I'm starting my wing chun classes in 2 days, I don't understand this 3 parts series like...AT ALL, I just don't get how powerful and yet relaxed his moves are....it just seems amazing haha great stuff
I definately would like to thank you for sharing this video. It has helped me immensely in my understanding of the art which I love. Keep up the great work.
Thank you very much! I think for the first time I really understood the principle of the effortless force or power in a physical way. It is amazing how everything relates to each other. I first experienced this principle in zen meditation and it is actually the natural and most "effective" state of being. Thank you for these insights. Peace.
usually I dislike people who talk to much while teaching, I get bored and drift off, even more so in person, but you sir have a gift! great work. thanks for sharing
very good explanation you have.I have a question for you,even if it sounds sylly,can you practice wing chun without a teacher---just reading and practicing the 3 forms(without dummy to)
I've trained 4 years at the same school of WC. I think you should train by yourself even without a teacher, but you really need someone who can FEEL what your doing to correct mistakes. And don't forget: the guy demonstrating here makes it sound simple, but that doesn't mean it is easy to do or practice. Where do you live? There might be somewhere to train. I still think you should train by yourself and follow good advice as best as possible; don't think you won't get anywhere; everything helps!
You can - but it will be very difficult - simply because wing chun is a feeling art.
Worse than reading is having a teacher with wrong understanding.
I would strongly suggest you find a qualified teacher by not looking at his talk only, but also his actions and ask your self: would this guy be able to actually cope with multiple and armed attackers with the intent of killing him.
At the end of the day wing is about self defense and not theory only.
I am doing wing tsun for a month. This video explains very very much details but I think to apply this methods may take time for years
yavuz1982selim1 2 weeks ago
I'm starting my wing chun classes in 2 days, I don't understand this 3 parts series like...AT ALL, I just don't get how powerful and yet relaxed his moves are....it just seems amazing haha great stuff
MarcoArsenault 6 months ago
@MarcoArsenault How is your wing chun now?
LyricalWeaver 4 months ago
Wow! My Sifu always tells me to leave my muscles at the gym!! lol
dogooda12 8 months ago
i like how no matter what he does he claims the sil lim tao to be the source
the river... if a river drys up nothing can grow from it so the first form is like a spring of life of the rest of ya kung fu grows
kiwirap 1 year ago
the guy in black seems pissed off. suck it up, fall boy.
VixtoryQ 1 year ago
Great video much to see and appreciate.
changyembo1 1 year ago
Excellent!!
mightymeatmonsta 1 year ago
very nicely taught
judutchinski 1 year ago
perfect tut
dkaujosen604 1 year ago
Very GOOD
dbrebi 1 year ago
best instructional video
professorboson 1 year ago
I definately would like to thank you for sharing this video. It has helped me immensely in my understanding of the art which I love. Keep up the great work.
wingchun2k10 1 year ago
Thank you for being willing to share your great knowledge and for helping to keep martial arts alive and well! Excellent!
natefegan 2 years ago
Thank you very much! I think for the first time I really understood the principle of the effortless force or power in a physical way. It is amazing how everything relates to each other. I first experienced this principle in zen meditation and it is actually the natural and most "effective" state of being. Thank you for these insights. Peace.
0NonZens0 2 years ago
usually I dislike people who talk to much while teaching, I get bored and drift off, even more so in person, but you sir have a gift! great work. thanks for sharing
hobofu 2 years ago
Very nice. Cool videos.
phatdriver 2 years ago
Good info and agree on the relaxation and attack his tension,
however -> the energy and intent is not going forward but towards his arm in these examples.
Nothing really threatens the center line at the first movement.
Are the examples just to show the impact on tension only, or do you really use two movements to accomplish a one movement job?
Tequn9q 2 years ago
thank you!
superbly done
sizzla123 2 years ago
very good explanation you have.I have a question for you,even if it sounds sylly,can you practice wing chun without a teacher---just reading and practicing the 3 forms(without dummy to)
wudangtaichimaster 2 years ago
I've trained 4 years at the same school of WC. I think you should train by yourself even without a teacher, but you really need someone who can FEEL what your doing to correct mistakes. And don't forget: the guy demonstrating here makes it sound simple, but that doesn't mean it is easy to do or practice. Where do you live? There might be somewhere to train. I still think you should train by yourself and follow good advice as best as possible; don't think you won't get anywhere; everything helps!
jacobjjj555 2 years ago
You can - but it will be very difficult - simply because wing chun is a feeling art.
Worse than reading is having a teacher with wrong understanding.
I would strongly suggest you find a qualified teacher by not looking at his talk only, but also his actions and ask your self: would this guy be able to actually cope with multiple and armed attackers with the intent of killing him.
At the end of the day wing is about self defense and not theory only.
Tequn9q 2 years ago