Below is an excerpt from a post over at Tai Chi Notebook. The topic is the mistaken notion in some internal martial arts circles that once you have taken your opponent's balance, the transaction is finished.There is more to it than that.
The full post may be read here.
I had an interesting chat with another Tai Chi teacher this week.
Generally, Tai Chi teachers are nice people who have trained hard at
something for a number of years and developed a lot of skill in it.
They’re often not that into the martial side of the art, (even if they
say they are), yet they’ve managed to pick up a lot of what I call “Tai
Chi Miasma” along the way.
(If you want to know what a Miasma is, I do a podcast
about the subject and how it reverberates through human history. Click
the link above. A brief summation of Tai Chi Miasma would be, “a set of
unconscious and often faulty assumptions about combat influenced by Tai
Chi training”, but I’d also have to include a lot of Chinese miasma
about yin and yang, qi and tao that was incorporated into Tai Chi by the
influence of the Neo Confucian Zhu Xi amongst the intellectual class.)
For example, I find that there’s a pervasive belief amongst Tai Chi
practitioners that the fight is effectively over once you have taken
your balance. They’ll say things like, “once I’ve got you off balance I
can walk you around the room”.
I’m sorry to break it to you (pun intended) but no, the fight is not over just because you have broken my balance!
It’s not over even if you get me off balance and whack me in the
face, unless I’m unconscious or too hurt to continue by your deadly 5
point exploding palm technique.
Yes, I’m sure you’ve seen your master controlling people with the
lightest of touches and walking them around the room in a wrist lock or
arm control of some kind, but that’s happening in a controlled training environment. In real life, it’s not like that.
Just watch any combat sport with live training against resistance.
Say wrestling or judo.
The players are in a constant state of flux.
They are losing their balance and regaining it over and over. Often they
willingly sacrifice their balance for a superior position.
They get thrown, they get taken down, they get pinned, but they fight
their way back up and go again. The fight is not over just because one
person takes the other’s balance, however skilfully or with the lightest
of touches they did it.
“Ah!”, they say, “but once you get them off balance it’s easy to keep them off balance. ”
No, no it’s not.
Just look at MMA. MMA is an even better example than pure grappling
arts because it involves strikes. Sometimes the strikes are controlled
and orderly, but a lot of the time, especially after people get hurt and
tired, there are wild punches being thrown looking for a KO, resulting
in people falling all over the place, people slipping, kicks missing,
etc.
Great advice for beginners who want to understand and train.
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