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GeneChing
05-05-2009, 05:34 PM
This just became a Tiger Claw Foundation supported event (http://tigerclawfoundation.org/) for 2009. I won't be going because I have a previous engagement on that day, but we have a freelancer headed there and our publisher might go. It looks really good - a lot of heavy hitters in the Tai Chi world.

Here's the official website (http://www.taichisymposium.com/).

GeneChing
06-01-2009, 11:51 AM
We are sending a rep from Kung Fu Tai Chi, but it's not going to be me, which is too bad because this sounds really interesting. We might even send two. Since our parent company Tiger Claw (http://www.tigerclaw.com) has a TN office, it's well within reach.


Vanderbilt Hosts Largest Tai Chi Chuan Integral Health Forum Outside of China Tai Chi Chuan Grandmasters, Researchers and Health Professionals Gather for First United States Dialog Nashville, Tenn.

— May 29, 2009 —
The Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health and Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., will host the first International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium on Health, Education and Cultural Exchange in the United States that gathers five grandmasters of traditional Tai Chi Chuan, academic researchers and health professionals. The symposium, “Traditional Tai Chi Chuan: A View through the Lens of Science,” runs July 5-10 and is designed to focus on the role of Tai Chi Chuan in integral health (www.taichisymposium.com).

What is Tai Chi?
Tai Chi Chuan is a martial art noted for its slow movements and extraordinary power. Also practiced by tens of thousands of people for health benefits, Tai Chi Chuan is among the world’s fastest growing health fitness activities today. Once an obscure Chinese martial art, today Tai Chi Chuan is taught not only in martial art schools, but also in community centers, parks programs, senior centers and health education classes around the world. An exercise people can practice well into their eighties and nineties, Tai Chi Chuan needs no uniform, equipment or special court.

Largest Symposium outside China
As the largest integral health forum held outside of China, the symposium opens the first U.S. dialog between the wisdom of Chinese culture and clinical science. For five days, grandmasters from five traditional Chinese family styles of Tai Chi Chuan, academic researchers, physicians and Tai Chi Chuan enthusiasts will share data, exchange discoveries, discuss Tai Chi Chuan research issues and plan future research collaboration.
The international symposium features 45 academic presentations and 25 poster sessions focusing on everything from general subjects on Tai Chi Chuan to clinical investigations of its role in health. Topics covered during the symposium will include biomechanics, kinesthetics, meditation, physical and mental health benefits, therapeutic value, the nature of chi and more. Presenters are coming from institutions around the world, including Harvard Medical School, Center for Cognitive Therapy, University of Missouri, National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, University of Illinois, University of California, Beijing Sports University (China) and the Mayo Clinic.

Grandmasters Meet Researchers
Grandmasters of the five traditional Tai Chi Chuan styles — Chen (Chen Zhenglei), Yang (Yang Zhenduo), Wu/Hao (Wu Wenhan), Wu (Ma Hailong), Sun (Sun Yongtian), — will teach daily workshops on their styles. To open greater information exchange about Tai Chi Chuan, the symposium will host several panel sessions between the five grandmasters and some of the most highly respected scholars in the country.

About the Symposium
The first of its kind in the United States, the International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium on Health, Education and Cultural Exchange is a forum that offers attendees the opportunity to network with others seeking a deeper understanding of how the practice of Tai Chi Chuan can enhance health, wellness and quality of life. For more information visit www.taichisymposium.com.

Media contact: Dave Barrett, Director of Communications International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium Forest Grove, Or. 503 349 5184 (cell) 503 357 8917 (home) davebarrett@ipns.com

woliveri
06-01-2009, 12:50 PM
I lived in Shanghai for nearly two years and never saw this gentleman.

Master Ma Hailong

Is he living outside of Shanghai but still in charge of the Wu association there?

taai gihk yahn
06-01-2009, 03:25 PM
This should be a worthwhile event - Sifu Yang Yang (http://www.chentaiji.com/) (an extremely pleasant and knowledgeable individual who I had the pleasure of meeting in person when he visited w/my sifu at our school) is chairing the Academic aspect (he had graciously invited me to come, and had even encouraged me to submit an article for it, but unfortunately my schedule was not able to accommodate such an endeavor at this point).

Looking forward to hearing your report on the event!

GeneChing
07-07-2009, 02:56 PM
...however one of our freelance contributors, Dale Napier, is there in our stead. Dale has an upcoming article in our Sep/Oct 2009 issue (on stands Aug 4). He's blogging his experience there (http://www.elementaltaichi.com/mainpage.cfm?pagename=blog) and you can also follow him on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/dalenapier). He promises to have a full report for us soon. Thanks Dale, and I envy you being there!

GeneChing
07-14-2009, 09:48 AM
We'll have a full report too in our next issue.

Mission Accomplished!!! (http://www.examiner.com/x-16087-St-Louis-Tai-Chi-Examiner~y2009m7d12-Mission-Accomplished)
July 12, 10:20 PM

With a great vision, two years of thorough planning, hard work in preparation and countless voluntary effort, the International Taichi Symposium, held at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, concluded the evening of Friday July 10, 2009 in huge success.

The International Taichi (Taiji) community has reached a new milestone. During the past six days, Grandmasters from all five Taichi Styles shared their lifetime of knowledge with participants by giving keynote speeches on Taichi’s history, philosophy, characteristics, features, key requirements, and applications. They also taught the Standardized 16-movement forms. The 16 Form Taijichuan was adapted to the universities’ sports curriculum in China. They were created by renowned Taichi Grandmasters Chen Zhenglei, Yang Zhenduo, Wu Wenhan, Sun Yongtian, and Ma Hailong. It was very fascinating for the symposium participants to learn the forms directly from the Grandmasters. Most of the symposium attendees were Taichi instructors from more than a dozen countries. However, it was quite challenging for them to learn all five forms in only five days. Many of them admitted that they now empathize with their students about learning a new Taichi form.

Taichi is very gentle; it appears to be easy to learn for non-practitioners. In practice, Taichi requires whole body coordination with specific foot work, body alignment and arm and hand movements. It looks flowing and smooth as if the eyes, head, hands, wrists, arms, elbows, shoulders, waist, legs, knees, ankles, and feet are all moving in sync. Ed Jones, Lifestyle Program Director of the Centers of Disease Control & Prevention and coordinator of the Taichi program at the CDC, commented on how frustrating it can be to first learn Taichi.

More than 50 scientists, medical specialists, and Taichi experts presented their research results on Taichi and Qi-Gong. They found overwhelming evidence confirming that Taichi and Qi-Gong have profound effects to help cancer survivors, aging citizens, early stage dementia patients, HIV/AIDS patients, and people suffering from knee osteoarthritis and arthritis. Taichi and Qi-Gong can also enable people to manage stress and anger. The most amazing finding is that practicing Taichi can actually burn more calories than some aerobic exercise regiments. Distinguished author and medical researcher, Dr. Esther Sternberg, highly recommends that Taichi and Qi-Gong be included in general medical treatments for patients.

This symposium was held mainly to celebrate 10th anniversary of the International Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Association. During the celebration banquet held on July 6, Master Yang Jun, President of the Association, was appointed as the 5th Yang Family Lineage Holder by Grandmaster Yang Zhenduo, due to his mastery in Yang Style Taichi as well as his valuable contribution to promote Yang Style Taichi worldwide. Master Yang Jun established the International Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Association with Grandmaster Yang in 1999. The Association began with only a few Yang Style centers and 300 members. In the past decade, more than 6,000 people joined the Association. Currently, it boasts over 2,000 active members with 28 centers in 12 countries.

With a jam-packed schedule from dawn until late evening daily, most participants were exhausted when the symposium ended. But they were happy and felt fulfilled simply because they learned such a vast wealth of information and Taichi/Qi-Gong skills during the week. They also renewed their friendships with others and built bonds with new friends. It was hard for them to say goodbye. At a request from many, Master Yang Jun, the President of the Symposium, promised he will work hard with others to have another symposium of this type of magnitude in the future.

GeneChing
07-22-2009, 09:43 AM
...not sure what the point of this piece is but it name-drops the Symposium...

Jet Li & Chenjiagou (http://www.examiner.com/x-16087-St-Louis-Tai-Chi-Examiner~y2009m7d21-Jet-Li--Chenjiagou)
July 21, 7:01 PM

To Taichi (Tai Chi, Taiji) aficionados, Chenjiagou (Chen-jia-gou, Chen Jia Gou) is the Mecca for Taichi. Chenjiagou, sometimes referred to as the Chen Village, is in Henan Province of China. Interestingly, it is located about 10 miles from the confluence of the Yellow River and the Lo River which is also considered to be the birth place of China, or the epicenter of Central Plain (Zhongyuan).

At the recent International Taichi Symposium hosted at Vanderbilt University, Grandmaster Chen Zhenglei highlighted the countless generals, intellects, scholars, philosophers, and warriors that were either born, raised, or lived in the Central Plain. Zhongyuan was the center of culture, politics, literature, agriculture, medicine, arts, and creativity of all forms, including martial arts.

Though the Chen Style Taichi is now a widely known, this was not always the case. The Chen Family was very modest and kept a low profile; they did not try to promote Taichi until 1928. Today, with the efforts of Grandmaster Chen, a lineage holder of Chen Style Taichi and three other Chen Family Buddha Warriors (Chen Xiaowang, Wang Xian, Zhu Tiancai), Chen Style Taichi has become well known among practitioners around the world. However,the roots and history of Chenjiagou remains a mystery to many.

There are few glimpses of Chen Village in modern media. Fortunately, in Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh’s movie, Tai Chi Master, there is a bonus feature with a walkthrough of the Chen Village. It is interesting to see that the original section of Chen Village is quite austere. There is nary a bamboo forest or airy pavilion. Instead, it is comprised of modest peasant homes that reflect the humble village name, “the Ditch of the Chen Family” (Chenjiagou).

Bob Ashmore
08-01-2009, 08:50 AM
Hello all,
I was priviledged not only to attend the Symposium but was also staff, as IT Manager. I worked on registration when they found themselves short handed for that function and I was priviledged to check in Dale Napier when he arrived.
He is very nice and always, and I mean always, has a smile on his face.
I tried to be nice to Dale every time I saw him, as we REALLY wanted him to give us a good mention in your magazine! :p
Seriously though, he was always a gentleman and we truly enjoyed having his participation at our little event.

HI DALE!! We hope you say nice things about us!!

I announced the Symposium on this forum on a thread quite a while back however there was very little response. I was pleasantly surprised when quite a few of the participants told me they had heard about the Symposium from my announcement thread on this site though. So I guess there are quite a few more people who read this forum than who post on it.

On to the good stuff:
The Symposium was truly awesome. All of the Grand Masters who participated gave excellent instruction during their classes and demonstrated an incredible level of knowledge about Tai Chi Chuan during their lectures and round table discussions.
Of course that is to be expected, since all of their first names are "Grand"... ;)
Attending the event can only be called the definition of "information overload". It was five straight days of non-stop, morning to night, learning about Tai Chi Chuan and it's effects on health. We started early in the morning, 6:15 a.m., on the Esplanade of Vanderbilt University with "morning warm ups with the Grand Masters". Each morning there were two GM's leading warm ups in their style at opposite ends of the Esplanade. This was a truly wonderful way to wake up, get stretched and warmed up and get to mingle with some of the true greats of our art.
It was pretty eye opening to be standing next to people like Hang Hoong Wang, Violet Li, Eugene Gaudreau, Rod Fergusson, Betsy Chapman, Jan Guyron (I hope I spelled everyone's names correctly) and on one morning...
Dale Napier :D
and seeing them line up right along with the rest of us lowly students and warm up with the GM's.
After that, BREAKFAST!! :)
After breakfast we went to the days "Keynote Address". Each GM addressed us with many insights into their art. I have extensive notes on every address except for GM Sun, who I had to miss for Symposium business. :(
From there those of us in Group B (there were two groups, A and B) went to the Sportsplex and took our classes on the 16 posture forms of the various family styles. It was a good venue, if quite a bit warm. I will not go into too many details on the classes except to say that every one of them was truly wonderful.
After the morning lesson, Lunch!! :cool:
After lunch was the lecture series done by the academics, medical and scientific experts as well as some Masters of TCC like Rod Fergusson. The only problem with these lectures was that there were always three groups of three lecturers to choose from! You had to decide which series you were going to see for the day and it was always, always a tough choice. I wish there had been three of me, so I could see them all! :)
After that, Group B once again recollected and we would go the Life Center for the afternoon class. A truly remarkable place to hold the classes. Very comfortable.
After class, DINNER! :p
After dinner there was always a special event. Monday was the 10 Year Anniversary of the International Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Association Banquet. It was truly wonderful and I want to once again thank the Executive Director of the Symposium, Lauren Wade, for showing us all a truly good time while we were in Nashville. She did the best job I've ever seen anyone do keeping us entertained every night.
Anyway, the Banquet was HUGE, with all the GM's and their families and disciples there. I must say it was a special treat to see the GM's singing opera... :cool:
There was a very special announcement made at the banquet regarding Master Yang Jun, the President of our Association. He was named the fifth lineage holder of the Yang Family that night by Grand Master Yang Zhen Duo. I feel priviledged to have attended the event to see him come into his own.
There were different events each night, all of them were truly wonderful. The Friendship Banquet and BBQ on Friday night was quite a treat. Again, Lauren Wade and her daughter Nicole Fedele did simply a terrific job putting that all together for us to enjoy.

What else to say? There's simply too much to put into words. I'd be here for days...
For those who would like to get a small taste of the event, Violet Li has a shutterfly page to post pictures. The link to that is:
http://internationattaichisymposium.shutterfly.com/

You'll even see me on there in some pics, but I'm not saying where! :p

Mike Lucero also has a shutterfly account that he linked on the Yang Family Tai Chi site: taichisymposium.shutterfly.com
There's a pic or two of me on there as well...

I hope to hear from others who attended the Symposium as well to get their feelings on the happenings there.

DRAGONSIHING
08-03-2009, 01:58 PM
Is there going to be a repeat of this seminar next year? It sounds like it was great and am looking forward to Dale's report in the magazine. Bob, your brief report was good and heightens my interest in going if it's repeated. Thanks. MP

Three Harmonies
08-03-2009, 05:39 PM
Anyone do anything hands on? Seems to be all form work, and modern wushu form work at that!?!? Any applications happening?

Thanks
Jake

Bob Ashmore
08-04-2009, 08:59 AM
Dragonsihing,
No, there will not be a repeat next year. GM Yang Zhen Duo said to do it "one more time" and so we are in the preliminary stages of doing so. However the plan, as of now, is to do it again in 2012.
It took two years to put this one together and it was awesome, so with three years the next one should be even better.
As soon as I have any more details I will let everyone here know.

Three Harmonies,
No, there was no "hands on" at the classes.
This was the Symposium for "Health, Education and Cultural Exchange" so there was no combat training involved. There were demonstrations of martial movements during the classes but they were not practiced by participants.
There was quite a lot of pushing hands going on while we waited for the buses to take us from one place to another but that was spontaneous amongst the guests and not a scheduled event.

Bob

Three Harmonies
08-06-2009, 07:18 AM
Bob
Thanks.
Too bad. I do not quite understand "martial" arts training without the martial part, but to each their own.

Jake

GeneChing
08-06-2009, 11:12 AM
When you're young, martial arts means fighting with others
When you're older, martial arts means fighting with yourself.

When your body declines, you face the hardest battles in the martial arts. I've often wondered if some aspects of taiji were constructs to maintain the Confucian seniority of elder masters. Obviously, at some point, the young fighter can beat the old fighter strictly on the power of youth (there are exceptions, of course, but those are remarkable cases). On another level, the therapeutic aspects of taiji are undeniable. Perhaps it was a construct for old fighters to stay healthy under the burden of their accumulated scar tissue.

My mom practiced taiji for a spell. It was a good social outlet for her and she felt it improved her golf game. Was it martial as in fighting? No, not at all. But my mom has different adversaries, the remainders of a long and fruitful life. After all, she had to contend with raising me. :o

TaichiMantis
08-06-2009, 12:01 PM
When you're young, martial arts means fighting with others
When you're older, martial arts means fighting with yourself.
My mom practiced taiji for a spell. It was a good social outlet for her and she felt it improved her golf game.

True! I hadn't picked up a club for two years but went golfing with the hubby on vacation this summer. My swing was more fluid and I was banging the ball pretty far!:D

Skip J.
08-06-2009, 01:28 PM
On another level, the therapeutic aspects of taiji are undeniable. Perhaps it was a construct for old fighters to stay healthy under the burden of their accumulated scar tissue.

My mom practiced taiji for a spell. It was a good social outlet for her and she felt it improved her golf game. Was it martial as in fighting? No, not at all. But my mom has different adversaries, the remainders of a long and fruitful life. After all, she had to contend with raising me. :o

Exactly.... when you're in your 50's or 60's before you ever start, there's not a lot of martial left in your body, no matter what your mind thinks. Taiji provides an outlet for that and beats the ever livin' heck outta watchin' tv from a chair as you get older...

Bob Ashmore
08-06-2009, 01:58 PM
Three Harmonies,
That's not what the Symposium is about. The Symposium is specifically for "Health, Education and Cultural Exchange".
The Symposium was designed as a way to highlight the aspects of the art beyond the martial.
Tai Chi Chuan makes a lot of claims as a "health style", the Symposium was designed to give Healthcare providers, educators and the top Masters of the art of Tai Chi Chuan a chance to get together in one place and explore that aspect of the art from a scientific perspective.
We wanted to step away from the martial arts and explore the other aspects of the art that don't often get brought out in the open in such a public fashion.
There isn't a single thing wrong with martial arts seminars, I go to as many as I can, but this was designed with an entirely different meaning.
Take a look around on the internet. How many martial arts related TCC seminars do you see advertised? There are hundreds, probably thousands, of them every year. Why do another one of those?

To each their own, as you say. I, for one, discovered a lot about TCC that I did not know and I've been a student of the art for 21 years.
I think it was wildly succesful specificially for that reason.

Bob

Three Harmonies
08-07-2009, 06:47 AM
Honestly... I see very, very few people actually training Taiji as a martial art. Very few seminars, classes, etc. Certainly hear / see more of the "health" aspect of Taiji than anything else IME.

Cheers
Jake

GeneChing
08-07-2009, 09:36 AM
Some people limit martial arts only to being fighting other fighters. But in a broader sense, martial arts is about fighting for personal health. Obviously, you need to be healthy to be a decent fighter. General health comes before anything in the martial arts. And as we age, that becomes a much more formidable opponent than anyone you'll face on the street or in the ring.

Don't fault others because they can only make it a short way down the path. You can fault people for thinking they've gone a long way when they've only gone a short way - that's ego and ego is always a fault. But to limit martial arts to a narrow personal definition is also ego.

Tai chi as a combat method will always be with us. You, of all people, Jake, know how effective it can be when trained properly. People like you will always continue to train it so because an effective method has intrinsic value. However, in all honesty, only a few can really train martial arts fully. The bulk of practitioners in America are nibblers. But there's nothing wrong with that. Quite the opposite, if martial arts is to grow, we need more nibblers. So don't be a hater. Support the tai chi nibblers. :p

That being said, I don't think this particular symposium was about nibbling at all. Bringing tai chi under an academic lens, especially when it comes to therapeutic benefits is very progressive. That's what our Tai Chi as medicine (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=50553) thread is all about. That's a future path of tai chi which holds so much promise.

Bob Ashmore
08-07-2009, 09:58 AM
Three,
As you say, to each their own.
I have gone to quite a few "martial" seminars for Tai Chi Chuan over the years. I quite enjoy them.
Me? I'm what Gene called a "nibbler".
I started training TCC for the martial aspects. I learned quite a lot of the martial art, though I wasn't very good at it (my own fault, I was quite young and when I started and after learning a few "tricks" I was satisified).
I thought I really "had it" at that time and was convinced of my own greatness.
That's when I met my current teacher, who very quickly disabused me of the notion that I was any good at the martial aspects by the simple expedient of taking me to the ground on a regular basis.
When I asked him what I was doing wrong, the answer was quite simple: "All of it".
That's when I was finally introduced to the principles of TCC.
I've been working on learning the underlying principles of the art ever since.
I'm still lousy at the martial art, but I've made vast improvements. It's not as easy to take me to the ground as it once was, so I'll keep going.
Along the way, I learned quite a bit about anatomy, kinesiology and health.
My advancing years have taught me that "fighting" isn't as easy as it looks, but that "healing" is even harder.
Personal healing as well as helping to heal others has become sort of a passion of mine lately.
I think it convenient that I happen to be training a "martial art" that allows me to do both.
That said, I've been "teaching" Tai Chi Chuan for a while now. You know what? I have yet to have a single person show up to one of my classes asking me to teach them how to fight.
Not once.
I get asked to teach people how to do "That healthy Tai Chi thing".
Some are interested in the martial aspects, to be sure, but most are not the least interested in that side of things.
I have tried to run classes that are geared toward the martial aspects, I have very few people sign up for them. But when I advertise "Tai Chi for Health" or "Chi Kung for Health" classes, I fill up nearly every one of them.
There seems to be more of an interest in the health maintenance side of the art than the martial side.
Since they are both the same thing, I don't see what difference it makes really. If you learn one side, you learn them both.
"The more you know, the more you know you don't know. The more you know, the faster you will learn."

Bob

DRAGONSIHING
08-07-2009, 10:32 AM
Thanks for the reply. Will be looking forward for info on 2012. All the other replies were interesting and informative. I do TCC for health and keeping my martial arts training from the past alive. My teacher has also done other martial arts in his younger days but really concentrates on training his TCC. WE do share applications, but for many in the classes its health first, MA second. MP

Skip J.
08-07-2009, 10:33 AM
snip...

I've been "teaching" Tai Chi Chuan for a while now. You know what? I have yet to have a single person show up to one of my classes asking me to teach them how to fight.
Not once.
I get asked to teach people how to do "That healthy Tai Chi thing".
Some are interested in the martial aspects, to be sure, but most are not the least interested in that side of things.
I have tried to run classes that are geared toward the martial aspects, I have very few people sign up for them. But when I advertise "Tai Chi for Health" or "Chi Kung for Health" classes, I fill up nearly every one of them.
There seems to be more of an interest in the health maintenance side of the art than the martial side.
Since they are both the same thing, I don't see what difference it makes really. If you learn one side, you learn them both.
"The more you know, the more you know you don't know. The more you know, the faster you will learn."

Bob

Yes..... exactly!

Well said Bob......

Three Harmonies
08-08-2009, 08:24 AM
Good points by all. I was not trying to put down anyone or any approach. It is just when I see a large group gathering with such names I personally would want to pick each and every one of their brains in terms of combatives. But again, that is me. I understand what the majority want, and how the majority will train.

I am glad the event went well for all!

Cheers
Jake

GeneChing
08-10-2009, 09:55 AM
...but I did hear there was some applications discussions in the hallways. The presentations were formal but there was some hands on for those who were interested. We sent a freelance reporter and he was rather impressed by some of the application material he was privy to (but such is the perk of being a reporter).


There seems to be more of an interest in the health maintenance side of the art than the martial side.
Since they are both the same thing, I don't see what difference it makes really. If you learn one side, you learn them both.
I'd agree that there is more of an interest in health since health is more fundamental and general. It's preposterous to want to be a good fighter when you don't have your health as a solid foundation. But I don't think they are the same thing and I do see a rather distinct difference. You could totally train taiji strictly for health and never get to the martial part. There's nothing wrong with that. In fact, we need more people to do that to increase our base population. That's just the first step however. Then next step is to learn the martial aspect, and not a symbolic martial as in combating disease and such. The combative methods of taiji - the nuts and bolts of how to take some one out - that's a very important element to authentic taiji. Most Western practitioners completely miss this. They might think they get it, but when push comes to shove (quite literally) they don't really have it. There's the only problem that I see.

There's a significant population of martial artists that never really learn to fight well - that's fine - I imagine that's always been so. Ultimately, to become a good fighter is challenging. It's not a democratic process - not everyone can achieve that level. The problem lies within those that get unrealistic ideas about their ability. That really falls on them (and their instructor).

So to be Devil's Advocate here, I totally hear what Three Harmonies is saying. I'm actually of the same persuasion. I charged our freelance reporter with the task of getting some applications. We talked at Legends of Kung Fu (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=51496) after and he seemed very satisfied on that account. Just like at most tournaments, there's the event itself which presents itself for public consumption, and then there's what happens in the hallways between presentations - that's where the best transmission tends to happen.

We'll have a report in our next issue. ;)

Bob Ashmore
08-10-2009, 01:39 PM
Gene,
I'll agree to disagree about self defense and the health sides of TCC being the same thing.
I see them as the same and for very good reasons, but that's my opinion and no else needs to agree with it.

I was privy to a few of those "hallway" discussions myself. Not with the Grand Masters themselves but certainly with some of the "Entourage" that came with them.
Most of what I ran into that I would consider "hallway" discussions were actually about Tui Shou, pushing hands, but there were a number of them that were about actual applications.
The stuff that goes on "on the side" is what I've always considered to be the best part of any kind of seminar.

As for the level of martial arts that most TCC players today receive...
I can only say that each person most likely gets to the level they want. You have to want to level up in order to do it and I just don't see that kind of interest.
I have always had a pretty big interest in the martial side of TCC and so I have received a good deal of information and training on the subject.
Why? Because I asked for it.
I'm definitely not interested in trying to make myself seem like the next Yang Lu Chan. I'm not and I never will be. I'm not very good at the martial apps, so don't think I'm blowing any kind of horn here. I need a LOT more practice.
However, I also am not just some palooka that walked in off the street.
I guess I'd be considered to be somewhere in the middle on that scale.
And... I don't have any probelm with that.
Could I stand up against a Master of the martial arts of any style? Nope, I sure couldn't. I'd get twisted up and tossed around like a rag doll, if not worse, no question about it. I don't train to that level, never have and, unless I hit that lottery this weekend, I most likely never will.
I have a job, a house, kids, a wife and two cars. All these things need attention and must come before my favored pass time of training TCC. This keeps me from becoming the next Tai Chi Chuan Master of Martial Adeptness.
However, when I've needed the skills to defend myself against attackers (a part of my life that I am quite glad to say doesn't happen very often any more) I have been able to defend myself adequately.
I asked my teachers to teach me to defend myself, they did. That's what it came down to.
However, even if you're not interested in the martial side of things, just learning the correct movements can and will increase your ability to defend yourself. Not to the same extent that someone who trains the actual combat art will be, but more so than if you had never trained anything.

Just for laughs and giggles, I asked all of my students this weekend a question: Do you want to learn more of the martial art of TCC?
The almost universal response: No, not really.
Then, again just for laughs and giggles, I pulled one of the longer term students who had expressed such an interest, but has never trained in that fashion, aside and asked him to allow me to conduct an experiment. He was nervous, but he agreed.
Then I took a poke at him.
No, I did not throw full force and if my punch would have landed I would not have hurt him. I just wanted to see what would happen. I was pleasantly surprised.
He "warded off" my incoming strike without even thinking about it.
His arm came up into "ward off" and he exhibited more than enough "peng" in his movement that my incoming strike was lifted and rolled uselessly to the side.
That's not bad, considering that this gentleman had never trained any kind of martial art before.
Now, it's not going to do much to help during the real deal, but it goes to show that learning a motor skill repetitively is at least going to get you out of the first punch. What you do after that is just as important, and is where the real training comes in, but keeping that first hit off of you has got to be better than nothing at all.

I've made this experiment before, with a wide range of my students. The result is nearly always the same.
So while there are going to be very, very few martialy adept students of TCC, there are a legion of students with "possibilities" out there.

No real point, just my ramblings.

Bob

Skip J.
08-12-2009, 01:22 PM
Gene,
I'll agree to disagree about self defense and the health sides of TCC being the same thing. I see them as the same and for very good reasons, but that's my opinion and no else needs to agree with it.

As for the level of martial arts that most TCC players today receive...

I can only say that each person most likely gets to the level they want.

You have to want to level up in order to do it and I just don't see that kind of interest. I have always had a pretty big interest in the martial side of TCC and so I have received a good deal of information and training on the subject.
Why? Because I asked for it. I'm definitely not interested in trying to make myself seem like the next Yang Lu Chan. I'm not and I never will be. I'm not very good at the martial apps, so don't think I'm blowing any kind of horn here. I need a LOT more practice. No real point, just my ramblings.

Bob
And I come along wayyyyy below Bob, but the issue is the same.

What I see on the ground is that taiji taught to paying students in a martial arts studio environment is a lot more martial in nature.

On the other hand, taiji taught in a rec center/senior center environment for free or nearly free is a whole 'nother animal. Bob has already covered that aspect very well above, no need for me to add anything. Bob, I apologize in advance if your students are in a studio.....

Anyway, most of the folks on here come from a ma studio background rich in a heritage of hard training and martial apps. Altho there are not many of us here from the rec center side, we too chose to concentrate on the apps - or we wouldn't be here on a regular basis. However, the great bulk of taiji folks are coming week after week, year after year for the elegant exercise described in the local bulletin of the rec center. The few guys who do come are more likely to want it, but not all of them do either. A significant number of the guys are there with with their wives; they're retired and have nothing else to do with their time.

TaichiMantis
08-13-2009, 04:52 AM
Honestly... I see very, very few people actually training Taiji as a martial art. Very few seminars, classes, etc. Certainly hear / see more of the "health" aspect of Taiji than anything else IME.

Cheers
Jake

Our Sifu teaches it as a martial art. He switches between forms and applications every other class.

mawali
08-13-2009, 06:28 AM
Next reality show title:

'Who wants to be the next Yang Luchan?

Skip J.
08-13-2009, 06:32 AM
Our Sifu teaches it as a martial art. He switches between forms and applications every other class.
Yesssss....

I see from your website that your's is exactly the studio "environment" I was speaking of...

Nice website by the way! You certainly bend over backwards to explain the mantis "way" ..... my compliments!

GeneChing
08-28-2009, 09:52 AM
Our next issue hits the newsstands on Oct 6th with a news report and a related feature article. Subscribe now. (http://www.martialartsmart.com/19341.html) ;)

Tai Chi practitioners and enthusiasts from across the globe attended the symposium at Vanderbilt. (http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/reporter/index.html?ID=7507)
Symposium sheds light on benefits of Tai Chi
BY: LI-JUN MA
8/28/2009 -

More than 400 Tai Chi masters, scholars and practitioners from across the world came to Vanderbilt this summer for a special symposium sponsored by the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health.

The symposium, sponsored by the International Yang family Tai Chi Chuan Association, offered a chance to study with five of China’s top masters and the opportunity to learn more about the latest research on the health benefits of Tai Chi Chuan.

“Evidence documenting the advantage of mind-body disciplines grows daily,” said Roy Elam, M.D., medical director of the Center for Integrative Health.

The martial art of Tai Chi Chuan was created in China more than 400 years ago, and consists of a series of slow, relaxed and graceful movements. It requires coordination of mind and body to focus on the cultivation of internal energy and to develop balance.

Often referred to as a moving meditation, Tai Chi Chuan helps reduce stress, increase strength, improve balance and coordination and enhance concentration.

Among those presenting research at the symposium were:

• Shin Lin, M.D., professor of Cell Biology, Biomedical Engineering and Integrative Medicine at University of California, Irvine, who reported on “Physiological and Bioenergetic changes associated with Tai Chi;”

• Gloria Yeh, M.D., assistant professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, who reported on “Tai Chi and Cardiovascular Health;” and

• Nisha Manek, M.D., of the Mayo Clinic, who reported on the potential of Tai Chi Chuan to reduce the risk of osteoarthritis in obese patients.

GeneChing
04-03-2019, 09:21 AM
I'm not sure that this is the same event given that it's a decade later. But might as well feed this old thread, right?


Six Traditional Tai Chi Masters and Tai Chi Researchers at International Symposium in Italy (https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/six-traditional-tai-chi-masters-and-tai-chi-researchers-at-international-symposium-in-italy-300823230.html)
Six leading tai chi masters, representing the traditional styles of Chen, Yang, Wu, Wu (Hao), Sun and He tai chi chuan will give classes and perform at the 2019 International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium: Directly from the Source in Selvino, Italy from May 24 - 29. The symposium, hosted by the Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Foundation, will bring together tai chi Masters, practitioners, researchers, and health professionals from all over the world.

NEWS PROVIDED BY International Yang Family Association
Apr 02, 2019, 13:45 ET

MILAN, April 2, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- A unique and exceptional event will take place in Selvino, Italy this May that tai chi enthusiasts everywhere will not want to miss. Six leading tai chi masters, representing the traditional styles of Chen, Yang, Wu, Wu (Hao), Sun and He tai chi chuan will give classes and perform at the 2019 International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium: Directly from the Source in Selvino, Italy from May 24 - 29. The symposium, hosted by the Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Foundation, will bring together tai chi Masters, practitioners, researchers, and health professionals from all over the world.

https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/845355/International_Yang_Family_Association.jpg?p=publis h&w=650
Tai Chi Masters

"The symposium is one of the biggest events outside of China for tai chi chuan," said Master Yang Jun, 5th generation inheritor of Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan and President of the Yang Family Tai Chi Chuan Foundation. "This is the first time it is being held in Europe. It will bring top traditional tai chi chuan masters and scientists together to discuss health and wellness benefits, combining the wisdom of Chinese culture with the research of modern science. It is a truly unique event."

During the symposium, the masters will give workshops where participants will learn a 10-movement hand form each master created specifically for the tai chi symposium. They will also be part of a round table discussion on the health benefits of tai chi with researchers. In addition, the masters will headline the Grand Showcase of tai chi and Chinese martial arts performances.

A number of researchers and scholars will present their latest research about tai chi's health benefits at the symposium. Scientific research on tai chi has been growing recently as more and more people practice the art. It has been proven to have excellent results in treating and preventing many health problems. The symposium academic program includes keynote addresses and both oral and poster presentations.

Another feature of the 2019 International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium is the inaugural Yang Family Tai Chi Cup, an international tournament of Yang style tai chi chuan. For the first time, the many schools of Yang tai chi chuan will gather in one place in friendly competition. The tournament will be a reunion of Yang style tai chi players and will demonstrate the interesting diverse variations of Yang tai chi chuan that have developed from many generations of family members and disciples.

"This symposium will truly be a rare opportunity for people to learn from the world's foremost authorities," said Master Yang, "and meet people from every corner of the world. They will be learning Directly from the Source."

For further information please contact: registration@taichisymposium.com

No_Know
04-08-2019, 09:38 PM
Sun, Wu, Wu, Ch'en, Yang! Roll back and Fend off Right. Revitalize the thread. Get some up Down Qi to set the Mind.-Ernie More Jr.

No_Know