If you are going to travel to a new city, and all you
know is your destination is westward, so you hop into your car
and just start to drive toward the west. You probably will reach
where you wanted to go with a lot of mistakes, and wasted time
with the wrong roads. It is the same, if you study Tai Chi without
a detailed road map. It will take you a lot longer to reach your
goal.
The traditional Yang Style Tai Chi
originally evolved from the Chen Style Tai Chi. Every time a change
is made to its original format, the new idea and frame will need
to be tested in theory, its function and application to see if
it is workable and useful.
When the first generation of the
Yang family - Yang Lu Chang changed the frame of the Chen Style
Tai Chi, it was the beginning, the embryo of the Traditional Yang
Style Tai Chi. It took the next two generations - his son, Yang
Jian Hou, and his grandson, Yang Chen Fu, three generations of
constant refinement to develop what we know today as the Traditional
Yang Style Tai Chi. It was not until Yang Chen Fu was in his late
50's, that he said "This is it. There isn't anything else
that I could refine on it. No changes should be made, because
I couldn't improved on it any better. This is Traditional Yang
Style Tai Chi."
Nowadays, when we study Traditional
Yang Style Tai Chi, we emulating the late Yang Chen Fu's frame.
He has left photographs for us to compare. But not only our body
frame has to look like his. The most important thing that he left
for us is the road map of how to study of Traditional Yang Style
Tai Chi, which we call the Ten Essences.
As I teach seminars all over different
regions in the world, I have a wide range of students from beginners
to experienced Tai Chi practitioners. When you have a mixed group
of different levels of skilled students, the first thing for me
as a teacher is to find out how much does each student understand
Tai Chi. If you teach the same thing all the time in every seminar
you are no longer teaching, you become an instructor. A good teacher
understands what each student's level is and then teaches according
to each student's need.
It is very surprising to me, when
I ask the students, "How many of you have heard of the Ten
Essences?" Most of the students will raise their hands. Then
I ask "How many of you can recite the Ten Essences?"
Half of the students will drop their hands. Then I ask the remaining
students to recite the Ten Essences. Everyone can recite 3 or
4 out of the Ten Essences without a problem, then it starts getting
harder as someone calls out the remaining essences. Most of the
time, no one can recite the Ten Essences without any hesitation.
It took three life times of the Yang family members to come up
with this detailed road map for our study of Tai Chi. Our mastery
of the Traditional Yang Style Tai Chi depends on our understanding
of the Ten Essences.
Memorizing the Ten Essences is not
a true understanding of Tai Chi. Memorizing the words doesn't
mean you are able to transfer the feeling into your body when
you practice the movements. If the feeling of the Ten Essences
is not transfered into the body when you practice, then the Essences
become a slogan. Slogans are useless in the study of Tai Chi.
Then how do we comprehend the Ten
Essences? First, let us understand the principal of Yin and Yang.
Energy is created when two opposite extreme forces either pull
or push each other with balanced equal intensity. To simplify,
drawing a bow to shoot an arrow is a good example of how the opposite
forces pull against each other to create a controlled energy.
When Tai Chi was created, it wasn't
created as a stress reduction, relaxation and meditation exercise.
It was created as a martial art with the understanding of traditional
Chinese medicine and the study of Yin and Yang.
In ancient times, all battle was
done one on one, man to man, hand to hand. The eye contact is
your first clash with your opponent. How you stand, how you look,
the appearance and the feeling that you project onto your opponent,
will determine the opponent's action from that point. If you stand
tall with the feeling of uprightness in the body with the projection
of high spirit, you opponent will less likely to make a move towards
you. You are using your spirit to overcome your opponent first.
Raising your head to lift the spirit is the first essence of Tai
Chi.
When a person has good spirit, you
will see their head, neck and spine lined up in a upright position.
When their back is hunched and head lowered, this is a sign of
tiredness, distress or not feeling well.
Earlier, we discussed Yin and Yang,
the coexistence of opposite forces in harmony. Therefore, the
feeling of lifting the head is needed to counter balance the feeling
of sinking shoulders and lowering elbows. Sinking shoulders and
lowering elbows is the second essence. The first and second essences
balance each other. Without the second essence, the body will
become too tense to practice. Sinking shoulders and lowering elbows
will allow you to become softer. We want to stand upright and
in a loose position.
As your shoulders sink and elbows
lower, you will feel your chest become loose and sink inward.
When your chest is sunk inward, this will cause your back to be
rounded, and the feeling of the muscles in your back expanded
and stretched slightly. Loosen chest and round back is the third
essence.
During your practice, if you feel
your spirit is low and you need to raise your head, your should
also feel your shoulders are sunk, elbows are lowered, chest loosened
and back rounded. The feeling of all these body parts are connected
as one unit. They are affecting each other just like the gears
in an engine.
If you try to recite these words
in your mind or to speak out loud, your body movements will become
too fast for you. Your mind and body are no longer in harmony.
You should feel the essences.
Breathing is controlled by your
chest. If your shoulders are pulled backward, your chest will
become tense, your breathing is restricted in your upper chest.
When the first three essences are done correctly, you will find
your breathing becomes longer and deeper. Your breathing is able
to be lowered into your lower abdomin. This feeling of deep and
relaxed breathing is called "Sinking Chi into Dantien."
The power of our body is never originated
in the arms or legs. It is created by torque of the waist. Waist
is a very misleading word in the study of Tai Chi. Most of the
students will think waist is the muscles on both sides of the
stomach. When we say waist, we mean the torso, the front and back
of the body, the complete rounded body.
The issuing of energy, is called
"Fa Jing". It is done by torqueing the waist very explosively
and quickly from one direction to the opposite direction, and
then back to its original position. This quick torque produce
an energy that shoots through the spine up into your shoulders,
and then extends into your arms, and finally the energy is released
through your hands. Loosening the muscles to allow the turning
of the waist is the fourth essence.
In the example of drawing the bow
to shoot an arrow, the power of the bow is not stored or created
at the ends of the bow but rather in the middle of the bow. In
the human body, the power is not in the hands and feet but in
the middle of the body-the waist.
Since we understand the power is
created in the waist, we also need to understand that every time
your waist is turned, your body weight is changed and your balance
is affected. The legs are built to support our upper body. The
feeling of a strong firmness in the legs is called "Rooting."
Rooting is created by either pushing your legs against each other
or pressing your legs down and away from each other. If you don't
have this rooting feeling, your mind will not be in the legs.
Paying attention to the weight changes in your legs will produce
a strong rooting feeling. Tai Chi energy is very interesting.
It is controlled by your thoughts, as long as you think about
it or pay attention to how it feels, the energy is there and ready
to be used at your command. If you don't think about it, then
the energy is not focused. Energy without focus is never controlled
and it is useless. The understanding of weight changes in the
legs with the turning of the waist is the fifth essence - Separation
of the substantial and insubstantial.
So every time your waist is turned,
you should connect to and feel your waist and legs are moving
together. Just turning your waist without feeling your legs will
cause your rooting to be weak and you will lose your ability to
use the torque energy effectively.
If you understand what the first
five essences are, you should be able to feel the upper body is
governor by the first three essences and your lower body is controlled
by the fourth and fifth essences. Upper body is the head, shoulders,
elbows, chest and back. Lower body is the waist and legs. To connect
the upper and lower body together in movements so the upper and
lower bodies' energies are combined into one larger energy is
the sixth essence - Coordinating the upper and lower body.
As soon as the upper and lower body
energies are combined and coordinated into one energy, you will
need to monitored it, so energy can be delivered continuously.
This feeling of flowing energy moving smoothly without interruption
in motions is called continuity. Your seventh essence.
In Tai Chi, every movement or motion
has to have a purpose, a reason. Reasoning can only come from
the understanding of the application. For example, the first move
in Traditional Tai Chi is raising both hands in front of the body
to shoulder height. Without understanding the application, students
will only raise the hands. They feel relaxed but that is it. Understanding
the application, students will be able to extend their energy
into an opponent's body and disturb his balance. The opponent
is then repelled backward without ever using any muscle power.
By understanding this, then the body is connected with the mind.
This aspect of Tai Chi study is very important. This is knowing
the intent, what your mind is trying to achieve and what your
body is capable of doing. Your intent and body frame have to be
unified as one. If you have a good intent without a strong body
frame, you will not accomplish what you want. The eighth essence
- Coordinating your internal intent (mind) and your external physical
frame (body). Sometimes, others refer to this essence as coordinating
internal and external.
The applications are executed in
your mind. No punch or push is executed with tightness in the
muscles. Tightness causes your movements to be more staggered,
slower and to use more muscle power. Loose muscle is suddenly
contracted into extreme tension and then loose again, creates
a type of the energy that is more powerful then the tight muscle
type. So when we practice Tai Chi, we use our mind not our physical
force. Energy is used softly and gently. Using mind not using
force is the ninth essence.
Softness is also misunderstood by
many people. If you are very soft, then you only practice one
of the extremies of Yin and Yang. Softness doesn't mean relaxed
soft. Softness means that your bone structure has been extended.
The tendons are pulled to a point of being stretched and there
is slight tension in then. The muscles are still soft. Both softness
and tension are needed to create energy in the body.
Finally, in motion, you should feel
peaceful. The feeling of peacefulness is like standing in a pool
of water, moving so gracefully that you don't create any waves
in the pool, because you move through it softly. This is called
seeking stillness in motion. When standing still, you feel the
inner body extending and expanding so energy is created, you are
seeking motion in stillness. Your final, tenth essence - Seeking
stillness in motion and motion in stillness, the Yin and Yang.
If you can reason out the ten essences,
your training in the Traditional Yang Style Tai Chi will reach
a new skill level. In the beginning, you might find it difficult.
Reasoning out the Ten Essences is better than trying to memorizing
them. Only by reasoning out the essences, will you understand
how they feels. Following the feeling with the guidelines of the
Ten Essences, your body will never move outside the corrected
frame. Your form will look just like Yang Cheng Fu's photographs.
You will find your energy comes up much easier and quicker. Then
you will know you are on the right path.