<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Audi:
<B>Greetings to all,
Fumin, thanks again for some interesting video clips. I admire the amount of versatility you can show with what seems like a very simple circling pattern. By the way, most of your clips seem to show only this base pattern. Do you practice others? Or do you simply work on finding techniques from the same overall pattern?
I think I enjoy the form more than push hands in a physical sense. I often find that doing form is simply a ... luscious experience. Like getting a full body massage. I find push hands, however, to be more fun and more challenging.
I sometimes smile when I am doing the form, but probably not that often. I frequently laugh doing push hands, because of all the surprising results.
Imagine: I am practicing Ward Off applications and counters with a partner. I reach forward just at the right time to start the Ward Off throw and dismiss my partner's inability to prevent me from penetrating his guard. I feel the power surging and gauge how much to control it to make sure that I do not send him sailing behind me into the wall, or worse yet, into that nice widescreen TV in the corner. Just as the tension builds and I am about to issue a devastating throw, I feel his palm gently resting on my back, and everything changes. I am now a deer stuck in the headlights, a bug with a pin in my back. My surging flowing power turns to complete double weight and brain freeze. Instead of tossing my partner backward, I fly awkwardly forward and break out laughing. The tension has to go somewhere as I ponder again how a gentle palm placement can change so much with so little. Soft conquers hard. Stillness defeats movement.
I also like push hands because of the intellectual challenge. I think I have learned seven or eight different counters to that same Ward Off application. While it is fun to practice these, I find it even more interesting to explore why the counters work. They seem to fall into three or four different family of principles that also apply to other applications. 4 principles X 8 energies yields a bunch of interesting combinations, even before we get into variations and counters to counters.
Take care,
Audi</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Hi Audi,
Thanks for your response.
Just like you say that I like to find techniques and carry out the classic taichi
Principles through basic simple and overall patterns.
Maybe at some other time, I'll put on some clips to show how taichi can fight, but they are only instant moves once the opponent role attacks quickly.
However, this teacher influenced me a lot.
http://www.5willowstaichi.tw/Fumin
[This message has been edited by fumin (edited June 17, 2009).]