Meh, often you have to completely extend the joints to the point where it feels like breaking - then they crack like fingers - to properly open the fascia surrounding them
Folding is just laying traps for the opponent, as you know
Quigga wrote:Meh, often you have to completely extend the joints to the point where it feels like breaking - then they crack like fingers - to properly open the fascia surrounding them
Folding is just laying traps for the opponent, as you know
Quigga wrote:Can you crack your jaws like your knuckles? Or your ilio sacral joints?
Quigga wrote:Meh, often you have to completely extend the joints to the point where it feels like breaking - then they crack like fingers - to properly open the fascia surrounding them
Folding is just laying traps for the opponent, as you know
Appledog wrote:All human beings are alive, therefore all human beings have qi, therefore any movement a human being makes can be harmonized with unbroken circular qi; any physical ('external') movement can be done in a manner which represents unbroken circularity. You cannot see this harmonization, which is the difficulty in copying your teacher's form. So, you have to start with a form which externally attempts to show unbroken circularity. And then, you will realize, that your physical body is not conforming to the unbroken circularity of your mind. Then you will suddenly realize your internals are not harmonized; you will become aware of them in the places they differ (this is the principle of differentiation which I will explain later). This is the start of internal development. If you just use a form which has broken and non-circular movements, you can not even pass the first stage.
This is to say, not all forms of internal development are the same. There is internal development, and there is internal development which is unbroken and circular.
Now, Bruce Lee said that the shortest line between points is a straight line -- not a circle. So perhaps we have been doing it wrong all this time. Thoughts?
So far nobody seems to understand what I meant, although windwalker almost got it for a second a few posts ago. So I will give two examples. One of inside to outside and one of outside to inside.
Stand in the Michaelangelo pose. Bend your arm at the elbow -- try to only move on the elbow. Is this a whole body internal movement?
If you say the answer is no, then the question becomes why not?
That is to say, not "why not" for the obvious, external reason -- but why didn't you make it a whole body internal movement? Can you make it a whole body internal movement but only "move" on the elbow?
Example two; any circular silk reeling exercise. This is intended to be some kind of whole body circular motion. But is it, really? Can you willingly make it noncircular and nonwholebody but give the impression that you are doing it? What is more likely, obvioulsy, is you are not doing it properly, and there will be some kind of qi blockage affecting your movement... But, if not, could you sabotage it intentionally?
A to B or B to A, in the middle is a harmonization of qi inside the body which justifies the movement -- if you want there to be.
Kong Bao Long wrote:The fact he did the Quan in dress shoes is what impressed me.
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