 Welcome to Bruce Lee's Wing Chun. Bruce Lee's Wing Chun was a little bit different than the traditional Wing Chun that he learned from Jit Man. He modified it a lot. It's a big topic, but I'm going to try to simplify it into some basic differences between Bruce Lee's Wing Chun and regular Wing Chun. So here we go. Here's Bruce Lee's three favorite trapping techniques. Let's show it to you right now. This first one. Second one. Second one. The third one. Alright, or like this. Back fist. So those are three. Let me show you how to do them in slow motion. Alright, so the first one is starting with a hop for the back fist. For us it's the same to do this, right? Now, if his back fist pushes me over this way, I do the energy going this way. And I'm going to go underneath with the lap and continue my back fist. So double back fist. So optimal back fist. I feel the energy going this way. Grab and then back fist. Really slow down. But back fist, you push this this way. This one comes underneath. Grab, back fist. That's the first one. Second one. Similar. We start with this again. But now his energy is kind of in the middle. But it's not all the way this way. It's a little bit on this way. So I'm going to bring this one up. Then trap it down this way. And then either his arms back there. I don't know how to really worry about it. But his arm is here. And great. I get to pin it down to his hip. And now I'm open for a trap. So slow motion again. Let's go one, two. This one comes up here. Three. And then you want to go three. To pin it in like this. Drop it. See him sink it down. Okay. And then boom. Like that. That's the second one. Third one. Is that starting with my right knee, right? So I go for a punch. And he meets it. I feel that energy. I'm going to roll my elbow over. Boom. Okay. So boom. Boom. That's the back fist. Boom. So roll over. Boom. Now if he blocks it. Boom. I pull this one down. And punch. If he misses that one. Then I trap this one. And continue on this way. So that was order three. Bruce Lee's favorite trapping techniques. So cool. All right. So if you studied your Bruce Lee's history. You know that Bruce Lee only learns Lin Tao. And some Q. He never got the beauty. Interesting, right? So he only learned half. Or maybe even less than half. Then the Wing Chun forms. Now when he did Qixao. You notice that a lot of the traditional Qixao. They stand at this stance. Okay. It's a square stance. And they're a little bit backwards. And their head is upright. Like this. So they do Qixao like this. Okay. Which is okay. A lot of people do like that. And you can make that work for you. Then they're great. Now Bruce Lee. When he went to the States. He started to meet people that are a lot bigger than him. Right? Like I'm Asian. And I'm here in North America. Basically all the other people are bigger than me. Other than the other Asians here. But pretty much all the other non-Asians. Are bigger than me. So that's what Bruce Lee encountered. When he went to the States. Everybody's bigger. So what happened was. They were stronger and heavier. And this. Didn't have any structure anymore. Because it was just too hard. To put enough energy. So he modified it. Into a. Fencing or kickboxing stance. With his right knee. In front. And. He. Open. Up. His back. Instead of making it like this. You open up like that. So it'll be like. Pushing a car. If you push a wall. If you push a car. It's going to be like this. You don't push a car. Like this. You won't push a car anywhere. So his philosophy. Was he needed more pressure. To go against a bigger opponent. So he used it. He used the round back. To connect to the arm. And open it up a little bit. So instead of being. A little bit tight elbow. He opened up his elbow a little bit. That's how he did it. A lot of people say. Oh. That's not Wing Chun. That's not proper. But that's how he did it. I'm just showing you what he did. Okay. And the reason why he said. Is to put more pressure. Into the. Into the person. Like this. Because I can push him a lot more. Put a lot more pressure. And then that's his key. Is to use the pressure. In his jikendo. Right. Jikendo is. Weight on the intercepting fist. Which means. He has to intercept. He has to make preemptive movements. To force the other person to do something. So. This is. He modified his q-cell. To have that. To put this floor pressure. A lot of people say. Well that's too much pressure. Well it's not stupid pressure. It's smart pressure. Because it's using. All this stuff to do. Some really cool stuff. And there's some of the fastest. Cheesaw that you've ever seen. Thanks for watching Bruce Lee's Wing Chun Trapping Techniques. I'll show you three today. There's a lot more that we can show you. And how Bruce Lee fought with his style of Wing Chun. So if you like this video. Make sure you check out some of my other videos. On this channel. And subscribe to this channel. To get cool awesome lessons on martial arts. .