Learn the "Quintessential Secret" of Tai Chi - FREE LESSON

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июл 2022
  • This comprehensive online Instructor Training Program created by Sifu Mark Rasmus offers in-depth instruction on Elastic Force Chi Kung and the internal arts. The video library comprising of 670+ video lessons is principle-based learning designed for teachers. Most of the knowledge taught in this program is usually closed-door information, as the video archive was filmed during workshops and instructor training courses. Therefore these video lessons contain invaluable knowledge based on profound internal principles proven to work with fast results.
    Course Contents:
    • Qi Gong masterclass.
    • Intrinsic energies training.
    • Fa Jin development.
    • Qi Gong exercises.
    • Mental development training.
    Enroll here: bit.ly/3GeKIAr
    Study online with Sifu Mark Rasmus.
    ► Elastic Force Chi Kung: bit.ly/3tfVfrd
    ► Initiation into Hermetics: bit.ly/3nfYrzr
    ► Tai Chi Chuan: bit.ly/3GeKIAr
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    The Martial Man is an exciting new web series following Kieren as he travels the far-east to experience traditional martial arts and learn the secret knowledge of the Grandmasters. The show offers the viewer a unique insight into the martial arts world and a front-row seat to learn directly from the masters.
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Комментарии • 62

  • @THEMARTIALMAN
    @THEMARTIALMAN  Год назад +3

    Study online with Sifu Mark Rasmus.
    ► Elastic Force Chi Kung: bit.ly/3tfVfrd
    ► Initiation into Hermetics: bit.ly/3nfYrzr
    ► Tai Chi Chuan: bit.ly/3GeKIAr

  • @yellostallion
    @yellostallion Год назад +11

    Mark is a rare find. This dimension is difficult to understand and train and Mark is a top notch communicator I've seen 🙏.

  • @ppshekinabefreiung556
    @ppshekinabefreiung556 3 месяца назад

    i hear your teaching over and over and everytime i hear and learn something new. Thank you!

  • @stephennordlinger4112
    @stephennordlinger4112 Год назад +5

    Very helpful in understanding the form applications.

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott Год назад +7

    Really cool explanation, thanks for posting this!

    • @THEMARTIALMAN
      @THEMARTIALMAN  Год назад

      My pleasure. I’m glad you found the video helpful 👍

  • @easternmovementprinciples4799
    @easternmovementprinciples4799 Год назад +1

    I’m looking forward to meeting Mark one day soon, great content

  • @nicokik3438
    @nicokik3438 Год назад +1

    Your my model of generosity! Respect!🤝🙏

  • @johnschmaingtheschoolofthe1190
    @johnschmaingtheschoolofthe1190 Год назад +1

    Good Lesson.

  • @artplaut7208
    @artplaut7208 Год назад +3

    Thank you Master

  • @ericstowe7243
    @ericstowe7243 Год назад

    Tremendous. I've wanted a 'metaphysical answer' for some people, particularly new students. This is it!!!🎯🤔💓👌👍🥋😉

  • @brianscott3622
    @brianscott3622 Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for this great post.

  • @jamespisano1164
    @jamespisano1164 Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing, Sir.

  • @RobertAgarHutton
    @RobertAgarHutton Год назад +5

    Well I am not a fan of using terms like fascia and chi but putting my personal prejudices aside, I did like the exercises shown and also the fact that Mark very clearly articulated that they were 'exercises' - a way to develop useful skills.
    As it happens I was teaching a different/similar (?) compression release exercise in class today and this makes me think that I should remember to make a video of it for my students - so thanks for your video and the ideas therein, and thanks for prompting me to go do some work :) :) :)

    • @dirtpoorchris
      @dirtpoorchris Год назад +1

      Ya, I dont like the whole fascia explanation everyone uses either. I like to just call it "Tendon power" instead of "muscle power". Or some people say "Fast twitch muscle fiber" but I just say "Tendon Power". And If your brain understands the nuances of acceleration and you have the tendons to use "relaxed power" you can develop strikes that are near impossible to dodge.

    • @RobertAgarHutton
      @RobertAgarHutton Год назад

      @@dirtpoorchris I battle with trying to explain Tai Chi 'things' to students. When possible, I try and give Western and Eastern explanations, and preferably neither :) Just do the work :) Of course, it may be that you have to believe in 'whatever' for it to be true but I doubt that - if you do the exercises the way taught, then surely with or without an explanation of the why, it should work. My example is that I don't have to believe in, or even know about, Oxygen, for the air I breathe to be beneficial.

    • @dirtpoorchris
      @dirtpoorchris Год назад +1

      @@RobertAgarHutton I think that's were metaphor type teaching helps some people. "Snake Fist Kung Fu". Helps IMAGINING your wrist as the snakes neck and imagining your arm striking - wrist power first, then connecting it to all the body muscles. Instead of bicep and tricep accelerated punching.
      It gets real fun when you start imagining your fists as "Cannon Fist Style"
      Another trick Ive heard is imagining something is on fire as you slap it and you dont wanna burn yourself. Suddenly your slap becomes much more accelerated and forceful.

  • @meditationamsterdam
    @meditationamsterdam Год назад +2

    Great video! thanks :0)

  • @alu3179
    @alu3179 Год назад +2

    Excellent !!

  • @SifuRodriguez
    @SifuRodriguez Год назад +1

    Ho Ho GungFu 🙏🏻❤️☦️❤️🙏🏻

  • @AdamDobson-mc1cv
    @AdamDobson-mc1cv 6 месяцев назад

    Very beautiful ❤️ Adam

  • @martialpath3792
    @martialpath3792 11 месяцев назад +1

    Is this gap the hara/lower dan tien??

  • @tranquil_dude
    @tranquil_dude Год назад

    4:37 Do the two basic ways of pressing into (& then destabilising) the opponent correspond to An and Ji ? :)
    (And the ability to neutralise those destabilising forces correspond to Peng and Lv?)

  • @Linvalfarquharson
    @Linvalfarquharson Год назад

    What if you have not got a training partnership as you only startednot long ago, how would it work for you??

  • @Naiddou
    @Naiddou Год назад

    good gonna try this on ma bro

  • @dirtpoorchris
    @dirtpoorchris Год назад +2

    Id have trouble being a complicit partner. Anyone time someone pushes on me I'm thinking of how to get around their force and use natural clash springing to my advantage. He pushes my forearms down with his palms so I try to go around the force and sidestep and take an elbow to his neck, so he pushes down on my elbow horn with his wrist to stuff it, so I keep coming forward but turn it into a shoulder tackle into a wrestler hug of the hips.
    TBH id prolly be complicit for 30 seconds then get bored and it would turn into a flow exchange instead of him just practicing on me.

    • @mintyfresh5000
      @mintyfresh5000 Год назад +5

      For the purposes of training and developing specific qualities you must have some "complicity". That's the whole point of this aspect of training. If you're unable to be a good training partner you're missing out on that development.

    • @vicwarrior106
      @vicwarrior106 Год назад +1

      I have the same experience, people in general seem to find difficult to understand that complicity is essential to practice drills and that competition is useless in these environments as it tends to be unproductive. Later on it may be essential to test the skill in an uncooperative environment, but when the basic learning is happening it can be detrimental to development of skills.

  • @peterjeck2684
    @peterjeck2684 Год назад +1

    Hey friend, I mastered the internal under a Master Student from Sifu Sergio. So I created a hair line with the Energie because of my hair loss. I would like to share this with the world. You wanna meet ?
    BG

  • @marthafoppe6964
    @marthafoppe6964 Год назад +1

    😌 promosm

  • @andrewtownsend4939
    @andrewtownsend4939 Год назад +2

    This demonstration would be more believable if the training partner was the same size and weight.

    • @LiShuBen
      @LiShuBen Год назад +4

      This guy isn't concerned about being believable. He's just teaching and if you don't accept it just move on. The mark of a teacher, not a salesman

    • @david9180
      @david9180 Год назад +2

      Yeah but its rubbish isnt it ?? Everytime tai chi faces a challenge they lose quickly and shamefully ' so what the heck are they teaching ??

    • @thunderflower7998
      @thunderflower7998 Год назад +1

      The only way to find out is to challenge him.He is there .please contact him and allow for some merciless exchange.

    • @david9180
      @david9180 Год назад +1

      They lose everytime or run away dude its just fact

    • @dirtpoorchris
      @dirtpoorchris Год назад +2

      @@david9180 I dont think many people claim Tai Chi is a Martial Art. Its a way to think about your body and balance. Its more of a health system and learning how your system works its energy. Believe it or not waving ur arms around for an hour and concentrating on your kinetic chains is actually taxing and training.

  • @novaacuinfo5930
    @novaacuinfo5930 Год назад

    5555

  • @vidya014
    @vidya014 Год назад +1

    Like magnets repulsing

  • @david9180
    @david9180 Год назад +8

    Heres something that is not a secret '' tai chi chuan has failed against every fight situation not once but many times '' whatever master yang Cheng min.ching and sun lu tang were doing has been lost due to egotistical fake teachers ' it's sad really isnt it

    • @dirtpoorchris
      @dirtpoorchris Год назад +2

      Alot of Tai Chi balance moves become amazing in Full Armor. The way people used to fight. Send enemy troops falling off a narrow wall or ledge or pathway with ur advance standing wrestling.

    • @david9180
      @david9180 Год назад

      🤡

    • @jackofallmasterofnun
      @jackofallmasterofnun Год назад +1

      No real masters have been beaten only cowboys. The art is real but not many can do it

    • @ff-ti7nj
      @ff-ti7nj Год назад

      @@jackofallmasterofnun Can you show me a real footage of a master?

    • @jackofallmasterofnun
      @jackofallmasterofnun Год назад

      f Adam mizner tai chi , true master check him out.
      Check out mindful wingchun..
      Love to get your opinion

  • @TaijiquanGaoshou
    @TaijiquanGaoshou Год назад

    So basically all this high skill only works on extremely willing patners. Pity in real life people tend to keep their structure when delivering force. Junior Judoka would lose their pants laughing at this waste of time.

    • @tjl4688
      @tjl4688 7 месяцев назад +1

      Judoka get uprooted all the time. This drill is merely a different means of breaking someone's kuzushi.
      When someone's body is releasing after you push into them, there's a moment where their connection to the floor is broken. It's in that moment where drive forward. Judoka do this all the time when they push/pull collars and such to set up throws.

  • @johnnyg9356
    @johnnyg9356 Год назад +1

    Hope people aren’t paying for this!

  • @KeithOng
    @KeithOng Год назад +5

    when you started with chi, i know the rest are woo woo...lol. Sorry but we need to relate scientific principles with martial arts principles.

    • @theoutlawwhitecrow4483
      @theoutlawwhitecrow4483 Год назад +1

      TCM isn't scientific?

    • @wkghrs
      @wkghrs Год назад +4

      That’s like saying using the word quantum to describe the state of particles being entangled is woo, sorry we need to explain this behavior with classical mechanics. Words are frameworks to which we understand phenomena. Some words more thoroughly and completely describe such phenomena, in which the word chi aptly describes. Chi itself does not imply a wholly new physical property that contradicts scientific paradigms, but a lens in which to understand multiple properties acting together.

    • @_db612
      @_db612 Год назад

      @@theoutlawwhitecrow4483 No man, the definition of scientific is being repetible and measurable, TCM isn't, thats why is kept separated from occidental medicine, often presented as a form of support to make scientific healings faster but not seen as a healing method itself (at least in europe)

    • @jepdr
      @jepdr Год назад +1

      Can science prove science?

    • @NihilGuru
      @NihilGuru 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@jepdryes.