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View Full Version : I Want More!!!!



captain
03-18-2003, 04:45 AM
Like John "bluto" Belushi once said,i want more!this is a great
little site and i enjoy the talk,but something is missing.there
are people on here that should share with us far more than
they actually do.afterall,this could be a great resource!
MY LIST OF WING CHUN WANTS.
1,rene ritchie to tell us more about his time spent in
china.with Sum Nung,and the other yks sifu's.
2,Ralf clautnitzer to complete that WSL story,and did he
ever meet up with gary elms,and cover his time spent
learning from WSL.
3,i want t niehoff to tell u about his first days in wck,and
his lessons from the masters.
4,anyone here who studies with or has studied with someone
from china.
5,instructors who teach wck to tell us about what it's like
to tecah this style.
6,roselando to say about his instruction and why he chose
wck.
7,wing chun in canada/usa/uk/aus,what's the history.
really i want more details passed along.something to inspire,
influence,and flavour the whole feeling of wck on this site.
and i dont want 2000 hits on this thread and 2 responses,
that's very naughty.there's a wealth stories out there and
unless your saving it for your book/dvd i want more!!!

Russell

kj
03-18-2003, 05:14 AM
Good questions, but "Don't be greedy," LOL. ;)
- kj

Matrix
03-18-2003, 05:48 AM
Originally posted by captain
Like John "bluto" Belushi once said,i want more! A lot of good that him. :(

t_niehoff
03-18-2003, 05:49 AM
I want less. TN

Terence

Matrix
03-18-2003, 05:52 AM
But.....less is more. ;)

Miles Teg
03-18-2003, 06:38 PM
What would be really cool, is if there was a microsoft paint program or something, so that we could make simple illustrations/diagrams to clarify points etc.

Probably something that isnt too far off though.

captain
03-19-2003, 07:37 AM
i am perfectly serious here,you all must try much harder.

captain
04-04-2003, 07:21 AM
Come on guys,you were eager new wck people once!
russ

reneritchie
04-04-2003, 09:30 AM
One of the first lessons I learned in WCK is patience. Everything comes step by step. It's about consistent work over years. When I was a newbie, I was hungry only to get what little I knew as good as I could possibly get it. Once, a local "karate" teacher came to learn with us. He asked to learn the whole first set right away, in one class. My sifu laughed and held his fingers very close together. "You do first move this good," he said in very broken English. Then he opened his fingers half an inch "When you do it this good, I show you next move".

The rest of us smiled. We hadn't learned any of the first set yet. We'd spent the last couple of months just doing the 4 basic horse/punch drills.