windwalker wrote:No flowery words, no magic tricks, just sweat, blood, and tears.
Always find these comments quite interesting.
In most cases an assumptions by someone never training in what they deride
Had they,,,they would know its often more difficult to train that what they suggest...
Case in point Ben Lo's classes were known by those who've trained in them as being quite physically challenging in meeting his requirements.
The same could be said of other teachers,,, "meeting the requirements"
...
windwalker wrote:Giles wrote: I listened. He's not lying or faking. But he's already been recruited into this circus, so at the time the cameras roll, a filtering process has already taken place.
A another mind reader,,,,amazing.
And if some one was videoing the encounters you had and posted them.
Would others watching, say they also were recruited into your "circus"
Giles wrote: The problematic element is what the whole production implies, starting with the film title. It's typical for the kind of communication we also see in many areas of politics and propaganda, nowadays and also historically: start with a certain true occurrence or situation and then take it out of context, blow it up, knowingly use it to make implications, to draw conclusions, that are distorted, that are disconnected from what actually happens. It's not sincere.
wayne hansen wrote:Wasn’t Bens teacher Chen Man Ching
Benjamin Jeng Pang Lo (1927 – 2018), a Tai Chi teacher who has had a great influence on many Tai Chi practitioners, passed away on October 12, 2018.
He was 93 years old.
Giles wrote:
The problematic element is what the whole production implies, starting with the film title. It's typical for the kind of communication we also see in many areas of politics and propaganda, nowadays and also historically: start with a certain true occurrence or situation and then take it out of context, blow it up, knowingly use it to make implications, to draw conclusions, that are distorted, that are disconnected from what actually happens.
It's not sincere.
Don’t take offence
Morgan Freeman introduces us to Tim Moorehouse, Olympic silver medalist fencer who is describing how it felt to be on the receiving end of a sword from Tai Chi Master Adam Mizner.
Bearing in mind that Adam has never trained using a sword!
From the new film Power of Qi where elite world champion athletes of different disciples from around the world test their strength and stability against the internal skill and power of the Qi that is cultivated in Tai Chi training.
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