Someone please school this guy on basic body mechanics and power generation.

Fu pow
You can knock someone clear across the room. When you understand "short energy" in Taiji you can fold your opponent in half with a quick pulse. Its actually scary.
Fahjing is not hard to display, especially short energy, but knocking a person clear across the room. GoD DAM boy, stop watching Taichi master.


Fupow
Its unique and different but again it is a qualitative difference and hard for me to quantify for you.
Will someone please explain to Fu pow the way he is using qualitative incorrectly.
He is is trying to express a phenomenon measured in kind, that is, non-numerical units. For example, color is a qualitative variable, because it cannot be expressed simply as a number.

What he should be using is called quantitative variable: phenomenon measured in amounts, that is, numerical units. For example, length is a quantitative variable.

But a shoulder strike, Fahjing of any kind, is measured by output of force as well as it being dictated by body mechanics. (See quote below from Fu pow to demonstrate power output)

Fu pow
When you do a shoulder strike in Taiji and you really know how to do it. You can knock someone clear across the room. When you understand "short energy" in Taiji you can fold your opponent in half with a quick pulse. Its actually scary.
qualitative variable
The shoulder strike or any blow would be measured through quantitative analysis.
As in, the numerical representation and manipulation of observations for the purpose of describing and explaining the phenomena that those observations reflect.