Tai Chi - the Most Misunderstood Martial Art
Author:
Ken Gullette
When the small
tai chi
master from China threw me to my basement floor, I realized the real
power behind this misunderstood
martial
art. I laughed at how easily he threw me down. He
laughed, too.
I stood up and we touched wrists again. I stepped at him and again
found myself on the floor, looking at my carpet in a whole new way.
I was on the receiving end of a tai chi master's skill and power.
Grandmaster Chen Xiaoxing (pronounced "shou-shing") is a direct
descendant of the man who created tai chi. He visited my home for a
week and I spent quality time finding out first-hand why so many
people misunderstand this powerful martial art.
Around the world, tai chi is used as a slow-motion exercise for
health and meditation, but that's not why it was created. Many
martial artists call tai chi a "soft" art, but that's because real
tai chi is rare in the United States. Every movement in tai chi is a
self-defense technique.
The art was created in the 15th Century by Chen Wangting, a retired
warrior in Henan Province, China. His family still practices it as a
martial art. They say you have to "eat bitter" to develop tai chi
skill. Real tai chi training, especially with the Chen family,
involves pain.
The idea of tai chi is to break your attacker quickly and end the
fight. Tai Chi is practiced in slow motion so students can develop
the body mechanics and structure to deliver the self-defense
techniques powerfully. To the average observer, tai chi appears
relaxed and fluid. Underneath, the body structure gives it an
iron-like strength.
I studied tai chi for a decade before being introduced to the real
art, and I was stunned at its power. In the years since I began
studying the Chen style, as my skill has increased, I've met many
tai chi students who have been in the art for over 20 years but they
don't know the proper way to move. Most teachers don't understand
the "secrets" of the art. As a result, students don't learn real tai
chi.
The real secret of tai chi and the "internal" arts of China is
simple: these are physical skills that take years to develop. Too
many teachers focus on developing "chi," a mysterious energy they
claim is circulating through the body. Their students focus on chi
and miss the body mechanics that can make them powerful.
This lesson was driven home to me in my basement as Grandmaster Chen
kept throwing me to the floor while he remained relaxed. I began to
realize what he was doing, and the subtle way he was making me lose
just enough of my balance that I could be easily thrown. It was a
valuable lesson. After he left my home, I was more determined than
ever to keep practicing so I could develop higher-level skill in
this very hard "soft" art.
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