Quote Originally Posted by LFJ View Post
The Taiji symbol is literally representing movement. They just didn't have GIFs back then.

Taiji means the extreme limit, and the symbol is showing when one reaches its limit it must change into the other.

It's just describing natural phenomena. Such as how day turns to night, and night turns to day.

When the sun reaches its highest point in the sky, the upper limit, it starts to set and the sky gets darker.
Then when the sky has become its darkest, it begins to transition into daylight once more.

How do you possibly interpret this concept as "complete rest"?



If your VT fails in live combat, it would seem impractical to blame the concept of yin-yang.
Better to look at what you're actually doing and discover exactly why it's failing.

Besides your misuse of the concept, neither YM nor WSL appealed this in their VT teaching, anyway.
We must remember, with total respect, Sigong WSL failed totally in the only competive endever he ever tried. AGAINST TRADITIONAL KUNG FU!!!. Why? Rules? There are always rules. It is called conditions. I don't buy the idea that VT cannot operate if there are rules.