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Sound Boxing is Directed by the Waist

By srmoody April 25, 2022 Leave a Comment

Excerpts from Chinese Boxing by Robert W. Smith.

“The waist is the foundation of all bodily movement … To fight with arms or legs independently of the waist is the mark of the perpetual beginner.”

“Sound boxing is rooted in the feet, sprouts in the legs, is directed by the waist, and functions through the fingers.”

“In Tai Chi, according to Cheng Man Ch’ing, ‘mastery’ comes by ‘quiet minding’ and ‘investing in loss.’ And with time.”

“To achieve success, you must relax everything.”

Cheng Man Ch’ing said, when an outsider scoffed: “One must be kind to blind men.”


Robert W. Smith (December 27, 1926 – July 1, 2011) was an American martial artist and writer, most noted for his prodigious output of books and articles about the Asian martial arts and their masters. Smith’s writing was an important factor in the spread of Asian martial arts such as judo, karate, and taijiquan into the postwar United States.

Filed Under: Inspiration

Gurus

By Steven Moody February 9, 2021 Leave a Comment

Gurus are people who may genuinely have insights and experience but they are “still susceptible to all of the normal human failings of greed and narcissism and there really is no circumstance where you can more fully exploit your egocentric desires…than being a guru – its like the ultimate rock star experience, especially in a traditional context where you getting this sort of Eastern authoritarian very hierarchical structure imposed on the relationship between teacher and disciple……I think it’s a relationship that needs a modern rethinking…I think you just have to lose the hierarchy and think of a teacher as one who has an expertise…they have more experience in something than you do and you want to learn this thing but this like learning to play the piano or to hit a golf ball …something that doesn’t have the same component of projection…the crazy dynamics.”

Neuroscientist Sam Harris on The Kevin Rose Show

We might think about this idea in our relationship to our Sifus (and other people and groups we admire with great passion). I’ve seen some some interesting (and sometimes destructive and debilitating and distorted) relationships between students and their teachers in martial arts, this desire to put the teacher on a pedestal and to believe they have magic powers and are some sort of elevated being. The more I learn the mechanics and developmental processes behind martial arts, the more I realized that fighting is just a skill that can be learned, like playing the piano. In some cases, it can take a very long time.  Some people have more aptitude and some are willing to put in a lot more work than others.  So in the edge cases, when you run into someone that is way more skilled than you, maybe even more skilled than you thought possible, they might start to seem capable of feats bordering on the magical.

“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
Science Fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke

Fighting skills are like learning a musical instrument. You can learn to make beautiful and amazing music that is magical, but it is not magic. No one is thinking that their piano teacher is some sort of higher being. We are often looking for something and someone to believe in and we find people who have knowledge and skills we admire and we put aside some of our rational faculties and in some cases throw our lives on the pyre for the person we admire.  But they are always just people.  There is this concept called “levels of development” in psychology.  It describes the fact that people can often be better than average or even a genius in one area, but under-developed in another.  So they may be a martial genius, but bad at business.  Or they might be self-absorbed.  They might not be the sort of person who has the best interests of their students at heart.  They might be more interested in showing off and cultivating awe than in communicating how it all works and how to get to where they are.

Something to think about!

Filed Under: Inspiration

I Move First

By Steven Moody February 15, 2016 Leave a Comment

“If my opponent does not move, then I do not move.
At my opponent’s slightest move, I move first.”
Wu Yu-hsiang

“Often it is in the very first instant, the intention to move, in which technique is lost.”
Joanne Elphinston

“Success is the progressive realization of a worthy goal.”
Earl Nightingale, Lead the Field

Taking Position in WIng CHun

Filed Under: Inspiration

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Hi. I'm Steve, a professional researcher. I've studied Chinese martial arts for over 20 years. During that time, I've learned from some of the best teachers in the world (including Greg LeBlanc, Gary Lam, and Bernard Langan). Plus, I've done hundreds of hours of research into fight science. This website contains the best of what I've learned. Contact: steve@snakevscrane.com

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