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Tai Chi Chuan

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T'ai Chi Ch'üan, Taijiquan, Tai Chi Chuan, or commonly Tai Chi or Taiji (太極拳, or simplified 太极拳; in pinyin: tài jí quán literally supreme ultimate fist), is a Nei chia ("internal") Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some recent medical studies. T'ai Chi Ch'uan is also known as a "soft style" martial art.

Tai Chi Chuan
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T'ai Chi forms are best known as the slow motion routines groups of people practice every morning in hundreds of parks across China and, increasingly, other parts of the world. In T'ai Chi classes one is taught awareness of one's own balance and what affects it, awareness of the same in of others, and appreciation of the practical value in one's ability to moderate extremes of behavior and attitude at both mental and physical levels.

Table of contents
1 Overview
2 T'ai Chi training and techniques
3 T'ai Chi styles and history
4 T'ai Chi in the present
5 T'ai Chi as a form of alternative medicine
6 See also
7 External links

Overview

T'ai Chi Ch'üan is considered an art of moving-meditation that is nowadays also considered a form of alternative medicine. While its practitioners have historically considered it primarily a style of martial art, T'ai Chi theory and practise is indeed largely formulated in agreement with many of the principles of traditional Chinese medicine. Besides the general health benefits attributed to beginning and intermediate level T'ai Chi training, many therapeutic interventions along the lines of TCM are taught to senior T'ai Chi students in traditional schools.

T'ai Chi Ch'üan as a physical art form is characterized by:

The Mandarin term "T'ai Chi Ch'üan" translates as "Supreme Ultimate Boxing" or "Boundless Fist". The solo training routines known as forms, pushing hands (two person training, choreographed and freestyle) and the acupressure massage and other manipulations taught by some schools are designed first to improve the T'ai Chi students' stability, looseness in the joints and muscles and level of relaxation by taking them through their complete natural range of motion. The slow, repetitive work necessary to that process are said to gently increase and open their internal circulation (body heat, blood, peristalsis, etc.), while the postural requirements introduced in the first classes are conducive to relaxing and deepening the students' breathing. Over time, proponents say this enhancement becomes a lasting effect, a direct reversal of the physical effects of stress on the human body. This reversal allows much more of the students' native energy to be available to them, which they may then apply more effectively to the rest of their lives; families, careers, spiritual or creative pursuits, hobbies, etc.

T'ai Chi Ch'üan is seen by many of its schools as a variety of Taoism, and it does seemingly incorporate many Taoist principles into its practice (see below). It is an art form said to date back many centuries (although not reliably documented under that name before 1850), with precursor disciplines dating back thousands of years. The explanation given by the traditional T'ai Chi family schools for why so many of their previous generations have dedicated their lives to the study and preservation of the art is that the discipline it seems to give its students to dramatically improve the effects of stress in their lives, with a few years of hard work, should hold a useful purpose for people living in a stressful world. They say that once the T'ai Chi principles have been understood and internalized into the bodily framework the practitioner will have an immediately accessible "toolkit" thereby to improve and then maintain their health, to provide a meditative focus, and that can work as an effective and subtle martial art for self-defence.

Teachers say the study of T'ai Chi Ch'üan is, more than anything else, about challenging one's ability to change oneself appropriately in response to outside forces. These principles are taught using the examples of physics as experienced by two (or more) bodies in combat. In order to be able to protect oneself using change, it is necessary to understand what the consequences are of changing appropriately, changing inappropriately and not changing at all in response to an attack. Students, by this theory, will appreciate the full benefits of the entire art in the fastest way through physical training of the martial art aspect.

In a fight, if one uses hardness to resist violent force then both sides are certain to be injured, at least to some degree. Such injury, according to T'ai Chi theory, is a natural consequence of meeting brute force with brute force. The collision of two like forces, yang with yang, is known as "double-weighted" in T'ai Chi terminology. Instead, T'ai Chi students are taught not to fight or resist an incoming force, but to meet it in softness and "stick" to it, following its motion while remaining in physical contact until the incoming force of attack exhausts itself or can be safely redirected, the result of meeting yang with yin. Done correctly, achieving this yin/yang or yang/yin balance in combat (and, by extension, other areas of one's life) is known as being "single-weighted" and is a primary goal of T'ai Chi Ch'üan training. Lao-Tzu provided the archetype for this in the Tao Te Ching when he wrote, "The soft and the pliable will defeat the hard and strong." This soft "neutralization" of an attack can be accomplished very quickly in an actual fight by an adept practitioner. A T'ai Chi student has to be well conditioned by many years of disciplined training; stable, sensitive and elastic mentally and physically in order to realize this ability, however.

Wu Chien-ch'üan, co-founder of the Wu family style, described the name T'ai Chi Ch'üan this way at the beginning of the 20th century:

"Various people have offered different explanations for the term T'ai Chi Ch'üan. Some have said: 'In terms of self-cultivation, one must train from a point of movement towards a point of quiescence. T'ai Chi comes about through the harmony of yin and yang. In terms of the art of attack and defense then, in the context of transformations of full and empty, one is constantly inwardly latent, not outwardly expressive, as if the yin and yang of T'ai Chi have not divided apart.' Others say: 'Every movement of T'ai Chi Ch'üan is based on circles, just like the shape of a T'ai Chi symbol. Therefore, it is called T'ai Chi Ch'üan.' Both explanations are quite reasonable, especially the second, which is fuller."

T'ai Chi training and techniques

As the name T'ai Chi Ch'üan is held to be derived from the T'ai Chi symbol, the t'ai chi t'u (太極圖, pinyin tàijítú), commonly known in the West as the "yin-yang" diagram, T'ai Chi Ch'üan techniques are said therefore to physically and energetically balance yin (receptive) and yang (active) principles.

From ultimate softness comes ultimate hardness. The core training involves two primary features, the first being the solo form or ch'üan - a slow sequence of movements which emphasise natural movement and relaxation. The second being different styles of pushing hands or t'ui shou (推手) for training "stickiness" and sensitivity in the reflexes through various motions in concert with a training partner in order to learn timing, coordination and positioning when interacting with a training partner or opponent. Pushing hands is seen as necessary not only for training the self-defense skills of a soft style such as T'ai Chi by demonstrating the forms' movement principles experientially, but also it is said to improve upon the level of conditioning provided by practice of the solo forms by increasing the work load on students while they practise those movement principles.

The solo form should take the students through a complete, natural, range of motion over their center of gravity. The repeated practice of the solo routine is said to encourage circulation throughout the students' bodies, maintain flexibility through their joints and familiarize the students with the leverage associated with the martial applications implied in the forms. The major styles of T'ai Chi have forms which differ somewhat cosmetically, but there are also many obvious similarities which point to their common origin. The solo forms, hand and weapon, are catalogues of movements that are practiced individually in pushing hands and application scenarios to prepare students for self-defence training. In most traditional schools (the modern Yang style being a conspicuous exception) different variations of the solo forms are practiced; fast/slow, small circle/large circle, square/round (different expressions of leverage through the joints), low sitting/high sitting, for example.

Other training exercises include:

T'ai Chi's martial aspect relies on sensitivity to the opponent's movements dictating appropriate responses. The calmness required to achieve the necessary sensitivity is acquired over extended, slow, meditative martial training. This sensitivity is trained in hundreds and thousands of hours of ch'i kung, pushing hands, sparring and fencing. T'ai Chi Ch'üan trains in three basic ranges, close, medium and long, and then everything in between. Pushes and open hand strikes are more common than punches, and kicks are usually to the legs and lower torso, never higher than the hip in most styles. The fingers, wrists, elbows, shoulders, back, hips and knees are commonly used to strike, and there is an extensive repertoire of joint traps, locks and breaks (chin na), particularly applied to put pressure on the opponent's elbows. Despite its "soft" image, T'ai Chi techniques can be lethal or incapacitating, with strikes to the eyes, throat, heart, groin and other acupressure points commonly used. However, most T'ai Chi styles expect their students to learn defensive or neutralizing skills first, and a student will have to demonstrate proficiency in defending themselves with them before the offensive skills will be introduced. There is also an emphasis in the traditional schools on kind-heartedness. One is expected to show mercy to one's opponents, as instanced by a poem preserved in some of the T'ai Chi families said to be derived from the Shaolin temple:

"I would rather maim than kill
Hurt than maim
Intimidate than hurt
Avoid than intimidate."

T'ai Chi styles and history

There are several major styles of T'ai Chi Ch'üan:

Chen style (陳氏)

Considered to be the senior branch of the T'ai Chi Ch'üan family styles, the Chen style today is known for its low postures and vigorous martial art training. While there are many hundreds of schools teaching T'ai Chi around the world, the family styles are said to go the farthest in maintaining the "old-fashioned" style of teaching that has been normative for T'ai Chi Ch'üan instruction for most of its history.

Historically documented from the 1600s, the Chen family originates in the Chen Clan Village (Chenjiagou) in Wen County, Henan Province.(溫縣陳家溝). Their best known teacher was Chen Changxing (陳長興 Chén Chángxīng) (1771-1853). Chen is traditionally associated with a teacher known as Jiang Fa (蔣發 Jiǎng Fā), although it is no longer clear if their relationship was a teacher/student one (or even who was senior) or if they were colleagues.

Some traditions teach that a disciple of Chang San-feng named Wang Tsung-yueh taught the martial art later to be known as T'ai Chi to the Chen family, but this cannot be confirmed. On the other hand, some in the Chen family claim that it was Wang who learned T'ai Chi Ch'üan from them.

Chen style has become well recognized internationally in recent years, due mostly to the efforts of Chen Fake (1887-1957), who taught for many years in Beijing. Many direct descendants of the Chen family are still teaching T'ai Chi.

Yang style (楊家)

The most popular and widespread style (many variations exist).

The Yang family first became involved in the study of T'ai Chi in the early 1800s. The founder of Yang style was Yang Lu-ch'an (楊露禪), aka Yang Fu-k'ui (楊福魁, 1799-1872), who studied under Chen Changxing starting in 1820. Yang's subsequent expression of T'ai Chi as a teacher in his own right became known as the Yang style.

Yang Lu-ch'an passed his art to

Cheng Man-ch'ing (1901-1975), a student of Yang Ch'eng-fu, shortened and simplified the traditional form Yang taught him, after his teacher's passing, supposedly to make it more accessible. Cheng Man-ch'ing is known as the first to teach T'ai Chi Ch'uan in the West.

Cheng's style is particularly popular in Taiwan, Southeast Asia and the U.S.A (where Cheng spent his final years).

Wu/Hao style of Wu Yu-hsiang (Yuxiang) (武家)

This Wu style was founded by Wu Yu-hsiang (武禹襄, 1813-1880), a senior student (along with his two older brothers) of Yang Lu-ch'an. Wu Yu-hsiang also studied for a brief time with teachers from the Chen family, to whom he was introduced by Yang. His most famous student was his nephew, Li I-yü (1832-1892), who in his turn taught Hao Wei-chen (1842-1920), whose family preserved the art for several generations, so that it is now sometimes known as Wu/Hao or just Hao style T'ai Chi Ch'uan. Hao Wei-chen taught the famous Sun Lu-t'ang (see the Sun style article below).

Wu/Hao is a distinctive style with many small, subtle movements, highly focused on internal ch'i development. It is today a rare style, with only non-family instructors currently teaching the art publicly.

Wu style of Wu Ch'uan-yü (Quanyou) and Wu Chien-ch'üan (Jianquan) (吳家)

Wu Ch'uan-yü (吳全佑, 1834-1902) started studying T'ai Chi Ch'üan in his capacity as an Imperial military officer cadet of the prestigious Palace Battalion under the famous Yang Lu-ch'an in 1850. He eventually became a disciple of Yang's son, Yang Pan-hou, and was given permission to teach his own students in 1870. Wu Ch'uan-yü's son, Wu Chien-ch'üan (吳鑑泉, 1870-1942), and grandchildren: grandsons Wu Kung-yi (吳公儀, 1900-1970) and Wu Kung-tsao (吳公藻, 1902-1983) as well as granddaughter Wu Ying-hua (吳英華, 1906-1996) were well known teachers. Wu Chien-ch'üan became the most well known teacher in his family, and is therefore considered the co-founder of the Wu style. He taught large numbers of people and his refinements to the art more clearly distinguish Wu style from Yang style training. Wu Chien-ch'üan moved his family south to Shanghai in 1928. Wu Kung-yi then moved the family headquarters to Hong Kong in 1948, his younger sister Wu Ying-hua and her husband, Ma Yueh-liang (馬岳樑, 1901-1999), staying behind to manage the original Shanghai school. Wu Kung-yi's children were also full time T'ai Chi teachers: Wu Ta-kuei (吳大揆, 1923-1970) was active in the resistance to the Japanese invasion of China, yet he later taught T'ai Chi in Japan after the war. His younger brother, Wu Ta-chi (吳大齊, 1926-1993), supervised the family's Hong Kong and southeast Asian schools for many years and opened the family's first Western school in Toronto, Canada in 1974. Wu Kung-yi's daughter, Wu Yan-hsia (吳雁霞, 1930-2001), was the senior instructor of the Wu family for five years after the passing of Wu Ying-hua, and was known as an expert with the T'ai Chi sword.

Wu Chien-ch'üan's descendants continue to teach in Asia, North America and Europe.

Wu style is the second most popular form of T'ai Chi Ch'üan in the world today, after Yang style. Wu style emphasises parallel footwork training with the feet relatively closer together than the modern Yang or Ch'en styles, small circle hand techniques (although large circle techniques are trained as well) and differs from almost all of the other T'ai Chi styles martially with Wu style's initial focus on wrestling and groundfighting technique; tumbling, jumping, throws, footsweeps, pressure point leverage and joint locks and breaks, which are trained in addition to more conventional T'ai Chi sparring and fencing.

Sun style (孫家)

Was developed by Sun Lu-t'ang (孫祿堂, 1861-1932), who was considered expert in two other internal martial arts styles: Hsing-i Ch'uan (Xingyiquan) and Pa Kua Chang (Baguazhang) before he came to study T'ai Chi. He was also considered an accomplished Confucian and Taoist scholar, especially in the I Ching. Sun learned T'ai Chi Ch'üan from Hao Wei-chen, who was Li I-yü's chief disciple. Interestingly, Sun started studying with Hao relatively late in his life, but his accomplishments in the other two internal arts led him to develop his T'ai Chi abilities to a high standard more quickly than is usual. He subsequently was invited by Yang Shao-hou, Yang Ch'eng-fu and Wu Chien-ch'üan to join them on the faculty of the Beijing Physical Education Research Institute where they taught T'ai Chi to the public after 1914. Sun taught there alongside the Yang brothers and Wu Chien-ch'uan until ca. 1928, a seminal period in the development of modern Yang, Wu and Sun T'ai Chi Ch'üan.

Besides his earlier Hsing-i and Pa Kua training, Sun's experiences with Hao Wei-chen, Yang Shao-hou, Yang Ch'eng-fu and Wu Chien-ch'üan influenced the development of what is today recognized as the Sun style of T'ai Chi - characterized by small circular movements and high stances with subtle footwork. Sun's daughter, Sun Jianyun (who passed away in 2003) was also a famous T'ai Chi Ch'üan teacher.

Wu Tang (武當)

There are several groups teaching what they call Wu Tang style T'ai Chi Ch'üan. They mostly claim to teach an original style they say was formulated by a Taoist monk called Chang San-feng and taught by him in the Taoist monasteries at Wu Tang Shan. Some consider that what is practised under that name today may be a modern back-formation based on stories and popular veneration of Chang San-feng (see below) as well as the martial fame of the Wu Tang monastery (there are many other martial art styles historically associated with Wu Tang besides T'ai Chi). There is also a modern T'ai Chi style going by the name Wudang as well that is fairly well-known internationally, especially in the UK and Europe, originally taught by a student of the Wu (吳) style.

When tracing T'ai Chi Ch'üan's formative influences to Taoist and Buddhist monasteries, one has little more to go on than legendary tales from a modern historical perspective, but T'ai Chi Ch'üan's practical connection to and dependence upon the theories of Sung dynasty Neo-Confucianism (a conscious synthesis of Taoist, Buddhist and Confucian traditions, esp. the teachings of Mencius) is readily apparent to its practitioners. The philosophical and political landscape of that time in Chinese history is fairly well documented, even if the art later to become known as T'ai Chi Ch'üan's origin in it is not. T'ai Chi Ch'üan's theories and practice are therefore believed by some schools to have been formulated by the Taoist monk Chang San-feng in the 12th century CE, a time frame fitting well with when the principles of the Neo-Confucian school were making themselves felt in Chinese intellectual life. Therefore the didactic story is told that Chang San-feng as a young man studied Tao Yin (導引, py dǎoyǐn) breathing exercises from his Taoist teachers and martial arts at the Buddhist Shaolin monastery, eventually combining the martial forms and breathing exercises to formulate the soft or internal principles we associate with T'ai Chi Ch'üan and related martial arts. Its subsequent fame attributed to his teaching, Wu Tang monastery was known thereafter as an important martial center for many centuries, its many styles of internal kung fu preserved and refined at various Taoist temples.

T'ai Chi in the present

Recently there has been some divergence between those who say they practice T'ai Chi primarily for fighting, and those who are more interested in its benefits to physical and mental health. More traditional stylists still see the two aspects as equally necessary pieces of the puzzle, the yin and yang of T'ai Chi Ch'üan. The T'ai Chi "family" schools therefore still present their teachings in a martial art context even though the majority of their students nowadays profess that they are primarily interested in training for the claimed health benefits. T'ai Chi has become very popular in the last twenty years or so, as the "baby boomers" age and T'ai Chi's reputation for ameliorating the effects of aging becomes more well-known. Hospitals, clinics, community and senior centers are all hosting T'ai Chi classes in communities around the world. Along with Yoga, it is one of the fastest growing fitness and health maintenance activities, in terms of numbers of students enrolling in classes. Since there is no universal certification process, and most Westerners haven't seen very much T'ai Chi and don't know what to look for, practically anyone can learn or even make up a few moves and call themselves a teacher. Relatively few of these teachers even know that there are martial applications to the T'ai Chi forms. Those who do know that it is a martial art usually don't teach martially themselves. If they do teach self-defense, it is often a mixture of motions which the teachers think look like T'ai Chi Ch'üan with some other system. This is especially evident in schools located outside of China. While this phenomenon may have made some external aspects of T'ai Chi available for a wider audience, the traditional T'ai Chi family schools see the martial focus as a fundamental part of their training, both for health and self-defense purposes. They claim that while the students may not need to practice martial applications themselves to derive a benefit from T'ai Chi training, their teachers at least should know the applications well enough to ensure that the movements they teach are done correctly and safely by their students. Also, working on the ability to protect oneself from physical attack (one of the most stressful things that can happen to a person) certainly falls under the category of complete "health maintenance." For these reasons they feel that a school not teaching those aspects somewhere in their syllabus cannot be said to be actually teaching the art itself, and will be much less likely to be able to reproduce the full health benefits that have made traditional T'ai Chi Ch'üan's reputation in the first place.

T'ai Chi as a form of alternative medicine

Researchers have found that long-term T'ai Chi practice had favorable effects on the promotion of balance control, flexibility and cardiovascular fitness and reduced the risk of falls in elders. The studies also reported reduced pain, stress and anxiety in healthy subjects. Other studies have indicated improved cardiovascular and respiratory function in healthy subjects as well as those who had undergone coronary artery bypass surgery. Patients also benefited from T'ai Chi who suffered from heart failure, high blood pressure, heart attacks, arthritis and multiple sclerosis (See research citations listed below).

Citations to alternative medicine research

See also

External links