The Flower and Root of Taiji

Managing Injury, Improving Fundamental Movement and Building Strength Through Tai Chi:

… A lot of people come to learn Tai Chi obsessed with learning the form. The form is like the flower of the plant. If you want to give someone something that looks good, give them the flower, but the flower soon dies. If you want to give them skill, teach them the root. The root is the ugliest part of the plant, but that’s the wellspring from which flowers come from all the time.

Practical Method Progress Stages

Practical Method Progress Stages

… Stay the course. This means continue to focus on the same movements, principles and ways of practice, no matter what. This is the time everything is boring. This is the time you will deviate (come up with your own versions of understanding and create new styles)

I can see a lot of connections with my own taiji journey. Stay the course …

Don’t Move

Watching the video above of Master Chen Zhonghua providing form correction on White Crane Spreads its Wings (Bai He Liang Chi) brings back many memories of the workshop I attended.  Often times, you would hear Master Chen tell someone to do something, but then tell them “Don’t move”. It’s like a verbal and physical paradox, yet when viewed from a different perspective, it’s clear what Master Chen is stating. When he says, “Don’t move”, it literally means, “Don’t move”. ;)