What is Xing Yi Quan? [Whirling Circles

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  • Опубликовано: 15 дек 2020
  • Welcome to the Whirling Circles Internal Martial Arts Podcast brought to you by the Wu Tang Physical Culture Association. Our newly developed podcast is focus on all things martial arts but also specifically Internal Martial Arts.
    This week Frank and Shawn discuss one of the three core internal Chinese martial arts Xing Yi Quan.
    - In this episode, you’ll discover
    - History and lineages of Ing Yi Quan
    - How an internal style can also be a hardstyle
    - Simplicity in the system leads to high-quality fighters
    - Considerations when training Xing Yi
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    Recommended Reading on Internal Arts:
    Whirling Circles of Ba Gua Zhang amzn.to/3l3JaOi
    Classical Northern Wu Style Tai Ji Quan amzn.to/2Jec15q
    __________________________________________________
    The Whirling Circles Podcast
    Webpage: whirlingcirclespodcast.com/
    RSS Feed: whirlingcircles.libsyn.com/rss
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Follow Wu Tang Physical Culture Association:
    Webpage: www.wutangpca.com/
    Facebook: / wutangpca
    Instagram: / wutangpca
    Podcast: whirlingcirclespodcast.com/
    Vimeo: vimeo.com/ondemand/wutangpca/
    Email instructor Tina Zhang to get info on how to take virtual classes with the Wu-Tang Physical Culture Association. tinazhangtaichi@gmail.com
    View the Tai Chi Club on Amazon: www.amazon.com/Tai-Chi-Club-C...

Комментарии • 31

  • @patrickh9937
    @patrickh9937 3 года назад +5

    Nice to see Frank telling stories. Back in 1994, I was learning tai chi and figuring out my teacher wasn't as good as his reputation. I read a couple of Frank's articles about Ba Gua in Inside Kung Fu and checked out the school. On a Sunday afternoon, I sat and watched and qigong class, a tai chi class, and a ba guy class. There was a woman named Tiffany in all those classes. Her pit bull hung out and watched all 3. He was completely chill the entire afternoon. Then the Hsing I class started. Tiffany and 3 other people stood in San Ti, and Frank started explaining to me what it was. Very quickly, the dog started going ballistic. Frank stopped the class, we all stood in a circle, held hands, and breathed. The dog calmed down, Tiffany took him home, and I decided this was the art for me. After 8 months I chose a direction, but I always enjoyed my time there. Frank is good people.

  • @r71vette
    @r71vette 3 года назад +6

    Really nice walk-through of the origin and development of this art. Thanks!

  • @cartoontortoise
    @cartoontortoise 2 года назад +1

    Enjoyed these podcasts while they lasted.

  • @maduroholdings
    @maduroholdings 2 года назад

    Very cool loved the story of mah San

  • @davidryan7386
    @davidryan7386 3 года назад +2

    wonderful!

  • @dennissweeney6774
    @dennissweeney6774 3 года назад

    I enjoyed the video. Thanks

  • @thedogdaddychannel507
    @thedogdaddychannel507 9 месяцев назад

    I live in Southeastern Michigan I'd like to try to find an instructor. Can anybody point me in the right direction? Xing yi quan

  • @renbukancho
    @renbukancho 6 месяцев назад

    There is more of the history of Marshall Yue Fei
    Shi Wei Yu Long

  • @joanstone6740
    @joanstone6740 3 года назад

    Did Frank ever get a chance to feel Kenny Gong's shingyi?

    • @joanstone6740
      @joanstone6740 Год назад

      @@lasherthirteen7456 wow I vaguely remember there was animosity because the two... Anymore details?

  • @ms4720
    @ms4720 2 года назад +1

    What is a good book on xing yi?

    • @Tomas33392
      @Tomas33392 8 месяцев назад +1

      In case you are still looking, Byron Jacobs "Dragon body, Tiger spirit" is probably among the best books on Xing yi you could find. Highly recommended!

    • @ms4720
      @ms4720 8 месяцев назад

      @@Tomas33392 I bought it when it came out on Kindle, thanks

  • @giuseppienad3413
    @giuseppienad3413 3 года назад +3

    Actually Ji Longfeng didn't taught 5 elements fist. Five Elements Fist emerged during the creation of Dai Style Xinyiquan

    • @bigwavesun
      @bigwavesun 3 года назад +1

      Correct, and even Dai style's 5 elements are different than what evolved into the Xingyiquan that is largely popular. The biggest difference I notice between Dai and the later style was Dai style's short striking methods.

    • @giuseppienad3413
      @giuseppienad3413 3 года назад +2

      @@bigwavesun Yes, Dai Family is more short ranged compared to most Xingyi styles since it follows the real ancient principles of Xinyi Liuhe Quan. Even Guo Weihan's Wu Xing Quan (Li Luoneng's "teacher"), looks exactly similar to that of the Dai Family compared to his "disciple". I wanted to add something base on my research on Xinyi (Xinyiba, Xinyi Liuhe, Dai Shi, Xing Yi and Yi Quan). According to several Dai Style practitioners, there was a routine that became the mother form of the Dai Family known as San Quan (Three fists) which is the basis of 5 elements and is only taught to student's who are deserving to learn this ancient form.

    • @bigwavesun
      @bigwavesun 3 года назад +1

      @@giuseppienad3413 Wow, great information. I would love more information on San Quan if available.

    • @giuseppienad3413
      @giuseppienad3413 3 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/J9S8tv1Na4s/видео.html

    • @bigwavesun
      @bigwavesun 3 года назад +1

      @@giuseppienad3413 thank you for sharing friend. After studying Dai from video observance I found their short striking very similar to Wing Chun's use of short strike though more varied and based on dantian movement. I am not sure if Dai clan were exponents in previous styles, but I have heard they previously studied Praying Mantis style which had similar short striking. The hole goes deeper with Xinyi/Xingyi.

  • @kanvrn
    @kanvrn 5 месяцев назад

    ruclips.net/video/lvrEQspJCV8/видео.html