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Thread: Kuen Kuit

  1. #1
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    Adhering to Wing Chun's Kuen Kuit

    Greetings,

    Does your WC training follow and adhere to the principles and concepts as described in the Kuen Kuit? I want to know if today's practitioners utilize or deviate from it.

    Bong Baat Ting Lao
    Dik Yaat Yee Dong
    Jong Sum Yim Hong
    Kuen Yao Sum Faat (Sao Yao Sum Faat)
    Lien Siu Dai Da
    Loi Lao Hoi Sung
    Lut Sao Jik Jong (Fung Lut Jik Jong)
    Sien Faat Jai Yan
    Yan Si Yee Gong
    Yao Ying Da Ying
    Mo Ying Da Yieng
    Yao Yieng Juk Lao
    Mo Yieng Po Jung
    Yee Sao Wai Gong
    Yee Gong Wai Sao

    You can find the translation and definition at
    www.wingchunkuen.com

  2. #2
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    I have not visited Rene's site recently-will do again sometime:
    As I have mentioned before- I am fascinated by the kuen kuit and there are different collections of them.There are many more than you list.
    Some of the ones you list are one liners others are listed on two lines but they are part of the same saying though for poetry
    2 lines can give you the rhythm..An example below-



    Yao Ying Da Ying
    Mo Ying Da Yieng
    ----------------------

    can be written horizontally witha break or
    vertically in two balanced columns depending on the option chosen for calligraphy and poetry..

    In any case:

    yau ying da ying mo ying da yieng

    strike any presented posture if its there otherwise strike
    where you see motion
    ------------------------
    That one directly comes from wing chun specific strategy.
    Then you have ones(I dont have my notes here) which are
    from old sources such as Sun Tzu--- something like---

    You start first but I arrive earlier.


    Then there is the very common wing chun one---

    retain what is coming in & send off what is retreating
    rush in upon loss of hand contact


    We have discussed that one just recently.

    Another wing chun specific one about the kwan-

    the six and a half point kwan does not make more than one sound

    Augustine Fong's elaborate collection in chinese calligraphy and in English are in the back of his now out of print book number 7
    (Wing chun theories and concepts)-
    which has been plagiarized by someone else. That book originally was prepared in English the late 70s when i still lived in Tucson..
    the book has disappeared in the market and some folks who are occasionally critical- still quote from it.
    But the poetry has to be internally and properly understood and interpreted. They are not mechanical formulae. Many CMA sayings had meaning for the insider and disguised its meaning for the outsider. specially true for some southern styles- and their unique histories.


    joy chaudhuri

  3. #3
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    a kuen kuit: fear vs. greed

    One of the Kuen Kuits that my Sifu shared with us is (in Mandarin):

    pa da zhong gui da
    (fear, hit, in the end, come back, hit)

    tan da zhong bei da
    (greed, hit, in the end, get, hit)

    My understanding of this saying is "if you are afraid to get hit, you will end up getting hit; if you are too eager to hit, you will end up getting hit).

    Last time I met with Sifu Ken Chung, he also talked about this, that greed and fear get in the way of training, and it best to leave this behind.

    Is this a saying common to Wing Chun (has anyone else heard of it)? Or is it just something my Sifu came up with?
    JK-
    "Sex on TV doesn't hurt unless you fall off."

  4. #4
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    In every day's language it could mean: Keep your head clear and let your Kung Fu do the talking!

  5. #5
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    Not an uncommon kuen kuit by any means. We dont use ken's phrasing of greedy but the same intent is there.

    Basically two interrelated sayings:

    Strike when you should. Do not strike when you shouldnt.

    Do not be too eager to strike. Do not be afraid to strike. Being afraid of getting hit- will finally be hit.


    Joy Chaudhuri

  6. #6
    Yes, this is a pretty common saying in HK YMWC.
    But when Ken says "but tam but wai", he has a very specific structural alignment meaning, quite different from the generic "you'll get hit if you are greedy or afraid".

  7. #7
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    aelward,

    There are thousands of Hoa Kuit (some call them Kuen Kuit). If you really need to know where your Sifu got them, you'll have to go back to your Sifu and ask him more about those two.

    However, this is the one Ving Tsun Hoa Kuit (Ving Tsun Kuen Kuit) which, I believe, is the jist what your sifu told you. This is a single poem, though sometimes you'll find its verses stripped from their context. (NOTE: This is Cantonese - the language of Ving Tsun - not Mandarin):

    Ying Dar, Chak Dar
    Pat Ying Dar, Pat Ho Dar
    Mo Keung Dar, Mat Luen Dar

    Translations to English could be as follows:

    Have the line? Take the line.
    Don't have the line? Don't take the line.
    No greedy hits? No confusion who hit.

    or:

    When you should hit, hit
    When you shouldn't, don't
    Don't when you can't
    Don't when you mustn't

    Anyone else want to take a gander at the translation? Attached is a rubbing of one side of the stone.
    Last edited by Tom Kagan; 10-11-2002 at 02:38 PM.
    When you control the hands and feet, there are no secrets.
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  8. #8
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    Thumbs up A wise young fella once said

    Post when you should post
    Do not post when you should not post
    If you post - always hit the spell check
    Rolling hands can sometimes be trolling hands

    *There is no Rene. Understand that, then bend yourself.* Rene Ritchie

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  9. #9
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    Similar

    From a submission grappling coach:

    "Take the gift, don't seek the bounty"

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  10. #10
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    Its confidence in your technique without ego. Its about not bull$hitting yourself about whats happening.
    S.Teebas

  11. #11
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    'when your opponent moves in, you move in,
    when your opponent moves out, you move in,
    when your opponent stands still, you move in!";-)

  12. #12
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    This one I made up:

    "It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that jing".

  13. #13
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    Have the line? Take the line.
    Don't have the line? Take the line.
    No greedy hits? Take the line.

  14. #14
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    Kuen Kuit

    Just wondering if people would be interested in sharing some of there family's Kuen Kuit and there interpretation of what they think they mean.I think it is amazing how a few Chinese characters can relay such a deep meaning.

  15. #15
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    bglenn

    you might check the following site:
    http://www.afn.org/~afn59160/kuit.htm

    Some are common to other wck, some are common to TCMA,
    and some are line specific.
    The site is maintained by Jordan Misner who does wing chun
    and teaches it. The school also teaches hung gar but not by Misner.

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