Yeung wrote:"Form without form, intention without intention, no intention is the real intention
(形无形,意无意,无意之中是真意 Xíng wúxíng, yì wúyì, wúyì zhī zhōng shì zhēnyì)" is a well known idiom in Chinese martial art. Any interpretation on it and what is the real intention in martial arts?
Yeung wrote:"Form without form, intention without intention, no intention is the real intention
(形无形,意无意,无意之中是真意 Xíng wúxíng, yì wúyì, wúyì zhī zhōng shì zhēnyì)" is a well known idiom in Chinese martial art.
Any interpretation on it and what is the real intention in martial arts?
what is the real intention in martial arts?
origami_itto wrote:I'm not attached to ideas. I'm not locked into outcomes.
Doc Stier wrote:origami_itto wrote:I'm not attached to ideas. I'm not locked into outcomes.
Sounds good, but your own comments on numerous thread topics repeatedly reveal that you don't really believe that, though. As long as you study and train with the intention of achieving specific goals or acquiring specific skills, regardless of what these may be, you are attached to the associated mental visualizations and physical efforts leading towards those outcomes.
Thereafter, upon successful completion of same, it is certainly possible to employ the results of the process with a passively neutral, unthinking state of mind, but not until then.
Return to Xingyiquan - Baguazhang - Taijiquan
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 103 guests