Tai Chi, Chi Kung and Pa Qua Program
Tai Chi Chuan is an ancient Chinese art of self-defence, conceived as a series of soft, slow, and flowing sequences of movement specifically designed to cultivate and direct the internal power that circulates through one’s system, which improves the practitioners’ health, and provides a source of energy for self defence. This internal power, the foundation to all life is termed Chi and is unlike external or physical energy. Chi is formless, limitless, and most importantly for self defense, can be applied in a much more focused, and concentrated manner than physical energy.
The twofold aim of the practice of Tai Chi is to increase one’s Chi and to learn how to harness it. Tai Chi Chuan is rooted in the Taoist philosophy which dates back to the fourth century AD. “Yin and Yang in succession:, the Tao te Ching says, or a flow from passive to active or vice versa, “is called the Tao”. To this, Fu Yu Lan later added that, “if one understands these laws, (the Tao), and regulates one’s actions in conformity with them, one can turn everything to one’s advantage.”
To generate great power you must first totally relax and gather your strength, and then concentrate your mind and all your strength on hitting your target. By harnessing all the energy available, and delivering it in a focused and concentrated manner, one is able to propel a much larger and weightier opponent through the air, with a blow that commenced only one inch away from the opponent’s body. This “one inch punch” is a fine example of the power of Chi, and this is why Tai Chi Chuan was called the Grand Ultimate Fist. The styles of Tai Chi Chuan we teach are Chen, the oldest style in existence and the Beiging short form which is the set that is most practiced throughout the world.
Ba Gwa Chang (Eight Trigram Palm)
Ba Gwa (sometimes written Pa Qua), like Tai Chi Chuan, is rooted in Taoism and is practiced to cultivate the Tao (manifest heaven and earth and order yin and yang). Ba Gwa is also similar to Tai Chi Chuan in that they are both internal schools of Chinese boxing (Niei Chi).
Ba Gwa shares roots with Tai Chi Chuan that go back to the Taoist monasteries but its modern protagonist is Tung Hoi Arnan (1789-1879). Many stories about Tung have been passed down. One tells of how he was sitting in a chair leaning against a wall when the wall collapsed. His disciples, fearing that he had been buried alive, rushed in looking for him, and found him sitting in the same chair, leaning against another wall. A similar anecdote tells of how he was napping one autumn day and, as the air was quite chilly, his disciples picked up a sheet and quietly tried to cover him. When they put the sheet down, however, there was no one there! “What’s the matter with you?” asked Tung from the window where he was sitting. “Why did you try to startle me?.”
The primary goals of Ba Gwa are to harmonize one’s vital energy and strength and to understand the changing nature of the universe. Its physical manifestation is quick anticipatory movement away from danger behind one’s opponent.