Wing Chun Master Brings Chi Gong for Healing
Long Beach, California – Aug 12th, 2010 - West Coast Wing Chun announces the arrival of Grandmaster Samuel
Kwok, founder of the Samuel Kwok Wing Chun Martial Art Association based in the UK, to Southern California.
Grandmaster Kwok will conduct a seminar in Chi Gong for Healing on October 10th, 2010 at the Belmont Shores
Chalet in Long Beach, California. Although Grandmaster Kwok teaches through out Europe, Asia, South
America, Africa and Australia, this will be his first seminar in California, and the first time he has chosen to
teach Chi Gong healing to the public.
Kwok is acclaimed world wide for his Wing Chun Kung Fu skills and has dedicated his life to the preservation
of Wing Chun Kung Fu as taught by Grandmaster Ip Man, teacher to the late Bruce Lee. Kwok has been
awarded a BA honor from Manchester University for his lifetime achievement and promotion of martial arts, and
the Samuel Kwok Wing Chun Martial Art Association extends to affiliates across six continents.
Grandmaster Kwok has practiced Chi Gong concurrently to Wing Chun Kung Fu for forty years and considers it
an important component of martial arts training. Kung fu practitioners in China have used Chi Gong to build and
harness internal power for thousand of years. A strike thrown with concentrated and channeled energy is
considered far more effective than an “empty” strike.
In addition to its importance in kung fu, Chi Gong is used through out China in self-healing practices, and
ubiquitously by the medical community. Grandmaster Kwok, though known world-wide for his
expertise in kung fu, has shared little of his life as a healer. He has spent his life-time as a psychiatric nurse
practicing in England where he resides, and has used his skills in Chi Gong to facilitate and manifest healing
within his patients.
Chi Gong is also used in meditative practices in both Buddhist and Taoist traditions. Meditative training in Chi
Gong focuses on breathing, chi or energy direction, deep concentration and intent, and acts as a tool for selfrealization.
Samuel Kwok has decided to conduct his first Chi Gong healing seminar with West Coast Wing Chun, an
affiliate Wing Chun school residing in Long Beach, Ca. West Coast Wing Chun's chief instructor, Sifu Bryan
Talbot has practiced kung fu for thirty-seven years, and Chi Gong for nearly twenty years.
In addition, he is a certified and practicing Reiki Master, as well as massage therapist. For more information,
contact West Coast Wing Chun's seminar hotline at 562-546-2805 or their main number at 562-612-7332. Email
inquiries may be forwarded to westcoastwingchun@ipmankungfu.com.
Does any one have videos on the following?
Are there any more videos of the others?
1.Rising arms begins by expanding the whole body vertically, from toes to fingers.
2.Yielding breath works on stretching the whole body in a slightly different way, bending the wrists backwars. This form is often used to link the others together when practiced in sequence.
3.Side-to-side waist turns the hips and torso of a practitioner, working the waist (an important component trained for power in the boxing system) in a horizontal manner.
4.Side diaphram bends, works the waist and also involves stretching the intercostal muscles (used heavily in the sinking and rising methods of wing chun kuen).
5.Single hoof, so named because it focuses on one hand at a time, is almost identical to the threading exercises seen in systems like baguazhang. This helps work the flexibility of the bridges and the balance in conjunction with the backwards and forwards movement of the waist.
6. Expanding chest serves to fortify the chest which is often "sunken" in wing chun kuen boxing, stretching through the pectorals and shoulders, and continues the whole body work of the yielding breath.
7. Dropping power is also seen in the hei gung of other arts. The skyward reaching of the arms, combined with a complete squatting and rising of the legs, works the entire body and end the series with the practitioner feeling fully invigorated.
8.Overturning arms completes the body of the exercises, reaching out and over in the horizontal plane. Following this, both the back and the dan tian are usually stimulated.