Grandmaster Professor Yu Yong Nian
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- Опубликовано: 24 май 2023
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This is a short video of my time in Beijing training under Grandmaster Professor Yu Yong Nian.
It was a great honour and I am thankful to my Sifu for having taught me so well that Grandmaster Yu Yong Nian would give me a chance to train with him.
My article on GM Prof Yu Yong Nian after he died: www.yongquan.org/articles/in_m...
0:00 - 0:44 Introduction
0:45 - 2:40 Yiquan push hands with YGY
2:41 - 3:48 Yiquan push hands with Grandmaster Professor Yu Yong Nian
3:49 - 3:58 End screen with recommendations
Impressive.
You are very lucky to have met and trained with him.
Brilliant! You've been very fortunate, but you've worked hard to deserve such an opportunity.
Thank you, true on both counts
@@spinningdragontao Who was your sifu?
Sorry, realised you mentioned it was Lam Kam Chuan, great stuff!
@@kaisekiryori Grandmaster Lam Kam Chuen is my Teachers Sifu. My Sifu is Raymond Rand. He featured on the original Fighters magazine article front page photo with Grandmaster Lam. Sifu Rand was one of Lam Kam Chuen's first students from the early to mid 1970's.
Un saluto a un caro e grande maestro...resterai sempre nei nostri cuori .🌓🌓🌓Cedric
Anzi, sempre. 🙏🏻❤️
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Very interesting video and thanks for posting. I have a couple of questions:
1. How does this style of push hands differ from Tai Chi push hands training?
2. If that was just a tiny bit of the Professor's power then what would would say, 25% of his power felt like? Did you get to see or experience it at a greater level?
Thanks for your comment. In answer to your questions.
1. Some styles of Tai Chi use this version of push hands but for me /us it's a bit of a hybrid form of push hands and other forms of training. For us the usual push hands is a bit more structured in a more straightforward manner. I will be doing a video on it soon. (I have started it but the battery died.)
2. GM Professor YYN was incredibly kind. He would never want to hurt his students. Whilst training he hit my calves with a copper rod, unbeknown to him he caught a vein on one and the bruise was huge. He'd have been horrified if he knew. He was all about skill and training and not about showing off. One of his pushes was hard enough to make me and that wall really resonate (lol). I never got to experience it more than that but it would have been very interesting. Like I say in the video he was 85 years old at the time so fair play to him.
much respect as compassion is greater than any tradition.
@@spinningdragontao