ToddFrom RichardsonTx thanks for the feedback. You will be pleased to know I have many more member videos to upload to my site from this interview. I will begin uploading them this week.
This is the most informative and best description of Tai Chi Jin I’ve ever heard in my 30+ years of studying. The Martial Man, you have a rare skill of bringing out the best in each master you interview. They open up and share their secrets openly with you. Thank you for this video 🙇🏼
Sifu Liang is not only very skillful in his craft, but also his down to earth nature shows that he has really achieved a good level of self development. Great stuff!
My first Taiji master teacher spoke no English so I appreciate Sifu Liang De Hua's ability to explain these concepts in English for those who cannot speak Chinese. Thanks for the outstanding video!
If you haven't been training seriously for twenty years you may find this difficult to accept. But this is still just another starting place. The real skills go deep. Thank you for sharing Grow the Art.
@@brandontodd14 Your ignorance is only partly because you lack the experience. The other part is your stubborn dismissive attitude toward what you don't understand or don't want to understand. There are many charlatans. This sifu is not one of them. But you are unable to tell the difference. You're entrenched in a kind of ignorance that leads to antagonism and other dangerous feelings.
@@surfwriter8461 The best shit is the shit that works on trained, resisting opponents. This stuff instills false confidence and gets people injured or killed. Talk about dangerous....
@@brandontodd14 Do you know anything about anything, or do you just post your juvenile trolling comments while pretending to know what's genuine and what works? This isn't a combat situation and is not a case of a complicit "opponent". It's a demo in which Sifu Liang shows various techniques using different types of jin familiar to anyone who knows internal martial arts. Anyone with a functional brain would know using this in real fighting situations would require extensive training, including a lot of true push hands or sparring, and there's nothing about the video that should deceive a viewer into thinking they can just start copying what they see in the video and be successful. I doubt you're really concerned about someone getting injured by having false confidence after watching a video like this. Your main goal seems to be to disparage the system and the practitioners.
song = 鬆 = stay loose, = relaxing thanks so much for this, this is 1 of the best lesson! 鬆(song) 沉 (chen, sinking) 勁 (jin, force) , loose, sinking force omg this is so good!!!
had to stop the video just a few minutes in to say that this is one of the best martial man (and tai chi) videos I have seen. Such a rare special insight into tai chi and a very high level teacher offering top quality practical and historical knowledge openly. I am always impressed that despite just 6 years in thailand you have opened more doors to such deep knowledge than many who have studied for decades! Keep up the amazing work!!
I can't believe u have all these opportunities to work with these guys...thx for ur videos n thank all these Great instructors when u talk with them... 👍👍
This is one of the best explanation and demo for the TC Jin ever seen. I have learned a lot from this episode. Thanks ! In my experience, to correctly exercise Taiji forms benefited me physically and mentally. And there is no secret to master Taiji forms, but learning by step by step with patience. By the way, we do not have to be as good as the Sifu Liang. We can exercise Taiji to improve our body and soul. This will be much, much easier.
Andrew Gohring it is in and of itself NOT a martial attacking technique so to avoid it would be within your capabilities .On the other hand as a defensive technique this bloke nailed it .My question to you is why would you think to avoid someone’s defence ?
I have trained in these jins in another school. I have to say that there is no way you will learn them at fast fighting speed. In the beginning you need a willing partner who will push in one direction at the same pressure without withdrawing or removing the push. Also hopefully they will allow themselves to move to reflect how your jin is affecting them so that you see what is hardly believable because it feels like you are not doing anything. The jin in large part are qualities not applications. Then you learn to put these qualities in push hands and only then does push hands become fun. Even in push hands it's good if your teacher sets himself up to show how to put those qualities into not only the accepted shape of applications, but at any moment whatsoever and no matter where you are being touched. Then and only then could the training be carried over into slow motion then fast sparring. Or you can like myself be satisfied that you have learned something amazing that improves the quality of life and health and serves to deepen neigong and qi gong. Or do both sparring training, and neigong/qi gong if you are young unlike myself at this age. If you choose not to train sparring you can still have laughs practicing push hands with a good community of practitioners. Laughs because when you are pushed, pulled or lightly struck with jin it seems odd, funny in a strange way and the effect seems so much grander than the effort put into it.
Also without learning the Jie Jin, connecting jin you can't learn and apply the others. And to learn these you need to have them done to you and to be a willing student pushing into the teacher without trying to neutralize. Same in helping to make demos like this. Martial Man is showing respect to the teaching in letting teacher's jin affect his own stance and initial force.
@@Sifu-Myers I think it depends on the character you are looking at , but I can say different than jing as in jing, qi, and shen. Although jing in this sense might be part of a foundation for applicable Jin referred to here.
This is why such few people developed skill in the art because high level people like this dont know how to talk about it.The word passive needs to be changed to receptive.The feeling of relaxation however is emptiness void and space.This is not passive either this is the existence of non-existence.Hang up the head and sink chi to the tan tien is not something that you do it is something that is achieved when enough relaxation happens so that the internal energy can be felt.Feeling internal energy is no big deal if your in a high speed elevator that stops and you feel the ground come up ,this is a feeling of internal energy.For those who doubt - When you jump on the earth you'll get so far off the ground. If you jump on the moon you will go higher.This is because of the difference in the force of gravity. Gravity is a force which creates tension in the atmosphere. When we reduce the tension in our bodies our movements become empowered .If I recieve any positive response that is descriptive I will write the method to achieve this. It is probably not what you think it will be
@@silatguy No, I'm saying that when you reduce the tension in your body you have more power.Tension is the internal resistance. Gravity is an external resistance.It is easier to control the internal resistance than it is to control gravity. Although you do propose an interesting concept.The body does have a magnetic field. Can we increase our magnetic field through relaxation ? I dont know. I dont have the answer to that
This is very good lesson for where i am in my practice. I am finally starting to feel relaxation waves when i breathe going down and up my body, and I'm able to understand what he is saying on my own level, and i can appreciate this new perspective. Thank you
if the only question you have after seeing this is "does this work in a cage" ....says more about you than it does about Tai Chi/jin etc. I don't get how anyone could not watch this and just respect this mans understanding , glad to see though most of the comments are giving the respect that should be due. This demo was really great
I can only guess. I think It would help in the cage, but of course you need to have other skills and training. Imagine if a big strong cage fighter goes at him punching and kicking like crazy, he would have to be able to deal with that kind of attack to be able to focus. Also throwing the opponent doesn't end the fight. You still have to know submissions or knockouts or be prepared to do ground and pound and you don't want to hurt an opponent permanently. So he has to control his energy to not cause internal organ damage etc. My guess is that if you combine internal skill with external skill then you could have an unbeatable combination, but, again, you would have to train hard all the time. One lapse of concentration could get you knocked out. Make sense? Also you can always lose concentration and get a knockout punch or liver shot that would totally screw up your energy flow. Cage fighting is very dangerous and requires a well rounded training and fitness level.
This looks great! I wonder if De Hua can turn the dude into a monkey? I learned from Master Kim-Lee in Korea about chi-gon. He could throw his chi across the room. I once saw him hit 4 people (they were standing in a straight line) at the same time from 10 feet away. He moved them back like they were pushed in the chest! Speaking to the four people later, they all said they felt him push them as if he put his hands on them! Amazing! To this day, those people cannot believe Master Lee didn't (couldn't) touch them. Master Lee taught us how to find our poles (where our energy comes from) and to close our switches to re-energize our chi! For the past 8 years, I've been on a quest in search of an answer to Who is the Master? Leroy
Great explanation for Chi. Ying/Yang/Li from 1:00-2:50 was amazing. Chi seams almost comical the way its perceived by most people because its explanation usually makes it sound impractical. But this makes it sound very practicle.
This guy Has so much ability, understanding, and knowledge and a great attitude. I wonder if he likes to teach because if he does then people should do whatever they have to in order to learn from him in person, if possible. It's an opportunity for anyone wanting to attain a real martial arts base. You can go anywhere in martial arts once you are learning an training hard with this skill set. Too bad I am not young, because I would go directly to the airport to go find him to learn real martial arts. I loved Thailand when I was there in my youth. It is a beautiful place with beautiful people. If course many of them have been corrupted by the western city life, but you can escape to the countryside and find peace, real peace. If you go there, stay away from the tourist destinations and find the quiet wonderful people who have kept their culture. Buddhism is fantastic because it isn't really a religion like the main ones of the world that have so much hate for other religions. Buddhism is about live and let live. Buddhist's don't seek out other religions to cause fighting. They live their lives in peace. Why did the dalaï lama have to hide to not be killed. Why would anyone want to kill a man who wanted nothing but peace and to be left alone to meditate and help others. Why would anyone want to kill a man of true peace. Thailand used to be a land of peace, and still is to sone extent, but if course, like most other places around the world, america has discovered its wealth and destroyed the culture for profit. Profit
Fantastic video. So much information. Thanks to Liang for sharing his knowledge and to The Martial Man for bringing it to us. Very inspiring I’m off to practice. 🙏🏼☯️🙂👊🏼
The same qualities Sifu Liang is talking about are what Sifu Nima also mention, along with the other masters interviewed. The ability to 'let go', to have movement in stillness and stillness in movement. Sounds mystical and lofty. Seeing Nima do the demo with students where he asks everyone to hold a good Tan Sau and then asks everyone to touch their bicep and tendons in the elbow joint to feel the muscular/tendon tension. He then asks them to 'let go' of that bicep and elbow tension that is required to hold the arm in that position. That was the lightbulb moment. No one else could do it. They could all understand what was asked, it wasn't weird or mystical, but their eyes all said, 'Holy shit.... I can't turn it off!' When he got someone to touch his biceps and elbow tendons under normal conditions and again when he 'let go', the look of shock was legit. I tried it myself, no matter how ''relaxed' I felt, I just couldn't switch that muscular tension off to maintain the position. Therein lies the practice and skill. It's why CST taught that SLT with no force is the pathway. Sifu Liang is also talking about the same change in quality, that dissolving of using force and muscular force and emptying that tension out. That ability to release, regardless of what system that skill comes from, is what needs to be attained. There are many paths to it, all under many names. Just get there.
Numerous historical records and anecdotal evidence show that Yang Chengfu had great skill in push hands, but had very little combat ability. He was defeated quite easily by Wan Laisheng in the Beijing Central Park in 1926. Wan was known for his speedy footwork and rapid attacks. Many kung fu historians in China have analyzed that Yang lost due to his lack of mobility and slow reaction. Many people have speculated that Yang only inherited and passed down the long energy aspect of Taichi, and not the combat aspect of it, which is the type of short energy and light skills that Yang Luchan exhibited when he first brought Taiji to Beijing where he popularized the art.
Maybe lack of mobility and lack of combat experience. But good reactions and timing is essential for being good at push hands. Many says that he learned "The old style" but progressively left it completely and only taught his own "new style". The "old style" that was taught to only a few of his inside door students and through his uncles, was quite brutal, had a lot of combat drills and mostly practiced with full speed. There are quite a lot mentioned about what YCF learned, taught and occasionally showed off. (You can do a Google search for: "The Chang Interview - Chang Yiu-Chun a Student of Yang Shou-Hou". ;) )
@@cynicalnutcase4937 Yeah, that's true. Yang Chengfu's style or what he passed down is definitely different to Yang Luchan's taiji. Weng Tonghe, an imperial tutor and a high-level government official in the Qing Dynasty witnessed a Yang Luchan fight. He described Yang Luchan as "advancing and retreating at incredible (god-like) speed, his body is agile like a monkey". This is the most credible account of Yang Luchan's display of Taiji in combat from a first-hand witness who isn't his student. It's pretty clear that Yang Chengfu doesn't possess similar abilities. The thing is, good reaction in push hands doesn't translate into good reaction in a free fight, because it's a lot easier to deal with a pushing energy which is a much slower and simpler force compared to a trained fighter throwing powerful rapid punches and kicks at you, plus you're already in contact with the opponent to listen to their movements... Anyway, I'll check out the resources you recommend :)
Very intersting. I never heard of this. I just googled it and see that Wan practiced Ziranmen which is also an internal style. In a book of Stuart Olson is written that after Yang Shao-hou died Chengfu became traditionaly the lineage holder as a family member but many disciples thought that he wasnt that good and there were some disciple of Shaohou who were much better. They even broke with the family.
I remember That in The Big Boss movie (Bruce lee) It Had Kungfu Master as Final Boss after Ice Factory Fight scence in thailand. Can be Referrence To Sifu Liang De Hua so many thai fighters try him in thailand and It End Quietly.(So Dont mess with him....)
If you know Tai Chi and listened carefully, you should have realised that it does not depend on the speed or the force. It is, like in all martial arts, about the timing and than doing the right thing. Best defence is, not beeing there.😀
Eduardo Canale that would depend on the strengths of the defender .from what I’ve seen of Bruce lee on film his strengths seem to be close in speed .So I would suggest moving away a bit or probably just running .
This is an excellent video with some key concepts described in a simple and understandable fashion while introducing the terms in a clear way. Thank you for sharing.
Would be great to get an in-depth explanation on how jin is generated from song and the different (40) jins, because in part two sifu Liang states verbatim "It's only one Jin actually". Which is what i understood as well. Maybe it's the applications of the jin which make it feel as if it's a different expression?
@@cloudexplorer5920 It ultimately depends on age. Or at the very least, how supple you were to begin with as a child, and were able to retain it as an adult. The younger you are, the easier it is to loosen your lower spine and coccyx, while standing up. That is the principle physical requirement to do these things. Physical. Of course, Adam and company obfuscate this with verbal mysticism ("chi", "jin", etc.) To be fair, most Chinese fall for that crap too. Understanding has nothing to do with language or culture. Most people who pursue this stuff began so in their late 20's or beyond. Well after they've already lost what is required. Of course, there are some folks who otherwise maintained flexible legs and hips, and some of them were lucky enough to have (literally) stumbled into it. But make no mistake, the majority of seekers are fleeced. Chinese call this the "Iron Rice Bowl" while talking up "wu de". Talk about cynical... But to answer more directly- if you can do side and front splits at least 70%, and can drop your lower spine in horse stance without "stacking" it, you can learn this in five minutes.
I've gotten to where I've trained enough years to grasp what he is doing. Yes, I understood it intellectually a long time ago, but it's only now that I'm really starting to get it, and I've found out what people have always said, it's just simple physics. It's nothing more than practicing long enough to be able to relax totally and sink your self into the ground like a cat not wanting to be picked up while disrupting the other person's standing structure.
It is possible to see chi emitting from the hands of the taichi master. How long does a taichi practitioner has an ability to see chi from his own zhan zhuang practice ? What's the criteria and years of practice to be able to see chi with their naked eyes.
Chi is the concept of controlling our breath, which is not easy. Buddhist do this, yogis who do yoga do that, athletes learn the basics of controlling their breathing. The way it’s taught here is just in a different way
I would be interested to see this style of martial arts up against fast punches to the face, UFC, etc. it would be the ultimate to see it used in real combat, up until now mostly demonstrations, which are limited in what they can show.. I imagine a future where we have a Tai Chi UFC champ lol
it would be extremely hard to use it when punches are thrown at lightning fast speeds. HOWEVER, this is very easy to use when grappled, nordwingchun has shown some demonstrations where his arm is behind is back but the much bigger person behind him still gets moved around effortlessly. ua-cam.com/video/c7deT2SPPkI/v-deo.html
When my shifu's shifu show his face people will fly back six meters, all his students had this skill, it doesn't matter if you believe or not, it was there, it has been there...
OK cool, it is good for health and is interesting skill in domain that it reveals possibilities of human body, but is it applicable in situations like fighting?
Observe and seek to understand. You will see how well it does work in reality. Problem has been the host of those who lack proper instruction. It has been the trouble for Tai Ji Quan for a long time.
Steven Edmund?!..... That name doesn't suit you well......I will call you Saddam Karim Al Baraki......it goes really well with your thumbnail photo. No need to thank me for I allways love to help people who have these kind of problem so you are wellcome....so how are you doing mister Saddam Karim Al Baraki?! I hope that you are ok. If I can help you then please let me know. Remember mister Saddam Karim Al Baraki, you have got a friend in me.
@@dekatvanlilith6494 I suggest you get your eyes tested ..... for that matter .... an MRI on your cranium too.No need to thank me.... blah blah blah blllaaahh blah
Thanks. I understand that jin is central. But I have one question and a request. He talked about 'magnitude'...or more precisely 'changing the magnitude' of the vector of force coming in. He showed various applications of jin, left, right, forward, back but the magnitude question wasn't explained, I believe. It mihht have beeb better to talk about where exactle the vectors go and describe how they are transformed. For instance, changing the attackers hand was not explained but this was the first thing you can see him doing. This is also found in aikido and it is about redirecting the attack, so you dont receive the full force...even when part of his talk was about 'receiving'. But, of course, in english the idea of redirecting seems contrary to redirecting...which we, in the wst, tend to think of as an activity and therefore an active action as opposed to passively receiving. I guess part of tue difficulty in doing and teaching taiji is that we are using unfamiliar concepts like relaxed-doing, receiving-redirecting. In our minds, we think action and reception are two separate and different things. To be honest, I didnt learn anything new in this video. The title, I thought, was a bit misleading. Finally, someone is going to show us what jin means...but no, he shows but does not tell.
Yang Cheng Fu s Tai Chi was developed mainly for health purposes. Remember, the chinese were called "the sick men of Asia ", at that time. So, Taijiquan was adapted to fit the people's needs. There is a great misunderstanding about Tai Chi in today's Martial Arts Community. We have got to remember that the old Tai Chi Masters from 19 and 20 Centuries did change the Art many times and held back knowledge when passing to foreigners and hid the Martial Applications. Tui Shou was intended to practice Dim Mak, to map the points, and not to exercise Hua, pushing and pulling. It's that simple. Stick and Follow means: strike the attacking limb and follow the attacker with a sudden burst of speed and power hitting the Dim Mak points or weak areas. Put the explosive-short fajing of Taiji to Wing Chun Kung Fu and you'll see what Taijiquan is like in combat. The Eli Montaigue school of Tai Chi has the closest approach to the REAL TAI CHI in my humble opinion..
Brendan Cabral. You are right. That was a sad period in the history of China when the foreigners came with drugs and the chinese corrupted officers led them in into the country. Even, Yang Cheng Fu was opium smoker. But, it is what it is. Thank you for your comment.
That is not what stick and follow means. Fajing is actually very basic in taiji No disrespect but I’ve seen Montaigue videos and it doesn’t even look like good taiji...it looks more like wing chun and I don’t see him showing any type of internal skill Just my opinion
Earl Montague (Eli's father) claimed he was taught taijiquan in Australia by a Chinese man who in reality actually never left China and never taught any westerners, claimed to know Yang Luchan' s "form" then proceed to perform what can only be his own variation of Yang Cheng Fu's form and to have traveled to Wudang temple where the monks had apparently been "waiting for him" where they then taught him everything they knew. I am not saying he had no skill but he was basically full of shit, i certainly wouldnt say he and his surviving school after his death are the holders of real taijiquan. He was just an old hippie from the Northern rivers area of NSW Aust who learned some martial arts and was able to convince people with bs like a used car salesman. Why do i say it was not Lang Luchan's form? Because there is no record of what it looked like and there was probably no official Yang "form" then just a set of postures that could be strung together to train the pronciples. Luchan learned the principles of Chen family boxing(it was not called taijiquan then) and was an acomplished long boxer so his postures were probably closer to Chen with a long boxing influence than what we know as Yang today, this being further refined by his sons Jian Hao and Pan Hao through to Shao Hao and Cheng Fu. Cheng Fu's form being the domminant form today and the only Yang form being taight to westerners in Australia at the time Earl would have learned of taiji.
A highly skilled expert of Yang style Tai Chi Chuan uses less physical exertion and movement than a highly skilled expert of Chen style Tai Chi Chuan. A Yang style expert uses less energy, but more mind to control or transform into negative an opponent's energy.
Put aside philosophy, its a pure physical trick. No harder to learn than contact juggling (which is hard and tricky by the way). But to apply it against quick unpredictable attack U need to have supercomputer in the head, calculating real time angles of optimal transformation (Hua).
Douchebag teachers do string students out for years to the tune of many $$$. I have no idea if Liang is like this. But the truth is, if you are flexible within a large range of dynamic tension (SUPPLE) you could learn it in five minutes.
@@andrewgohring7625 sorry I mean this is a genuine traditional martial arts with high techniques that are rarely encountered and not carelessly passed down, usually the master chooses his student.
Thanks for sharing, Master LDH is already at a high-level Taichi. The Song chen jin is depend on his Neigung level. I really enjoy it. There are still a lot of good Taichi Master in Shanghai, hope you can come to visit one day.
Liang is a lot more honest than Adam Mizner. Liang provides real explanations. Whereas Adam gives mere descriptions- by design of course. He's all about the "Iron Rice Bowl", which is just asinine since it can be broken by lead this day and age.
I would argue Adam Mizner is responsible in sharing things only when the person is ready to understand. It's nice to see Sifu Liang share all these things. But it is mostly useless to most taiji practitioners and might be confusing if they don't have decent fundamentals. Adam Mizner's teachings is not expensive compared to many so called masters out there. He is generous in the stuff he shares and the price he charges. Also why people expect all these information to be free of charge puzzles me. Most knowledge worth knowing comes at a cost. Why you're using the word "asinine" in this case is weird dude. It's like I'm an artist who spent my life drawing and painting for a living. And I teach my skill at a price. But someone like you comes along and calls me asinine for not sharing knowledge I've spent 20 years acquiring for free. Strange.
@@krenx You are egregiously full of shit here. "sharing things only when the person is ready to understand" LOL You mean having "open" hips and shoulders, so that the spine can fully flex? I used to lay out my "resume" in these matters, but sleeping dogs are just that. I learned these things for practically NOTHING, from "nobodies" deep inside of China. Rubes like you tend to assume that if someone has high skill, that they are public and visible and "famous" like Adam and Liang. The total opposite is the actual truth. You'll never know. Adam teaches kiddie stuff to stiff westerners who don't have an intrinsic chance of doing these things, ever. You included. You will spin in circles for years and years before you realize that your only hope would have been to start in your youth. People pay to to learn to paint? How the blind lead each other... Have fun paying for Adam's bacon, sucker.
@@andrewgohring7625 Wow, so angry. Whatever art you're doing is clearly not helping you. Have some tea and chill dude. Sounds like you have full knowledge of the entire background of Adam, my life and sifu Liang's life and experiences all in your head. You must be a master of some sorts to attain that kind of depth into our lives. Have fun with whatever illusions you have cooked up about people in and outside of your life. But I recommend don't swim in that pool for too long. Not healthy. Peace and love 🙏
So sung is everything,more sung more jin,is it a reversal of energy or a transmission of your own enegy? Is chi and muscled contraction the same force. Like as much sneeze
More song (sung), more Jin is true but you need ting too and to be able to move chi through the body for it all to work. Muscle contraction is not it. Some muscles will inevitably contract as your posture changes as evidenced when Liang leans forward to push Kieron back (when Kieron is pressing on Liangs chest) but the muscles engaged are only to hold the body up and in position. The force is generated through openness in the joints/muscles/white tissues etc. Which is nigh on impossible to understand without experiencing but it happens
I worked my ass off nonstop. You can read more here in my recent Facebook post. facebook.com/themartialman/photos/a.149416868808198/1069764463440096/?type=3
The teacher is basically grounding himself down, which makes him harder to push and his hands are also adding a push down and back. It’s a philosophy of how to be like a mountain or a boulder, all the weight and gravity is pushing down
Watch Part 2/2 of this interview and gain access to exclusive unseen videos, and member-only content by visiting my site: themartialman.com
Watch part two here: themartialman.com/taiji-jin-太極勁-part-two-liang-de-hua
Thank you for the video(s) ! :) I've subscribed to your site and found that it's really worth it. :)
Baoqing Ye that's great to hear. I'm happy to hear you're pleased with the content I'm posting on my site. Thank you for the support.
Both videos, so good.
ToddFrom RichardsonTx thanks for the feedback. You will be pleased to know I have many more member videos to upload to my site from this interview. I will begin uploading them this week.
This is the most informative and best description of Tai Chi Jin I’ve ever heard in my 30+ years of studying. The Martial Man, you have a rare skill of bringing out the best in each master you interview. They open up and share their secrets openly with you. Thank you for this video 🙇🏼
I'm happy to read your positive feedback. Thank you!!
I agree he is very good and should subscribe to his website for more exclusive content.
@@wesleymalutama3651 you just turned a wonderful thing into a typical business meeting. Why does everything end up being about money?
@@perrypelican9476
You can see it that way or you can simply have a look at his website if you want to discover even more wonderful things.
@@THEMARTIALMAN i absolutely love your work on tachi
Sifu Liang is not only very skillful in his craft, but also his down to earth nature shows that he has really achieved a good level of self development. Great stuff!
My first Taiji master teacher spoke no English so I appreciate Sifu Liang De Hua's ability to explain these concepts in English for those who cannot speak Chinese. Thanks for the outstanding video!
I appreciate him bettering his English for the same reason! Cheers Liang!
If you haven't been training seriously for twenty years you may find this difficult to accept. But this is still just another starting place. The real skills go deep. Thank you for sharing
Grow the Art.
lol this bullshit is charlatanism
@@brandontodd14 Your ignorance is only partly because you lack the experience. The other part is your stubborn dismissive attitude toward what you don't understand or don't want to understand. There are many charlatans. This sifu is not one of them. But you are unable to tell the difference. You're entrenched in a kind of ignorance that leads to antagonism and other dangerous feelings.
@@surfwriter8461 The best shit is the shit that works on trained, resisting opponents. This stuff instills false confidence and gets people injured or killed. Talk about dangerous....
@@brandontodd14 Do you know anything about anything, or do you just post your juvenile trolling comments while pretending to know what's genuine and what works? This isn't a combat situation and is not a case of a complicit "opponent". It's a demo in which Sifu Liang shows various techniques using different types of jin familiar to anyone who knows internal martial arts. Anyone with a functional brain would know using this in real fighting situations would require extensive training, including a lot of true push hands or sparring, and there's nothing about the video that should deceive a viewer into thinking they can just start copying what they see in the video and be successful. I doubt you're really concerned about someone getting injured by having false confidence after watching a video like this. Your main goal seems to be to disparage the system and the practitioners.
God bless you Sifu for taking the time to transmit your wisdom to the world.
song = 鬆 = stay loose, = relaxing
thanks so much for this, this is 1 of the best lesson!
鬆(song) 沉 (chen, sinking) 勁 (jin, force) , loose, sinking force
omg this is so good!!!
Liang Sifu is my teacher's taiji brother. Wonderful to see traditional taijiquan and song being explained so clearly!
Thanks Buddy.
Gu?
Adam Mizner.
Buddy Tripp oh I read that as Liangs Sifu. I guess you meant to say Sifu Liang
@@SteveMe21685 In Chinese the name is put in front of the title.
had to stop the video just a few minutes in to say that this is one of the best martial man (and tai chi) videos I have seen. Such a rare special insight into tai chi and a very high level teacher offering top quality practical and historical knowledge openly. I am always impressed that despite just 6 years in thailand you have opened more doors to such deep knowledge than many who have studied for decades! Keep up the amazing work!!
I've been lucky enough to touch hands with Liang and I can assure you all he's the real deal. His students are very lucky :) Cheers from Argentina!
Greetings from Thailand 🇹🇭
He for sure, and Adam Mizner ...
Thierry Guth - is Adam Mizner 's lineage connected to Liang De Hua's ?
@@staffcarpenborg I don't know about Lineage, but I do know they trained together and are friends
staffcarpenborg I think Liang’s is purely yang shao hao and Adams is partly yang shao hao and partly Huang xing xian, at least
Respect to Liang De Hua, Great explanation.
I can't believe u have all these opportunities to work with these guys...thx for ur videos n thank all these Great instructors when u talk with them... 👍👍
I enjoy doing Tai Chi.The art itself has a full package with strong benefits.
This is one of the best explanation and demo for the TC Jin ever seen. I have learned a lot from this episode. Thanks ! In my experience, to correctly exercise Taiji forms benefited me physically and mentally. And there is no secret to master Taiji forms, but learning by step by step with patience. By the way, we do not have to be as good as the Sifu Liang. We can exercise Taiji to improve our body and soul. This will be much, much easier.
The application of Jin. I used to think it was all folklore. And, here it is to be seen. A miracle in itself.
Wait till you experience it for yourself.
Yes, very real and not folklore.
@@THEMARTIALMAN Your comment about the point of contact disappearing was exactly what it felt like.
it is easier to avoid than some might think...
Andrew Gohring it is in and of itself NOT a martial attacking technique so to avoid it would be within your capabilities .On the other hand as a defensive technique this bloke nailed it .My question to you is why would you think to avoid someone’s defence ?
Thankyou Martial man and sifu.
I have trained in these jins in another school. I have to say that there is no way you will learn them at fast fighting speed. In the beginning you need a willing partner who will push in one direction at the same pressure without withdrawing or removing the push. Also hopefully they will allow themselves to move to reflect how your jin is affecting them so that you see what is hardly believable because it feels like you are not doing anything. The jin in large part are qualities not applications. Then you learn to put these qualities in push hands and only then does push hands become fun. Even in push hands it's good if your teacher sets himself up to show how to put those qualities into not only the accepted shape of applications, but at any moment whatsoever and no matter where you are being touched. Then and only then could the training be carried over into slow motion then fast sparring. Or you can like myself be satisfied that you have learned something amazing that improves the quality of life and health and serves to deepen neigong and qi gong. Or do both sparring training, and neigong/qi gong if you are young unlike myself at this age. If you choose not to train sparring you can still have laughs practicing push hands with a good community of practitioners. Laughs because when you are pushed, pulled or lightly struck with jin it seems odd, funny in a strange way and the effect seems so much grander than the effort put into it.
Also without learning the Jie Jin, connecting jin you can't learn and apply the others. And to learn these you need to have them done to you and to be a willing student pushing into the teacher without trying to neutralize. Same in helping to make demos like this. Martial Man is showing respect to the teaching in letting teacher's jin affect his own stance and initial force.
I know terminology may be different so is Jin the same say Jing? Or are they two different concepts?
@@Sifu-Myers I think it depends on the character you are looking at , but I can say different than jing as in jing, qi, and shen. Although jing in this sense might be part of a foundation for applicable Jin referred to here.
@@williamcranstoun9566 Makes alot of sense I know terminology can be a bit tricky but thanks for clearing that up
Thank you so much for this. Its hard for to eloquently express these ideas to people that dont practice. This video takes care of that problem!
Very informative and clear. Thanks Kiren!
Thanks Thomas I hope you’re well.
@@THEMARTIALMAN You as well my friend! Wishing you the best this year :)
Thank you for sharing this material.
This is why such few people developed skill in the art because high level people like this dont know how to talk about it.The word passive needs to be changed to receptive.The feeling of relaxation however is emptiness void and space.This is not passive either this is the existence of non-existence.Hang up the head and sink chi to the tan tien
is not something that you do it is something that is achieved when enough relaxation happens so that the internal energy can be felt.Feeling internal energy is no big deal if your in a high speed elevator that stops and you feel the ground come up ,this is a feeling of internal energy.For those who doubt - When you jump on the earth you'll get so far off the ground. If you
jump on the moon you will go higher.This is because of the difference in the force of gravity.
Gravity is a force which creates
tension in the atmosphere.
When we reduce the tension in our bodies our movements become empowered .If I recieve any positive response that is descriptive I will write the method to achieve this. It is probably not what you think it will be
so are you saying you manipulate gravity by relaxing?
@@silatguy No, I'm saying that when you reduce the tension in your body you have more power.Tension is the internal resistance. Gravity is an external resistance.It is easier to control the internal resistance than it is to control gravity. Although you do propose an interesting concept.The body does have a magnetic field.
Can we increase our magnetic field through relaxation ? I dont know. I dont have the answer to that
Thank you Sifu Liang . Very good teaching .Travel gently
Beatiful to read commentaries, so many people understand the reality of this.
Much appreciated. Thank you
Thanks Kiren and Master Liang
HUMAN CAPITAL thank you!
This is very good lesson for where i am in my practice. I am finally starting to feel relaxation waves when i breathe going down and up my body, and I'm able to understand what he is saying on my own level, and i can appreciate this new perspective.
Thank you
I am on new level now from you and I understand much more from my level
if the only question you have after seeing this is "does this work in a cage" ....says more about you than it does about Tai Chi/jin etc. I don't get how anyone could not watch this and just respect this mans understanding , glad to see though most of the comments are giving the respect that should be due. This demo was really great
I can only guess. I think It would help in the cage, but of course you need to have other skills and training. Imagine if a big strong cage fighter goes at him punching and kicking like crazy, he would have to be able to deal with that kind of attack to be able to focus. Also throwing the opponent doesn't end the fight. You still have to know submissions or knockouts or be prepared to do ground and pound and you don't want to hurt an opponent permanently. So he has to control his energy to not cause internal organ damage etc. My guess is that if you combine internal skill with external skill then you could have an unbeatable combination, but, again, you would have to train hard all the time. One lapse of concentration could get you knocked out. Make sense? Also you can always lose concentration and get a knockout punch or liver shot that would totally screw up your energy flow. Cage fighting is very dangerous and requires a well rounded training and fitness level.
This looks great! I wonder if De Hua can turn the dude into a monkey? I learned from Master Kim-Lee in Korea about chi-gon. He could throw his chi across the room. I once saw him hit 4 people (they were standing in a straight line) at the same time from 10 feet away. He moved them back like they were pushed in the chest! Speaking to the four people later, they all said they felt him push them as if he put his hands on them! Amazing! To this day, those people cannot believe Master Lee didn't (couldn't) touch them. Master Lee taught us how to find our poles (where our energy comes from) and to close our switches to re-energize our chi! For the past 8 years, I've been on a quest in search of an answer to Who is the Master? Leroy
Great explanation for Chi. Ying/Yang/Li from 1:00-2:50 was amazing. Chi seams almost comical the way its perceived by most people because its explanation usually makes it sound impractical. But this makes it sound very practicle.
I think I would have to personally feel this in order to accept that it's real.
It isnt...
that’s the truth. and each one will give you a different feeling.
@@oakstgorillas A different feeling of being scammed out of your money.
@@brandontodd14 .... if you don’t get it you just don’t get it. this guy said and showed a lot and didn’t ask you for any money.
@@oakstgorillas LOL you can't be serious man. Please learn real martial arts
Thanks. I wish I had a teacher like that.
This guy Has so much ability, understanding, and knowledge and a great attitude. I wonder if he likes to teach because if he does then people should do whatever they have to in order to learn from him in person, if possible. It's an opportunity for anyone wanting to attain a real martial arts base. You can go anywhere in martial arts once you are learning an training hard with this skill set. Too bad I am not young, because I would go directly to the airport to go find him to learn real martial arts. I loved Thailand when I was there in my youth. It is a beautiful place with beautiful people. If course many of them have been corrupted by the western city life, but you can escape to the countryside and find peace, real peace. If you go there, stay away from the tourist destinations and find the quiet wonderful people who have kept their culture. Buddhism is fantastic because it isn't really a religion like the main ones of the world that have so much hate for other religions. Buddhism is about live and let live. Buddhist's don't seek out other religions to cause fighting. They live their lives in peace. Why did the dalaï lama have to hide to not be killed. Why would anyone want to kill a man who wanted nothing but peace and to be left alone to meditate and help others. Why would anyone want to kill a man of true peace. Thailand used to be a land of peace, and still is to sone extent, but if course, like most other places around the world, america has discovered its wealth and destroyed the culture for profit. Profit
Fantastic video. So much information. Thanks to Liang for sharing his knowledge and to The Martial Man for bringing it to us. Very inspiring I’m off to practice. 🙏🏼☯️🙂👊🏼
Hey Joanne, enjoy your training :)
Awesome very clear explanation
Glad it was helpful!
A jewel of a teaching ! Thanks for sharing
Thierry Guth thanks for watching! 👍
The same qualities Sifu Liang is talking about are what Sifu Nima also mention, along with the other masters interviewed.
The ability to 'let go', to have movement in stillness and stillness in movement. Sounds mystical and lofty.
Seeing Nima do the demo with students where he asks everyone to hold a good Tan Sau and then asks everyone to touch their bicep and tendons in the elbow joint to feel the muscular/tendon tension. He then asks them to 'let go' of that bicep and elbow tension that is required to hold the arm in that position.
That was the lightbulb moment. No one else could do it. They could all understand what was asked, it wasn't weird or mystical, but their eyes all said, 'Holy shit.... I can't turn it off!'
When he got someone to touch his biceps and elbow tendons under normal conditions and again when he 'let go', the look of shock was legit.
I tried it myself, no matter how ''relaxed' I felt, I just couldn't switch that muscular tension off to maintain the position. Therein lies the practice and skill.
It's why CST taught that SLT with no force is the pathway. Sifu Liang is also talking about the same change in quality, that dissolving of using force and muscular force and emptying that tension out. That ability to release, regardless of what system that skill comes from, is what needs to be attained.
There are many paths to it, all under many names.
Just get there.
sifu liang is really amazing
Amazing!!! Thank you very much!!!
You are welcome!
This is an amazing episode! I want to learn from this guy.
Arvin Gandha thanks for the feedback! Be sure to check out part two of this interview also.
This is Legit information. Thank you Martial Man
My pleasure!
Always worth another watch. New layers reveal or get reinforced.
I think I might work through this video with Wayne and test each other. 🙂👊🏼🙏🏼
Truly outstanding thank you for sharing freely
Jarrod Pelrine it’s my pleasure. Be sure to check out part two of this interview.
Numerous historical records and anecdotal evidence show that Yang Chengfu had great skill in push hands, but had very little combat ability. He was defeated quite easily by Wan Laisheng in the Beijing Central Park in 1926. Wan was known for his speedy footwork and rapid attacks. Many kung fu historians in China have analyzed that Yang lost due to his lack of mobility and slow reaction. Many people have speculated that Yang only inherited and passed down the long energy aspect of Taichi, and not the combat aspect of it, which is the type of short energy and light skills that Yang Luchan exhibited when he first brought Taiji to Beijing where he popularized the art.
Maybe lack of mobility and lack of combat experience. But good reactions and timing is essential for being good at push hands. Many says that he learned "The old style" but progressively left it completely and only taught his own "new style". The "old style" that was taught to only a few of his inside door students and through his uncles, was quite brutal, had a lot of combat drills and mostly practiced with full speed. There are quite a lot mentioned about what YCF learned, taught and occasionally showed off.
(You can do a Google search for: "The Chang Interview - Chang Yiu-Chun a Student of Yang Shou-Hou". ;) )
Plus he was a big guy too, right?
@@cynicalnutcase4937 Yeah, that's true. Yang Chengfu's style or what he passed down is definitely different to Yang Luchan's taiji. Weng Tonghe, an imperial tutor and a high-level government official in the Qing Dynasty witnessed a Yang Luchan fight. He described Yang Luchan as "advancing and retreating at incredible (god-like) speed, his body is agile like a monkey". This is the most credible account of Yang Luchan's display of Taiji in combat from a first-hand witness who isn't his student. It's pretty clear that Yang Chengfu doesn't possess similar abilities. The thing is, good reaction in push hands doesn't translate into good reaction in a free fight, because it's a lot easier to deal with a pushing energy which is a much slower and simpler force compared to a trained fighter throwing powerful rapid punches and kicks at you, plus you're already in contact with the opponent to listen to their movements... Anyway, I'll check out the resources you recommend :)
@@brokeheartwolf3733 He was 144kg.
Very intersting. I never heard of this. I just googled it and see that Wan practiced Ziranmen which is also an internal style. In a book of Stuart Olson is written that after Yang Shao-hou died Chengfu became traditionaly the lineage holder as a family member but many disciples thought that he wasnt that good and there were some disciple of Shaohou who were much better. They even broke with the family.
Great cultivation and wisdoms. Thank you
illuminating Movements thanks for watching!
I remember That in The Big Boss movie (Bruce lee) It Had Kungfu Master as Final Boss after Ice Factory Fight scence in thailand.
Can be Referrence To Sifu Liang De Hua so many thai fighters try him in thailand and It End Quietly.(So Dont mess with him....)
Am 70 that's how l was told, great explanation.
Thank you both for showing
Super nicely explained. Thanks for the great subtitles
Thank you for sharing these amazing experiences. I wonder which technique they use against a fast fist like those send by Bruce Lee.
Thanks for watching 👍
If you know Tai Chi and listened carefully, you should have realised that it does not depend on the speed or the force.
It is, like in all martial arts, about the timing and than doing the right thing.
Best defence is, not beeing there.😀
Fighting is fighting. All "codified" methods have flaws which can be exploited.
Eduardo Canale that would depend on the strengths of the defender .from what I’ve seen of Bruce lee on film his strengths seem to be close in speed .So I would suggest moving away a bit or probably just running .
Awesome explanation, thank you for sharing this treasure knowledge .
This is an excellent video with some key concepts described in a simple and understandable fashion while introducing the terms in a clear way. Thank you for sharing.
Tim Jahns thank you for the feedback! 👍👍👍
Thank you Keiran! I aspire to train with sifu LDH someday.
I hope you get the opportunity to attend one of his workshops in the future. You won't regret it 👌
Excellent demo 🙏
Thanks!
Thanks for publishing the info too
My pleasure.
@@THEMARTIALMAN : I hope to learn next time I am there. Good look with your journey
Thank you sir for showing us this!
Would be great to get an in-depth explanation on how jin is generated from song and the different (40) jins, because in part two sifu Liang states verbatim "It's only one Jin actually". Which is what i understood as well. Maybe it's the applications of the jin which make it feel as if it's a different expression?
Always eager for a new show 👍
Lot's more to come on this channel.
Thank you for the video, and I hope someday you can interview Master
Chen Zhong Hua as well.
Thanks for sharing!
I like when he pretends to be pushed back by a magical force at 4:55.
Thanks for the video, make a clear explanation also regarding Song
i think, he really explains it very well, but i still did not understand.
should i do zhan zhuang every day to get to the point of understanding?
Absolutely wonderfully detailed explanation and description of these principles. Thank you so much! Really great channel, BTW.
Douglas Newman don’t forget to subscribe 😁
Wonderful! What a great way to share difficult principles
"Principles" my ass. It's called flexible hips and having the physical ability to elongate one's lumbar while on their feet.
@@andrewgohring7625 can you do it ?
@@cloudexplorer5920 Since I was 16. It's not special. And it does not play out the way he displays it, under pressure.
@@andrewgohring7625 How much time does it take to master the same technique ?
@@cloudexplorer5920 It ultimately depends on age. Or at the very least, how supple you were to begin with as a child, and were able to retain it as an adult. The younger you are, the easier it is to loosen your lower spine and coccyx, while standing up. That is the principle physical requirement to do these things. Physical. Of course, Adam and company obfuscate this with verbal mysticism ("chi", "jin", etc.) To be fair, most Chinese fall for that crap too. Understanding has nothing to do with language or culture. Most people who pursue this stuff began so in their late 20's or beyond. Well after they've already lost what is required. Of course, there are some folks who otherwise maintained flexible legs and hips, and some of them were lucky enough to have (literally) stumbled into it. But make no mistake, the majority of seekers are fleeced. Chinese call this the "Iron Rice Bowl" while talking up "wu de". Talk about cynical... But to answer more directly- if you can do side and front splits at least 70%, and can drop your lower spine in horse stance without "stacking" it, you can learn this in five minutes.
This was great! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Wow I love this MASTER
Very interesting video! Thank you!
Thanks for watching 👍
I've gotten to where I've trained enough years to grasp what he is doing. Yes, I understood it intellectually a long time ago, but it's only now that I'm really starting to get it, and I've found out what people have always said, it's just simple physics. It's nothing more than practicing long enough to be able to relax totally and sink your self into the ground like a cat not wanting to be picked up while disrupting the other person's standing structure.
It is possible to see chi emitting from the hands of the taichi master. How long does a taichi practitioner has an ability to see chi from his own zhan zhuang practice ? What's the criteria and years of practice to be able to see chi with their naked eyes.
Chi is the concept of controlling our breath, which is not easy. Buddhist do this, yogis who do yoga do that, athletes learn the basics of controlling their breathing. The way it’s taught here is just in a different way
I would be interested to see this style of martial arts up against fast punches to the face, UFC, etc. it would be the ultimate to see it used in real combat, up until now mostly demonstrations, which are limited in what they can show.. I imagine a future where we have a Tai Chi UFC champ lol
it would be extremely hard to use it when punches are thrown at lightning fast speeds. HOWEVER, this is very easy to use when grappled, nordwingchun has shown some demonstrations where his arm is behind is back but the much bigger person behind him still gets moved around effortlessly.
ua-cam.com/video/c7deT2SPPkI/v-deo.html
@@Aznbomb3r LOL get one of his arms, and his opposite leg, and it all goes to shit.
That will be the day lolol. A Tai Chi UFC champion. I'd fucking blow my brains out
You can, just it is hard & need mastery
When my shifu's shifu show his face people will fly back six meters, all his students had this skill, it doesn't matter if you believe or not, it was there, it has been there...
You should see my face in the morning..
This explained by resultant vectors in physics
OK cool, it is good for health and is interesting skill in domain that it reveals possibilities of human body, but is it applicable in situations like fighting?
Observe and seek to understand. You will see how well it does work in reality. Problem has been the host of those who lack proper instruction. It has been the trouble for Tai Ji Quan for a long time.
Wow 👏 Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching.
great video , this guy is good and well spoken
Steven Edmund?!..... That name doesn't suit you well......I will call you Saddam Karim Al Baraki......it goes really well with your thumbnail photo. No need to thank me for I allways love to help people who have these kind of problem so you are wellcome....so how are you doing mister Saddam Karim Al Baraki?! I hope that you are ok. If I can help you then please let me know. Remember mister Saddam Karim Al Baraki, you have got a friend in me.
@@dekatvanlilith6494 I suggest you get your eyes tested ..... for that matter .... an MRI on your cranium too.No need to thank me.... blah blah blah blllaaahh blah
@@stevenedmund5680 😂👍✌️
Great video!! Thanks
Thanks for the positive feedback 👍
Thanks. I understand that jin is central. But I have one question and a request. He talked about 'magnitude'...or more precisely 'changing the magnitude' of the vector of force coming in. He showed various applications of jin, left, right, forward, back but the magnitude question wasn't explained, I believe. It mihht have beeb better to talk about where exactle the vectors go and describe how they are transformed. For instance, changing the attackers hand was not explained but this was the first thing you can see him doing. This is also found in aikido and it is about redirecting the attack, so you dont receive the full force...even when part of his talk was about 'receiving'. But, of course, in english the idea of redirecting seems contrary to redirecting...which we, in the wst, tend to think of as an activity and therefore an active action as opposed to passively receiving. I guess part of tue difficulty in doing and teaching taiji is that we are using unfamiliar concepts like relaxed-doing, receiving-redirecting. In our minds, we think action and reception are two separate and different things. To be honest, I didnt learn anything new in this video. The title, I thought, was a bit misleading. Finally, someone is going to show us what jin means...but no, he shows but does not tell.
this was so powerful i could feel the chi come though my computer screen and knock me back against the wall
One of the best demonstrations. Keep it up :)
Thank you.
Yang Cheng Fu s Tai Chi was developed mainly for health purposes. Remember, the chinese were called "the sick men of Asia ", at that time. So, Taijiquan was adapted to fit the people's needs.
There is a great misunderstanding about Tai Chi in today's Martial Arts Community. We have got to remember that the old Tai Chi Masters from 19 and 20 Centuries did change the Art many times and held back knowledge when passing to foreigners and hid the Martial Applications.
Tui Shou was intended to practice Dim Mak, to map the points, and not to exercise Hua, pushing and pulling. It's that simple.
Stick and Follow means: strike the attacking limb and follow the attacker with a sudden burst of speed and power hitting the Dim Mak points or weak areas.
Put the explosive-short fajing of Taiji to Wing Chun Kung Fu and you'll see what Taijiquan is like in combat.
The Eli Montaigue school of Tai Chi has the closest approach to the REAL TAI CHI in my humble opinion..
Everardo Bueno part of the reason the were called sick was because of Britain’s push of opioids on the population.
Brendan Cabral. You are right. That was a sad period in the history of China when the foreigners came with drugs and the chinese corrupted officers led them in into the country. Even, Yang Cheng Fu was opium smoker. But, it is what it is. Thank you for your comment.
@Aston Price-Lockhart
Thank you for your comment. The research, study, and practice of Chinese Kung Fu is amazing!.
That is not what stick and follow means. Fajing is actually very basic in taiji
No disrespect but I’ve seen Montaigue videos and it doesn’t even look like good taiji...it looks more like wing chun and I don’t see him showing any type of internal skill
Just my opinion
Earl Montague (Eli's father) claimed he was taught taijiquan in Australia by a Chinese man who in reality actually never left China and never taught any westerners, claimed to know Yang Luchan' s "form" then proceed to perform what can only be his own variation of Yang Cheng Fu's form and to have traveled to Wudang temple where the monks had apparently been "waiting for him" where they then taught him everything they knew. I am not saying he had no skill but he was basically full of shit, i certainly wouldnt say he and his surviving school after his death are the holders of real taijiquan. He was just an old hippie from the Northern rivers area of NSW Aust who learned some martial arts and was able to convince people with bs like a used car salesman.
Why do i say it was not Lang Luchan's form? Because there is no record of what it looked like and there was probably no official Yang "form" then just a set of postures that could be strung together to train the pronciples. Luchan learned the principles of Chen family boxing(it was not called taijiquan then) and was an acomplished long boxer so his postures were probably closer to Chen with a long boxing influence than what we know as Yang today, this being further refined by his sons Jian Hao and Pan Hao through to Shao Hao and Cheng Fu. Cheng Fu's form being the domminant form today and the only Yang form being taight to westerners in Australia at the time Earl would have learned of taiji.
pretty good👍
Thanks!
A highly skilled expert of Yang style Tai Chi Chuan uses less physical exertion and movement than a highly skilled expert of Chen style Tai Chi Chuan. A Yang style expert uses less energy, but more mind to control or transform into negative an opponent's energy.
Amazing! Hope he teach some fundamentals!!
Excellent
Shuji Ling 👍👍👍
In order to feel the top of the head I should br straight, snd inverselly?
Put aside philosophy, its a pure physical trick. No harder to learn than contact juggling (which is hard and tricky by the way). But to apply it against quick unpredictable attack U need to have supercomputer in the head, calculating real time angles of optimal transformation (Hua).
Special skill is very expensive "not everyone can buy" 🔥🔥🔥❤️❤️❤️
Douchebag teachers do string students out for years to the tune of many $$$. I have no idea if Liang is like this. But the truth is, if you are flexible within a large range of dynamic tension (SUPPLE) you could learn it in five minutes.
@@andrewgohring7625 sorry I mean this is a genuine traditional martial arts with high techniques that are rarely encountered and not carelessly passed down, usually the master chooses his student.
@@andrewgohring7625 but recently some traditional martial arts began to open up to avoid extinction of their martial arts
@@faridginanjar2562 The original Yangs proved themselves left and right. Adam hides behind moral posturing. THAT is what is killing the art.
Thanks for sharing, Master LDH is already at a high-level Taichi. The Song chen jin is depend on his Neigung level.
I really enjoy it. There are still a lot of good Taichi Master in Shanghai, hope you can come to visit one day.
i didn't understand completely, but i think this will provide me with a mystery to solve once and for all. i can tell this is the real deal
Super brother
Thanks!
Welcome sir you are my best teacher
Very cool.❤
Amazing!
Martial Man this is real?
Luis Antonio it is 100% real. I would never publish anything that wasn’t.
Liang is a lot more honest than Adam Mizner. Liang provides real explanations. Whereas Adam gives mere descriptions- by design of course. He's all about the "Iron Rice Bowl", which is just asinine since it can be broken by lead this day and age.
I would argue Adam Mizner is responsible in sharing things only when the person is ready to understand. It's nice to see Sifu Liang share all these things. But it is mostly useless to most taiji practitioners and might be confusing if they don't have decent fundamentals.
Adam Mizner's teachings is not expensive compared to many so called masters out there. He is generous in the stuff he shares and the price he charges.
Also why people expect all these information to be free of charge puzzles me. Most knowledge worth knowing comes at a cost. Why you're using the word "asinine" in this case is weird dude.
It's like I'm an artist who spent my life drawing and painting for a living. And I teach my skill at a price. But someone like you comes along and calls me asinine for not sharing knowledge I've spent 20 years acquiring for free. Strange.
Adam Mizner is really interested in money this is why
@@krenx You are egregiously full of shit here. "sharing things only when the person is ready to understand" LOL You mean having "open" hips and shoulders, so that the spine can fully flex? I used to lay out my "resume" in these matters, but sleeping dogs are just that.
I learned these things for practically NOTHING, from "nobodies" deep inside of China. Rubes like you tend to assume that if someone has high skill, that they are public and visible and "famous" like Adam and Liang. The total opposite is the actual truth. You'll never know.
Adam teaches kiddie stuff to stiff westerners who don't have an intrinsic chance of doing these things, ever. You included. You will spin in circles for years and years before you realize that your only hope would have been to start in your youth.
People pay to to learn to paint? How the blind lead each other... Have fun paying for Adam's bacon, sucker.
@@andrewgohring7625 Wow, so angry. Whatever art you're doing is clearly not helping you. Have some tea and chill dude.
Sounds like you have full knowledge of the entire background of Adam, my life and sifu Liang's life and experiences all in your head. You must be a master of some sorts to attain that kind of depth into our lives. Have fun with whatever illusions you have cooked up about people in and outside of your life. But I recommend don't swim in that pool for too long. Not healthy.
Peace and love 🙏
@@krenx It's called pattern recognition. Emotion is not present here. Adam is a fraud as a teacher, and his followers are chumps. Just facts.
Jin == The Force. Taiji Master = Jedi Master.
May the Jin be with You.
Is he living in Thailand now??
Hey that was cool. Lots of energy control and redirection.
So sung is everything,more sung more jin,is it a reversal of energy or a transmission of your own enegy? Is chi and muscled contraction the same force. Like as much sneeze
More song (sung), more Jin is true but you need ting too and to be able to move chi through the body for it all to work. Muscle contraction is not it. Some muscles will inevitably contract as your posture changes as evidenced when Liang leans forward to push Kieron back (when Kieron is pressing on Liangs chest) but the muscles engaged are only to hold the body up and in position. The force is generated through openness in the joints/muscles/white tissues etc. Which is nigh on impossible to understand without experiencing but it happens
Excuse me if you don't mind answering, but how did you get the money to get all of these interviews before the subscription plans?
I worked my ass off nonstop. You can read more here in my recent Facebook post. facebook.com/themartialman/photos/a.149416868808198/1069764463440096/?type=3
@@THEMARTIALMAN Thank you for sharing.
The Iron Sheik you’re welcome
may i ask why you are going backward while pushing him
The teacher is basically grounding himself down, which makes him harder to push and his hands are also adding a push down and back. It’s a philosophy of how to be like a mountain or a boulder, all the weight and gravity is pushing down
I think this stuff is you need to feel it to understand it.
Words and visuals aren't enough.