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One other question Bowser...your teacher says he trained with Dr. Yang Jwing Ming for awhile in I guess chin na and Yang tai chi, seminars or formal study? I ask because one of my sifu, Sigung Jeff Bolt, is the senior student of Dr. Yang Jwing Ming and currently resides here in Houston. Would be interested in what he learned from Dr. Yang. Thanks.
I have several of his books as well and they are most excellent sources for chin na techniques. There are so many chin na techniques that its hard to learn all of them.
I wish I had someone near me that I could study tai chi from. The only tai chi person around hear is Sin The' (Shaolin Do) and what they teach is a made of form that they call the yang short form. It looks nothing like the yang short form that everyone else does.
I'll be restarting Wing Chun soon, after a break for studying/parenthood/redundancy/new job/daughter with health issues, so I'm itching to get back into it.![]()
I've been studying Xing Yi Quan for about a year.
Thoroughly enjoy it!
Can you tell us a little bit about Xing Yi (Hsing I)? I know very little about it. I know it's linear and that when attacking you don't stop until you have defeated your opponent. I've read where it is compared to a train speeding forward. What else can you tell us, I'd like to learn more about it.
It's just my opinion from the way I'm taught but I like the fact that it concentrates far more on the mechanics of the body to develop power and not the form of the move itself like in a TKD pattern or Karate Kata.
In my TKD years, I was always rigid in my technique and fighting, trying to use my muscles to generate power in a strike. Xing Yi teaches you to relax your muscles and strike as the whole body and not just a foot or fist.
I've recently started Krav Maga in which we do a lot of bag work and sparring, I've been absolutely amazed by how much power I've managed to put into strikes through the using the principals in Xing Yi.
peace and blessings! brand spankin new to this site. lets see. currently i train in a mixed style. it contains tiger, snake, fma, jma, and african arts. the organization is called combative arts international. my instructor trains the police department and some times the air force reserve in hand to hand combat. my true formal and tradional training training through out the years has been many years of wing chun and hung gar, 7 star mantis, a little bit of clf, baqua and myzongyi. i have trained in jma early in my life but i am die heart kung fu. i am very serious about sparring and application of hand to hand combat and weapons application(dont find that much anymore) and i think to become a better martial artist sparring against different arts is very important.
i live in the buffalo area but i am relocating to atlanta and will be, well i hope to be training in clf with sifu stone or northern shaolin with paths atlanta, peace
How long do you guys practice San Ti Shi? And what other postures would you use in practice with the foundation training?
Thanks a lot![]()
I probably do about 10 mins San ti Shi and the Yi Quan variant in class.
I must admit I don't practice much outside class which is a great travesty as postures are absolutely essential in my experience for progressing in XYQ.