back upon themselves. These blades are not practical for actual jian training,
and are used primarily for showy demonstrations in which the blade is made
to vibrate dramatically. They are also used in two-person sword training in
which neither participant is likely to be injured from such a malleable blade.
The overall length of the jian is determined primarily by the length of its
blade. Ideally, the length of the jian should reach from the hand to the ear
when the sword is held as shown in Figure 15-2. The balance of the jian is an
important consideration. A sword that is too heavily weighted toward the
front will make it difficult to maintain the tip in an upright position when
executing the various postures. Unless a particular posture requires that the
tip be pointed downward, there is a common admonition in taiji jian practice:
“Don’t let your tip dip.” Ideally, the combined weight of the sword’s guard,
grip, and pommel will serve to offset the weight of the blade itself. A well-
balanced jian will balance nicely on two outstretched fingers placed
approximately three inches forward of the guard.
Figure 15-2
How to Hold the Jian
When holding the jian, there are a variety of different grips that are
employed, depending upon the purpose to which the sword is being used at
that moment. The term “wojian” refers to any method for gripping the jian
and defines the relationship between the sword and the hand holding the
sword. It is essential to hold the jian correctly in order to execute the various
sword techniques that will be presented later in this chapter. The following
information refers to individuals who are right-handed. Individuals who
normally hold the jian in their left hand will need to reverse the directions
presented here.
The most commonly used grip is similar to the grip used when shaking
someone’s hand or when holding a tennis racket. The handle is held naturally
in the hand with the thumb wrapped around the top and the fingers wrapping
around the outside of the handle. See Figure 15-3a. Unlike a firm handshake
or the determined grip that holds a tennis racket, however, the hand does not
grip the sword firmly with all four fingers. Instead, the thumb and the middle
two fingers of the hand contact the jianba firmly, with the remaining two
fingers only loosely connected to the handle. In his book, The Major Methods
of Wudang Sword, Huang Yuan-xiou identified to methods for holding the
jian. The first method, which is more common, is si ba jian, which translates
as “dead-grip sword.” In Wudang sword, the sword is held loosely, which is
called huo ba jian, translated as “live-grip sword.” He explained that the live-
grip enables the swordsman to manipulate the sword with an agility and
dexterity that a swordsman who uses the dead-grip can never achieve.223
When held in this fashion, with the elbow dropped comfortably down by the
lower ribs, the sword will have an upward inclination, as shown in Figure 15-
3b. This is to the correct way to hold the jian. As stated previously, the sword
holder should adhere to the dictum: “Don’t let your tip dip.” Except when
intentionally thrusting downward with the sword or when cutting
horizontally, you want the tip of the sword to point upward at all times.
Figure 15-3a
Figure 15-3b
Other grips are employed when turning the blade of the sword sideways for
cutting. Figure 15-4a shows the grip in which the thumb of the hand is up,
and Figure 15-4b shows the grip in which the thumb is pointing down. These
two grips are often alternated as the sword is used to cut horizontally first
across the left side of the body and then back across the right side of the
body. See Figures 15-4c and 15-4d.
Figure 15-4a
Figure 15-4b
Figure 15-4c
Figure 15-4d
The sword may also be used to cut upward or to block an overhead strike. In
the former case, the natural grip shown in Figure 15-3a may be reversed by
rotating the wrist clockwise one hundred and eighty degrees such that the
thumb is on the outside of the jianba and the fingers are on the inside. See
Figure 15-5a. This will enable the sword to be lifted up in an upward cutting
arc, as shown in figure 15-5b. The wrist can also be rotated one hundred and
eighty degrees counter-clockwise as shown in Figure 15-5c. This grip is often
used when holding the jian over the head either to thrust down onto an
opponent or to block an opponent’s overhead attack. See Figure 15-5d.
Figure 15-5a
Figure 15-5b
Figure 15-5c
Figure 15-5d
When holding the sword in the right hand, the left hand is often used to
support the grip by placing the first two fingers of the left hand against the
inside of the right wrist, as shown in Figure 15-6a. The thumb of the left hand
and the remaining two fingers of the left hand are curled under and joined
beneath the hand. When the two fingers of the empty hand are held against
the wrist of the hand holding the jianba, the empty hand is referred to as the
“sword helper,” or jianfa.
When the empty hand is held in the same shape but is not connected to the
wrist of the hand holding the sword, as illustrated in Figure 15-6b, it is
known as the “sword finger,” or jianjue. This hand position is also sometimes
called the “secret sword hand” since it can be used as second, “hidden”
weapon, as will be described in the following section.
Figure 15-6a
Figure 15-6b
The sword helper hand provides both physical and energetic support when
either cutting or blocking. See Figures 15-7a through 15-7d below.
Figure 15-7a
Figure 15-7b
Figure 15-7c
Figure 15-7d
There are other sword holding positions, including several two-handed grips
that may be utilized when pressing or thrusting forward forcibly against an
opponent’s weapon, either in defense or for attacking. See Figures 15-8a and
15-8b. The two-handed grip is employed during various postures in the Chen
style taiji jian practice, such as The Black Dragon Whips Its Tail.
Figure 15-8a
Figure 15-8b
Two other grips should also be mentioned. The first is the resting grip, in
which the sword is actually held pointing upward in a “port arms” position.
In this resting grip, the sword is held in the left hand and rests against the
outside of the left arm, as shown in Figure 15-9a. The second grip is similar
to the first, but the sword is held in a reversed positon, or fanwo, with the
sword resting against the inside of the left arm, as illustrated in Figure 15-9b.
In the taiji jian tradition the practitioner always begins by holding the jian in
the left hand.224
Figure 15-9a
Figure 15-9b
The Principles of Taiji Jian Practice
The principles of taijiquan apply whether performing the empty-hand form or
practicing the taiji jian. In particular, the fundamental principles outlined by
Yang Cheng-fu that relate to the structure of the body should be attended to.
These include the following, among others: “An intangible and lively energy
lifts the crown of the head.” “Contain chest and raise the back.” “Relax the
waist.” “Sink the shoulders and drop the elbows.”
One should also follow the guidance provide by Chen Zhenglei in which he
counsels the practitioner to pay attention to physical coordination as a whole.
In particular, the hand, eye, body, and footwork should all be coordinated. It
is essential that the qi, shen and jin should all be coordinated.225 In the sword
form of the Chen style in particular, the alternation between hard and soft
(gang and rou) come into play, as gentle, sweeping movements of the sword
are interrupted by swift, fierce attacks that result in the practitioner’s fa jing
being expressed in the sudden shaking of the sword, which vibrates all the
way out to the tip. This sword style employs nimble and solid footwork, the
interchange of soft and hard, and slow moves interspersed with fast ones.
Real attacks are hidden in fake moves and fake moves transform into real
attacks.
In addition, it is important to recognize that the power delivered to the sword
when striking, cutting, thrusting, stabbing, deflecting, or blocking must all
come from the legs and the waist and not from the shoulders. In particular,
the turning of the waist and the torso are especially important when cutting
from side to side. The movements of the individual wielding the sword and
the sword itself must become one movement, such that the power delivered to
the sword is a direct result of the power generated by the sinuous and circular
movement of the body. Zhang Yun wrote that, when practicing taiji jian, the
movements of the waist should be larger than they are in when practicing the
empty-handed form. Therefore, practicing the jian provides an especially
good opportunity to increase your awareness of the movements of your
waist.226
When handling the taiji jian, it is important that the sword be treated as an
extension of the arm and the hand that is holding the sword. Just as it is true
in pushing hands that “the hand is not a hand, the body is a hand,” it can
equally be said that “the sword is not a sword; the body is the sword.” In this
analogy, the arm that holds the sword must be treated as an extension of the
torso, which in turn is connected to the waist, the legs, and the feet. One does
not cut, thrust, slice, stab, block, or parry with the sword, but rather with the
arm that holds the sword. Moreover, the arm that holds the sword does not
move independently of the body. When cutting, the movement begins with
the feet, is powered by the legs, controlled by the waist, directed into the arm,
and expressed in the motion of the sword. The same is true for all the
movements of the sword. This is the key to using the jian correctly according
to taijiquan principles.
Regarding the union of the body with the sword, the famous General Li Jing-
lin wrote that the essence of practicing the sword lies in moving the body like
a swimming dragon. He stated that, after practicing for a long time, the
practitioner’s body fuses with the sword, and the sword then fuses with the
practitioner’s shen.227
In order for the waist and legs to effectively transfer power into the sword,
the entire body must be correctly aligned. In particular, the line from the
baihui point on the top of the head must be aligned with the huiyin point
between the legs. This is in accordance with the principle of zhong ding, or
Central Equilibrium. When standing upright, this will allow the torso to
function as a vertical axis, thus enabling waist to transfer maximum power
into the extended arm and sword to cut horizontally from side to side. You
will also derive the greatest height when lifting the sword overhead if the
torso is vertically aligned.
When practicing taiji jian forms, there are postures in which the torso is
inclined forward, such as in thrusting downward to stab or to block. Even in
these inclined postures, it is important to maintain the linear alignment
between the baihui and the huiyin. This will allow for the most direct transfer
of power into the tip of the blade when thrusting and will provide the greatest
stability when blocking.
There is a principle of taijiquan pushing hands that states: “Don’t apply more
than four ounces of pressure against an opponent’s body, and don’t allow
more than four ounces of pressure to build up on your body.” This is a
corollary of the fundamental principal of taijiquan which instructs the
practitioner: “Use four ounces of force to repel a thousand pounds.” These
two principles may be adapted to sword fighting as follows: “Don’t apply
more than four ounces of pressure on the opponent’s blade, and don’t allow
more than four ounces of pressure to build up on your own blade.”
Recall that, in taiji jian practice, it is permissible and often desirable to
connect the two blades when sparring. This allows you to listen to your
opponent’s blade and also to control it. However, if you apply too much
pressure against the opponent’s blade, he will be able to borrow that pressure
and use it either to deflect your sword and to circle in to cut you or simply to
follow the line of rigidity of your sword in order to strike at your wrist. On
the other hand, if your opponent begins to build up pressure on your blade, he
may be able to cause your blade to be collapsed inward against your body,
which will diminish the effectiveness of your defense. As you feel pressure
building up on your blade, you must move your body (and hence your sword)
in such a way that your opponent’s blade is drawn into emptiness. Having
redirected your opponent’s attempt to penetrate your defense, you will be free
to attack him where he has become open.
In his book, The Art of Chinese Swordsmanship – A Manual of Taiji Jian,
Zhang Yun outlines what he refers to as “Techniques of Taiji Jian.” These
“techniques” are actually qualities that should be maintained whether
practicing the taiji jian forms or engaging in sparring. These qualities are:
relaxation, smoothness of movement, nimbleness of movement, stability,
emptiness, and integration.228 These are also qualities that should be
expressed whenever practicing the empty-hand forms or playing pushing
hands. However, as the taiji jian is an extension of the body, the forms and
applications are much bigger than the empty-hand forms and applications. An
error or fault that may imperceptible in an empty-hand form is likely to
become apparent when it occurs while handling the sword. For this reason,
one must pay particular attention to the development and expression of these
qualities when practicing with the taiji jian.
The six qualities listed above are all crucial for the proper performance of
both taijiquan and the application of the taiji jian. When practicing with the
jian, the quality of nimbleness is especially important. This is because
stepping, jumping, standing on one leg, and squatting down are all performed
on a larger scale and are often executed relatively quickly compared to the
empty-hand forms. Indeed, lively and active stepping is a characteristic of
taiji jian (and even more so in the Wudang Mountain style of jian). This
makes sense, as the consequences of stepping too slowly or taking steps that
are not long enough are severe (i.e. one may be cut or stabbed if one is not
able to elude or evade the opponent’s attack.) The movements of the sword
are also much bigger than the movements in the empty hand forms, so
nimbleness and agility are required in the handling of the sword as well as in
the feet.
These rather elegant and evocative posture names were interwoven into a
thirteen stanza poem. Although the names of the thirteen postures are still
utilized by practitioners of both the Yang and Wu styles, the actual postures
themselves have apparently undergone substantial changes since the time
when Fu Zhongwen and Yang Ban-hou practiced these sets. This is
evidenced by photographic depictions of Fu Zhongwen in the book, Taiji
Saber, written by Cai Longyun, and translated by Paul Brennan.240 There is
also a taiji dao set practiced by adherents of the Guangping Yang style of
taijiquan that is reportedly the same as the set practice by Yang Ban-hou.
Both of these sets are substantially shorter in duration and more direct in their
use of basic dao techniques.
Regardless of the changes that have taken place during the past century, it is
clear that practitioners of both the Yang and Wu styles of taiji dao developed
a unique approach to the use of the dao that was based upon the principles of
taijquan and which may also have incorporated skills borrowed from the
Wudang school of swordsmanship. Because the Yang and Wu styles of
taijiquan are less explosive than the Chen style of taijiquan, a unique sword
design that expressed the subtleties of these styles was required. This led to
the development of the taiji dao, or saber, which differs in a number of
characteristics from what Zhang Yun refers to as “the common dao,” or “the
common broadsword.” He explained that, by the end of the Ching dynasty,
the most prevalent dao found in most martial arts schools were nu wei dao, or
oxtail swords. Oxtail dao, or what we would label “ordinary broadswords,”
have shorter blades and handles than taiji dao. Further, unlike many taiji dao,
they do not typically have an upper edge. Due to the differences in the shape
of a taiji dao compared to a regular dao, some sword techniques specific to
the practice of taiji dao will vary depending on whether one is using a taiji
saber or a standard broadsword.241
It is important to note that practitioners of Chen style taijiquan typically
employ a “common broadsword” when performing the taiji dao set.
Depending upon the school, it is not uncommon to find practitioners of Yang
and Wu styles employing broadswords as well in their taiji dao practice.
Because the Sun style of taijiquan is derived in part from bagua zhang and
xingyi quan, each of which have their own broadsword sets, the Sun style of
taiji dao also uses a broadsword. Whether you choose to practice the taiji dao
with a broadsword or a saber will depend partly upon your preference and
partly upon the style of taijiquan that you practice. Of course, you should
always defer to the preference of your teacher, especially if you are studying
under a lineage holder of a traditional family style of taijiquan.
The creators of taijiquan stated that the purpose of their art was to promote
the dual goals of developing martial skill coupled with civil cultivation. As
has been emphasized throughout this book, the complete art of taijiquan
includes both martial and civil components. We can consider these two
aspects of taijiquan to represent the two sides of an extremely valuable coin.
If you were to invest in such a coin, you would accord equal importance to
each side of the coin. The martial applications of the solo form and weapons
forms were presented in chapters Fouteen through Sixteen. The role of civil
cultivation in the practice of taijiquan also has been addressed in many of the
chapters of this book. This chapter and the one that follows will jointly
address the highest level of civil cultivation, that of spiritual development.
Continuing with the coin analogy, imagine a rare Chinese coin from some
ancient dynasty. One face of the coin depicts a fierce warrior sitting astride a
charging horse, bow drawn, arrow nocked, gaze intent on the enemy. This
side of the coin represents the martial aspect of taijiquan. On the reverse side
of the coin stands a Taoist monk, dressed in a flowing robe, hair drawn up in
a top-knot, bearing a scroll in one hand and a peach in the other. The scroll in
this image represents wisdom, and the peach symbolizes longevity. This side
of the coin exemplifies the qualities of civil cultivation that may be attained
through the practice of taijiquan. These two aspects of our art are symbolized
in the taijiquan salute, in which the left hand (representing wisdom) covers
the right fist (signifying strength).
As has been discussed previously, civil cultivation includes the development
of the muscles and sinews, which strengthens the body; the cultivation and
circulation of the qi, which leads to greater vitality and increased longevity;
the stimulation of the vital organs and the meridians associated with those
organs, which can aid in curing diseases and prevent illness; and, if pursued
with the proper instruction and discipline, the refinement of the spiritual
body, which can result in enlightenment.
Figure 17-1a
Figure 17-1b
In order to execute each posture with the correct distribution of qi, one must
not only know the martial application of each posture of the form, one must
also know where to direct the qi and what quality of qi (i.e. yang or yin)
should be sent to each extremity. This requires a thorough understanding of
each posture and also the ability to engage the yi to direct the qi.
Additionally, the transitions from posture to posture must be clearly
understood, as they require that the qi that was previously directed to each
extremity be withdrawn into the dantien before being redirected outward
again in support of the next posture. This in turn entails strictly following the
principle of Open/Close and a clear grasp of the principle of distinguishing
between the substantial and the insubstantial.
The drawing in and the subsequent extending of the qi as one posture
transitions into another may be illustrated by considering the transition from
the Chen style posture Lazy About Tying the Coat into the posture of Six
Sealing and Four Closing. At the conclusion of the posture of Lazy About
Tying the Coat, the substantial (or yang) qi has been extended outward
toward the outer edge of the right hand as well as down into the right leg and
the toes of the right foot. Correspondingly, the yin qi is held in the left hand
and in the left leg and the heel of the left foot. The finished posture of Lazy
About Tying the Coat is represented in Figure 17-2a.
In order to initiate the transition into the posture of Six Sealing and Four
Closing, the hands are withdrawn in a counter-clockwise circle toward the
center in conjunction with the weight shifting from the right leg back onto the
left leg. In this closing phase, the qi is likewise withdrawn from the hands
and feet and spiraled back into the dantien. See Figure 17-2b.
As the transition continues, the hands continue circling down and then up and
forward toward the right, and the qi is issued from the dantien and spiraled
outward toward the palms in a double push gesture. This is supported by the
shifting of the weight back onto the right leg and the attendant stepping to the
right with the left foot, as shown in Figure 17-2c.
Figure 17-2a
Figure 17-2b
Figure 17-2c
The above description of the circulation of the qi in the transition from the
posture of Lazy About Tying the Coat into the posture of Six Sealing and
Four Closing constitutes one cycle of chan ssu jin, or silk-reeling energy.
This cycle includes both the gathering, or shun chan, phase, and the issuing,
or ni chan, phase. Normally, Chen stylists practice silk-reeling by repeating a
single cycle, such as the one described above. However, when practicing the
empty-hand form as a mindful meditation, the silk-reeling must proceed from
posture to posture, from one cycle of shun chan/ni chan directly into the next
cycle, continuing on until the entire form has concluded.
The challenge of performing the solo form with the awareness centered on
the qi becomes one of continually circulating the qi throughout the entire
form “without breaks or holes, hollows or projections, or discontinuities.”
From the moment one steps out from the wuji posture and begins to separate
yin and yang at the commencement of the form, the yi must direct the qi to
flow continuously, “like a great river rolling on unceasingly.” If at any point
in the execution of the form the practitioner loses the sensation of the
movement of the qi, he or she should terminate that round of the form and
begin anew. However, prior to initiating another round of the form, the
practitioner should identify what caused the qi to stop flowing. Was it due to
a lapse in concentration or was it related to a blockage somewhere in the
body?
Lapses in concentration are likely to occur whenever a beginner practices any
type of mindful meditation. Even seasoned meditators occasionally
experience such lapses. When engaged in other forms of mindful meditation,
such as when meditating on the breath or when engaged in mindful walking,
it is easy to begin anew. All one needs to do is to take another breath or
another step forward. However, when the taijiquan form is used as the
vehicle for practicing mindful meditation, it is necessary to begin the entire
form again.
There are no shortcuts to this type of mindful meditation. One should not, for
instance, “take up where one left off.” That is to say, if the practitioner is
performing the Wu style solo form and finds that, at the point of executing
Fist Under Elbow, she has lost the sensation of the qi, it would be cheating to
return to the position of Cross Hands in order to begin again. The only way to
train the complete and continuous circulation of the qi throughout the entire
performance of the form is to start at the beginning and continue on without
any discontinuities until the form is complete. It is best to think of the qi at
the beginning of the form as a tiny stream born high in the mountains that
gathers strength and momentum as it flows onward like a mighty river until it
reaches its final destination where the river meets the sea.
Although practicing the form while focusing the awareness on the qi without
breaks or discontinuities is a significant achievement, it is not the ultimate
attainment of taijiquan. In his classic, Expositions into the Practice of the
Thirteen Postures, Wu Yu-hsiang wrote that focusing only on the qi will
cause the mind to become “stagnant.” Wu explained that the practitioner must
make the ching shen firm, while maintaining external calmness. Wu further
added that the yi must rely upon the ching shen and not be focused on the qi.
If the mind is concentrated on the qi, the qi will become stagnant. However,
when the mind is focused on the ching shen, the resulting strength, or li, will
become like “pure steel.”273
This important exposition from Wu Yu-hsiang’s treatise gives rise to several
questions: Isn’t qi a good thing? Shouldn’t we strive to cultivate the qi? How
can concentrating the yi on the qi lead to stagnation of the qi? Also, isn’t li
external strength? If so, shouldn’t we be striving to develop jin and not li?
And, finally, how can there be pure steel without first cultivating and
circulating the qi? We can begin to answer these questions by further
investigating Wu’s treatise, in which he stated that, when the ching shen is
raised, there is no fault of heaviness. One must become light in order to
elevate the ching shen. This is accomplished by suspending headtop.274
The key concept to be understood is the notion of raising the ching shen, the
spirit of vitality. The term “ching shen” employed by Wu Yu-hsiang is
referred to elsewhere in Taoist literature as hsien shen. This is the purified
shen that is the result of the Taoist alchemical process of transmuting the
ching and the qi in order to refine the shen. When the ching shen is raised, the
awareness is no longer focused on the circulation of the qi. Focusing on the qi
limits the awareness, preventing the practitioner from being simultaneously
calm and agile. When the mind is fixed on one thing, even if that thing is the
qi, then it becomes stagnant and heavy. In relation to this, the reliance upon
qi to support jin is not the highest level of jin. At the highest level, issuing jin
is accomplished by the yi alone. This is only possible when the ching shen
has been elevated to reside in the upper dantien, situated behind the yintang
acupoint.
The term, “pure steel,” in this discussion refers to the refinement of the jin
that takes place when the qi is condensed into the bones, especially the
vertebrae in the spine. The Taijiquan Classics refer to the process of
cultivating the jin of pure steel as if creating the blade of a fine sword. The
metal is hammered, reheated, and hammered again until all the impurities are
eliminated in order to forge a blade that is indestructible.275
Several techniques for condensing the qi into the bones and elevating the
spirit of vitality will be presented in the following sections of this chapter.
Assuming that one has achieved the level of spiritual cultivation that enables
one to raise the spirit of vitality into the upper dantien, practicing the form, or
any activity for that matter, becomes the highest form of mindful meditation.
At this level of attainment, one is mindful of one’s own spirit and becomes
conscious of one’s own consciousness.
In the yogic spiritual tradition, the awareness of one’s own essential nature is
called “pure consciousness,” or “cosmic consciousness” This is considered to
be a transcendent state of awareness, what the Taoists refer to as “natural
awareness.” Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who introduced Transcendental
Meditation to the West, was once asked about taijiquan. He replied that it
would be possible to transcend while practicing taijiquan. He was aware that
any thought or activity, if experienced at a sufficiently subtle and refined
level, could serve as a vehicle for focusing consciousness onto itself. In TM,
the vehicle for refining the consciousness is the mantra. In taijiquan, the
vehicle for refining consciousness is the form itself. In either practice, when
either the mantra or the form disappears and all that is left is pure
consciousness (i.e. pure ching shen), then one transcends the limitations of
ordinary consciousness and experiences cosmic consciousness, which reveals
one’s essential spiritual nature.
Brain Washing
In addition to practicing condensing the qi into the bones in order to cleanse
and stimulate the marrow, the Shaolin monks also practiced a technique
which enabled them to lead the qi directly to the brain in order to activate and
“wash” the tissues of the brain. As you may be aware, the brain is the largest
consumer of blood. Even a brief interruption of blood supply to the brain can
result in permanent brain injury. The main job of the blood is to supply
oxygen to the tissues. If we can increase the oxygen level of the blood, we
can supply a greater amount of oxygen to the all the tissues of the body. This
is especially important for the neurons of the brain, which require as much as
ten times more oxygen than other tissues of the body.
Recall that, in TCM, the relationship between the qi and the blood is
considered to be that of a brother and sister. Where the qi goes, the blood
follows. If we can direct the qi to the brain, then the blood will naturally be
drawn to the brain as well. Additionally, if the blood has been strengthened
and purified through the process of cleansing the bone marrow, the oxygen-
rich blood will be able to nourish and cleanse the tissues of the brain.
The Shaolin monks discovered a direct pathway for transporting the qi to the brain: the Thrusting
Channel. Figure 17-11, shown below, depicts the course of the Thrusting Channel, indicated by the
letters A, O, N, M, and P. The Thrusting Channel is located in the center of the torso. It begins at huiyin
energy gate (the letter A in Figure 17-11). The huiyin is an important energy gate in that it is situated at
the confluence of the Conception Channel (A, L, K, J, I, and H) and the Governor Channel (A through
H).
Figure 17-11
The technique of leading the qi up the Thrusting Channel and into the brain is
similar to the previous self-cultivation techniques introduced in this book in
that it employs the yi to guide the qi. This is a neidan technique and requires
both tranquility and focused intent. This focused meditation is best performed
either seated or standing in wuji posture. This technique should not be
attempted lying down, as the spinal column needs to be vertical in order to
direct the qi to rise up the Thrusting Channel.
To begin, settle yourself in either a seated or a standing posture. Be sure to
level the pelvic bowl and also suspend the headtop. It is important that the
spine be elongated and not compressed during this meditation. Take ten deep,
relaxing abdominal breaths to calm the mind while at the same time guarding
the yi and the qi together in the dantien.
Once you feel settled and relaxed in body and mind, switch to reverse
breathing. With each inhalation, pull up lightly on the perineum and the anus
as you mentally draw the qi up from the huiyin to travel from point A all the
way up to point P. Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming states that, in the exercise of brain
washing, the keys to success are the yi, the breathing, and the huiyin.279 With
each the exhalation, allow the qi to diffuse out to all the tissues of the brain.
When exhaling, you should also relax the perineum and the anus. This differs
from Dr. Yang’s instruction, which is to continue to hold up the perineum
and the anus during both the inhalation and the exhalation.
When you first begin this practice, try for a total of twenty-four breaths. If at
any time you feel light-headed, revert to regular abdominal breathing and
suspend the movement of the qi from the huiyin to the brain. Once you have
regained your focus, you can resume reverse breathing and continue the
practice. Over time, you will develop the ability to continue this focused
meditation for up to twenty minutes. The result of practicing for even five
minutes at a time will be increased alertness, broader awareness, and more
focused attention. You may feel that your brain is larger and that your
consciousness has expanded beyond the physical limits of your cranium. As
you increase the length of your practice, these positive sensations will
become amplified and will accrue over time.
After several weeks of practice, you can enhance your brain washing focused
meditation by incorporating the “heng” and “ha” sounds into your inhalations
and exhalations. The “heng” and “ha” sounds are normally vocalized when
practicing the form or applying martial techniques. The purpose of the
“heng” sound is to gather and store the jin. The “ha” sound is employed to
amplify and focus the power when the jin is released. However, these two
sounds may be repeated silently when practicing reverse breathing. When
reverse breathing while engaged in brain washing focused meditation, you
silently repeat the sound, “heng”, as you draw the qi up the Thrusting
Channel on the inhalation. On the exhalation, as the qi is diffused throughout
the brain, you silently express the “ha” sound.
When practicing brain washing focused meditation, you may feel sensations
at the special points located at either the Third Eye Chakra (the yintang
acupoint) or the Crown Chakra (the niwan acupoint). These important energy
gates are often activated during the process of brain washing focused
meditation. As you will discover in the following chapter, the Third Eye
Chakra is the home of the shen, which the Taoists refer to as the Shen Valley.
Brain washing focused meditation is one of the techniques employed by
Taoist adepts in order to elevate the shen, which is one of the primary goals
of Taoist alchemy.
Conclusion
This chapter has introduced the topic of spiritual development and has
suggested that the founders of the various family styles of taijiquan were not
only martial artists but also spiritual cultivators who practiced esoteric and
formerly-secret methods for refining and elevating the spirit of vitality, or
shen. The basic concepts of spirituality and enlightenment were discussed as
a foundation for introducing the possibility of employing taijiquan as a path
for spiritual development. It is important for all individuals who seek to
follow a spiritual path to know where that path will lead.
All spiritual traditions have the same ultimate goal, which is to reveal the true
self and to unite that self with universal consciousness. In the yogic tradition,
the self is the atman, and is revealed primarily through the practice of
meditation. The state of self-awareness that results from this practice is
known in the yogic tradition as “cosmic consciousness.” Once the atman is
revealed, the final step is to unite the atman with brahman, or universal
consciousness.
The Buddhist tradition seeks to resolve the duality of the self and the non-
self. When this duality is resolved, one’s true self, or buddha nature, is
revealed. The realization that duality is an illusion results in the state of
enlightenment, or nirvana. This, in turn frees one from the karmic wheel of
birth, death, and rebirth.
The goal of the Taoist tradition is to elevate the shen in order to reveal the Te.
Waysun Liao defines the “Te” as that small piece of the Tao that resides in
each individual. Once the Te is revealed, it can then merged with the Tao in
order to complete the process of spiritual development that results in
enlightenment. The means for elevating the shen to reveal the Te and for
merging the Te with the Tao are contained within the alchemical practices
developed by the venerable Taoists sages of the past.
The practice of taijiquan, in and of itself, has the potential to elevate the
spirit, or shen, and to enable practitioners to realize their innate nature, their
true self. This chapter has demonstrated how, by practicing the form with
focused intent, one can not only cultivate and circulate the qi but also refine
and elevate the shen. The refinement and elevation of the shen can lead one
to a transcendental state of awareness. Although it is possible to achieve such
a state by engaging solely in taijiquan, it is helpful to supplement the practice
of taijiquan with additional exercises whose purpose is to strengthen the qi
and to refine the shen.
The Shaolin Buddhist practices described in the Shii Soi Ching, several of
which were presented in this chapter, may be used to strengthen the qi by
stimulating and cleansing the bone marrow. The practice of brain washing,
also described in the Shii Soi Ching, enables the practitioner to stimulate the
neurons of the brain in order to support a strong and vital shen. The practices
of bone marrow cleansing and brain washing as presented in this chapter will
result in healthy, abundant qi and a strong and vibrant shen. This will result
in a healthy body and mind. Along with the Microcosmic and Macrocosmic
circulations, these exercises may be considered to be preliminary activities to
the more demanding practices of Taoist alchemy, which are presented in the
following chapter.
If your interest lies in the dual benefits of improved health and increased
vitality, you can forgo any further self-cultivation practices. With the
continued and dedicated practice of the exercises presented in this chapter,
you will certainly attain this commendable goal. However, if you wish to
pursue self-cultivation with the aim of spiritual enlightenment, then you will
need to engage in the Taoist alchemical practices described in the following
chapter. Through these practices, you will discover how to transmute the
Three Treasures of the ching, qi, and shen in order to reveal the Te and merge
it with the Tao in order to attain the ultimate goal of spiritual practice, the
state of enlightenment.
Chapter Eighteen
The first stage, laying the foundations, entails restoring the depleted ching, qi,
and shen until they reach a state of abundance. In particular, it is important
for the ching, or sexual essence, to be abundant and for the qi to be strong
and capable of circulating freely throughout the body. The foundational
practices referred to above and described more fully in chapters Three
through Eight of this book are essential prerequisites for the Taoist
alchemical practices presented below. Restoring the ching to the level
necessary for the transformation into qi is discussed later in this chapter.
Technically, Taoist alchemy begins with the second stage of cultivation. In
this stage, the sexual essence, or ching, is stimulated and transmuted in order
to augment the qi. In the third stage, the qi is refined and transmuted into
shen. In the fourth stage, the refined shen, known as the ching shen, is
returned to emptiness.
Each of the three alchemical stages (stages two through four) takes place in
one of the three dantien. The transformation of ching into qi takes place in
the lower dantien, which is associated with the Sacral Chakra. The
transformation of the qi into shen takes place in the middle dantien, which is
associated with the Heart Chakra. Finally, the transformation of shen into
emptiness occurs in the upper dantien, which is situated at the yintang
acupoint. This important energy point corresponds to the Third Eye, or Brow
Chakra. This point is also referred to as the “shen valley” and is the residence
of the revealed self. Figure 18-3 depicts the three dantien and their role in the
transformation of the san pao.
Figure 18-3
The material that follows will describe the Taoist techniques for each of these
three stages of spiritual development. The actual techniques presented in this
chapter have been culled from a number of sources, including those identified
above. In particular, these techniques have been simplified to make them
accessible to all individuals. The original Taoist methodology for practicing
these alchemical exercises involved special dietary restrictions, secret rituals,
Tantric-like sexual practices, and other monastic activities that would be
restrictive in today’s society.
In his commentary on The Jade Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic, Stuart Olson
wrote that, for modern Western practitioners, the more extreme Taoist
practices that entail ingesting herbs, abstaining from grains, and engaging in
esoteric sexual practices are not necessary. Rather, the same results can be
achieved through the process of meditation, which he refers to as the
“tranquility method.” This is the method that will be employed for each of
the four stages of Taoist alchemical transformation described in the
remainder of this chapter.
If one completes the three stages for transmuting the ching, qi, and shen,
one’s shen will come to reside in the shen valley and the Te will be revealed.
This is the state of self-awareness, which the yogic tradition refers to as
“cosmic consciousness.” Recall, however, that achieving self-awareness is
not the final goal of spiritual development. In order to achieve full
enlightenment, the Te must be merged with the Tao. This is the final Taoist
practice, which involves opening the Heaven’s Gate (baihui) located at the
top of the head. This energy gate corresponds to the Crown Chakra in the
yogic spiritual tradition.
Opening the Heaven’s Gate allows the Te to merge with the Tao. This results
in universal awareness, not only of the individual spiritual self but also of the
Tao. In the yogic tradition, this state of awareness is called “universal
consciousness.” The method for opening the Heaven’s Gate and merging the
Te with the Tao is a separate process and will be explained in the final section
of this chapter. Those who are able to reach this level of spiritual
development will have achieved the highest attainment of Taoist alchemy.
The practice of Taoist alchemy is long and involved. As stated previously,
there are no shortcuts on the path to enlightenment. The Taoist sages
developed specific waidan and neidan practices for completing each stage of
cultivation. These practices will be discussed in the sections that follow.
However, prior to discussing the individual stages of Taoist alchemy, one
additional practice needs to be introduced. This is the practice of the reversal
of kan and li, also known as the “reversal of fire and water.” This Taoist
practice is central to the alchemical practices employed by the Taoist for
refining and transmuting the three essences.
Transmuting the Qi
Through the alchemical process of using the reversal of kan and li to
transmute the ching, the your qi should now abundant and energized. This is
the ching qi referred to in the preceding secion. For the sake of simplicity,
this ching qi will be referred to as “qi” the remaider of this discussion.
Having reached this level of self-cultivation, you are ready to undertake the
second stage of the alchemical process, which is to transmute the energized qi
in order to strengthen the shen. The process of transmuting the qi into shen
involves the yi, the breath, the qi, and the shen. Once again, you will employ
the technique of reverse breathing as the engine that drives the process.
However, this alchemical process now takes place in the middle dantien
rather than in the lower dantien. Refer to Figure 18-3 for the locations of the
three dantien. You will recall that the middle dantien is the site of the
transformation of qi into shen.
This practice is best undertaken in a seated position. Begin by settling into
your preferred seated posture. Take ten relaxing abdominal breaths and place
your awareness in the middle dantien. This practice requires absolute mental
tranquility and physical relaxation. You should only undertake this type of
meditation if you can achieve these two complementary states.
When you are settled in mind and body, initiate the process of reverse
breathing. As you inhale, draw your qi up from your lower dantien into your
middle dantien. The qi should travel up through the chongmai, or Thrusting
Channel, located in the center of the spine. As you exhale, direct your shen to
descend down the Thrusting Channel from your upper dantien into your
middle dantien. At the conclusion of each exhalation, allow the qi and the
shen to remain together within the middle dantien. This is the first step in the
process of transmuting the qi in order to refine the shen.
Once you are able to draw the qi up into the middle dantien on the inhalation
and draw the shen down into the middle dantien on the exhalation, then you
can proceed to the next stage of the process of refining the shen. In this
second, more advanced stage, you will use the inhalation of a reverse breath
both to draw the qi upward from the lower dantien and to direct the shen
downward from the upper dantien. In order for the two essences to travel
simultaneously using the same pathway, you need to understand that the
Thrusting Channel is actually divided into three sub-channels, as shown in
Figure 18-7.
Figure 18-7
You can think of the Thrusting Channel as a divided highway. You have one
lane travelling down on the left side of the body and another lane travelling
up on the right side of the body. Consider the middle sub-channel as the
highway’s median. On the inhalation, you draw the qi from the lower dantien
up the right side of the Thrusting Channel and into the middle dantien. At the
same time, you can direct the shen down from the upper dantien on the left
side of the Thrusting Channel and into the middle dantien. This will require
some mental experimentation on your part until you can coordinate the
upward and downward movements of the qi and the shen. Once you are able
to bring both essences into the middle dantien on a single inhalation, you are
ready to begin transmuting the qi in order to refine the shen.
The middle dantien now serves as the metaphorical cauldron in which the qi
and the shen are to be “cooked.” The pressure generated by the steam
contained within the lower dantien increases the vibratory frequency of the
qi, which enables the qi to merge with the shen. The middle dantien,
however, should not be heated in the manner used to heat the lower dantien.
In “The Three Treasures of Immortality” it is written that, to refine ching and
transmute it into qi, one should use heat. However, to refine qi and transmute
it into shen you should employ focused awareness, which is cooling.310 Stuart
Olson explains this by stating that, at the first stage of the alchemical process,
one must rely on heat generated in the lower dantien. However, once the
ching is transmuted into qi one needs to abandon heat and rely upon lightness
in order to reach the level of illumination in which the shen is transformed.311
Instead of using heat to combine the two essences of qi and shen, you must
use the power of your heart/mind and intention to accomplish this important
task. You may liken this alchemical transformation to the process of cold
fusion in the field of nuclear physics. Here you will use pressure rather than
heat to transform the combined qi and shen into a bright, shining shen, which
the Taoists referred to as “ming shen.” The “pressure” that is employed is the
concentrated effort of the yi to combine the refined qi that is produced by the
reversal of kan and li in the lower dantien with the shen that has been drawn
downward from the upper dantien. As a result of the practice of the reversal
of kan and li, your qi is now vibrating at a higher frequency, one that is more
compatible with the frequency of your shen. The exhalation is used to
compress these two essences together in order to refine the shen and make it
shine.
The original Taoist texts claimed that nine such breaths would result in the
condensation of one drop of the elixir of immortality. After nine reverse
breaths in which the qi and the shen are combined, you should direct the
concentrated drop of elixir downward toward the lower dantien via the
central channel of the Thrusting Channel. At first, you will need to imagine
this taking place. However, over time you will begin to sense something
dropping down to the huiyin. You may experience warmth, electricity,
tingling, or even a spark of light descending from the middle dantien to the
lower dantien.
As with the previous focused meditation techniques introduced in this and the
preceding chapters, you will want to start off slowly. Try for nine repetitions
and then imagine the drop of elixir descending down to the lower dantien.
Allow yourself to pause and relax the mind and then try for nine more
repetitions. Try to work up to nine nines (i.e. eighty-one repetitions) in a
single meditation session. This will produce nine drops of elixir in the lower
dantien, which is a significant accomplishment.
At the conclusion of each meditation session, you should direct your
energized shen upward via the Thrusting Channel to its residence in the shen
valley, located at the yin tang point, which is the seat of the Third Eye
Chakra. As you practice daily, you will gradually feel an increase in the
power of you shen. Your mind will become clearer, and your ability to focus
upon a single idea or concept will improve. Your awareness of you inner
being will become more discerning, and your perception of your external
environment will become clearer as the subtle energies that surround you
become apparent. You will find yourself relying more and more upon your
shen to lead the movements of the taijiquan form, and the form will seem
effortless to you. You need merely to will it and each posture of the form will
occur spontaneously.
The ancient Taoist texts state that one hundred days of this practice should be
sufficient to create enough elixir in order to elevate the practitioner to the
level of an Immortal. Obviously, this timeline is allegorical rather than literal.
However, it is true that the practice builds one day upon the next, and the
shen becomes stronger and more refined with regular and continued practice.
The accumulation of the elixir of immortality at the lower dantien is
important. Drop by drop, over time the quantity of the elixir will increase
until it begins to fill up the lower dantien. At some point, the lower dantien
will begin to expand and feel as though it is vibrating and rumbling like
distant thunder. You may sense that your lower dantien is filled with light or
energy. You may even feel like a bright light is shining from your navel. This
is the equivalent of the fully-developed spirit fetus which is referred to in the
Taoist texts. Until you feel the actual accumulation of the elixir building up in
the lower dantien, you should continue with this stage of self-cultivation and
not attempt to proceed to the third stage, which is to elevate the shen in order
to reveal the Te.
Revealing the Te
When you reach the point of emitting wisdom light from the seven apertures
and illuminating the Golden Court, you can suspend with practicing reverse
breathing and drawing the elixir up from the lower dantien. From this level of
self-cultivation onward, you will rely solely upon the tranquility method for
revealing the Te and attaining enlightenment.
The tranquility method entails simply sitting in meditation and allowing your
awareness to reside in the shen valley. You no longer place your awareness
on your breathing or your dantien. You merely sit and shine your wisdom
light from the seven apertures and the Third Eye Chakra. You will note that
the tranquility method is similar to the meditation practices employed by the
Buddhist and yogic spiritual traditions to reach enlightenment. The chapter
on “The Three Treasures of Immortality,” which is contained within the The
Way of the Immortals Tranquil Sitting Classic, explains that the primal shen
reflects one’s inner nature. As such, it is the master of both the ching and the
qi. When the primal shen unites with the ching and the qi, the primal shen
will perfect itself naturally.315
The term “primal shen” employed in the preceding paragraph refers to your
Te, or original nature. This is your innate spiritual self. When your ling shen
begins to shine with wisdom light, you no longer need to “do” anything in
order for your Te to be revealed. Through the simple act of sitting in
tranquility and emitting wisdom light, your inner nature, your Te, will reveal
itself spontaneously. This is the method-less method, the activity of non-
action, which is the highest form of Taoist practice.
It is worth pointing out that many spiritual traditions claim that this revelation
can occur with a flash of light. The more common experience, however, is
that the revelation takes place gradually. Every day a little more of the Te is
revealed. Each day the restrictions of the normal mind diminish and the
illusions created by the seven apertures fall away. As awareness of the self
grows, one becomes more attuned to the true nature of reality. When
awareness of the self persists without interruption, this is the state of cosmic
consciousness, which is the first stage of spiritual enlightenment.
Conclusion
This chapter has presented the process for completing the Taoist alchemical
practice of cultivating and transmuting the san pao in order to achieve
enlightenment. Although the practice of taijiquan was not mentioned in this
chapter, the practice of Taoist alchemy is nonetheless central to the ultimate
goal of taijiquan, which is that of martial mastery combined with civil
cultivation. The martial mastery of the art of taijiquan relies upon intrinsic
energy, or jin, rather than hard, physical force, or li. The development of jin
in particular, as well as other high-level martial skills, is enhanced through
the cultivation of the ching and the qi. The highest level of martial skill, the
ability to control the opponent through force of will alone, results from the
refinement and strengthening of the martial spirit, or shen. As the shen
evolves from ching shen into ming shen and finally into ling shen, the martial
spirit of the practitioner also evolves. The fabled martial abilities of the past
taijiquan masters were surely based upon their highly evolved shen.
As impressive as the martial accomplishments of the past masters were, their
true achievement was that of spiritual development. It is not certain that the
past masters attained enlightenment, but the verified accounts of masters such
as Sun Lutang and Yang Jianhou, both of whom were able to determine the
time and place of their death, indicate a very high level of spiritual
cultivation. Through the practice of Taoist alchemy and tranquil sitting, we
have the tools available to achieve the same level of spiritual development.
The path may seem long and arduous, but with discipline and diligence, the
goal of enlightenment is within the reach of all sincere taijiquan practitioners.
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Notes
[←1]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 8
[←2]
Ibid, page 12
[←3]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan: The Source of Taiji Boxing,
pages 18 - 20
[←4]
Cultivating the Qi, Volume One, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 58
[←5]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, pages 57 - 58
[←6]
Douglas Wile, Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the Late Qing Dynasty, page 145
[←7]
Fu Zongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 12
[←8]
Wolfe Lowenthal, Gateway to the Miraculous, page 61
[←9]
Fu Zongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 12
[←10]
Peter M. Wayne, PhD, The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi
[←11]
T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, translated by Douglas Wile, page 149
[←12]
Ibid, page 31
[←13]
Waysun Liao, Taiji Classics, page 95
[←14]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 212.
[←15]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 9
[←16]
Cheng Man Ch’ing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on Taijiquan, Translated by Benjamin Pang
Jeng Lo and Martin Inn, page 23
[←17]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 57
[←18]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style TaiChiChuan – Forms, Concepts and Applications
of the Original Style, page 1
[←19]
Yang Chenfu, The Essence and Application of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 10
[←20]
Waysun Liao, Taijiquan Classics, page 95
[←21]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan: The Source of Taiji Boxing,
page 152
[←22]
Wolfe Lowenthal, There Are No Secrets - Professor Cheng Man-qing and his Taiji Chuan, page
137
[←23]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 53
[←24]
Lao Tzu, Tao Teh Ching, translated by John Legge, Sacred Books of the East, vol. 39, publ. 1891
[←25]
Ibid
[←26]
Ibid
[←27]
Ibid
[←28]
Ibid
[←29]
Cheng Man Ch'ing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on T'ai Chi Ch'uan, translated by Benjamin
Pang Jeng Lo and Martin Inn, page 8
[←30]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taiji for Health and Wellness page 8
[←31]
T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, translated by Douglas Wile, page 3
[←32]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan: The Source of Taiji Boxing,
page 83
[←33]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi for Health and Wellness, page 21
[←34]
Chen Kung, Cultivating the Ch'i, Volume One, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 141
[←35]
Ibid, page 150
[←36]
Cheng Man Ch'ing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on T'ai Chi Ch'uan, page 30
[←37]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi for Health and Wellness, page 2
[←38]
Ibid, page 38
[←39]
Ibid, page 37
[←40]
Chen Kung, Cultivating the Qi, Volume One, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 42
[←41]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 45
[←42]
T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, translated by Douglas Wile, page 12
[←43]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming, The Essence of Taiji Qigong, page 51
[←44]
Cheng Man Qing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on Taijiquan, page 42
[←45]
Dr. Yang, Jwing-ming, The Essence of Taiji Qigong, page 31
[←46]
Chen Kung, Cultivating the Qi, Volume One, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 69
[←47]
Douglas Wile, T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, page 132
[←48]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 11
[←49]
Fu Zongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 16
[←50]
Wolfe Lowenthal, There Are No Secrets, page 54
[←51]
Ibid
[←52]
Ibid, page 56
[←53]
Ibid, page 55
[←54]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi for Health and Wellness, pages 8 - 10
[←55]
Ibid, page 8
[←56]
Ibid, page 9
[←57]
Ibid, page 9
[←58]
Ibid, page 9
[←59]
Ibid, page 10
[←60]
Ibid
[←61]
Gu Liuxin, Chen Style Taijiquan, page 6
[←62]
Waysun Liao, T’ai Chi Classics, page 99
[←63]
Ibid, page 120
[←64]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan, page 73
[←65]
Ibid, page 14
[←66]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 16
[←67]
Ibid, page 17
[←68]
Wolfe Lowenthal, There Are No Secrets, page 97
[←69]
Ibid
[←70]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 18
[←71]
Lo/Inn/Amacker/Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 57
[←72]
Ibid, page 19
[←73]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 18
[←74]
Waysun Liao, Taijiquan Classics, pages 109 - 110
[←75]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 44
[←76]
Ibid, page 46
[←77]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 18
[←78]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 20
[←79]
Ibid, page 25
[←80]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, page 19
[←81]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 45
[←82]
Douglas Wile, Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the Lage Qing Dynasty, page 51
[←83]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 54
[←84]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 19
[←85]
Cheng Man Qing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on Taijiquan, translated by Benjamin Lo, page
88
[←86]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 44
[←87]
Ibid, page 38
[←88]
Cheng Man Qing, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on Taijiquan, translated by Benjamin Lo, page
90
[←89]
Ibid, page 92
[←90]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 32
[←91]
Ibid, page 55
[←92]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taijiquan – Forms, Concepts and Applications of
the Original Style, page 13
[←93]
Ibid, pages 15 - 16
[←94]
Ibid, pages 17 - 19
[←95]
Ibid, page 58
[←96]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 57
[←97]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 21
[←98]
Ibid, page 21
[←99]
Ibid, page 22
[←100]
Ibid, page 31
[←101]
Ibid, page 53
[←102]
Ibid, page 50
[←103]
Ibid, page 53
[←104]
Ibid, page 53
[←105]
Ibid, page 56
[←106]
Ibid, page 59
[←107]
Wang Peisheng and Zeng Weiqi, Wu Style Taijiquan, page 6
[←108]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 65
[←109]
Wang Peisheng and Zeng Weiqi, Wu Style Taijiquan, page 6
[←110]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 38
[←111]
Douglas Wile, T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, page 110
[←112]
Dr. Yang, Jwing-Ming, Advanced Tai Ch Chuan, page 238
[←113]
Ibid
[←114]
Douglas Wile, T'ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmissions, page 149
[←115]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan: The Source of Taiji Boxing,
page 136
[←116]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Yang Style Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 12
[←117]
Ibid, page 13
[←118]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Intrinsic Energies of Taijiquan, page 133
[←119]
Wang Peisheng and Zeng Weiqi, Wu Stule Taijiquan, page 6
[←120]
Ibid, page 6
[←121]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taijiquan – Forms, Concepts and Application of the
Original Style, page 25
[←122]
Wang Peisheng and Zeng Weiqi, Wu Style Taijiquan, page 3
[←123]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taijiquan – Forms, Concepts and Application of the
Original Style, page 83
[←124]
Ibid, page 45
[←125]
Ibid, page 68
[←126]
Ibid, page 136
[←127]
Ibid, page 81
[←128]
Ibid, page 93
[←129]
Ibid, page 91
[←130]
Ibid, page 93
[←131]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 92
[←132]
Ibid, page 83
[←133]
Ibid, page 83
[←134]
Ibid, page 90
[←135]
Ibid, page 69
[←136]
Ibid, page 72
[←137]
Ping-Siang Tao, Taiji Push Hands – The Secret of Qi in Taiji Quan, page 176
[←138]
Davidine Siaw-Voon Sim and David Gaffney, Chen Style Taijiquan – The Source of Taiji
Boxing, page 73
[←139]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taiji for Health and Wellness, page 58
[←140]
Ibid, page 59
[←141]
Ibid, page 60
[←142]
Ibid, page 62
[←143]
Ibid, page 67
[←144]
Ibid, pages 22 - 23
[←145]
Ibid, page 74
[←146]
Ibid, page 75
[←147]
Ibid
[←148]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taijiquan – Forms, Concepts and Applications of
the Original Style, page 13
[←149]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Intrinsic Energies of Taijiquan
[←150]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page xvii
[←151]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 23
[←152]
Cheng Man Qing, Cheng Tzu’s Thirteen Treatises on T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Benjamin
Pang Jeng Lo and Martin Inn, page 25
[←153]
Cheng Man Qing, Cheng Tzu’s Thirteen Treatises on T’ai Chi Ch’uan, page 44
[←154]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 95
[←155]
Ibid, page 30
[←156]
Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming, Advanced Tai Chi Chuan, Volme One, page 74
[←157]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 25
[←158]
Lo/Inn/Amacker/Foe, The Essence of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, page 76
[←159]
Douglas Wile, T’ai-chi Touchstones: Yang Family Secret Transmission, page 103
[←160]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page
128
[←161]
Ibid, page 41
[←162]
Douglas Wile, Lost T’ai-chi Classics from the Late Qing Dynasty, page 67
[←163]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 46
[←164]
Douglas Wile, Lost T’ai-chi Classics from the Late Qing Dynasty, page 66
[←165]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 52
[←166]
Ibid, page 53
[←167]
Ibid, page 71
[←168]
Ibid, page 81
[←169]
Ibid, page 84
[←170]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olso, page 60
[←171]
Lo/Inn/Amacker/Foe, The Essence of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, pages 33 and 34
[←172]
Douglas Wile, Lost T’ai-chi Classics of the Late Qing Dynasty, page 45
[←173]
Lo/Inn/Amacker/Foe, The Essence of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, page 38
[←174]
Douglas Wile, Lost T’ai-chi Classics from the Late Qing Dynasty, pages 56-57
[←175]
Ping-Siang Tao, Taiji Push Hands – The Secret of Qi in Taijiquan, page 172
[←176]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of T’ai Chi Ch’uan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 71
[←177]
Ibid, page 73
[←178]
Wile, page 51
[←179]
Yang Zwing-Ming, Advanced Tai Chi Chuan, page 167
[←180]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 7
[←181]
Waysun Liao, Taiji Classics, page 116
[←182]
Dr. Yang Zwing-Ming, Advanced Tai Chi Chuan, page 239
[←183]
Ibid, page 241
[←184]
Waysun Liao, page 89
[←185]
Douglas Wile, page 70
[←186]
Ibid, page 117
[←187]
Chen Kung, page 96
[←188]
Yang Zwing-ming, page 240
[←189]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of Taijiquan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 87
[←190]
Ibid, page 88
[←191]
Yang Zwing-Ming, Advanced Tai Chi Chuan, page 130
[←192]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of Taijiquan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 172
[←193]
Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming, Taiji Jin Na, The Seizing Art of Taijiquan, page 21
[←194]
Chen Kung, The Intrinsic Energies of Taijiquan, translated by Stuart Alve Olson, page 41
[←195]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 111
[←196]
Ibid, page 103
[←197]
Martin Broedicker, Tai Chi Chuan in the History of Chinese Martial Arts, page 2
[←198]
Feng Zhiquan & Feng Dabiao, Chen Style Taijiquan, page 20
[←199]
Ibid, page 21
[←200]
Ibid, page 26
[←201]
Ibid, page 83
[←202]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 23
[←203]
Ibid, page 25
[←204]
Ibid, page 26
[←205]
Ibid
[←206]
Ibid, page 28
[←207]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-ming, Tai Chi Secrets of the Wu Style, pages 78 - 80
[←208]
Wang Peisheng and Zheng Weiqi, Wu Style Taijiquan, page 7
[←209]
Ibid, page 62
[←210]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taichichuan – Forms, Concepts and Applications of
the Original Style, page 140
[←211]
Sun Lu-tang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 57
[←212]
Ibid, page 92
[←213]
Ibid
[←214]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming, Advanced Yang Style Tai Chi Chuan, Volume One, page 19
[←215]
Lo/Inn/Amacker/Foe, The Essence of T’ai Chi Ch’uan – The Literary Tradition, page 64
[←216]
Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming, Advanced Yang Sty;e Tai Chi Chuan – Volume One, page 5
[←217]
Petra and Toyo Kobayashi, Classical T’ai Chi Sword, page 13
[←218]
Wu Ying-hua and Ma Yueh-liang, Wu Style Taichichuan – Forms, Concepts and Applications of
the Original Style, page 3
[←219]
Petra and Toyo Kobayashi, Classical T’ai Chi Sword, page 69
[←220]
Chen Weiming, Taiji Sword and Other Writings, translated by Barbara Davis, page 13
[←221]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of T’ai Chi Ch’uan – The Literary Tradition, page 34
[←222]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton Vol. 4, page 2
[←223]
Huang Yuan-xiou, The Major Methods of Wudang Sword, translated by Dr. Lu Mei-hui, page 75
[←224]
Zhang Yun, The Art of Chinese Swordsmanship – A Manual of Taiji Jian, page 51
[←225]
Ibid, page 10
[←226]
Zhang Yun, The Art of Chines Swordsmanship – A Manual of Taiji Jian, page 55
[←227]
Huang Yuan-xiou, The Major Methods of Wudang Sword, translated by Dr. Lu Mei-hui, page xix
[←228]
Zhang Yun, The Art of Chines Swordsmanship – A Manual of Taiji Jian, pages 28 - 32
[←229]
Petra and Toyo Kobayashi, Classical T’ai Chi Sword, page 28
[←230]
Huang Yuan-xiou, The Major Methods of Wudang Sword, translated by Dr. Lu Mei-hui, page 10
[←231]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton Vol. 4, page 21
[←232]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton Vol. 4, page 14
[←233]
Dr. Yang Zwing-ming, Taiji Sword, Classical Yang Style, page 85
[←234]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton Vol. 4., page 17
[←235]
Dr. Yang Zwing-ming, Taiji Sword, Classical Yang Style, page 88
[←236]
Ibid, page 89
[←237]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page xii
[←238]
Ibid, page 22
[←239]
Ibid, page 186
[←240]
https://brennantranslation.wordpress.com/2014/01/17/yang-style-taiji-saber-according-to-fu-
zhongwen/
[←241]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 185
[←242]
Ibid, pages 48-49
[←243]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 21
[←244]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 38
[←245]
Ibid, page 38
[←246]
Ibid, page 41
[←247]
Ibid, page 64
[←248]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 39
[←249]
Xie Zhikui, Chinese Single Broadsword – A Primer of Basic Skills and Performance Routines
for Practitioners, page 3
[←250]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton, page 168
[←251]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 372
[←252]
Ibid, page 217
[←253]
Ibid, page 219
[←254]
Cai Longyun, Taiji Saber, translated by Paul Brennan,
https://brennantranslation.wordpress.com/2014/01/17/yang-style-taiji-saber-according-to-fu-
zhongwen/
[←255]
Zhang Yun, The Compete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 235
[←256]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton, page 179
[←257]
Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, page 115
[←258]
Chen Zhenglei, Chen’s Taichi Sword, Saber & Baton, page 169
[←259]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 16
[←260]
Jou, Tsung Hwa, The Tao of Tai-Chi Chuan – Way to Rejuvenation, page 45
[←261]
Yang Chengfu, The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 9
[←262]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 53
[←263]
Ibid
[←264]
Fu Zhongwen, Mastering Yang Style Taijiquan, translated by Louis Swaim, page 191
[←265]
Waysun Liao, Taiji Classics, page 88
[←266]
Ibid, page 100
[←267]
Ibid
[←268]
Ibid, page 110
[←269]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 44
[←270]
Ibid, page 81
[←271]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan, page 83
[←272]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, page 72
[←273]
Lo, Inn, Amacker, Foe, The Essence of Taijiquan – The Literary Tradition, page 49
[←274]
Ibid, page 47
[←275]
Ibid, page 53
[←276]
Yang, Zwing-Ming, Muscle/Tendon Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing Chi Kung – The
Secret of Youth, page 99
[←277]
Ibid, page 102
[←278]
Ibid, page 194
[←279]
Ibid, page 251
[←280]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Healthy, Longevity,
and Immortality, page 155
[←281]
Wang Mu, Foundations of Internal Alchemy – The Taoist Practice of Neidan, translated by
Fabrizio Pregadio, page 15
[←282]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Healthy, Longevity,
and Immortality, page 143
[←283]
Ibid
[←284]
Ibid, pages 122 - 123
[←285]
Yang, Zwing-Ming, Muscle/Tendon Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing Chi Kung – The
Secret of Youth, page 138
[←286]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Jade Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Health,
Longevity, and Immortality, page 160
[←287]
Ibid, page 159
[←288]
Wang Mu, Foundations of Internal Alchemy – The Taoist Practice of Neidan, translated by
Fabrizio Pregadio, page 19
[←289]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Jade Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Health,
Longevity, and Immortality, page 167
[←290]
Wang Mu, Foundations of Internal Alchemy – The Taoist Practice of Neidan, translated by
Fabrizio Pregadio, page 15
[←291]
Waysun Liao, Tao: The Way of God, page 168
[←292]
Ibid
[←293]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming, Muscle/Tendon Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing Chi Kung – The
Secret of Youth, page 76
[←294]
Ibid, page 83
[←295]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Jade Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Health,
Longevity and Immortality, page 127
[←296]
Ibid, page 143
[←297]
Ibid, page 18
[←298]
Wang Mu, Foundations of Internal Alchemy – The Taoist Practice of Neidan, translated by
Fabrizio Pregadio, page 5
[←299]
Ibid, page 8
[←300]
Ibid, page 10
[←301]
Wang Mu, Foundations of Internal Alchemy – The Taoist Practice of Neidan, translated by
Fabrizio Pregadio, page 13
[←302]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming, Muscle/Tendon Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing – The Secret of
Youth, page 73
[←303]
Cheng Man Ching, Cheng Tzu's Thirteen Treatises on Taijiquan, page 31
[←304]
Ibid, page 42
[←305]
Stuart Alve Olson, Muscle/Tendo Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing – The Secret of Youth,
page 163
[←306]
Sun Lutang, A Study of Taijiquan, translated by Tim Cartmell, pages 69 – 70
[←307]
Dr. Yang, Zwing-Ming, Muscle/Tendo Changing and Marrow/Brain Washing – The Secret of
Youth, page 198
[←308]
Ibid, page 239
[←309]
Ibid, page 247
[←310]
Stuart Alve Olson, The Jade Emperor’s Mind Seal Classic – The Taoist Guide to Health,
Longevity, and Immortality, page 167
[←311]
Ibid
[←312]
Ibid, page 197
[←313]
Ibid, page 144
[←314]
Ibid, page 146
[←315]
Ibid, page 199
[←316]
Ibid, page 200
[←317]
Lao Tzu, Tao Teh Ching, translated by John Legge, Sacred Books of the East, vol. 39, publ.
1891