Wednesday 25 November 2009

The Master Himself

Sorry, I haven't had a chance to write a new entry for some time. I have been rushing round setting up new classes, seeing clients and running some trainings, which means I have got behind with a lot of things; emails, blog entries, behind the scenes stuff on the website.

I now have a bit of free time and am slowing catching up with everything. But, I thought to bridge the gap with a video of Cheng Man-Ch'ing performing his 37-step Yang style Tai Chi form (the one I practice and teach).

Hope you enjoy it...



Matt

www.thetaichiguy.co.uk
Tai Chi and Chi Kung Classes in Cardiff and Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, UK

Wednesday 14 October 2009

Do I Really Have to Wear Silk Pyjama's?

I got the latest issue of the Tai Chi union magazine the other day and flicking through it I was bombarded with Westerners wearing those silk pyjama things that you often see in old Kung Fu movies.

Why are they wearing them? It is not a uniform. Does wearing them make their Tai Chi more authentic?

Not at all!

I always find it odd that certain people who practice Tai Chi often learn to speak and read Chinese, eat (a lot!) of Chinese food, and basically try and pretend they are Chinese. Why? It doesn't (as far as I can tell) make your Tai Chi any better.

Just because Tai Chi was developed in ancient China doesn't mean we have to wear ancient Chinese clothing to practice it. At the time, that was contemporary Chinese dress, that is all. If Tai Chi was invented in a UK inner city today would we all be wearing shell suits to practice it in a few hundred tears time? Probably (sadly)...

Do you see the irony? All those silk pyjama things are, are the ancient Chinese equivalent of the sweat pants and hoodie. They wore them to practice Tai Chi because they were comfy, that is all. But nowadays we seem to have this attitude that to do "authentic" Tai Chi we have to be wearing the right gear (ie the silk pyjama thingy's).

I have never owned a pair of those pyjama's (they can be very expensive you know!), I practice Tai Chi in whatever I am wearing at the time, often a baggy pair of jeans and a hoodie. Wearing loose fitting, comfy clothing can make it easier, but it is not necessary. Does that make my Tai Chi any less authentic (or, more importantly, effective, that someone who does?).

Matt
www.thetaichiguy.co.uk
Tai Chi and Chi Kung Classes in Cardiff and Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, UK

Monday 5 October 2009

The Goal of Taijiquan

"(Taijiquan was) born as a martial art, this will always be the essence but the goal is higher. It is the spiritual transformation of mental and physical health and the development of a peaceful, enlightened person".

- Jan Silberstorff

I couldn't have said it better myself!

Tuesday 29 September 2009

Beginners Mind

An old Tai Chi teacher of mine used to say that each time I practice the form I should approach it as if it was the first time I had ever done it.

At the time I thought that was just silly. What am I meant to do? Forget it all and re-learn it each time?! What is the point in that? Surely to improve at Tai Chi I have to draw on the previous experiences and practice. After all that is how we LEARN isn't it?!

Then I got it...

"Beginners mind" means approaching the practice of Tai Chi fresh each time. When we do something we so often compare it to past experiences or future expectations. We rarely focus on what we are doing right now.

"Beginners mind" is about letting go of all the past times you have gone through the form, letting go of the good experiences that you want to emulate and the bad times you want to avoid, about the aims and goals you have with you practice and just being in the now, focusing 100% on the current practice; your posture, your breath, your movement, the tiny changes in balance, the flow through from one posture to the next...

That is enough to think about without filling your brain with memories and expectations!

Tai Chi is really about living in the now.

Matt
www.thetaichiguy.co.uk
Tai Chi and Chi Kung Classes in Cardiff and Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, UK

Tuesday 22 September 2009

Why Tai Chi? Part 2: Confessions of a Tai Chi Addict

So, in my last post I gave a potted history of my martial arts career and what lead me to being here today to be teaching and practicing Tai Chi.

As I said in my previous post I got into martial arts in general after watching a Bruce Lee movie (as, if they are honest, will be the major reason that most people get into martial arts! It may not be a Bruce Lee movie, but it will be because of some Kung Fu film or TV show!).

I loved Muay Thai because at the time I was a bundle of nervous, twitchy energy and I liked the intensity of the art (I was into pretty hardcore stuff back then; hard house dance music, extreme sports etc), but as I have got older, I realised a lot of that twitchy energy was due to being a bit of an introvert and therefore having something called a "high acting arousal system" (which isn't rude, it is about the amount of stimulus you need to get an adrenaline dump, the higher the acting system, the more excited or nervous you get more easily, make sense?), so all these extreme things I was into were actually making me more nervous, over excitable and twitchy.

I needed something to chill me out and calm me down. Tai Chi was ideal for that, the slow controlled movements, the breathing, the relaxation... It helped me calm down, chill out, become more mindful and less clumsy. I tried Yoga, but I found that just too painful, Tai Chi seemed to suite me better...

I still find I get all twitchy, clumsy and nervous if I don't Tai Chi or sit (meditate - but more on that in a later post), regularly enough. I moved house about a year a go and in all the upheaval and stress, I stopped Tai Chi-ing and sitting for probably about 6 months. I noticed that I started getting all twitchy and excitable again...

But Tai Chi, is much more than standing and waving your arms. It is well known for its gentle exercise and meditative properties. The evidence for the positive effects of Tai Chi are boundless, I will, in one of these blogs, put a list of links to research that shows the positive effect of Tai Chi in so many different and varied areas of health and well being (in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if one day they find out that Tai Chi is all you need to do to keep fit and healthy!).

Tai Chi is actually a pretty intense work out if you do it properly, it may look all gentle and easy, standing there waving your arms around, but if you focus on the movement you can find after just minutes of doing the form you know you have done a workout!

However, mostly, I became addicted to Tai Chi because I realised that it is a very, very effective martial art. In fact, it is predominantly a martial art and with all the talk of health benefits of Tai Chi, this is often lost. The Tai Chi form is a very carefully designed form of shadow boxing...

You see the full name for Tai Chi is "Ta Chi Chuan" (or taijiquan as some of the more hardcore devotees demand it to be written) literally translates as "supreme ultimate fist", "boundless fist," "great extremes boxing" (depending on who you believe).

By practicing Tai Chi you can start to develop some of the seemingly superhuman abilities you see in those old Kung Fu movies. OK, you may not be able to fly or jump off mountains, but you will find you will be more limber, faster and much stronger than you appear, with the ability to push, pull and shove things with ease that people twice your size would struggle to do.

And the great thing about it is that, unlike to so many other martial arts that you seem to peak at in your 20's and slowly decline over the years, the more you practice Tai Chi the better you get it, no matter your age. This is why you often see the stereotype of the old master living on a mountain being able to throw their younger and seemingly fitter students around with one finger!

You can never, ever perfect Tai Chi, you will tweak and change and adapt and perfect it over the years. Some days it will feel like the Tai Chi will take over, other days it won't flow at all and I will give up in a huff.

But don't let all that talk of fighting put you off, Tai Chi is the worlds laziest martial art and you only need to put as much effort as you can or want to into it to start developing your abilities it gradually builds up over time (learning and perfecting Tai Chi is not to be rushed!).

So, Tai Chi really seems to be to be "the ultimate" that is translates into!

Matt
The Tai Chi Guy
www.thetaichiguy.co.uk
Tai Chi and Chi Kung Classes in Cardiff and Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, UK

Friday 18 September 2009

Why Tai Chi? Part 1: A Potted History.

This is not going to be a plug for Tai Chi, but I thought I would start my first "proper" entry here with a short explanation of why I Tai Chi.

I have been doing martial arts for over 20 years. I was inspired at the age of 12, after watching a Bruce Lee movie (I was far too young!) and a friend of mine, Kevin Troth (who I haven't seen for nearly 15 years, so if you are reading this, hell Kevin!), who already did White Crane (I think) Kung Fu. I started to watch all the martial arts movies I could, I was totally mesmerised by the mysticism of the East, the Buddhist iconography, the superhuman powers of the Kung Fu Masters...

I was quite a shy, unsure kid and I became convinced that martial arts would make me cooler and more confident (and therefore more popular, especially with the ladies - hey, I was 12!). It did, eventually, but it took 20 years....

Anyway, back to the story. Eventually I managed to convince my parents to let me take up a martial art and took up Sakaido (a sort of hybrid kickboxing style that seems to have disappeared nowadays). After then I took up kickboxing, training with Howard "the Hawk" Brown and the English Contact Karate Association. I then got all carried away with myself and like a kid a sweet shop I started sampling any martial art in the local area; Judo, Ju Jitsu, Aikido, Jeet Kun Do, and lots of different things. This was when I first came across Tai Chi, I thought it as just old people waving their arms around, but after doing a few seminars with the likes of Dan Doherty and Earl Montague (I must point out I never trained with these guys, just attended some of their seminars) I realised it was a very, very effective martial art!

It, as you can probably imagine, all became far too much for me and I suffered martial art burn out (the promise of more confidence and more popularity had not come true and I became jaded and cynical), so between 19 and 22 and I didn't really do much at all.

Although, in that time I did start to get more heavily involved in Buddhism and Eastern philosophy. But that is probably a subject for a different post!

Then at 22, I found myself horribly unfit (I had been into climbing and white water canoeing and hiking and mountaineering in my late teens, but as all my friends moved away to university I gradually stopped doing anything much) and decided the best way to get fit again was to take up martial arts (I had really started to miss them!). So, having always wanted to give it a go, I took up Thai Boxing (Muay Thai). This was a few years before the massive explosion in the popularity of Muay Thai, caused by Tony Jaa movies and at the time it had a sort of mystical reputation as a very brutal art. I really got into it and within 8 months was a fully qualified instructor and was taking part in professional competitions.

Then I hurt myself. And got ill, very ill. I lost about 2 stone in weight over night.

So after just 2 years of flying high in Thai Boxing I was horribly unfit, thin and didn't know what do with myself (other than sulk!). Around this time though, I came across the Barefoot Doctor. I picked up his book "Barefoot Doctor's Handbook for the Urban Warrior: Spiritual Survival Guide", I loved what he had to say and how he said. And he kept going on about Tai Chi. That inspired me to take it up properly (as well as thinking that is was a nice gentle way to start doing some exercise again). So I found our local instructor Duncan Howorth and started attending classes. It was a very small, friendly group and I really enjoyed going. After awhile I slowly regained my fitness and took up Thai Boxing again and did both Tai Chi and Thai Boxing. Unfortunately Duncan moved away and the classes folded, luckily I had managed to learn the whole form (the Beijing Style 24 step form) and could practice it by myself.

I carried on with the Thai Boxing.

Then. I hurt myself. Again!

So, I decided that Thai boxing was just too much for me now (it had been frustrating never seeming to manage to get back to the heady heights of my early 20's) and quit, and started looking for something else to do, I flirted with Western Boxing and Fencing, but they never really hooked me like Muay Thai had.

Then, utterly by chance, I met Mark Peters of Kai Ming Tai Chi. He taugh the Cheng Man-ch'ing Yang short form (which was the one I actually always wanted to learn). He booked on one of my NLP trainings and we struck a deal where he taught me Tai Chi if I taught him NLP. Excellent deal!

He made me an instructor in 2007 and I have been teaching ever since...

So, why do I Tai Chi? What is it about it that made me choose it over all the other martial arts? Well, that will be the subject of my next post. I think I have written enough already!

Matt
The Tai Chi Guy
www.thetaichiguy.co.uk

Tuesday 15 September 2009

Welcome

Hello and welcome to my new Tai Chi Journal. Here I will discuss and record my practice in the magic art of Tai Chi as well as my thoughts and ideas on the subject! I will write as an w

I have been practice Martial Arts for over 20 years and Tai Chi for 10 of those. I have been teaching Martial arts and self defence for 10 years, specifically Tai Chi since 2007.

To learn more about me, please visit my dedicated Tai Chi site www.thetaichiguy.co.uk.

I will write more soon!

Matt
The Tai Chi Guy