This is the most unique and straightforward explanation for training and application of Peng that I've seen, and I scour the internet for solid training instructions that aren't behind a pay wall. This truly feels like inner-door teaching- as in, it feels so rich in information, and potentially demystifying for any outside onlookers trying to understand Taijichuan, a commonly misunderstood yet powerful martial art.
I am practicing Taichi since past 15 years and your video has added to my knowledge about application in a good form. Kindly make more and more such videos on various Taichi applications. Thank you 🙏
You are one of the few people I’ve seen mention the idea of concept-based martial arts. This is extremely important, an ignorance of this fact is the reason why many people think that most traditional martial arts are impractical in a real situation. I was a competitive boxer for about 5 years before I branched off in to martial arts. I did tons of full contact sparring against completely noncompliant training partners, so I can tell right away if something can be used in the fast paced chaos of self defense; understanding that many Chinese martial arts are concept based has allowed me to derive practical, useful, and efficient techniques from the arts. It really is the key. Thanks for the great video. I subscribed
This is amazing stuff! I would however disagree on that push not being for fighting, as I've had a similar move done to me before. It was only roughhousing and my dad didn't push hard but I was sent reeling backwards with no traction and plowed into a table. It sucked but it was educational, and my dad isn't even a Tai Chi practitioner XD It showed the potential of it. If a skilled player catches you at a bad angle they could hurl you off your feet or send you stumbling, and if they've good aim and good spatial awareness then the area you're in and everything and every one in it becomes a minefield.
@@kungfuronin I feel you! Often got the same problem...one way I was suggested to use is to put them in the upper part of the screen, often the colour of the sky is more uniform and doesn't change pattern so much. Otherwise in most editing programs you can enclose the subs in a darker or lighter panel, in order to make them stand out regardless of the background. Hope it could help, anyway is no big deal, the content is more important and yours is great! 💪
This is the most unique and straightforward explanation for training and application of Peng that I've seen, and I scour the internet for solid training instructions that aren't behind a pay wall. This truly feels like inner-door teaching- as in, it feels so rich in information, and potentially demystifying for any outside onlookers trying to understand Taijichuan, a commonly misunderstood yet powerful martial art.
Thank you!
I am practicing Taichi since past 15 years and your video has added to my knowledge about application in a good form. Kindly make more and more such videos on various Taichi applications. Thank you 🙏
Thank you! Will do
Wow this is amazing! 👍 Keep up the great work 🔥
Thanks! Love your videos too!
You are one of the few people I’ve seen mention the idea of concept-based martial arts. This is extremely important, an ignorance of this fact is the reason why many people think that most traditional martial arts are impractical in a real situation. I was a competitive boxer for about 5 years before I branched off in to martial arts. I did tons of full contact sparring against completely noncompliant training partners, so I can tell right away if something can be used in the fast paced chaos of self defense; understanding that many Chinese martial arts are concept based has allowed me to derive practical, useful, and efficient techniques from the arts. It really is the key. Thanks for the great video. I subscribed
Thank you! Yes to understand something one must understand the layers. And the concepts are the most important
Great content, Mr. Ronin!
thank you!
Thank you for nice explanation
You are welcome
This is amazing stuff!
I would however disagree on that push not being for fighting, as I've had a similar move done to me before. It was only roughhousing and my dad didn't push hard but I was sent reeling backwards with no traction and plowed into a table.
It sucked but it was educational, and my dad isn't even a Tai Chi practitioner XD
It showed the potential of it. If a skilled player catches you at a bad angle they could hurl you off your feet or send you stumbling, and if they've good aim and good spatial awareness then the area you're in and everything and every one in it becomes a minefield.
Very good! If I could suggest you to make the subtitles darker next time, I’m sure they could be more helpful ☺️
Ok, thank you
I tried making them black, but my pants were black so it didn’t help either 😅
@@kungfuronin I feel you! Often got the same problem...one way I was suggested to use is to put them in the upper part of the screen, often the colour of the sky is more uniform and doesn't change pattern so much. Otherwise in most editing programs you can enclose the subs in a darker or lighter panel, in order to make them stand out regardless of the background. Hope it could help, anyway is no big deal, the content is more important and yours is great! 💪
@@kungfuronin You can use drop shadows to your captions. It'll help. 😁
Excellent
Thanks!
❤❤❤
Best❤
Thank you!
🎉🎉
Thank you!
🔥
🔥🔥🔥