East Winds said:
WhiteBirch,
Interesting take on the subject. I suppose if you only have superficial interets in your art, you wont care what is being taught in its name. "I find I learn and understand the form more deeply because of it". Sorry, don't understand that reasoning. Taijiquan is a martial art and the martial postures are put together to "make" the form. Not the other way round as you are suggesting.
I don't mean to suggest that. What I mean is I can perform the movements of the form without understanding any of the martial reasoning. You wave your arms in a certain way, and voila, you end up looking the same. I personally find that the martial reasoning helps me understand what my arms and legs are actually doing. Even if I have a student that says they don't care about the martial aspect, I tell them that they should learn it so that they know what they're learning, why it works that way, and that it will help them remember the pattern of the movements.
East Winds said:
I have studied my art diligently now for 15 years and I strongly object to some "snake oil seller" peddling something that he calls taijiquan. If that is the depth of your interest, can I suggest line dancing as an alternative?
Hmm... medical studies have been done to death on Tai Chi. The studies have generally nothing to do with the martial aspect, so even if a student learns the movements without martial intent, they can still benefit. Yes I believe they are limiting themselves, but they still can benefit so I'm willing to work with them. If nothing else, I can try to entice them to learn the why's and wherefore's later.
What is Tai Chi Chuan? Is the Short Form still Tai Chi Chuan? What about the 48-Step Form? What about the Sword Form or the Staff Form? If you only learn and practice the Short Form for 20 years, are you still doing Tai Chi Chuan -- you're only learning a part of the art -- IMO the same as if you didn't learn the "martial moves." So, IMO, you *are* learning Tai Chi Chuan, you're just not learning the whole art.
In the end, my point is this...
Discouragement
by Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming
...
My master took a look at me and said, "Little Yang, why do you look around at what others are doing? When you plow a field, plow it because you want to plow. You do not plow because others make you plow. You do not plow for othersÂ’ approval. So why would you look around at others? Why would you care? If you look around and see that you are ahead of others, you would become proud of yourself and then you would become lazy. If you are behind, you would become depressed and discouraged. DonÂ’t look around, simply bow your head, look down and keep plowing. One day, when you feel tired and take a break, you will look around and suddenly you will realize that there is no one around you. You have left them far far behind you. You will see how far you have gone and yes, you can take some pride in that, but then you look ahead and see how far there is still to go (and there will always be more to go). ThatÂ’s when you put your head back down and go back to plowing."
...
It's kind of ironic. When you get away from the Taoist mentality, we start generating a "mine" mindset and which is "better." From a Taoist mentality, from which Tai Chi is based, there isn't a mine or a better -- there just is.
The point is, you can argue until you're blue in the face, but you can't win. You can't tell them that what they're doing isn't right, you can name the thing anything you want, but that won't change a thing. So... why even waste the breath and time. IMO, it's better to be the best that you are and can be rather than worrying about what everyone else is doing. Be a positive force rather than a negative force.
WhiteBirch