Hello
I'm new to the forum - and before I talk about the subject at hand I just wanted to say how much I enjoyed reading your contributions.
The Xu Shi Jue is something that I have not looked into deeply - and is therefore, in some ways, a bit more enigmatic to me.... I think the texts speak in answers only - if you have your own context of experience they are very obvious - if not...then you either wait - or dig deep as you are doing
The fullness and emptiness that I experience in my own practice is firstly -the upper body and lower body split:
The stance is full the upper body empty. When the stance is correct it is strong and the upper body can sink into it. The attention is moved into the stance - clearing the way for a more subtle form of attention to come into it. The stance becomes full of Yi. The absence of Yi from the upper body invites ting into it.
The division of Yi and Ting is the first step in training the attention to deepen. I think that this is the first line:
'Using empty-empty full-full, the spirit gathers within'
So that is one become two, now for two becomes four.
The next separation is 'dexterity' - it's the separation of the left and right leg and their correlation to the right and left arms. When the right leg is full the left leg is empty - when the right arm is empty the left arm is full. This is the interchange of right to left and holds the martial interchange of forces. I think this is the 2nd line:
'Using empty-full full-empty, hands trade merit'
The next two lines reflect that the above is the most basic method of the body - and if you cant interchange left and right... well its not good

certainly no flowing like a river anyway - more like lapping like the tide
The next two lines are a bit different to Douglas Wiles translation?
Which reads:
When one has the opponent’s vital point
in the palm of ones hand; finding empty
be on guard, but if full, attack.
If we fail to attack the full,
our art will never be superior
I think the meaning is clear enough though.
Back to the earlier descriptions of the body – the empty leg does not mean without strength. This to me is the next line;
‘Knowing that empty and full themselves contain empty and full’
This leads us to the discussion for the weight split – I believe that, as in Kuo Lien Ying’s text, the division of empty and full is a gross one to start with – and becomes more and more refined. From coarse to fine.
I think that the division of empty and full is also commonly mistaken to be one of weight. If a person is to have a gross division and it be confused with weight – they will have a stance where all the weight of the body is borne on one leg. 100/0. Can the '0' leg have strength? How can the body be balanced when issuing? How can you neutralise your opponents force into the ground?
Let me try and expand…
When the opponent pushes, you sink to one side – this does not necessarily mean that your own weight moves across (49/51) - the sinking prepares a channel for your opponents weight. A common error is to sink your weight onto the leg as well as your opponent’s push – this kind of pins you into the leg. The correct feeling is to have your opponents weight into your back leg and you to have the feeling of now being next to him. That way you absorb his force without rolling it back into yourself. You neutralise your own centre before your opponents.
On the basis of this I believe agility comes from being able to sink to one side - (which is not possible when the weight of your own body rests on one leg) – being able to sink to one side comes from being able to divide empty and solid.
I’ve run out of time ….. off to my class now. Sorry I haven’t referred to your individual posts – the volume of text was a bit overwhelming!
Steve
Ps: (you can play at this with a set of weighing scales under your back foot – you can see the weight climb as you neutralise the opponent – you can also reach a point where it looks like your weight is largely over your front leg, but with say a couple of people neutralised into your back foot - you can lift the front foot without moving – it did my head in the first time I saw it because there was no leaning or out of posture pushing from the other two – its just that the back foot had maybe 16 stone in it – which more than offset the weight of the chap being pushed)
[This message has been edited by Anderzander (edited 06-29-2003).]
[This message has been edited by Anderzander (edited 06-29-2003).]