zrm wrote:Well I liked it.
I noticed on your website you also train Xing Yi and Bagua. Do you ever incorporate Xing Yi / Bagua concepts and movements into your push hands practice as you transition into free-flow / light sparring drills? Or do you treat them as separate arts?
everything wrote:Looks fun. For what you're doing I would want to "throw" (bad pun, not intended) in more throws.
Thank you!Bao wrote:Nice vid, thanks for sharing.
I wonder though why you decide to go directly from drill and not from free push hands.
daniel pfister wrote:
Well, basically because there wasn't time, and the biggest complaint I've gotten so far was that it was too long a video!
I feel like even in the single-hand exercise there is a substantial element of free play that requires the participants to stay alert and responsive.
daniel pfister wrote:everything wrote:Looks fun. For what you're doing I would want to "throw" (bad pun, not intended) in more throws.
Yes, that'll be for future vids. Some people complained that this one was too long! I'll try to focus on just a few techniques next time. This one was meant to be a general overview showing fairly simple things people can practice to help get them to a place where they can start some soft sparring, especially from a distance.
nicklinjm wrote:Re: the original video, very nice stuff- think how to bridge from fixed PH to some kind of sparring is one of the big questions that people studying tcc for combat have. Also like the fact that your partner in the demos is actually giving you some real force to deal with! Your students are lucky ~
Bao wrote: In drills you are always one step behind what you could have done in free push hand or sparring.
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