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Tai Chi Push-hands - Teacher Solomons

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Uploaded by on Nov 5, 2006

http://mastergohring.com Flinkerbusch pushing with Teacher Solomons

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  • likes, 15 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (MasterGohring)

  • Is this Master Gohring in the black? I have an Austin club and have been meaning to stop by to say hi.

  • This is Uri Solomons.

  • I think viewers of this Tai Chi exercise should know it's to help beginner's learn a concept of yielding and balance. This is a very basic technique and should not be confused with the various much more advanced practice of 'push hands' that teaches how to defend yourself against real attacks.

  • Thank you for the thoughtful comments.

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All Comments (18)

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  • hahahahahah omg.. i think he has tooooo much money.. if your going to do something do it right..

  • @AkiraSumida its xing yi. im not a practitioner of it, but i think that just how it is.

  • hahaha LOL yes, that's what I said. This shouldn't happen in taiji. Other styles, maybe, but taiji...no

  • Read the complete chin or fourth character secret and Wang's treatise on the idea of double-weightedness:Substantia­l and insubstantial movement or the shifting of weight from on side to the other side of the body. Defensive/Substantial/immovabl­e-object has one side closed, contracted and sinking. Offensive/irresistable force has the other side opening, expanding and rising. When the body can do both at the same time then you begin becoming a peerless boxer when appling the 13 postures.

  • I am not a high level martial artist, (someday tho), but I have to disagree to a point with you. I agree that leaning in or pulling won't work against a high lvl practitioner, but I do think that push hands training is important for a beginner such as myself. While I was in China (with zero taiji ex) my teachers over there started me with push hands and never showed me any form. They showed me proper posture and how to swallow and sink a push, and how to handle a pull.

  • Double weighted is not "2 feet heavy". This 'teacher' is incorrect. Double weighted is, as the classics refer to them, when the opponents center is trapped. When the arms are caught up, either by the offensive player or by the the defensives inability to respond (usually caused from tension or resistance), there is double weighted-ness. The loser then is caught by his inability to transfer his center to an advantageous position. If the posture is broken, like the teacher here, its easy to lose.

  • He is right, look at clips of master chen xiao wang for example and chen style pushhands

  • As the first minute goes on, I can quickly notice that the teacher is definitely the one in all black. Look at the way he is controlling guy in white. He is weighted properly and it is allowing him to have the advantage.

  • which one is the teacher?

  • what style does he teach? i dont mean to be negatively critical in any manner, but i notice a lot posture compromising from both practitioners in this video. particularly the thoracic and pelvic alignment are off in this video. is there a reason for this?

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