Of course....What our pro-sparring members think of SLT as a basic and profound part of Wing Chun?...Is it still relevant in their approach?...
no one will stuck if one understand the classical way of how chinese think and tcm. but, if one don't then one really stuck.Originally posted by PaulH
..Some are stuck on the island of the Pipe Network where they will spend the rest of their intellectual life tinkering with the human meridian valves and switches to tap into that mysterious energy.
24hours of true humble learning about the background.....will likely to safe 10years or a life time of practicing in dark. healtier, stronger.... better...surely..
Old Jong,Originally posted by old jong
What does he say about this?...
We were talkin' 'bout the Wing Chun Bible.
Regards,
John Weiland
"Et si fellitur de genu pugnat"
(And if he falls, he fights on his knees)
---Motto of the Roman Legionary
"Aim at Heaven and you will get earth 'thrown in': aim at earth
and you will get neither." --C. S. Lewis
Hendrix,
You wrote an excellent post earlier about being natural in SLT . I gather since that there are more TCM stuffs in it with respect to the 12 human meridian lines and the linking or delinking of them. How do you this safely?
Regards,
Originally posted by PaulH
Hendrix,
You wrote an excellent post earlier about being natural in SLT . I gather since that there are more TCM stuffs in it with respect to the 12 human meridian lines and the linking or delinking of them. How do you this safely?
Regards,
Hi Paul,
Don't know what is excellent. Just try to be not excessive.
There are only a small handfull of ground keys to know about meridian and breathing ...yee ...for Chinese MA. Not much at all but certainly one has to put good amount of time to get the experience before can benifit from it. after that, it is a habit or a nature. After about 2 decades of searching, analysis, and synthesis, since I am not a strong boy since a kid, eventhough I try to train hard and get great training via Kyukusin for the full contact...., the understanding of these keys indeed makes a different in health, daily living, .... and in the sustaining of MA... and can ramp up quick if one needed to get more intensity...
see after 40's human are aging..health issues will reveal..... and not much time to train... but experience in those keys preserve one's skill to a certain degree... even without training since it becomes a part of living.
Not to talk about the greatest fighter. But, a balance man where one is healthy....feel comfortable and peace... Those are the benifits...
As you see, good fighters in modern WCK era oftern died of Liver or Heart or stroke...problems.......
there is a sign about the extreem of the training and some platform has been lost...., can we avoid that? that is a good question to search into the proper of nature...
Last edited by Phenix; 06-25-2003 at 10:11 AM.
Thanks John,Originally posted by John Weiland
When you coming to San Jose Wing Chun to visit again? We're planning a picnic in August in Cupertino.
Regards,
In the mean time, issues at work..... need to settle that ...
Practice SLT to find out what it is.
Phenix,
I don't look at it as either.
SiuNimTao is the exact same term as what a relative few southern chinese opera troupes (DING! lightbulb here) call the teaching stage where a person learns and practices their vocal scales. It is also the same term used to describe what their performers do before a performance to warm up their voices.
Siu = embryonic
NimTao = mindset; intent
Siu = little
Nim = to copy or to mimic (archaic)
Tao = beginning;
SiuNimTao = The seeds of intent; Start with some copying.
Perhaps a better analogy would be to compare it with a recipe. SiuNimTao would be analogous to the list of ingredients. A full meal still needs to be prepared (ChumKiu), enjoyed (BiuJe).
So what is SiuNimTao? Its exact ingredients depend on the meal Cleanup chores are in the MoyFahJong.
yylee,
Perhaps, until one ponders why, in Chinese, no linguistic distinction is made between a goat and a sheep.... a goat is a goat. not much room for interpretive meanings...
Also, referring to a goat/sheep is almost always used as a metaphor to refer to one's ultimate duty to one's parents - the same intent as the 5th commandment (4th if your Catholic) along with the same punishment for failing your duty: death.
When you control the hands and feet, there are no secrets.
http://www.Moyyat.com
Hi Tom,
the SLT= seeds of intent is also mentioned by WSL. If I understand David Peterson correctly, Wong considered it as young (embryonic) ideas. This means it will grow more in time and in practice.
Regards,
Hi TomOriginally posted by Tom Kagan
Perhaps, until one ponders why, in Chinese, no linguistic distinction is made between a goat and a sheep.
Also, referring to a goat/sheep is almost always used as a metaphor to refer to one's ultimate duty to one's parents - the same intent as the 5th commandment (4th if your Catholic) along with the same punishment for failing your duty: death.
I remember there are different Chinese terms for goat and sheep, San Yeung and Meen Yeung
true there can be more than a handful of meanings, connotations, and symbolisms associated with a goat, but a dictionary's job is to lay them all out for reference.
he says this:Originally posted by old jong
What does he say about this?...