I Tried Tai Chi (not what I expected)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 мар 2024
  • In this video I tried Tai Chi Quan! Oh And Push Hands?
    Please make sure you guys check out Sifu Chris over at sevenstarkungfu.com
    Their RUclips is ​@heintzdog
    Want the Full Uncut Class? Become a Yellow Belt Member!
    / @senseiseth
    If you want to see more from me, go to senseiseth.com
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Комментарии • 768

  • @user-dd6on5cr3u
    @user-dd6on5cr3u 3 месяца назад +926

    Tai Chi has brought Seth one step closer to Sumo replacing Karate as his base.

    • @KurtAngle89
      @KurtAngle89 3 месяца назад +104

      That, giving his build and his football upbringing, makes pretty much sense

    • @SenseiSeth
      @SenseiSeth  3 месяца назад +354

      I practice sumo 100x more than I practice karate these days

    • @TheCCBoi
      @TheCCBoi 3 месяца назад +32

      Sumo is low-key GOAT 🐐

    • @Reflectionmaterial
      @Reflectionmaterial 3 месяца назад +55

      Wrestling or Sumo seems a better base in general.
      A ton of situations end up in the clinch.
      Seth also showed how usefull Sumo is in self defense situations etc during the self defense championships.
      Being able to throw people or run them into walls, furniture, other people, trip them over curbs etc while stopping them from doing it to you is kinda handy.

    • @IamHattman
      @IamHattman 3 месяца назад +23

      Honestly, getting good with push hands like this would probably be really good for sumo.

  • @Dave-zo7ks
    @Dave-zo7ks 3 месяца назад +233

    I took a couple of years of Tai Chi instruction from a not-quite-elderly woman several years back. It was mostly focused on the exercise component but we did push hands occasionally. After class one evening, I asked her if she could show me one or two of the martial applications of the form we were learning. She absolutely rag-dolled me. It's no joke.

    • @_munkykok_
      @_munkykok_ 2 месяца назад +12

      Screenshot or it didn't happen

    • @neinlives9424
      @neinlives9424 2 месяца назад

      its absolutely a joke, you just suck

    • @daveshif2514
      @daveshif2514 Месяц назад +4

      yup ti chi xian is extremely similar to jiujitsu or karate.

    • @tommckellen342
      @tommckellen342 Месяц назад +4

      This will be an unpopular opinion, but you (Seth) are doing the tai chi right. The instructor was wrong to stop you with the wrestling clinches and Uchi matas. These moves are all in the Tai Chi form. This group is 70 percent there but Tai Chi is even closer to MMA, Judo and Sumo than you think it is

    • @toulousegoose1150
      @toulousegoose1150 Месяц назад +2

      Same! My Mandarin tutor was an elderly woman who taught Tai Chi classes with the Mandarin speaking local community. She took me to class with her so I could be around more native speakers. Those tiny old ladies threw me around like a rag doll-- after a brutal leg workout. Glad people are out there showing how rough it really can be!

  • @reflexflow9088
    @reflexflow9088 3 месяца назад +427

    As a Tai Chi Instructor for over 40 years and a FMA Teacher who has worked with many MMA Fighters and Martial Artist, this is exactly what Tai Chi is and the way it should be practiced, but rarely is! Great Video!

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +10

      conflating push hands with application?

    • @steveforde7475
      @steveforde7475 3 месяца назад +37

      @@Purwapada yes it might have been the context of the coach's explanation was lost in the editing. But there is a danger with Push Hands that it becomes something of a circus trick. Too much focus on not being moved and confusing Push Hands with wrestling (a valid training, bit it's not Push Hands) and it's definitely not fighting, a bit like a football (soccer) player who practices ball juggling but never actually plays the real game.

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +4

      @@steveforde7475 yes well said

    • @kevinschultz6091
      @kevinschultz6091 3 месяца назад +19

      @@steveforde7475 - yeah, to me it looked like what I would consider a deca dena (chaining/back-and-forth) loose drill, designed to emphasize and train one aspect of an art. In the Memorization/Integration/Application model of learning, Push Hands looks to be the Integration aspect.
      The instructor did mention more applications: ie, the discussion of locking up with underhoods vs. just punching the guy, for example. And this may be one reason why Seth was doing so well - in addition to being a generally well-trained marital artist, he may have a tendency to go for more wrestling or sumo techniques....which works to score points (or win, in this case), but doesn't necessarily train the underlying skill that the drill/game is supposed to. Which is a limitation of the ruleset, I would imagine: it's there to train Push Hands, but wrestling techniques actually work better in that context to achieve the stated goal of the drill. And the actual martial art techique that you would use against a wrestler (push off and punch) isn't allowed in the drill, so there's a tendency to use the technique that works, as opposed to the ones you're supposed to be practicing.

    • @Livingtree32
      @Livingtree32 3 месяца назад +8

      Nah, the people in the video have absolutely no clue about Taijiquan.

  • @Tondor50
    @Tondor50 3 месяца назад +215

    Hard to argue with anything that improves balance, strength, range of motion and awareness of what your opponent is doing. Thank you for sharing this journey with us Seth,

    • @rabiesbiter5681
      @rabiesbiter5681 3 месяца назад +11

      Real Taijiquan also just involves playing with your opponent's balance while your opponent tries to mess with yours. In Judo, I've heard that called the "kuzushi game." Play the kuzushi game enough and you'll be ragdolling people in Judo.

    • @daveshif2514
      @daveshif2514 Месяц назад +2

      @@rabiesbiter5681yup, being trained in tia chi xian is as good as being a judo blackbelt. judo has unique techniques but the fundamentals are unparalleled in tai chi

    • @tommckellen342
      @tommckellen342 Месяц назад +2

      This will be an unpopular opinion, but you (Seth) are doing the tai chi right. The instructor was wrong to stop you with the wrestling clinches and Uchi matas. These moves are all in the Tai Chi form. This group is 70 percent there but Tai Chi is even closer to MMA, Judo and Sumo than you think it is

  • @bryanquick3349
    @bryanquick3349 3 месяца назад +246

    tai chi looks soft as hell until you see folks who know what they're doing uprooting people and tossing them like pizza dough

    • @stryed3483
      @stryed3483 3 месяца назад +32

      Especially Chen Taichi. They have such a strong base and can quickly move their weight around.

    • @PaMuShin
      @PaMuShin 3 месяца назад +18

      Well it is soft, a good practitioner uses not more force than 4oz then most of the time less. You just let gravity work for you. Similiar to judo, if you pull someone into a shoulder throw over your body that is hittin you full force then it is not taking much power any more.

    • @david9180
      @david9180 3 месяца назад +2

      This is the worst example of tai chi chuan I've ever seen in 25 years 😄

    • @P.G.1966
      @P.G.1966 3 месяца назад

      INTERNAL CHI.

    • @peterclarke7006
      @peterclarke7006 3 месяца назад +7

      @@david9180 oh please don't do the silly martial art "wot am bestest" thing...

  • @modernchow
    @modernchow 3 месяца назад +233

    its cool to hear you speak about tai chi in a similar way to karate as overall a long game. Also Sifu Chris is a cool instructor. can't wait to see the uncut version if there will be one

    • @SenseiSeth
      @SenseiSeth  3 месяца назад +29

      Uploading it rn!

    • @junichiroyamashita
      @junichiroyamashita 3 месяца назад +6

      Connected to this,you may want to look at Armwrestling,Devon Larrat promotes a variant similar to Japanese Arm Sumo. You may find more similarities with Tai Chi.

  • @emptyemptiness8372
    @emptyemptiness8372 3 месяца назад +135

    Traditional taijiquan training is no joke, i went through it when i was younger, living with Sifu studying taiji style boxing. Retired now with teeth like a bucket of smashed crabs, healed broken ribs ( from training). It was brutal and there is a big difference between indoor learning and public, or there was back then. I worked a a bouncer in gogo bars in southern thailand, all i had was my taijiquan and i never needed anything else. Those that mock taijiquan have never been hit with the real thing.

    • @sharpe8888
      @sharpe8888 3 месяца назад +1

      Who was your sifu?

    • @PaMuShin
      @PaMuShin 3 месяца назад +7

      Usually Taiji only gets rough if you get rough. Like if you challenge the headmaster or insult him, then you get torn sinews or your head run into a wall. But normal practice if you follow along is all about staying relaxed, never sweat nor breath heavy. Everything else is violating principle.

    • @dougnettleton5326
      @dougnettleton5326 3 месяца назад +13

      ​@PaMuShin
      I don’t know what kind of tai chi you practice if you never sweat. Maybe you were dancing. Many years ago, I read an article about tai chi in a martial arts magazine. The gist of it stayed with me: "It doesn’t matter what style you do. Just, do your form. If you're not sweating at the end of it, do it again. Repeat until you are sweating."

    • @warfighterarmy
      @warfighterarmy 3 месяца назад +5

      He speaks of energy and liquid conservation through exhalation. This is often the result of medition in motion, also known as a state of zen.
      Learning proper breathing techniques and focus allow you to sweat much less during training and recover from adrenaline/nerves. Ironically, this carries over into everyday life.

    • @david9180
      @david9180 3 месяца назад

      😄😄😄

  • @manlymanmann7592
    @manlymanmann7592 2 месяца назад +12

    "I've never sweat from moving so slowly" that's fuckin' it man. you get strong in muscles you didn't even know you had.

  • @IceWyte
    @IceWyte 3 месяца назад +54

    Seth been watching you for 4 years now and your content just keeps getting better and better. Its gotten to the point that you're absolutely my favourite RUclipsr on the platform and I insta click any new video you post! Keep smashing it!

    • @SenseiSeth
      @SenseiSeth  3 месяца назад +7

      Appreciate you 🙏🙏

  • @lusteraliaszero
    @lusteraliaszero 3 месяца назад +16

    this must be an incredibly exciting thing to stumble into when you're that deep in sumo

  • @reamus9102
    @reamus9102 3 месяца назад +30

    Love seeing someone give Tai Chi a real chance instead of dismissing it as something for the grandparents in the park. So much more than that! Hopefully we see a part 2 as you explore it even more?? 🤞

    • @david9180
      @david9180 3 месяца назад +16

      Tai chi is practised so that you can be a grandad in the park instead of in hospital 🤔

    • @reamus9102
      @reamus9102 3 месяца назад +5

      @david9180 haha 😄 that's one way to look at it!

    • @torg2126
      @torg2126 2 месяца назад

      ​@@david9180 "By the time I'm forty, I'll be the worlds most dangerous cripple."
      Tai Chi exists as a vitally important supplimental art, that allows the users of harder, striking based arts to both avoid and recover from injuries. Also additional conditioning is useful

  • @joshuachristofferson9227
    @joshuachristofferson9227 3 месяца назад +31

    ☯ As a Practitioner of Taijiquan sine 90's, I'm happy to see Seth keeping an open mind about this very Experiential Kinesthetic Art. I'd strongly suggest he tries the other 2 main Soft Forms, Hsing Yi & Baguaquan.

    • @dougnettleton5326
      @dougnettleton5326 3 месяца назад +1

      He could also try "liu he ba fa". The paradox of lhbf is that while it's claimed to predate the three better known "internal arts", it has elements of all three.

  • @nyhyl
    @nyhyl 3 месяца назад +36

    I am a Taijiquan practicioner myself and this is exactly what Taijiquan is. Everything else people usually think of when they think of Taijiquan is also a part of this art but they also heavily relate to Tuishou. In Taolu/form training you develop body awareness, fluid motion, mind-bidy-connection, breath application and relaxed, heavy body.

  • @tranquil_dude
    @tranquil_dude 2 месяца назад +10

    There may indeed be a link between TaiJi Push Hands and Sumo.
    In ancient China there was a combat sport called XiangPu and written as 相扑 ("pounce at each other").
    Yes, those are the same characters used to write Sumo nowadays.
    XiangPu was roughly similar to Sumo, except with less emphasis on body size.
    According to a Japanese sports encyclopedia, Sumo originated from Tang Dynasty China. It's highly likely that this "original Sumo" was referring to XiangPu, or a variant of it. (an even older name for XiangPu was JiaoDi, 角抵,”horn butting", referring to its origin myth)
    Later, XiangPu got subsumed into ShuaiJiao (摔跤,modern Chinese word for wrestling),
    but (here's my speculation: )
    a primitive form of XiangPu may have been adopted by the early developers of TaiJi as their main sparring style,
    and then renamed firstly as DaShou (打手, "hit hands") and then TuiShou (推手,“push hands").
    (of course, the sparring can also include non-wrestling type attacks)
    Hence why you feel that Push Hands principles are so intimately applicable to Sumo. :)
    Also why passerbies often have difficulty distinguishing between ShuaiJiao, Push Hands and Sumo techniques.
    It looks like they overlap ... because they do! :)
    If anything, it's technically correct to say that you're practicing Taiji ShuaJiao (太极摔跤)。
    It's like the term Aiki-Jujutsu.
    The first term (Aiki) is the ideal you're following, the 2nd term (Jujutsu) is the sport/skill you're applying it to.
    As the Shifu in the video has explained, the term TaiJi by itself refers to the general concept.
    TaiJi-Quan (太极拳,“TaiJi Fist") refers to the martial art you're applying it to.

    • @imstupid880
      @imstupid880 2 месяца назад +2

      Was going to say the same thing, but you said it far better than I ever could 👍

  • @mrgoober6320
    @mrgoober6320 3 месяца назад +56

    The man responsible for the mainstream perception of tai chi as moving meditation is Cheng Man-ch'ing, who took the tradition to Taiwan when he escaped the communist revolution. Cheng Man-ch'ing mostly abandoned the harsh, martial training methods that tai chi used to have in common with the authentic traditional Chinese martial arts that were forgotten in the wake of the revolution. He's also credited with bringing tai chi to the attention of the West when he moved to New York and taught there. Thus it is his version of tai chi that the English-speaking world is mostly aware of.

    • @ShredST
      @ShredST 3 месяца назад +10

      And yet his lineage has produced some very formidable push hand players. Mario Napoli went to China and wiped the floor with the Chen village guys. Josh Waitzkin won the push hand championship in Taiwan

    • @braddub8145
      @braddub8145 3 месяца назад

      Never knew this, interesting af

    • @JonathanJMusic
      @JonathanJMusic 3 месяца назад

      Yes, also the meaning of Tai Chi Chuan is something like "Supreme Ultimate Fist". I studied Kung Fu in China, not Tai Chi but a lot at my school and friends were involved with that, and with the old chinese masters of for example Wudangshan, and also Sun Style Tai Chi. Basically what I learned is that the old school Tai Chi in China is extremely violent, deadly and efficient when applied, but these are different variants of the style than the one you mentioned, and that the west is aware of.

    • @ShredST
      @ShredST 3 месяца назад +6

      @@JonathanJMusic "also the meaning of Tai Chi Chuan is something like 'Supreme Ultimate Fist'"
      IMO that name does more harm than good. It encourages pretension and mysticism

    • @GermanSausagesAreTheWurst
      @GermanSausagesAreTheWurst 3 месяца назад +2

      @@ShredST I completely agree.
      Just because it's two characters does not mean it is two words.
      Some Chinese words are composed of multiple characters.
      So far the best translation for TaiJiQuan that I have come across is "Polarity Boxing".

  • @seadawg93
    @seadawg93 3 месяца назад +54

    Love this! It’s so cool how respectful you are and how make a point of finding legit instructors.
    Looking forward to a future push hands competition win! 🥇

  • @dmcclendon79
    @dmcclendon79 3 месяца назад +8

    Push hands was my favorite. Over time it definitely helped develop sensitivity to being grabbed, pushed/pulled. In our moving step practice, sifu would allow us to use chin na and slaps to the face. Good video as always!

  • @Scarecrowswdsmn
    @Scarecrowswdsmn 3 месяца назад +32

    Excellent, Seth, I’m glad you’ve found push hands. I hope more people find this aspect of tai chi, it’s dying to the philosophy and the health practices… it also bleeds into Sanda as well, it’s all part of the same thing

  • @LairdErnst
    @LairdErnst 3 месяца назад +36

    Normally Tai Chi Sifu start people out by teaching the forms of Tai Chi (this what I’ve read and experienced other martial arts I have done) and that would be more of what Seth was expecting. He jumped into combative tai chi and dealt with the finished product.

    • @sharpe8888
      @sharpe8888 3 месяца назад +3

      I'm sure he had heard of them. Combative Tai Chi places are rare

    • @PaMuShin
      @PaMuShin 3 месяца назад +2

      Technically speaking there is no combatitive Taiji in the classical sense, but watch the background. The belts with the tigers and the lion dance equipment on the walls. Plus the stone weights, it has to be a mixed style with southern shaolin combat. There are a lot of teachers doing this. In Taiji you never use stone weights, the typical training equipment of Taiji are balls from stone or metal similiar to medicine balls but never these barbells and especially not applying hard conditioning on the body, internal practitioners despise such practice.

  • @Leo_HuangAB
    @Leo_HuangAB 3 месяца назад +6

    The birthplace of Taichi is not Chen village. Chen village is the birthplace of Chen Style Taichi. The original Taichi birthplace is Wudang Mountain where Taoist Monk Zhang Sanfeng set up shop to create what we know today as Taichi

  • @TheElbowMerchant
    @TheElbowMerchant 3 месяца назад +43

    I'm guessing this is not the type of Tai Chi that the "masters" in China tried to use against MMA fighter Xu Xiaodong. This one looks like it might have some practical applications in a fight, as opposed to the type that takes place in a park. That's not to say that park Tai Chi doesn't provide some benefit to its practitioners, as I'm sure it helps with breathing, mindfulness, and a form of mobile meditation. Either way, I definitely learned something from this video, and I was thoroughly entertained, so that's all I can ask for in a Sensei Seth video.

    • @redrenegade7724
      @redrenegade7724 3 месяца назад +26

      Correct. All those "masters" received their certification from the government. They are cultural/tourist assets, not real martial artists, who have never sparred. This video shows a much better application of tai chi.

    • @rojcewiczj
      @rojcewiczj 3 месяца назад +20

      Those "masters" were magicians, not martial artists. Those videos should be titled "MMA vs man who pretends to know Tai chi"

    • @bemusedalligator
      @bemusedalligator 3 месяца назад +8

      park taichi is more like yoga than wrestling.

    • @johndough8115
      @johndough8115 3 месяца назад +8

      Slow motion training, is very beneficial to Specialized Strength Developments, such as Developing super strong Tendons. However, its only ONE part of this Combat art. Tai Chi, has all elements ranges of combat. From long distance interceptions, to short range strikes, standing grappling... locks... and throws... as well as like +10 different Weapons (Swords, Staffs, Spears, and many more).
      Additionally, the special breathing aspects... help to create far greater bloodflow circulation, which creates a very different type of tissue / muscles.. and you also get faster and more robust Healing, on top of all of this.
      Also, the Brain starts to generate new neuron connections... which greatly expands your Bodily positional Awareness, as well as your External Spatial 3D awareness (taking it to a whole other level of abilities).
      If you want to see a small example of how challenging Slow Motion training can be... Start by doing simple pushups. Do one set, at full speed, until failure. Then a day or two later... Try doing a set in slow-motion. At least 7 seconds down, and 7 seconds up... until failure (no rests between. just a nonstop controlled movement, through the entire session).
      You will notice, that you will only be able to do a Fraction of the number of pushups, when doing them slowly. This is partially because when you do them fast, you are using gravity... allowing yourself to fall without resisting much... then you are relying on a Momentum Cheat, to help get you back Up. When you slow things down, you cant just let yourself drop instantly.. nor do you have any momentum, to help raise you. As such, your muscles (and tendons) are constantly being Challenged, throughout the Entire Range of Motion. You will develop much greater strength along the Entire path of travel. You will also start to develop stronger joints and tendons... since more time is spent challenging them.
      In Tai Chi's standing version... you have your arms away from your body for almost an entire hours worth of time (the typical minimal amount of time, spend doing these forms, to gain serious benefits). One of the keys to gaining the proper development while doing these forms... is to try to relax your muscles to the point where your body is almost about to go limp... and fall to the floor, like a pile of Jello. This minimal amount of Muscle efforts, causes your tendons and other tissues, as well as your bone structures, to take up much more of the STRESSES (Work). As such, you start to develop Super-Strong Tendons and other Strong / Density tissues + bones.
      These strong (yet flexible) tendons, can create a sort of Super-Human like strength. Even much larger and stronger fighters, will have difficulty in moving you.. and or, in them trying to Bend your Posture into a point of weakness / failure. They allow you to also use your tendons.. sort of like Springs... where you can absorb the OPs energy without Uprooting you... and then COLLECT his mass-energy, charging up your "Springs"... and finally you can Release that Stored up energy... to uproot and send them Flying away (or, you can just use an explosive short range strike).
      Xu Donger is nothing but a Chinese CCP Shill. Hes like the Gracies of China. The Gracies made False claims about fighting "Masters". Yet anyone with any decent amount of training in the arts, could EASILY see that none of these guys were Masters... and in fact, it was very easy to see, that they all were very Incompetent / clueless. The Gracies Cherry-Picked such Artists, because they wanted Easily Exploitable targets, for their Scam. They didnt want to actually risk getting injured (Or Ended), by high level / Masterclass level Fighters.
      I personally would be able to take out XU, in less than 5 seconds flat (Permanently). I dont say that lightly, either. I have 30 years, spanning many different artforms... and Im used to fighting against FAR more skilled OPs. Many of which, make my skills pale in comparison. And let me tell you... if you think the UFC fighters are "Scary" ?! lol You have never seen, nor felt what its like... to spar against these dudes. There simply is no Comparison. A masterclass level fighter, only needs 2 inches of travel (or less), for example.. to generate enough power to cause Internal Ruptures within the Enemies body.
      Also, a Masterclass level fighter, isnt fooled by simple Feint tactics, like the Gracices use to set up their Takedowns. In fact, I once attended an Open Sparring event at a Jujitsu school. Normally I dont use Damaging, or KO level forces... when I spar... But, if fighters show me open Disrespect... then I give them a small TASTE of what I typically hold back. These guys were all Blackbelts, and they clearly wanted to "Prove" themselves... via harming others intentionally. One of them started making funny faces, and funny noises... in a display of disrespect, when I went to spar against him. As such... I chose to knock him out, and two of their other Blackbelt fighter, right after dropping him. I used my mostly extended lead guard hand, with a vertical fist punch to their foreheads. I used less than 6 inches of travel... and I never used more than about 15% of what I was capable of delivering. They ALL tried the same feint tactics... such as feinting high, then trying to rush in for the low takedown. But Im a Masterclass level fighter, and we dont Fall for such Simplistic tricks. They were also all very lucky, that I ALLOWED them past my short range Oblique Kicks to their Kneecaps... without Incident. I only ever use such a kick once... at a fraction of the output.. and it put a fighter out of commission for an entire month. And I only did so.. because he said: "You, and Wing Chun... are Sh*T". After he healed up... he never fought against me the same way. He stayed as far away from me as possible... to the point of not really being effective at all. Before that point, he use to rush in like a freight train... and use his greater mass and strength, to try to drive me to the ground (often succeeding, because I refused to use crippling / KO level output. I also refused to play a Grapplers Game, to "change" my typical combat level responses... to suit a Sportized version of Sparring).
      Anyway... Tai Chi has a lot of high level combat knowledge, and abilities. Its just rare that you can find a teacher that actually knows + is willing to teach you the actual full Combat Art. Its also such a deep art, that you will have to train it every single day, for several hours a day, to be able to develop all of these skillsets (which is a problem not only with Tai Chi, but all high level Combat arts). Since a lot of people are both Ignorant, and are lazy... most modern practitioners will never learn these arts... or... they just wont ever develop them to effective Masterclass levels of capabilities.

    • @dakaodo
      @dakaodo 3 месяца назад +6

      It mostly comes from the same place in name. I'm sure a lot of tai ji quan masters who can't fight will claim to be from a certain lineage to appeal to authority and borrow legitimacy. Maybe they even actually trained in that lineage at some point. Maybe a few of them even sincerely believe their training gave them the keys to the fighting kingdom. But they lost the mental and physical training and mindset that makes for functional fighting skills. People who do tai ji in the park for health and wellness in their old age are generally learning a branch of tai ji that has deliberately deprioritized or even entirely abandoned the training of a fighting mindset.
      But someone who can fight well using tai ji quan is someone who can fight well. Tai ji quan just happens to be the means of expression they happen to use. Seth kind of touched on this when he related his impression of tai ji to sumo and any other kind of wrestling.
      Without fight-focused mindfulness in your training, any martial art can be turned into a laughingstock. Faff around doing push-ups, and you get bad push-ups. Faff around doing martial arts, and you get bad martial arts. It's just a skill, and skills are just tools that can be used well or badly depending on the person.
      This applies to any martial art that's gone through phases of popularity, being watered down, used by well-intentioned but misguided practitioners, used by deliberately misleading charlatans, etc. How many krav maga people actually have the mindset and capability of an IDF spec ops soldier? How many capoeiristas know how to use the spirit of the malandro to trick, deceive, and mislead? How many tae kwon do tournament point fighters also train strikes with power and followthrough?
      Some do, many don't. Because the vast majority of people who pay for martial arts classes don't have to confront the real and likely possibility of personal violence, so they bring a lot of cognitive biases and preconceptions with them into their training, and they are rarely disabused of these misconceptions by the harsh reality of an actual confrontation. Like, for decades sometimes.
      A capable fighter is probably going to have one or more of these qualities or experiences: being hit harder than they expected, dealing with adrenaline dumps, knowing how to lose and go again, knowing how to learn, adaptability, listening (through physical contact, as mentioned in this video for tai ji), a balance of judiciousness and assertiveness/aggression, accepting that the world is a bigger place than any one person and there's almost always going to be someone you can beat and someone you can't beat, knowing your current limits but being willing to push and expand those limits. A lot of people say that these experiences give rise to humility and wisdom and this often does happen, but that's not a hard requirement for becoming a capable fighter.
      There are more common or universal traits to good fighters that you can add to the list.

  • @brandonlee93
    @brandonlee93 3 месяца назад +19

    I studied Isshinryu karate years ago and was able to earn a black belt. Fast forward a bit when I took a tai chi class being offered at the Air Force base I was stationed at. It was an eye opening experience. By the end of the class I was able to feel a ball of energy between my hands…even the newbie I was with felt it too. Some people had no idea what they were supposed to be experiencing, but I did for sure. I need to look for another class.

    • @4saken404
      @4saken404 2 месяца назад +1

      Oh nothing feels better than holding and moving the "ball". It's been years for me since the last time. This comment is making me think about it again!

  • @EdwardH
    @EdwardH 3 месяца назад +17

    You are a great ambassador and martial arts educator. I'm glad you went out there, had a good time and shared it.
    Also glad you made the comparison to Sumo. Lots of Tai Chi people hate that 😅 but wrestling is wrestling and it's just a question of how it integrates into bigger cultural and martial contexts.

    • @user-zr1dr7nz8e
      @user-zr1dr7nz8e 3 месяца назад

      Taiji is not wrestling

    • @EdwardH
      @EdwardH 3 месяца назад +4

      @@user-zr1dr7nz8e I've been practicing Taiji since 1983 including 4 years in China. Taiji is mostly stand-up grappling, and grappling is wrestling.
      Yes there are differences between Taiji and any other specific wrestling style, but wrestling is still wrestling.
      Shuai jiao is wrestling, jiujitsu is wrestling, Gouren is wrestling, Bok is wrestling, Burri is wrestling, Judo is wrestling, and Taiji is also wrestling (if not just wrestling).
      The majority of peple who say Taiji is not wrestling do not see wrestling as the extremely sophisticated and fundamental human behaviour that it is.

    • @user-zr1dr7nz8e
      @user-zr1dr7nz8e 3 месяца назад

      @@EdwardH Wrestling doesn't teach you swords and spears, Taiji does, or at least it's part of the system. Agreed, wrestling/grappling is fundamental and also part of the basis of taijiquan, but wouldn't you say that if you thought of taijiquan as just grappling you'd be missing a lot? I think of Taiji as a battlefield martial art that had a spiritual awakening.

    • @EdwardH
      @EdwardH 3 месяца назад +3

      If you read my response to you I said that "Taiji is also wrestling if not just wrestling".

  • @MatthieuSCHREK
    @MatthieuSCHREK 3 месяца назад +7

    That was great !
    When I was practicing a bit of aikido back in the day, some "random" old guy ( who I was told, was even better then the instructor but wouldn't assume the teacher's role ) took me appart from the other guys and made me practice this hand pushing thing. I learned a lot in just two or three sessions.
    What a boss this guy was.
    This episode made me remember all that.

  • @wacomundo9599
    @wacomundo9599 3 месяца назад +3

    Dude, your channel is amazing. It encapsulates the joy of studying martial arts. I feel like a lot of content creators and athletes have this missing these days. Thanks for that man!

  • @dandiaz19934
    @dandiaz19934 3 месяца назад +6

    Honestly mad respect for this gym for pressure testing all the stuff they teach. Only that will sift through the bullshit. Super happy to see them train by fighting.

    • @manlymanmann7592
      @manlymanmann7592 2 месяца назад +1

      that's real taiji. but if you only saw people practicing the form, you wouldn't know it. that's the "bullshit" you're talking about.

  • @camiloiribarren1450
    @camiloiribarren1450 3 месяца назад +18

    When the Tai chi concepts are applied properly, it’s not just “old man kung fu”, it has plenty of good explanations and techniques that lead to grappling; it can improve anyone’s martial arts. It helped me with sparring in my Goju Ryu
    For more tai chi knowledge, check out Coach Niko who focuses on tai chi push hands

    • @johndough8115
      @johndough8115 3 месяца назад +4

      Tai Chi is not just limited to Grappling. It has one of the highest potentials of Lethal level Striking abilities... called "Fajin" (Short range, explosive power). A Masterclass level fighter in the Internal Arts, should find it very easy to KO any fighter, with a mere fraction of his output.. and with less than 6 inches of travel. At full potentials... he should have the ability to cause internal Ruptures within the OPs body... with only a mere inch or two of runway.
      I, myself, mastered Fajin expression. To date, Ive KO'd 4 different disrespecful fighters, using a short range vertical punch to their foreheads. I used less than 6 inches of travel, and never used anything more than about 15% of what I was capable of generating / delivering. 3 of these guys were Blackbelt fighters in Jujitsu, at their Open-House sparring event. The other fighter, was a mix of Capoeira, and Kook Sul Won (A Korean blend of TKD and Kung Fu).
      Tai Chi tends to use open palms, in an "Explosive Push" format, for demos, and to be "Nice" to their training partners. However, Fajin expression, is used in Actual combat application... not "Pushes". It seems like a lot of Tai Chi practitioners, dont even know this... which may boil down to certain lineages, or teachers.. choosing not to teach this aspect of the art (or it being lost in these certain branches). Of course Fajin isnt only in Tai Chi. Its supposed to be within pretty much all Chinese combat arts... usually taught last, and often only taught to the most skilled and Trusted of students. Its sort of an Open-Secret of all Chinese artforms. It sounds unrealistic to most... and unless you have taken a Fajin hit from a Master of it... most will never believe / understand... and think its mere delusional fantasy.

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +8

      @@johndough8115 stop writing long cringe paragraphs

    • @AngriestPeanut
      @AngriestPeanut 3 месяца назад

      @@johndough8115That…is not…how…physics…and musculature…works…

  • @oscarocampo1121
    @oscarocampo1121 3 месяца назад +5

    YES NEW VIDEO!!! I’m new to your channel and I’ve been binge watching everything for the past 2 weeks 😂. Great content!

  • @SaintPepper
    @SaintPepper 3 месяца назад +4

    It's pretty cool to see you try all these different styles! Keep grinding Sensei Seth 🫡

  • @tomtom4405
    @tomtom4405 3 месяца назад +1

    "Sticky hands" (push hands) with one or both hands and "sticky sticks" the same thing with a staff/stick. Haven't done this for years, brings back good memories, thank you!

  • @JivecattheMagnificent
    @JivecattheMagnificent 2 месяца назад +1

    One of your best videos yet. Always good to see Sifu Chris.

  • @howarddavies782
    @howarddavies782 3 месяца назад +3

    This is why they practice Mabu or the Horse Stance, for those who can stick it, as it roots you strongly to the ground and makes it difficult for the opponent to uproot you. Good video.

  • @GruntSquad92
    @GruntSquad92 3 месяца назад +5

    I love this guy, I am sure his students are glad to have him!

  • @junichiroyamashita
    @junichiroyamashita 3 месяца назад +2

    The Push Hands by itself could be a really useful skill for wrestling in general,for self defence and competition. I am also interested in their body bumping strikes,or shoulder strikes.

  • @matthewmagda4971
    @matthewmagda4971 24 дня назад

    This looks legit. Thank you for the honest and authentic presentation!

  • @thomasnorman8643
    @thomasnorman8643 2 месяца назад +2

    Lol nice Last Air Bender reference. I just finished rewatching the original series

  • @Carnerd101
    @Carnerd101 3 месяца назад

    This was so well done! Much respect.

  • @hypramgeth7449
    @hypramgeth7449 3 месяца назад +3

    You can improve one inch punch stuff with tai chi as well. It's like people collected exercises that have a 'what the hell effect' and made it into a dance. It's misunderstood because it's so sacred, it's not a complete combat training system and it doesn't train you to throw magic fireballs but it's full of surprises.

  • @DagwoodDogwoggle
    @DagwoodDogwoggle 3 месяца назад +2

    Seeing this video was bitter sweet. I used to be a G at moving push hands and shuai jiao. Actually did MMA (NHB) for a short time and in that era my training partners were a little surprised that Kung-Fu worked. Now I'm old with serious injuries and surgeries that would prevent me from fighting in any situation but what would be absolutely necessary. Still, it was nice to see a school that actually teaches Chinese clinching and stand up grappling.

  • @SalvadorTrakal
    @SalvadorTrakal 3 месяца назад +8

    Tai Chi is Kung Fu (skill developed through practice), it's just an "internal" system, different way of learning but just like any traditional martial art, it has punches, kicks, throws, joint locks. Big emphasis on sensitivity and Qi Gong, good for your health and development.
    I like Chen Tai Chi, more explosive movements and good forms.
    There are more cool internal systems to explore out there!

    • @jasonsecretsword7606
      @jasonsecretsword7606 3 месяца назад +1

      I prefer Yang for it's ability to generate power from stillness. Same Jins as the later stage Chen but less visible to the observing eye and the opponent.

    • @SalvadorTrakal
      @SalvadorTrakal 3 месяца назад +2

      Awesome!, I've practiced more Yang than Chen, but I like both, and they are very close relatives. Since I mainly train Northern Shaolin, I like the explosive movements of Chen. I also know a little Bajiquan form and enjoy it a lot!, thanks for sharing your thoughs!

    • @4saken404
      @4saken404 2 месяца назад +1

      I wanted to get into Chen since before I even knew it existed. I had only ever done Yang on and off for years but always instinctively wanted to do incorporate a more explosive style into it. And then one day someone showed me what Chen looked like. This was a "House" style so I'm sure how similar it is to mainstream Chen... but the guy demonstrating it looked and moved like Bruce F***ing Lee. It was perfect! Only by that time I was already well over 40 and my current sifu was into his 60's and his age was making it less and less likely I would ever get a chance to learn it. And of course it was WAY too hardcore for anyone else in the class to be interested in. So it never came to pass. Damn. I wish I could go back in time and could have gotten private classes on that. One of my big regrets in life.

    • @SalvadorTrakal
      @SalvadorTrakal 2 месяца назад

      @@4saken404 I hope you get to practice it!, you could try baji quan, which is "similar". you could find some basic forms and practice them, legend says Yang Luchang lived in Chen Jia Gou, he copied the movements and from that he created his style (Yang), so if he can do it you can watch some videos and practice!

  • @cfudough
    @cfudough 3 месяца назад +18

    Gotta say...I'm disappointed you didn't learn the no-knockout style of taichi...
    JK - I love the amount of respect you give to other styles, and even incorporating PRINCIPLES of each style into your overall philosophy of martial arts.
    Especially the way you approach push hands and drills around 4:00-5:00.

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +7

      no knockouts came from george dillman, nothing to do with tai chi historically

  • @D3rWischmop
    @D3rWischmop 3 месяца назад +4

    4:13 is really interesting to me. We do this drill in my Karate school when we train elbow strikes or joint locks. Basically anything that you whould use if you are to close to strike someone with your fist. It really helps you to develope a sense for controling someone elses arms.

  • @Purwapada
    @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +17

    yang style and it's descendants is mostly changquan with errors like "double heavy". It became especially corrupted by being promoted as qi gong which appeals to hippies.
    Real Tai chi comes from creating rotations from pivots which is extremely difficult to do. no hippie stuff

    • @koraegi
      @koraegi 3 месяца назад +7

      Excuse me
      Wuxia novels tell me Qigong can move mountains

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад

      @@koraegi lol

    • @GabrielAKAFinn
      @GabrielAKAFinn 3 месяца назад +2

      The hell does that mean. Rotation by definition occurs around a pivot.

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 3 месяца назад +3

      @@GabrielAKAFinn By making a pivot tai chi establishes a point on the body which remains fixed, (not moving in horizontal space), while the other parts align in relation to that fixed point, this creates rotation by means of continuous leverage.

    • @tranquil_dude
      @tranquil_dude 3 месяца назад +5

      I'm currently practicing under Yang style and I agree with what you say :)
      Sadly, in the Taiji community in general,
      a lot of these true principles are rarely explained to students when they're starting out. :|
      Instead, they're told to practice in a certain way and expected to "eventually develop what needs to be developed".
      Or they're given instructions that describe a desired effect but aren't really helpful to the beginner.
      e.g. asking the student to "maintain structure" in the face of external force (e.g. a push from the training partner)
      Technically, the instruction is not wrong, but what tends to happen is that the student misunderstands what the purpose of that "structure" is, and uses it to resist the external force (when the main point should be to maintain his/her balance), resulting in "double heavy".
      While I'm at it, there's also instructions like "feel your opponent's feet through the contact point" or "redirect your opponent's force into the ground" etc etc.
      Again, technically those are not wrong, but what often ends up happening is that the student misunderstands what "feel" and "redirect" mean, and instead try to *do* stuff to create those effects, resulting in unnecessary tension, again leading to a subtle form of "double heavy".

  • @devinwedman3159
    @devinwedman3159 3 месяца назад +1

    this is something I understood instantly it started to be shown on here. I have so many new ideas. amazing video!!!

  • @harrymanback3475
    @harrymanback3475 21 день назад

    What a great teacher, loved it 👍

  • @EliteBlackSash
    @EliteBlackSash 3 месяца назад +3

    Chinese Wrestling originally looked very much like what later developed into Sumo. Shirtless “Shanxi Style” (No Jacket) competition still retains some of that. In Baoding “Combat” Style it’s called the basic / “Bull Fighting” stage. Tai Chi retains it too, but most ppl like to deny that aspect exists.
    Toph from Avatar is based on the style Southern Mantis, which is a Hakka style of Kungfu. People who survived a lot of conflict. It features probably even more extensive sensitivity and listening drills than Tai Chi and Wing Chun combined. Except… the training is way Way WAY more practical, and violent lol. Most people quit just from the body conditioning, alone. Think… boxing medicine ball training, except it’s person conditioning you. Damn near full-blast. Back and forth. And yet you’re training Timing. And THEN you do your sensitivity drilling. When your body, and arms are already damn-tired.

  • @The_Taiji_Viking
    @The_Taiji_Viking 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video! Sifu Chris and Sifu Chin are truly excellent representatives of the complete art art of TaijiQuan.
    I have been blessed to study under them both for many years.
    This is pretty much exactly what it looks like every time someone finally feels real Tai Ji for the first time.
    As you said yourself, time spent this way applies to every possible combat sport, and even to non violent environments.
    Better quality movement and the ability to more easily sense someone else's intentions as they move are inarguably strong positions for Life.
    The ultimate GPP

  • @sbjchef
    @sbjchef 3 месяца назад +1

    It is cool watching both you develop and the surprise on the other practitioner's faces

  • @JaredGenesis444
    @JaredGenesis444 25 дней назад

    When you can connect with your opponants energy i feel like that is when you've really conquered fighting. This style seems to be a great way to do it. Thx for sharing this!

  • @ntrslmgb
    @ntrslmgb 3 месяца назад

    That actually looks pretty dope. One of my favs from this try out series

  • @Finnja76
    @Finnja76 3 месяца назад +6

    I love everything about this.

  • @DannysComicCorner
    @DannysComicCorner 3 месяца назад +7

    This looks like it would help you a ton in sumo

  • @Cmaxb9
    @Cmaxb9 3 месяца назад

    Absolutely amazing. The nuances of tai chi are so cool, and of course it even has a sumo connection, should we be surprised?! So dope. Would love to see Seth’s daily sumo training.

  • @KevinLeeVlog
    @KevinLeeVlog 3 месяца назад +3

    This is very cool!

    • @mrmushin1
      @mrmushin1 3 месяца назад

      I am surprised kev, you never did this when you did Taiji

    • @SenseiSeth
      @SenseiSeth  3 месяца назад

      You’re very cool Kev

    • @KevinLeeVlog
      @KevinLeeVlog 3 месяца назад

      @@mrmushin1I was saving for part 2 lol

    • @PaMuShin
      @PaMuShin 3 месяца назад

      Cause Kevins Taiji was like the real one, this school is a mixed thing, you saw the tiger Belts? The Lion Dance equipment?`The barbell on the arms? This would never be done by Taiji practitioners. Taiji uses at best balls of stone or metal like medicine balls. And never applies external force. Neither on the body, nor are practitioners supposed to sweat or get out of breath, it is against principle. It is always expected that you reach your goal with maximum 4 oz of force letting people get themselves into trouble. The sumo thing that comes into wrestling is tiger style. Taiji is snake and crane principle. A lot of teachers mix, usually with white crane or mantis so the old folks still can train it too. Yang Taiji was especially reformed by Yang Chengfu to be useable in old age, as such taking away jumps and acrobatics.

    • @PaMuShin
      @PaMuShin 3 месяца назад

      @@SenseiSethyou were pretty close with the toph thing, but toph is using dragon, tiger, crane style. But it shares the sensing/listening attribute

  • @TheNinjaEveryDay
    @TheNinjaEveryDay 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video! I really enjoy seeing you train with these Kung-Fu gentlemen!

  • @tts626
    @tts626 3 месяца назад +1

    Great that you found some folks doing the martial side of Taiji so that people can see it's not just dancing in the park. Though when you know how to do that "dance" the way it's supposed to be done, it's quite the challenge too =)

  • @sp0rsk
    @sp0rsk 3 месяца назад +3

    I remember my first tai chi class back in college and it was like "okay here's how you uwatenage" and when I complained that I *knew* that was a sumo move he yoritoashied me out the front door.

  • @GoldenbellTraining
    @GoldenbellTraining 3 месяца назад +1

    Cool stuff - David Chin delivered the challenge letter to Bruce Lee that became the Wong Jack Man fight. Chris has probably heard what actually happened since David Chin was one of the few people to witness the fight.
    I also studied Guang Ping Yang Style Taiji under Henry Look's line - another Kuo Lien-ying student.

  • @rabiesbiter5681
    @rabiesbiter5681 3 месяца назад +1

    THANK YOU! Yes, there is value to the forms. Doing the forms without doing Tuishou is like buying shoes, taking the box home and leaving the shoes behind. The forms aren't about moving your hands. Your body does 95 percent of the actual movement and your hands/arms do very little. The forms help you learn the body mechanics, the pushing hands helps you learn how to apply it to keeping your own balance and taking away someone else's. When you learn that, then things like hitting people and taking them to the ground all just kinda fall together. A push is just a hit without impact after all.

  • @toddellner5283
    @toddellner5283 3 месяца назад +1

    I am lucky enough to have found aTaiji teacher who has had good training including power generation. It isn't just for uprooting. The short power hits like a hammer and makes you feel yhe force all the way through your body, Nasty and effective

  • @ronthedon1945
    @ronthedon1945 3 месяца назад +1

    This was a great way to shed light on Tai Chi because I also shared the same stereotype that it was just "advanced breathing techniques". lol

  • @sunflowerbadger
    @sunflowerbadger 12 дней назад

    I wish there were more tai chi classes like this around. I did Chen tai chi for years, but it was always a struggle getting to practice push hands because most people weren't there for that.
    It has been amazingly useful in Muay Thai clinching since I started doing that.

  • @tonbonthemon
    @tonbonthemon 3 месяца назад +1

    That's awesome, I'm glad this was shown over the "Park" exercise variety... which has its place but is not the whole story!

  • @SenseiEli
    @SenseiEli 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank you!

  • @smakajo400
    @smakajo400 3 месяца назад +1

    Yeah I was informed by a Push Hands practitioner that Push Hands is "finesse Sumo with cloths on."

  • @KenGullette
    @KenGullette 3 месяца назад +1

    Excellent video. I've done martial arts for 51 years and studied Chen Taiji Quan for the past 26 years. It's the real deal.

  • @GOBRAGH2
    @GOBRAGH2 3 месяца назад

    I like Sifu Chris. He explained it in a way I could grasp!

  • @t-rizzle0016
    @t-rizzle0016 3 месяца назад +2

    I did Tai Chi for about 10 years the one where you're in the park. I also do Mauy Thai. One day our Mauy Thai coach starts showing us some things at a range our guys have a bit trouble with. I recognised the way he was moving his hands etc as Tai Chi almost push hands.

  • @seasickviking
    @seasickviking 3 месяца назад +1

    People tend to forget that Tai Chi is STILL a combat-oriented martial art. The Tai Chi you see in the park is basically the kata portion while Tai Chi Chun (Tui Shou) is the sparring portion.

  • @Khoisanboogie
    @Khoisanboogie 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video. Nice to see tai chi being trained like this.

  • @thefubuking9919
    @thefubuking9919 3 месяца назад

    I practice sumo sense i have only one class a week this actually could be a really good add to my training.
    I saw there is multiple classes in my town of fighting tai chi.
    Thank you really much for that video and all your content in general you do great stuff !

  • @indefenceofthetraditionalma
    @indefenceofthetraditionalma 3 месяца назад +1

    So good to see a fair representation of tai chi chuan. Would be good to get this instructor back to go through form applications

  • @56Seeker
    @56Seeker 3 месяца назад

    More of this please, very interesting

  • @shaynehawkins713
    @shaynehawkins713 3 месяца назад +2

    Tai chi can be very combative. You learn the form but also its application. I would stand one leggged in arhat carries a cauldron for half an hour. Then do the other leg. Tai chi is pushing, pressing, drilling, throwing and strikes. Its still incorporated into bruce lees art jeet kune do. I learned basic moves of tai chi from jeet kune do then studied the art in full. In free sparring i used it often. You make it functional in sparring.

  • @PamiiruqSorrell
    @PamiiruqSorrell 3 месяца назад +2

    Yes! I was waiting for you to get into some real tai chi. You just barely scratched the surface here.

  • @poot111111
    @poot111111 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank goodness Seth went to Sifu Chris's Tai Chi class, that dude is an animal !

  • @nunninkav
    @nunninkav 3 месяца назад +1

    Looks like a very nice compliment to Sumo. It's like, the Aikido version of Sumo, much more nuance. So, I undestand why Seth wants more, as this is a very realistic and purposeful form of grappling. Never heard if it before Seth, thanks for the introduction.

  • @peterkhew7414
    @peterkhew7414 3 месяца назад +1

    Gojuryu Karate's Mawashi Uke is Chen style Taijiquan silk reeling. They also have push hands training, but it's called Kakie. They look different only because they developed separately from each other; with Gojuryu from Hokkien White Crane and Chen style Taijiquan from Northern Long Fist or Changquan.
    You can also find sensitivity drills in both Japanese Jujutsu and Filipino Eskrima.

  • @dcho
    @dcho 17 дней назад

    Great vid! Thanks for sharing. I also practice the same lineage.

  • @spiritualphysics
    @spiritualphysics Месяц назад +1

    Chin Na applications as the instructor showed can reduce the wrestling component. There are more than hip/foot imbalances. Great vid. Thanks for sharing
    👊🏾😎👍🏼

  • @section9809
    @section9809 3 месяца назад +1

    I spent 10 years from 20 t0 30 learning Yang Style with Chen principles and focus plus 10 years of Wing Chun at the same time. The previous 10 years was Judo and Boxing. At the age of 30, I started a 15 year career in Security/Bouncing in pubs and clubs. I still have all my teeth and good looks, guess it paid off! Tai Chi Chuan is close in stand up grappling with control techniques and some short punches and kicks. Think old school jujitsu with Aikido.

  • @axj5
    @axj5 3 месяца назад +12

    the best waterbender in the world, Sensei Seth

    • @senpapi3058
      @senpapi3058 3 месяца назад +3

      I feel like Seth would be either an earth or lava bender

    • @LairdErnst
      @LairdErnst 3 месяца назад +2

      Sensei Seth is definitely an Earth Bender. I’d go so far as to say a Metal Bender with how much he’s grown as a martial artist.

  • @McTeddyGames
    @McTeddyGames 3 месяца назад

    I think the most interesting part of this video for me was the direct meeting of sumo and tai chi, force vs. flow. It was cool to see both approaches being effective in their own ways.

  • @rogermanley9017
    @rogermanley9017 3 месяца назад +1

    My teacher used to say ‘mei lien tui shou, bu Yong gong.’ - If you don’t practice push hands, you won’t be able to use it, or you won’t have any gong, as in gong fu. Personally, I consider ‘tui shou’ a Chinese folk wrestling style system. And we wouldn’t expect any folk style wrestling system to walk into a UFC cage without a takedown, striking, or ground and pound game and dominating. However like a lot of wrestling, it can be an excellent base if taught correctly.
    I also compare park taichi to Tui shou, like a cardio kickboxing class done once or twice a week at the YMCA to a Muay Thai gym in Bangkok where some has been training for years as a professional fighter/kickboxer.
    Cardio kickboxing as well as park taichi, we’re both adapted and changed to meet the needs of people looking to keep in shape, or keep healthy. The long form in the Yang style mimics precisely that Tui shou range, e.g. arm drags, guillotines, rear naked chokes, etc. but most people misinterpret the forms as an outside range, like slow moving karate, and this is incorrect. If you slowed down an over under drill then separated from your partner at that continued speed by yourself, you would start to understand the true interpretation of the forms.

  • @Daeva83B
    @Daeva83B 3 месяца назад +1

    I like it.. My dad used to do Tai Chi, maybe i will follow in my dad's footsteps..
    It's a nice a sport and he got quite good at it, with pushing hands, i couldn't push him away, neither did i had any grip on him, he just... shifted all my directional power away from him, it was quite impressive.

  • @fallingleaveskungfu
    @fallingleaveskungfu 3 месяца назад

    Nothing makes me happier than to see Chris getting more exposure. A legit old school gong fu bad ass. 👏🙏

  • @mxmrus
    @mxmrus 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much, Seth.

  • @brassJOE
    @brassJOE 3 месяца назад +1

    My Tiaji instructor's instructor said that studying taiji without push hands is like buying a pair of shoes and throwing them away to take the box home empty.

  • @pukanger
    @pukanger 3 месяца назад +3

    Sifu Heintzman and I trained together in college! Love and miss that guy!

  • @ACarpenter89
    @ACarpenter89 3 месяца назад

    This is going to transfer so well to your sumo and I can't wait for that video

  • @winstonsmiths2449
    @winstonsmiths2449 21 день назад

    Hilarious intro! Better you than me. I came from watching another YT watching Kevin Lee with guest Dr. Mark Cheng go over Tai Chi (combat). Looked very scary and efficient.

  • @Jenjak
    @Jenjak 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank you for finding a real taichi teacher, and not go in the first mcdojo you found. ^^
    My teacher says partner work is 50% of taichi. not 5% or 10%, it's 50%. So a school that is doing close to 0% push hands is not a good taichi school.

  • @robertmccann5838
    @robertmccann5838 3 месяца назад +1

    This is exactly how taiji should be taught. Great video.

  • @fireeaglefitnessmartialart935
    @fireeaglefitnessmartialart935 3 месяца назад

    The push-hands as a game, ive done at my first mma gym. Predominately in the wingchun class we had, and sometimes outside of class for fun. I even changed aspects like, one guy only fists and the other open hands, or on a box, or 1 open hand, 1 closed hand, etc. It was fun and i think it definitely helped my overall training.

  • @LucyDaisy11
    @LucyDaisy11 3 месяца назад +1

    Hello Sensei Seth you are amazing!

  • @Brisingr2207
    @Brisingr2207 3 месяца назад

    OMG NOW I WANT MORE OF THAT

  • @reeds.9669
    @reeds.9669 3 месяца назад +1

    I constantly astonished that no matter what style, Sensei Seth finds a teacher that can actually show how it works. I find it wild that some of the traditional styles are now seen as useless when they must have been very useful back in the day; I remember thinking this when I learned that White Crane techniques found it's way into many different styles of martial arts (kung fu, karate and I think tai chi as well) but I look at it now and I have no idea how people saw White Crane and thought it was insanely revolutionary and had to flourish immediately. But there MUST have been something to this older styles, I don't think they lived on pure hype back in the days of constant lei tai challenges.

  • @andrewjones198
    @andrewjones198 2 месяца назад +1

    Tai chi is absolutely amazing for developing fighting prowress.

  • @ohsteeev
    @ohsteeev 3 месяца назад

    Wow this guy is a great teacher

  • @stefangurguriev1047
    @stefangurguriev1047 3 месяца назад +2

    I like this, this would go very well with wrestling and it basically is wrestling. I think those drills would be very helpful