Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 39

Thread: Is the knowledge of many forms important for you?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    41

    Is the knowledge of many forms important for you?

    Hello all,

    Let exchange some knowledge together.

    Normaly if you are new in a shaolin school you start with.

    Basic Stance, Wu Bu Chuan, Liang Chan Quan ect

    After the first form is Xiao Hong Chuan "normaly"

    But then after you learned all of those, not meaning you master it.
    But you know how the form works and now you can look to complete those details.

    But what i see much then that after they done the basics, they allready learning new form. Without know the first well!

    For myself its not important to know many forms.
    I gues 3 forms without weapon and 3 with weapon is allready much!

    Why 3 with weapon, my idea of that is you have to learn Basic stance ect, but for me Basic weapons are also a must know!

    Broad Sword and Stick are for me those basic weapons, then you should take a weapon with interests you most.

    Now your opinion.

    Last edited by Hanak; 10-17-2012 at 02:34 AM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    DengFeng
    Posts
    1,469
    One of the most important aspects of Kung Fu is 'Bian Hua' That is Changeability. THe ability to change from one move into another.

    If you only practice a few forms you find you will be very stuck with those movements. To Break this you can practice the individual ShouBa of the forms (that is the individual movements) and practice free combining them. ALso you can try more forms.


    If you train a great deal, then there are only advantages to training more forms. It makes you very comfortable at changing and gives you such a large repertoire of techniques that you see through the move to the formula behind and no longer need any of the moves at all. Thus you can become formless. You can also become this way by having the style explained to you in very high detail, but such a teacher is rare.


    When you learn a new form it unlocks new information about all the older forms you learned. So you will find you progress more quickly generally. Its all about time. If you have a lot of time to dedicate, then I would suggest learning as many as you can get your hands on. However few people have such time, and so it is important to sreamline. In this case I would suggest learning enough for a complete style but to focus on their individual techniques.


    In SHaolin the problem for a lot of beginners is having a complete martial art. The problem is that WuBuQuan, LianHuanQuan and XIaoHongQuan are not enough. THey don't contain all the techniques you need. Neither WuBuQuan or LianHuanQuan are old Shaolin forms, they are later additions specifically for beginners. XiaoHongQuan is a complete stlyle if you learn all its roads (4 forms). It can work in combination with Pao Quan very well as well. However it is not so well combined with TongBei, Luohan, Jingang, etc.

    No one has yet organised Shaolin into a Logical syllabus. So at the moment, in order to learn the style well, you really do have to practice a lot of forms. Or have an extremely good teacher who teaches you all the principles well.


    IMPORTANCE

    So, is it important to have the knowledge of many forms? No, it is important to have the vast knowledge of your system of Wushu. This may be just a few moves or even a few principles, well applied. However in Shaolins case, its gonna take quite a few forms.

    It goes without saying that a form should be well learned before moving on, but not to the point of stagnation. It is difficult to know when to move on. But you will know yourself. If you get to a point where progress is slow, move on.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    ᏌᏂᎭᎢ, ᏥᎾ
    Posts
    3,257
    Quote Originally Posted by RenDaHai View Post
    You can also become this way by having the style explained to you in very high detail, but such a teacher is rare.
    So true. The majority of people in Shaolin now just do sanda for the fighting side, and maybe have some hypothetical applications to the movements of their traditional sets. But those who really know and teach the concepts and principles of the system are rare, and one must really know how to seek them out. Ironically, most of them aren't the monks, who rather fall in the former category. For many people, an expensive trip to Shaolin these days is a big disappointment.

    In response to this topic, I agree 100% with RDH. That's my understanding as well and how I train. I personally know many forms and can use them freely, but "specialize" in one or two.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Canada!
    Posts
    23,110
    Not for me. It is about the principles contained within the forms that is more important ultimately.

    I've learned dozens of forms, some very long and complex, others short and simple.

    I personally only maintain a couple of handsets and a few weapons such as staff(gwun), single broadsword(dao), wu dip do(butterfly knives) an gim(straight sword).

    I occasionally reach into the way back machine and pull something old just to dust it off and give the rust a shake, but having many forms is not of great importance, especially in context to the actuality of fighting.
    Kung Fu is good for you.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Western MA
    Posts
    953
    My Sigung once said that "Just because you don't remember a form you learnt, doesn't mean your body doesn't still know it."
    Knowing a lot of forms might not be so important, but learning a lot of forms is very useful for the reasons RDH mentioned.
    Even if, like David, you only keep up on a few of them, your body has still learned new ways to move/combine techniques from the forms you've 'forgotten.'

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,095

    I used to know dozens of forms.

    When I was younger, I had the entire BSL system. It was over 50 forms. I've let all those go. A few of the more basic ones are still hardwired into me and I can pull them back up with a little effort. I remember many of the weapon techniques, but couldn't recite the entire form. That's when I had a lot more time to focus on physical training.

    Nowadays, I only focus on a few forms. I started a thread on that two years ago. I haven't updated that in a year. At this time in my life, I'm content to focus on a few fundamental Shaolin forms. I don't need to know many, but I'm glad that I did once, because it gives me a stronger foundation and more diversity. If I was presented with a new form, I would certainly explore it, but my coach now wants me to work on what I have, and I'm in total agreement.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    41
    Quote Originally Posted by ShaolinDan View Post
    My Sigung once said that "Just because you don't remember a form you learnt, doesn't mean your body doesn't still know it."
    Knowing a lot of forms might not be so important, but learning a lot of forms is very useful for the reasons RDH mentioned.
    Even if, like David, you only keep up on a few of them, your body has still learned new ways to move/combine techniques from the forms you've 'forgotten.'
    Well learning many forms is indeed good for progress!
    But true that people say here is, that its good for further training experience.

    But remember them all or specialized in all of them is impossible.

    Like bruce lee once said, I'm more affraid from a guy who punch 100000 times the same punch, then from a guy who knows 100000 techniques.

    But allways interesting what people think of such things.

    Thx for it!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Shell Beach, CA, USA
    Posts
    6,664
    Blog Entries
    16
    Quote Originally Posted by Hanak View Post
    Well learning many forms is indeed good for progress!
    IMO, learning many forms is a big waste of time. I have learned more than 50 forms so I believe I'm qualified to say this.

    The best training method is to develop a set of "finish moves". You then try to use your other moves to set up, create opportunity, and apply your "finish moves". When you do that, you will find out that you need to design your own combo that fit your own body type. None of those moves that you have learned from your forms are useful for your purpose.

    Without developing a set of "finish moves" first, all your training will have no purpose - like a homeless person with no home.
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 10-17-2012 at 10:27 AM.
    http://johnswang.com

    More opinion -> more argument
    Less opinion -> less argument
    No opinion -> no argument

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    DengFeng
    Posts
    1,469
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    IMO, learning many forms is a big waste of time.
    .
    In MA many aspects of training Plateau quickly. This is how 20 year olds can become champions. They become equal with their peers at most aspects then physical condition becomes paramount. To stop things becoming stagnated we must change up our training frequently. Time spent on form is never wasted, you are always improving your ability to move and always learning new strategies, new concepts entirely through the diversity of form.

    As soon as anything Plateaus time is only needed to maintain it, extra time is wasted. To improve it you need inspiration, new ideas and new experiences. Form is there to inspire and create these new ideas. I am always in the process of learning a new form. It doesn't matter if you remember every one clearly, what is important is that you allow it to teach you new concepts. You will remember the concepts without having to remember the form.

    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    I have learned more than 50 forms so I believe I'm qualified to say this.
    .
    Depends on the forms and your attitude towards training them.


    No time of any training is wasted if you are learning new things

    Its only a waste of time if you allow it to plateau
    Last edited by RenDaHai; 10-17-2012 at 12:52 PM.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Pound Town
    Posts
    7,856
    each songshan shaolin form is a complete style with its own lineage.

    if u leanr more than 2 ur pushing it

    Honorary African American
    grandmaster instructor of Wombat Combat The Lost Art of Anal Destruction™®LLC .
    Senior Business Director at TEAM ASSHAMMER consulting services ™®LLC

  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by David Jamieson View Post
    Not for me. It is about the principles contained within the forms that is more important ultimately.

    I've learned dozens of forms, some very long and complex, others short and simple.

    I personally only maintain a couple of handsets and a few weapons such as staff(gwun), single broadsword(dao), wu dip do(butterfly knives) an gim(straight sword).

    I occasionally reach into the way back machine and pull something old just to dust it off and give the rust a shake, but having many forms is not of great importance, especially in context to the actuality of fighting.
    I agree with this. HOLY SH!T! dude, you have a B#TTLOAD of posts, D@MN!

    Gene should give away some free shw@g to the 3 top POSTERS, what do you think?

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by RenDaHai View Post
    As soon as anything Plateaus time is only needed to maintain it, extra time is wasted. To improve it you need inspiration, new ideas and new experiences. Form is there to inspire and create these new ideas.
    I think this is a really important point. Learning new movements and sequences triggers some kind of cognitive process that feels quite different from refining what one already knows. There's that feeling of discovery that come as a new form starts revealing its secrets. Even if some of these aha-moments turn out to have been wrong, it's invigorating and inspiring.

    I read somewhere that learning new movement sequences actually raises performance on cognitive tests, but only temporarily. This was tested. Learning new forms of dance led to a spike in ability at solving logical puzzles.

    And I believe, exactly as I think you're saying, that going back to an old form, after learning something in between, can make your relationship to the old form fresh again.

    My approach to open handed forms has changed since I started with staff. Staff has changed how I dig a ditch. Digging has changed my stance training. Stance training has changed my sitting meditation and how I sit at a desk during the day. And that has changed my life.

    But all that is only with about 5 or 6 forms depending on how you count. Maybe 3 active at any given time. I'm one of the people with little time who needs to stick to relatively few forms.

    About free-combination / bian hua. The simple little staff form I'm working on takes less than a minute at medium speed. But then try learning everything in a mirror-image, and then finding all the different ways to combine and recombine the steps, turns, grips, and power projection aspects it contains, and you've got a huge field of possibilities to work with.
    Last edited by rett; 10-18-2012 at 01:32 AM.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Shell Beach, CA, USA
    Posts
    6,664
    Blog Entries
    16
    You have to be very careful to select the forms that you want to learn. If all your forms are on the same level, you may grow fat but you will not grow tall. Going through the elementary school class material multiple times won't earn yourself a PhD degree.

    When your teacher wants to teach you a new form, you should ask, "Why do I need to learn this form for?" If your teacher can't give you a good reason, don't learn it.
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 10-18-2012 at 01:38 AM.
    http://johnswang.com

    More opinion -> more argument
    Less opinion -> less argument
    No opinion -> no argument

  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    You have to be very careful to select the forms that you want to learn. If all your forms are on the same level, you may grow fat but you will not grow tall. Going through the elementary school class material multiple times won't earn yourself a PhD degree.

    When your teacher wants to teach you a new form, you should ask, "Why do I need to learn this form for?" If your teacher can't give you a good reason, don't learn it.
    Exactly I think a style should have maximum 5 or 6 forms. I think even that is pushing it. There are too many things to work on practice and get good at to spend so much time on forms and probably not paying enough attention to detail. I want to do my forms and go on to drills, sparring, strength training, and cardio.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    DengFeng
    Posts
    1,469
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    You have to be very careful to select the forms that you want to learn. If all your forms are on the same level, you may grow fat but you will not grow tall. Going through the elementary school class material multiple times won't earn yourself a PhD degree.

    When your teacher wants to teach you a new form, you should ask, "Why do I need to learn this form for?" If your teacher can't give you a good reason, don't learn it.

    I can agree with this. It has to be pushing something new.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •