TAIJIQUAN
FOR HEALTH, COMBAT AND SPIRITIAL CULTIVATION
Taijiquan
for Health
This
of course does not mean that you cannot practise Taijiquan for health.
Indeed most people who practise Taijiquan all over the world today
do so for health reasons, and Taijiquan is excellent for promoting
health. But you should remember the following two points if you want
more benefits from your Taijiquan training. One, Taijiquan is basically
a martial art, and two, even if your main intention of practising
Taijiquan is for health and not for combat, you should practise it
as a martial art.
This
paradox is actually easily understandable. If you practise Taijiquan
as a dance, which in my opinion is not a wise thing to do and moreover
is insulting to all the great Taijiquan masters in the past who have
bequieted to us this wonderful martial art, you will get the benefits
that a dance will give, such as elegant movement, loosening joints
and gentle blood circulation. Ibut if you wish to have the kind of
radiant physical, emotional and mental health that characterize accomplished
martial artists, you have to practise Taijiquan as a martial art.
Practising
Taijiquan as a Martial Art
A martial
artist has to be fit and healthy. otherwise he will be unable to fight
well, or the martial art he practises is not wholesome. Different
martial arts have different ways of training. In some arts, the practitioners
have to strike sandbags, lift weights and often sustain hits in sparring.
If you want powerful strikes, strong muscles and do not mind some
injury sustained in sparring (which is often unattended to), you may
choose such martial arts.
But if
you prefer a more gentle approach to developing power and stamina,
as well as calmness and mental freshness (which are not readily found
in martial arts that emphasize aggressiveness and brutality), practising
Taijiquan as a martial art is an excellent choice. Hits are sometimes
sustained in Taijiquan sparring too, but unlike in many other martail
arts where such hits are routinely left untreated, such accidental
injury which is far less often in Taijiquan than in most other arts,
is relieved by the internal energy flow which forms an integral part
of Taijiquan training.
How can
a student tell whether he is practising Taijiquan as a dance or as
a martial art? It is actually quite easy, although it is amazing how
very few students have given a thought to it. If much of the training
time is given to performing beautiful external forms, with little
or no training to develop internal force and combat efficiency, it
is likely to be a Taiji dance. If after learning the external forms,
the onus of the training is to develop internal force and combat efficiency,
Taijiquan is practised as a martial art, which was also the way all
great Taijiquan masters practised it in the past.
Taijiquan
for Spiritual Cultivation
Yet,
more than an excellent martial art, Taijiquan is a programme for spiritual
cultivation, irrespective of race, culture and religion. Of course,
not many people are ready for, or interested in, spiritual cultivation;
that is the reason why this spiritual aspect of Taijiquan is seldom
discussed and little known. Actually, spiritual cultivation was the
original aim of Taijiquan when it was first evolved from Shaolin Kung
Fu by Zhang San Feng. The concern of this great Taoist master far
surpassed petty fighting; he developed Taijiquan to further his spiritual
quest to merge with the great void.
Some
Taijiquan exponents, especially those of the Chen style, regonize
Chen Wang Ting instead of Zhang San Feng as the First Patriarch of
Taijiquan. Chen Wang Ting was a great scholar-general at the end of
the Ming Dynasty. If you examine his poems you can find much evidence
that his main concern, like that of Zhang San Feng a few centuries
before him, was spiritual development rather than martial efficiency.
The following lines from his poem are illustrative:
Now
I only have the 'Classic of Yellow Palace'
to accompany me.
In times of leisure I invent martial art,
In times of activity I farm the fields,
And teach children and grandchildren
to be strong and healthy
to meet life's expediencies.
Practising
Taijiquan is helpful if you are interested in spiritual cultivation.
If you can attain the advanced level of Taijiquan training whereby
your form, energy flow and mind have beome one, you may have direct
experiences that you are actually more than your physical body, thus
giving you experiential result of spiritual cultivation which many
people merely read about in books.