I am content with slower progress - provided I am making progress - while I'm running out the clock in the Reserves. It won't be long.
After all, I have the rest of my life to work on Tai Chi Chuan

gvi
Thanks for your post Bob. You could be correct, and since I am no expert on this I cannot really be certain. However, see the following quote:Bob Ashmore wrote:Dpasek,
The only thing I would change about what you've posted is that strengthening the flexing and extending muscles does not weaken the stabilizers, they can and should all work together rather seamlessly without causing any problems.
http://drsunderman.com/stabilizer-muscles/Many people, especially those that workout often, believe that they are strengthening a full range of muscles while at the gym. However, all too often when I test a stabilizing muscle it is very weak…even more weak in the heavy lifters. In many individuals the movers become strong enough to do the job of the stabilizers. The stabilizer muscles, now not being used, become smaller, weaker, and soon forgetting their purpose in the body.
gviglobal village idiot wrote:Mr. Ashmore,
One of the things I noticed about most recently taking up formal instruction was how easily I fell back into it; not only with the forms themselves, but also the breathing. As I said up-thread, so-called "belly breathing" and knowing when and how to inhale/exhale goes back - with me anyway - all the way to jr. high school, learning to play a wind instrument.
I assumed everyone did tai chi chuan that way, and had to be told by my instructor that this assumption was mistaken.
gvi
Training to habitually power movements from the legs and to control/direct it through the waist is different than typical movement that tends to emphasize the hands. In the following article, a Chen style practitioner attempts to explain the differences:global village idiot wrote:A new thing I discovered only recently is that because of my new focus, is that it's causing me to move slightly differently OUTSIDE of the studio.