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What is Tai Chi - Not Merely A Martial Art
Author: Laddie Sacharko
Date Posted: January 22, 2007
What is Tai Chi (and qigong, for that matter)... and how is it spelled and pronounced?
Over many, many years of practice and study, I've heard it described
in many ways. T'ai Chi, taiji, chi kung, qi gong, qi gong, etc.,
etc. Translated means "harmony of opposites",Supreme Ultimate, ultimate
reality, perfect balance, and perfection (I'm sure I've missed a
few...no emails please). Tai Chi is a martial art, a self defense
system, long-fist, shadow boxing, meditation in motion, a slow folk
dance, a dance of creation and destruction, health fitness routine
and more. I've read about Tai chi as a means for teaching conflict
resolution and anger management, and for controlling ADD/ADHD, as
a mood management system, stress reduction, immune system tuner,
and balance training system. I've heard from a very prominent contemporary
Grandmaster that Tai Chi is "anything done well", and I've heard
of Tai Chi as a way of life. Currently, tai chi (a VERY SPECIFIC
tai chi) is the answer to arthritis. So once again what is tai chi?
What I practice is a very specific pattern of movements, attempting
to execute a set of principles. The movements have martial implication,
if not application, and are sequenced in a way that allows me to
practice with a sense of an opponent's attack/defend tactics. Practice
time is a period of releasing the incessant, insistent noise of
contemporary society, and retreating to a more contemplative personal
experience.
It seems to me, that at times my life has flowed more easily as
a result of practice, that my moods have been more upbeat, and my
health has been better during times when I have redoubled my efforts
at practice, whether the redoubling was aimed at "perfecting" a
piece, or simply, practicing more often. I have practiced and taught
tai chi for physical fitness, balance, concentration, relaxation.
I have experienced and witnessed "radical shifts in perception"
(Webster's definition of miracle), release of artistic blockages,
unveiling of reality vs delusional fantasy, and significant personal
transformation and growth. I've felt it passionately, and watched
as others passed it by on their way to "something" else. For me,
it is a journey which has allowed me to visit many people and places;
some I liked, and some I did not. It is perpetually challenging,
disappointing, daunting and rewarding and always leading to a new
perspective.
Qi Gong (and Tai Chi), Herbal Medicine, Acupuncture, and similar
"arts" hail out of a period in China's stone age, ending roughly
4,000 BC. The period is known as "China's Wild History" by some,
the wellspring of China's mythology, legend, and traditional folklore.
It is the time before written recorded history, when the Three August
Ones, god-kings, used their magical powers to live long lives, presiding
over long peaceful reigns, and to make the lives of their people
better.Fuxi, Huangdi, and Shennong are credited with the inventions
of writing, farming, fishing, fire, herbal medicine, and the original
formulations of China's traditional medicine. The exact period of
time is fuzzy, misty, primordial, bridging the span of time between
a great flood thousands and thousands of years in the past, until
about the time of the first historically legitimate dynasty, the
time of th Xia People 2100-1600BC. The last of these god-kings the
"Earthly King" is said to have ruled for more than 45,000 years!
What we do know is that pre-historic people didn't live long, spent
much of their time scaring up some lunch, and resting until it was
time to create a new generation, or eat again....or admire, ponder
wordlessly, the full moon. Absent an extensive menu of differentiations
(vocabulary), our "Wild History Man", probably knew the moon in
ways most of us in the information age can never hope to. From that
organic knowing (experience) evolved a world view that is inclusive
of all things, and out of which a complete system of integration
and disintegration is devolved.(huh?) The five elements alchemy:cycles
of creation and destruction.
In practicing, studying, and mulling it over, I think the most
important "fact" (opinion?) I have uncovered is just how powerful,
and simultaneously; limiting, words can be. I think that people
with a limited vocabulary have no less an experience of life than
the most articulate; different certainly, and my surmise is that
their experience of life is more powerful. Words, I'm afraid, cause
a kind of thought process which is depleting...Master
Duan taught us that our thoughts are energy, the more thought, the
more energy required to sustain them. The energy comes from the
body and in to the head. I've experienced that, the words mean something
different to me, than to someone who has not, and even others who
have had the experience would describe it differently.
Practice, study, and learning qi gong and tai chi was and is the
place from which I stepped into a "new mind", in Tai Chi we call
it beginner's mind. It is the place from which I have entered into
an experience of life and things, much bigger, and somehow more
rich than I was able to know from my "old mind". It permits an openness
that allows for, and celebrates the mystery of existence, and doesn't
try always to explain it away.
In working with others, what I'm really doing is sharing an experience...
an experience of the world; of life, profoundly different from the
one I was socialized with....words alone are inadequate, as are
demonstrations.Chop Wood, Carry Water.
Practice, read, ponder, share. Practice some more. Experience.
About The Author
Laddie Sacharko retired from military life more than 10 years ago,
after serving for 25 years. He is a graduate of the University of
Connecticut, with a Masters Degree in Education Counseling. While
studying, Laddie interned with drug and alchohol rehab programs,
in order to understand the psychology of addiction. Laddie currently
operates Starfarm Tai Chi and Qigong Search Center, where his activities
are directed at helping others discover the mind-body connection,
and move towards acceptence of their lives. Laddie is also the author
of several articles and "e-Books and e-Manuals", which are enjoying
success world-wide over the web, and publishes under the name Starfarm
Publications. Visit http://www.starfarmtaiji.com
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Tai Chi articles.
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