Sunday 25 October 2015

External Comes First


又有三步睡功夫。一曰仰臥,兩腿直,十足指回勾腰控,存想湧泉,雙手搭扣撐住;二曰左偏臥,頭枕左足尖,左手搬左足跟,右換如之;三曰伏臥,雙手抱頭,足跟朝天,十足指尖用力向地,存想泥丸。隨便臥時,頭腰腿要三直*
There are also the three "lying down" skills. First, the one on the back, legs straight, the ten toes hooking through the waist, keeping in mind the Gushing Spring (涌泉, acupoint located in the middle of the foot), the hands locked together to support; second, on the left side, the head lying on the extremity of the left foot, the left hand pulling the left heel, then doing exactly the same on the right side; third, on the stomach, two hands holding the head, the feet arch pointing towards the sky and the ten toes vigorously pointing towards the ground, keeping in mind the Mud Pellet (Upper Cinnabar Field also called sometimes the Third Eye). However one is lying, head, waist and legs have to be kept straight.



External Comes First is also a classic example of the oversight of heavy stretching as first training, because the reasons behind it are forgotten, it is a too strenuous exercise and it usually used to take only a couple of months since the students were normally teenagers.

Sunday 18 October 2015

Transforming First the Body


三年樁,兩年拳
Three years of postures, two years of boxing

百折連腰盡無骨*
A hundred twists linking the waist, a boneless utmost

練形者,又名曰展筋脫骨**
Who trains the shape, also called spreading out the fascias and bones coming off



Different athletes have different bodies. From a weightlifter to marathon runner, because the physical abilities required and the motion imposed are very different, the type of bodies are very distinct. Even for Martists, sometimes one can recognise who is practicing what just by looking at their bodies and how they move.

Friday 2 October 2015

Train, Refine, Temper


練形術
Art of training the body

煉石補天
Refine the stone to repair the innate

千錘百鍊
After hard work and numerous revisions



煉 and 鍊, are all pronounced liàn. They are all made of 柬, to select, but written with different radicals*. They all can be used as to describe one's training. Even if they seem interchangeable, those three characters actually refer to different parts of training in internal arts.