Interesting discussion. I can think of a slew of examples where each art does what you characterize as a specialty of one of the others. I think taiji has a really good mix of all of these tactics. I also think that taiji might better be characterized as specializing in "rolling." You roll continuously from one movement into the other, without necessarily absorbing backwards in a change of direction - rather it is continuous motion in any direction, including in the direction you were going.
@ogretubing Thanks - you're right. I tend to call taiji's main emphasis as "continuing momentum", bagua's as "turning momentum" and xingyi's as "falling momentum". Clearly taiji does a fair amount of turning and falling - as they are subsets of "continuing". However, the "absorb" (ie. where you rollback) is most prevalent in taiji, then turning and falling. The exact terminology is not something I have had a great deal of time to develop, hence my expression in the video is a bit imprecise.
great video, but shitty camera-handling >__> so damn dizzying
Benbanme 2 weeks ago
@Benbanme Sorry - my little girl was the only one on hand at the time. I can hardly expect expert photography from her! I'll redo it another time!
dandjurdjevic 2 weeks ago
Love your work Dan and hearing about the internal arts
TheDemzlyChannel 1 month ago
Interesting discussion. I can think of a slew of examples where each art does what you characterize as a specialty of one of the others. I think taiji has a really good mix of all of these tactics. I also think that taiji might better be characterized as specializing in "rolling." You roll continuously from one movement into the other, without necessarily absorbing backwards in a change of direction - rather it is continuous motion in any direction, including in the direction you were going.
ogretubing 1 month ago
@ogretubing Thanks - you're right. I tend to call taiji's main emphasis as "continuing momentum", bagua's as "turning momentum" and xingyi's as "falling momentum". Clearly taiji does a fair amount of turning and falling - as they are subsets of "continuing". However, the "absorb" (ie. where you rollback) is most prevalent in taiji, then turning and falling. The exact terminology is not something I have had a great deal of time to develop, hence my expression in the video is a bit imprecise.
dandjurdjevic 1 month ago
no offence meant at-all please :D ,, but why do you have a japanese-martial arts uniform on (with belt) when these are Chinese arts?
facejobby 1 month ago
@facejobby I train in multiple arts. On this day I was in a gi, and didn't see the point in changing clothes for this discussion.
dandjurdjevic 1 month ago