View Poll Results: Wushu good or bad

Voters
12. You may not vote on this poll
  • Good. They are to promote and propagate.

    2 16.67%
  • Bad. They discourage variations and improvements

    0 0%
  • No differences. They are just references for study and practice.

    2 16.67%
  • Bad. Wushu forms stressing too much acrobatic more and more

    8 66.67%
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Thread: Standardized Wushu forms good or bad

  1. #1

    Standardized Wushu forms good or bad

    The Wushu forms evolved or changed since the 1990's.

    They are still changing.

    What do you think?

    It is good for promotion and propagation of the styles.

    Or waste of time.

    good references to study and practice.

    --


  2. #2
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    I voted "no difference" because It is good for what it is. If you said is it good for fighting I may feel different. Personally, although I do not train that way, I think wushu forms are beautiful to watch and wushu players are talented athletes (combatants is a different story).
    Bless you

  3. #3
    the clarification needed is

    go for what exactly???
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  4. #4
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    i discourage ppl from doing contemporary wushu. aside from the lack of martial application it is bad for the joints. like gymnastics if you start young and really stick with it you will be used up by your mid twenties. (most people, of course there are always exeptions). however, unlike gymnastics there are no wushu scholarships to colleges that i am aware of. there is no wushu as an olympic sport to earn sponsorship deals, etc. so basically its not a healthy sport to play and the pay off for the damage it does to your body isn't worth it. at least if you are learning a style that has and teaches a lot of practical applications and fighting techniques you can always get that as the payoff as well as a good work out. just my opinion. then again i won't discourage anyone from doing somethign they really enjoy.

  5. #5
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    i shouldnt say there is no pay off. that is wrong. there is a sense of satisfaction and confidence and all that that goes with competing. so there is the intrinsic reward but i think the damage to the joints over shadows it. i know what chronic knee pain is like and it is almost never worth it. i cant even cross my right leg anymore with out spending a few minutes trying to get it to stop hurting so i can walk normally again. and thats from wrestling i can't imagine how much worse gymnastics or wushu would have made me.

  6. #6
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    well if you are talking about what was at the last china games, it was all gymnastics with a front slap kick thrown in here and there. it was bad. but the compulsoraries from the late 90's were pretty good.
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  7. #7
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    I liked the competition forms from the 80's. Those people basically made up those forms, but they were still martial artists at that time and expressed a lot of power in every movement.
    That is what I feel is missing in Modern Wushu, the power, the jing. What they do is certainly impressive though. I know I would love to be able to a jump front kick 8 feet in the air and clear 10 feet of carpet. Still, they need the jing. I love to watch the old masters doing forms, nice and slow, then WHAM! they shoot out a punch. Very cool.

  8. #8
    the idea behind Kuo Shu in ROC and Wushu in PROC;

    it is to promote and progagate Kung Fu.

    from the Kuo Shu team in Berlin Olymics in 1930's to special events coincidental with Beijing Olympics in 2008.

    if you want to make something popular, you would make the forms short and easier for everyone to learn.

    if you want to do performance and competition, on the other hand, yes you would increase the "technical" difficulties in the forms.

    can't have them both ways.

    we are not talking about fighting aspects at all.

    Wushu is geared toward performance and "exercise" routines for "all"?

    --

    a good link to history of both Wushu and Guo Shu:

    http://us.geocities.com/ottawakungfu...ew1Hist02H.htm

    Last edited by SPJ; 01-11-2007 at 01:56 PM.

  9. #9
    personally i would like to see a return to the old school
    i think standardised forms allow for variation by giving domething to work from
    they give people an equal chance for competition
    and thats why their is a seperate category for personal forms
    so both are good

    (also im gonna infuriate everyone here
    i think alot of wushu is very practical ive found inside and outside crescent kicks and constant drilling very effective when i spar in valetudo
    no one expects them lol )
    there are only masters where there are slaves

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  10. #10
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    lkfdmc

    the clarification needed is

    go for what exactly???
    sure you don't mean 'good for exactly what???' Too many shots to the head David, starting to lose some motor functions? Words starting to slur? Just funning with you.

    Anyhow my feeling on the question, they're fine if that is what you are into. If you are into the sport of Wushu, then the routines have served there purpose of elevating the levels & standards of the athletes within the sport on a global level. The International Compulsory routines of the 90s certainly had greater resemblance to the traditional styles they were supposed to represent. The versions that came out in 2000 were certainly more difficult and forced athletes to further elevate their standards within the sport. Now you have the 'Nandu' Difficulties Rules and they are certainly much more difficult then the two sets of International Compulsory routines. The new Nandu Optional routines are certainly not to everyone's liking and definitely have switched the emphasis of sport Wushu further and further towards acrobatics. But then China as far as I can see is always retooling things and who knows in a short while it could go completely a different direction (keeping on top of what China does with this sport is always difficult). Wushu has become like Gymnastics & Figure Skating it's evolving and it has become all about performance, greater difficulty and flash.

    My two bits.

  11. #11
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    The 1970s wushu forms which were not hard nailed down like the 90s ones i thought were better. the ones from teh 90s removed even more of the martiality and added more gymnastics.

    the way it is going, it will eventually become floor gymnastics with a slight martial flavoutr similar to an Elvis Stoyko martial flavoured figure skating routine.

    which is ok. contemporary wu shu is what it is. People see if for the athletic and gymnastic endeavour that it is and I don't think anyone holds it up as bonafide fighting arts.

    takes effort and lokos good, looks way better in a movie too than watching some lumbering hulk just smashing through stuff... definitely less boring than ufc talent wise, unless you're into visceral carnage in which case it would be the other way around.
    Kung Fu is good for you.

  12. #12
    What we call the "Contemporary Wushu" was the logical step in the evolution of standardization of Wushu for the masses.

    It took the base concepts founded by the Chin Woo and the Kuo Shu.

    Where they failed was in the fact that they just cut and pasted various forms from different systems into a curriculum. Regardless of the diverging foundations that these sets came from.

    This caused many forms/sets to be performed with the "wrong" foundation.

    The 32's of the late 70's and early 80's are very systematic. They choose the Long Fist system (Cha, Hua, Pao, etc.) to be the common foundational base. Then specialized sets were forumulated from there (most of these specialized sets IMO are not very good as they muddied the Long Fist with other specific systems like Tong Bei, Fanzi, etc.)

    The recent forumulation of the Contemporary Wushu Duan System is very good. (Jie Ben Basics, Wu Bu Quan, 16 and the three 34 long fist routines as well as the matching weapons sets) A systematic approach in developing strong foundations in the students. Later on if they choose they may participate in Competition by learning the Compulsories of the late 80's.

    The new Compulsories for me are Garbage. They really disregard any real martial application. For me it resembles your average Gymnastics Floor Routine Competiton.

    Now this concept of Duans can easily be adopted into "Traditional/Classical" systems by emphasizing the Primary Actions of the style. This way a student can master these skills then be able to understand and execute the more advanced Secondary Skills which is what most Traditional Forms are dominated with.

  13. #13
    oh forgot to mention.

    They also had a Southern Duan System as well.

    It was/is not very popular so it has not been widely produced for the masses.

    But I believe there are pieces of it around.

    I know that www.plumpub.com
    has the Northern Duan's and probably some of the southern ones as well.

  14. #14
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    Modern Wushu has painted itself into a corner

    We addressed the problems head on in our Nov Dec 2006 issue. The two relevant articles - the cover story and the one with Master Bryant Fong - are both live on our website so you can catch up on the issues if you haven't already. It was discussed more on Jiayo.
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  15. #15
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    as a martial artist, i recently had to make a very sad decision.

    the school i most recently studied at, i had to leave.

    there is very good, traditional material that i absolutely love. however there was a large modern contemporary wushu element, which i do not wish to practice.

    In todays world, contemporary wushu is a wonderful tool for the promotion of chinese martial arts.

    I do see a few flaws however in the gaining popularity of the modern wushu. The common misconception of what CMA has to offer is becoming an increasing concern for many of todays CMA practitioners, whom do not focus on modern wushu.

    For those who train for self defense/fighting, the promotion of CMA through modern wushu, can be detrimental to thier goals in relation to the majority of the ignorant public as to what CMA has to offer.

    in other words, modern wushu hurts our numbers, in regards to the amount of people becoming interested in TCMA. your average person goes by what they see, and most of what you see on CMA is modern wushu, thus pushing the image of non combat related studies.

    For instance, my current situation. I would have loved to continue my training on the traditional shaolin sets i was in the process of learning.

    however my teacher presents a structured study program. in other words, you study the same thing everyone else does. including modern wushu.

    for people like myself, getting older/more focused on actual self defense, this is a very bad thing. I found myself gaining more and more "sport wushu" related injuries, completely detrimental to my over all training. Increasing my down time and removing time i could be spending on actual combat related training.

    For myself, I purely enjoy CMA. I couldnt tell you why, other than that is how i feel.

    Now for the search on a new school. I have decided to stick with CMA, however it was a very very tempting move to go MMA.

    I do plan however to incorporate judo/bjj into my training within the next few years.

    This current aspect that many schools share, of conforming to the modern wushu craze, is pushing more and more people away from CMA studies, at least those interested in fighting.


    i dont hate wushu, i just dont like to practice it any more.
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