Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Our Academy
  • Tai Chi
    • What is the Art of Tai Chi - Tai Chi Academy
    • What is Hun Yuan Tai Chi?
    • Benefits
    • Tai Chi Testimonials
    • Why is Tai Chi Practised Slowly?
  • Qigong
    • Wuji Gong for Self Healing, Jan
    • What is Qigong?
    • Healing Arts of Emei Qigong
    • Energy Makeup Analysis
  • Online Courses
    • Tai Chi Level 1 for Beginners
    • Relax & Refresh
    • Tai Chi Level 2
    • Tai Chi Level 3
    • Tai Chi Level 4
    • Tai Chi Refinement with Brett
    • Tai Chi Refinement with Fontane
  • Classes in Canberra
  • Gallery
  • Workshop Bookings
  • Articles

Tai Chi & Wu Dao Gong

Submitted by everyadmin on Mon, 04/30/2012 - 16:15

How I Have Benefitted from My Training in Tai Chi and Wu Dao Gong

Instructor Lis talks to advanced student Monique.

When did you start Tai Chi and why?

I started Yang style Tai Chi in 1998, in my 30's. You were my first teacher, Lis! Since then, however, there has been a series of fits and starts, including the birth of my child along the way.

Reasons for starting were both physical and mental. I had developed a creaky neck which came as a bit of a surprise, and I wanted to do something about it. I had also been looking for a way to get fit for a while and this was a trigger to finally start something specific. I had also developed an interest in and a respect for mind-body medicine and was very curious about Tai Chi in this regard.

You’ve been practising for a long time now. What makes you keep going?

Reasons for continuing include basic enjoyment and definite positive results. When I first saw the Yang style, I was instantly captivated by the beauty and fluidity of the movements. The naming of the movements was also fascinating, with the knowledge there was always more to learn behind each. (Tai Chi is like a window to another culture and another time.) This made Tai Chi so interesting, especially when compared to the one-dimensional names and approach of something like the 5BX / XBX exercise routine. Tai Chi is addictive in a good way. In some ways, especially in the beginning, I feel I have been making up for the absence of childhood extra-curricular activities (e.g. ballet or callisthenics, with Tai Chi as a kind of slow choreography).

What benefits have you discovered from your training?

Physical benefits: strong legs, better flexibility and good balance.

Mental benefits: strong sense of calm, especially after a good session, feeling light in body and mind (a natural high). In the first year of practice, there was a very noticeable improvement in my flow of thoughts for a research report I was writing at the time; my appetite also seemed to be very healthy.

Some students find the Qigong (meditation) the most difficult part of learning Tai Chi. Others love it from the start. Do you enjoy the Qigong?

Yes and No. It really is the hardest part of the training. When I attend more regularly to it, I feel more calm and focused (and virtuous for having done it!). Enjoyment comes more often after the training, but sometimes during it as well. It demands correct posture like nothing else and really helps in this regard, along with its other benefits. I found the earlier grounding in Qigong, with the sequential checking of points of relaxation down through the whole body a great help.

The Academy offers many extra courses to enhance and deepen our students knowledge. Have you taken advantage of any of these?

Various extra courses I have done over the years include (aside from
straight Yang and Hun Yuan Tai Chi classes, or Wu Dao Gong classes):

  • Yang style special workshop with Grandmaster Fu Sheng Yuan
  • Taoist Qigong with Fei Wang
  • Tai Chi Sword with Fontane
  • Ba Gua workshop with Grandmaster Ma Chuan Xu
  • Hun Yuan Qigong with Brett
  • Hun Yuan Cannon Fist 32 Form with Brett and Fontane
  • Silk Reeling with Fontane
  • Bang (Stick) with Fontane
  • Yang refinement with Chris
  • Yang refinement with Brett
  • Guarding the Temple Form with Chris and Justin

Wu Dao Gong, the martial arts training, is much more demanding physically than Tai Chi. What made you want to try it?

I wanted more of a challenge, to extend myself and realize more of my untapped potential; would I be able to cope? Also a basic curiosity about and interest in the training, learning more in-depth about Tai Chi and its allied arts; getting closer to the source.

And how are you coping with it? How is it?

Vigorous and demanding; initially quite exhausting. It has opened the way to strengthen and flex the upper body much more, as well as the lower body. My hand/finger strength has been a noticeable improvement, the fingers feel more solid. Wu Dao Gong has brought to the fore the importance of pacing oneself, of cultivating reserves of energy, and of good nutrition as fuel and as an aid to recovery.

Have you found the training beneficial?

Benefits include an increasing ability to cope with the training, enjoyment in learning new forms and techniques, having an outlet to let fly! The commitment and inspiration of the teachers also rubs off. I find I am exercising muscles that I haven't been aware of previously. After some years of the slow, gentle Tai Chi movements, doing movements at least with the intent of speed and force is a lot of fun. It's a great outlet for the tensions of life. The body contact aspects of Wu Dao Gong have opened up a whole new area for development and I am becoming increasingly comfortable with this aspect.

Has the Wu Dao Gong training helped your Tai Chi? In what ways?

The Wu Dao Gong has helped my Tai Chi and vice-versa, so I see it as a 2-way street. Wu Dao Gong has made the Tai Chi seem more purposeful and shows the power or force behind it. It helps place the various Tai Chi forms in a bigger context of a range of training types and options. Rather than leave Tai Chi behind, it makes me value it all the more. On the other hand, Tai Chi (along with all the extra courses done) has provided a series of basics that translate well to Wu Dao Gong: e.g. the central role of Qigong as underpinning all else; good posture, a certain degree of strength and flexibility to be worked on further, particularly leg strength, and basic stances. With the proviso of course that the mental knowledge of all these things is one thing, translating it all into the physical body is entirely another.

(This is an actual interview, but the name has been changed for reasons of privacy.)

article_type: 

  • interview

Interviews

Finding His Passion - Brett
Self Development - Chris
My Tai Chi Journey - Lis

Articles


China trip

Managing Parkinson's
My Tai Chi Journey - Lis
Recovery from Accident
Wu Dao Gong - Fei Wang
Engages the Mind
Better Coordination and Focus Leads to Better Daily Life Skills
Enhances My Life & Work
Throwing off Stress
Training - I Know Myself
Great Rewards
Helps to Keep Me Young
A Fresh Outlook on Life
Maintaining a Balance
Finding His Passion - Chief Instructor Brett Wagland
Path of Self Development - Chris
Life Changing Experience
Full Use of My Right Hand
Progress towards Recovery with the Help of Qigong
Importance of My Time
Training Saved the Day
Surfing Your Life
Train Well and Live Well with Internal Arts
Can You Steal My Art?!
Can You Feel the Qi?
Calming the Mind and Relaxing the Body
How Tai Chi and Wu Dao Gong improve your Sporting Performance
What is the Difference between Fancy Forms and Gong Fu?
Reflections on the Tai Chi & Meditation Retreat, April 2016
Moving with Awareness Enhances Vitality
Tai Chi: The Path To Freedom
Understanding and Achieving Different Levels of Skill
Reflections on the 11th Tai Chi & Meditation Retreat
Xiu Lian: Self Cultivation
The Yin and Yang in Tai Chi
The Tao of Success in Life
What is the Purpose of Practising Tai Chi Slowly?
Qigong: the Art of Living Well in Body, Mind and Spirit
Tai Chi as Calligraphy
Energy for Life
Transforming the Body from Weakness to Strength
China Trip - 2017 Highlights
China Trip - 2013 Highlights
China Trip - 2011 Highlights
China Trip - 2009 Highlights
China Trip - 2007 Highlights
China Trip - 2006 Highlights
China Trip - 2005 Highlights
China Trip - 2004 Highlights
China Trip - 2003 Highlights

 

 

  • Tai Chi Academy
  • PO Box 70
  • Woden ACT 2606
  • Australia

 

  • Phone 02 6296 1357
  • Email us

  

 

 

ecommerce payment gateway by e-Path

Find us on:

ecommerce payment gateway by e-PathFacebook