 Mattis Kung Fu actually is from Southern province in China, around 400 years ago. The creator is called Wang Lang, he combined the 18 styles of famous Chinese Kung Fu at that time together. He used the most useful competitive fighting concept inside. Including the long-distance fist, we call it Chang Chen. Something short, close fighting techniques, something like Wing Chun. And wrestling, Chinese wrestling, fast wrestling, we call it Kua Jiao. The famous kicking techniques, Ling Zhong Yue Yang Ke, means very good kicking techniques. And also have the joint knockings, we call it Qin Na. But it's only the standing joint knockings. So about 18 styles of Kung Fu. Combined into one style. Into one system. So we call, why we call play Mattis? Because we're always using these porches, the graphic. The play Mattis clock means the graphic. No, no. Flushed eyes, no. It's for graphic, different graphic. So we have some techniques like hooking, hooking is hooking. Holding, hooking. Chai, chai, chai. This one chai. Chai means like you are plucking. Kua, kua. Blocking, blocking. And also we have the hooking and go in, hooking and go in. This is footwork. And clutch punch. It's beng chen, beng da, beng da. And how to move the torso. And slip it. And li, li, li. Lian Zhang Tie Kou means the sticking, li, li, for the very closing wrestling or the joint knockings. So very complex system. It's just like MMA. Just like the MMA concept of the very Asian MMA concept of Chinese Kung Fu. So that's why I want to share it to you guys. Very interesting. Thank you. The founder is called Wang La. He's the Chinese guy in Southern province, around the late of the Ming Dynasty. He created a primitive kung fu system when he observed two animals. One day he said that one day in the legend, he practiced martial arts in the mountain. He observed one praying mantis. When he catch the insect and then get him a bite, catch and bite, catch and bite, the insect cannot escape. For this idea, he created a praying mantis claw to control the enemy and then launch the striking. One day he observed the other animal, their monkeys. They observed them, they were very agile. They went bounding around and they made sure for their playmates, they kicked their playmates and then running around, very agile. So from this animal, he created a footwork, a praying mantis footwork. So we call in the praying mantis form, you can see the praying mantis claw and very agile monkey footwork. Combined two animals. Combined two animals. And he also had the 18 styles of the Chinese Asian martial arts inside. So just as I mentioned before, the long distance, short distance, closing, wrestling, joint knocking, and most of the very part of the praying mantis is the combos, the combos very special to the other martial arts. The combos including the striking, kicking, wrestling together. Not punching and then kicking and then wrestling, his combos, punching and then suddenly wrestling. The punching is for wrestling. The wrestling, when you're wrestling, but at the same time, it will make you dislocate some joints or break some bones. This is a very special idea. Everything floating there. This is specialty. So he combined these two animals. At the same time, he combined the 18 styles of the Chinese martial arts around Ming Dynasty in that period. Including the long distance fighting strategies and short distance, closing, joint knocking, wrestling and everything in that time. Kicking. Kicking, striking, punching, wrestling, joint knocking. Very complete system, actually. And you combine them all into one system? Yeah, into one system. So in the praying mantis, kung fu, we have many forms. Each form, they have their specialty or some combos. Combos is very special comparing to the other kung fu. Because the praying mantis combos is including the striking, kicking, wrestling together. Sometimes when you're striking, actually it's for wrestling. When you're wrestling, it's for joint breaking, joint dislocating. This kind of concept is very special. So you blend all the techniques together? Yeah, it's together. Actually, there are many forms because praying mantis is different branches. One of my branches is the self-star praying mantis. So in my school, I just teach ten. So three for the beginner, one for middle and the other for advanced to shorten the time. By no many other schools, they teach many, more than twenty. Twenty forms. But for me, I think ten is enough to master the call of the praying mantis techniques to understand the concept inside. Okay, thank you.