Tom wrote:I had the pleasure of briefly meeting Sun Zhijun and watching him teach a small group outside of his home in Beijing last September. While I was more interested in his teaching methods and style, I found his hands-on corrections and demonstrations effective with his students. And despite having a back injury and being in his seventies, he moved very fluidly and with very good speed. It wasn't so much that he was blindingly fast, as much as his speed was appropriate to the technique demonstrated . . . very good timing. If Wilson Wu has spent a significant amount of time with Sun Zhijun, he's had the benefit of learning under a good teacher.
I like his philosophy on the website indicating that Wilson Wu "combined practical experience with methodical research to develop the concept of 'Jin' or 'integrated strength' to the many systems that he teaches. "
I haven't trained Chenshi baguazhang in several years, but from what I recall of it and observe here, I think Mr. Wu is pretty good.
Mephisto wrote:After I get my new camera, I hope to convince Lin laoshi to let me record some new clips. Shame he took down the one of him doing our 64 palms. He's really slick.
William, whomever you learn with, if you study under our system I hope you're up for training some serious leg gongfu.
mixjourneyman wrote:Mephisto wrote:After I get my new camera, I hope to convince Lin laoshi to let me record some new clips. Shame he took down the one of him doing our 64 palms. He's really slick.
William, whomever you learn with, if you study under our system I hope you're up for training some serious leg gongfu.
He does 64?
I thought Sun Zhijun only had a 24 set.
The 24 has 64 postures that can be practiced as single exercises or as a form.
I didn't know Sun also has a 64 routine.
Interesting.
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