Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The former for sure. The spine as I have been taught is the vertical axis one should focus on, like the trunk of a tree, the straighter the stronger. Any bending in any direction can first cause bad form and bad positioning as well and moving the center of gravity making your legs compensate and weaken in the process.Do you guys practice a chest up (erect spine, back straight) posture when fighting or practicing or do you use a sunken chest (hunched shoulders)?
Avoid the dreaded "Wing Chun Slouch"!!!!![]()
I've written on this before, but it is worth repeating. The "Wing Chun Slouch" can be a problem in some schools. This is poor posture and bad for your health. We've all seen it....those guys that are all hunched over with a big curve in their mid-back. You even see this in "Masters" that should know better! Sam Kwok has this...partly because he is so tall. Moy Yat had this to some extent as well. I think this is often brought about by two things. First is the whole idea that you have to tilt your pelvis forward to lock your upper body and lower body together as one unit. So guys will thrust their pelvis forward, which leads to the upper body being tilted backwards. So to compensate and keep their balance they will curve the mid-back and "hunch" forward. The other thing that causes this is the idea that to defend the centerline you have to have your arms on the centerline. So guys will try and pull their elbows inward to get them as close to the centerline as they can. This really rounds off the shoulders and results in a "hunch." Just take a look at Chi Sau footage on youtube and you will see this.....guys all hunched forward in the "Wing Chun Slouch." And the strange this is, you can see guys all from the same school and same teacher....some will be hunched over in poor posture and some won't!
This kind of posture is very similar to the poor posture that results from sitting in front of a computer screen all day without a good ergonomic set up. It can lead to back pain, neck pain, headaches, shoulder problems, etc.
Wing Chun Slouch:
![]()
I've written on this before, but it is worth repeating. The "Wing Chun Slouch" can be a problem in some schools. This is poor posture and bad for your health. We've all seen it....those guys that are all hunched over with a big curve in their mid-back. You even see this in "Masters" that should know better! Sam Kwok has this...partly because he is so tall. Moy Yat had this to some extent as well. I think this is often brought about by two things. First is the whole idea that you have to tilt your pelvis forward to lock your upper body and lower body together as one unit. So guys will thrust their pelvis forward, which leads to the upper body being tilted backwards. So to compensate and keep their balance they will curve the mid-back and "hunch" forward. The other thing that causes this is the idea that to defend the centerline you have to have your arms on the centerline. So guys will try and pull their elbows inward to get them as close to the centerline as they can. This really rounds off the shoulders and results in a "hunch." Just take a look at Chi Sau footage on youtube and you will see this.....guys all hunched forward in the "Wing Chun Slouch." And the strange this is, you can see guys all from the same school and same teacher....some will be hunched over in poor posture and some won't!
This kind of posture is very similar to the poor posture that results from sitting in front of a computer screen all day without a good ergonomic set up. It can lead to back pain, neck pain, headaches, shoulder problems, etc.
Any resources for good mobility exercises? I have that problem.
Regarding the alignment of the spine, i think some people exaggerate it. When I am helping one of the new students I sometimes describe it as "tucking in the tailbone" vs a "pelvic tilt" because some students, when they hear the later, thin k "pelvic thrust" like they are doing the "Time Warp"
Regarding the alignment of the spine, i think some people exaggerate it. When I am helping one of the new students I sometimes describe it as "tucking in the tailbone" vs a "pelvic tilt" because some students, when they hear the later, thin k "pelvic thrust" like they are doing the "Time Warp"