by JerryKarin » Wed Mar 01, 2006 6:24 am
Here's a rough translation of the beginning of the essay. I will add to it as I get time
Taking up the question of silk reeling energy
by Gu Liuxin (posthumous)
edited by Yuan Chuang
Editors note: This article was written by Professor Gu Liuxin for Tiyubao (magazine) and was originally intended as the conclusion to some related arguments about taijiquan, but later, for various reasons was never published. Reading this now, not only does it contain historical value, but it also can serve to clarify a lot of seemingly correct but actually confused ideas. Although 40 years have passed, this proves to have quite a bit of value.
After Xu Zhiyi published his article "A sketch of the issue of Silk Reeling energy in taijiquan" in the June 1st, 1964 edition of Tiyubao a good deal of controversy was generated. The climate of research on Chinese martial arts had hitherto fallen behind other areas, and so this controversy was a good starting point.
The crux of the discussion has been whether or not silk reeling (chansijing) and silk pulling (chousijing) are the same. The different schools of thought with regard to this question break down into two categories: the first contends that silk reeling is unique to Chen style taiji and that silk reeling and silk pulling are two different things. The second school of thought holds that silk reeling is a common quality of all styles of taijiquan and that silk reeling and silk pulling are identical.
The first school of thought, aside from its basic view (silk reeling is unique to Chen style) is divided on the question of the differences between silk reeling and silk pulling. Aside from Chen style, do other styles have pulling silk energy? Xu Zhiyi's article is somewhat confused on this point. "Silk pulling is the most generalized taiji energy", "Silk reeling is merely one of the manifestations of pulling silk", this is Zhao Renqing's viewpoint. "Among the various energies of taijiquan, pulling silk energy, spiraling energy, and silk reeling energy are all different", "Pulling silk energy is not an energy used to gain ascendance over an opponent", "Spiralling energy and silk reeling energy are used to gain ascendance over an opponent", this is Li Jingwu's viewpoint. Meng Hongji, Hong Junsheng, and Long Fengwu have written some analysis and criticism of the the differences within the agreement of the advocates of this school of thought, the contradictions among them, the internal contradictions of the viewpoint of each, as well as the conceptual and logical contradictions of this group. In the interest of brevity, this essay will mainly take up Mr. Xu's position.
We advocate the second position. My own view of this problem is: Silk reeling and silk pulling are synonomous, both using an image to express the winding and turning forward and backward esoteric movement characteristic of taijiquan, and are the special characteristic of taijiquan which distinguishes it from other martial arts (hard and soft, fast and slow, movement and quiescence, extraordinary strength or skill are common requirements of all martial arts). Without this main characteristic one cannot totally exhibit the uniqueness of this Chinese art of taijiquan. Ordinarily when we say this person's performance seems like real taijiquan, there is something in what he is doing, our judgement is always primarily in accordance with this special characteristic. Silk reeling (silk pulling) infused throughout the process of performing taijiquan is the commonality (common character - silk reeling) existing within the particular quality (individual quality - each style of taijiquan). If you depart from the particular specialty then the commonality won't exist and likewise, if you depart from the commonality (silk reeling) then the particular specialty ceases to exist (each style of taiji).
The method of practicing silk reeling and it's unique use
The method of practicing silk reeling is actually extremely ordinary and simple. Within the requirements of "use the mind to move the qi, use the qi to move the body" and so if one part moves all parts move with inner and outer matching up, one continuously rotates waist and turns backbone, above rotating upper arm and forearm, turning the palms, below rotating ankle and knee, changing the energy at the crotch, forming a fused body into a whole system endlessly extending in space making up a spiralling movement.
Silk reeling technique can be divided into two types: one is forward reeling where the palm turns from facing inward to facing outward, and the other is reverse reeling where the palm turns from facing outward to facing inward.
[This message has been edited by JerryKarin (edited 03-01-2006).]
[This message has been edited by JerryKarin (edited 03-01-2006).]