https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuadSIMVJzQ
Chang Dongsheng's Yang Style Taijiquan#常东升#杨style Taijiquan
常东升的杨式太极拳#常东升#杨式太极拳
Very nice movement..
Chang Dongsheng's Yang Style Taijiquan#常东升#杨style Taijiquan
常东升的杨式太极拳#常东升#杨式太极拳
origami_itto wrote:He does that thing i notice in a lot of videos where he kind of sticks his butt out in like single whip for example. Is that a stylistic affectation? What's the deal?
Bao wrote:origami_itto wrote:He does that thing i notice in a lot of videos where he kind of sticks his butt out in like single whip for example. Is that a stylistic affectation? What's the deal?
Don't really understand your point or what response you expect. "Leaning" and "kind of sticking the butt out" area two very different things. There's a method behind "leaning". Trying to just stick your but out would be wrong and is something I've never heard about in Tai Chi.
windwalker wrote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuadSIMVJzQChang Dongsheng's Yang Style Taijiquan#常东升#杨style Taijiquan
常东升的杨式太极拳#常东升#杨式太极拳
Very nice movement..
Doc Stier wrote:The idea that all TCC of any style should be performed with a vertically upright body at all times is a concept introduced in the 1970's through the widespread popularity at that time of the Cheng Man-Ching style.
Older photos of Yang and Wu Style TCC masters clearly illustrate that they did not consider this to be either necessary or desirable for effective live combat applications of form set postures.
“Of Luchan’s students, Wanchun (萬春) got his hard fajin, Lingshan (凌山) was adapt as throwing, and Quanyou (全佑) was skilled at neutralization.” So these were his three best students (besides his sons of course). Wangchun, Lingshan, and Quanyou were Manchurian guards working at Prince Duan’s palace
They said, "It doesn't look like the Yang style." "Well," I said, "It is the old Yang style." They said, "It doesn't look like the old Yang style that we have seen." And I said, "It is older than that." One of the two men, Zhang Pinqing, told me that after seeing this form demonstrated he realized that this style of taijiquan, while unlike any Yang style he had seen before, was exactly what he had been looking for. He saw that it matched perfectly the ideas and theories described in the taijiquan classics.
In Taiwan people have been doing taiji for decades, since about 1949. Before then, there were no people practicing taijiquan in Taiwan.
We can say that when you eat a certain type of food often, you get sick of it.
Yangjia Michuan Taijiquan is like a food too, but --
the more you eat it, the more you like it
origami_itto wrote:Bao wrote:origami_itto wrote:He does that thing i notice in a lot of videos where he kind of sticks his butt out in like single whip for example. Is that a stylistic affectation? What's the deal?
Don't really understand your point or what response you expect. "Leaning" and "kind of sticking the butt out" area two very different things. There's a method behind "leaning". Trying to just stick your but out would be wrong and is something I've never heard about in Tai Chi.
I'm saying that's what it looks like, kind of awkward and broken looking.
If it's leaning, what is the point of leaning
marvin8 wrote:Ho Chun School of CMA (Shuai Chiao, TC) — Tai Chi (Pts. 1-8)
. . .
harry gross
Nov 15, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daduWk5NmL0
harry gross
Nov 15, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nd2Cu6fELtA
harry gross
Nov 15, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxaBd0_Hkfk
Bao wrote:You can find a lot of old tai chi videos w tai chi masters and practitioners have a more or less pronounced leaning: Dong Yingjie, Lee Ying-Arn, Yang Shouzhong etc. Why would you believe that they would lean for no reason? That would not make any sense at all. So there must be a reason, right? So, can't you use your own fantasy or intellectual capacity and come up with one or two reasons?
origami_itto wrote:Bao wrote:You can find a lot of old tai chi videos w tai chi masters and practitioners have a more or less pronounced leaning: Dong Yingjie, Lee Ying-Arn, Yang Shouzhong etc. Why would you believe that they would lean for no reason? That would not make any sense at all. So there must be a reason, right? So, can't you use your own fantasy or intellectual capacity and come up with one or two reasons?
It's a discussion board, bro, let's discuss some things.
marvin8 wrote:origami_itto wrote:Bao wrote:You can find a lot of old tai chi videos w tai chi masters and practitioners have a more or less pronounced leaning: Dong Yingjie, Lee Ying-Arn, Yang Shouzhong etc. Why would you believe that they would lean for no reason? That would not make any sense at all. So there must be a reason, right? So, can't you use your own fantasy or intellectual capacity and come up with one or two reasons?
It's a discussion board, bro, let's discuss some things.
For sake of discussion: What are the mechanics of front cut (or osoto gari), coordination of hands (e.g., kuzushi) and throw, hips back (exercise flexibility/ROM), etc.? If you're too straight up, the opponent may counter you. Also, your ability to change with opponent's reactions—setting up another throw.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOIlR_suG04
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHMgiC3taZA
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