https://neigong.net/2008/10/29/an-inter ... ang-fukui/
In it, the following passage stuck out and resonated with me:
This is not something many of my students would really care to do; however, I have a few students (in case I haven't mentioned it, I'm now teaching a class on my own at my Masonic Lodge) who - once we've finished learning the Standard form and understood it - seem open to approaching the art as more of a fighting system.YF: Yang Ban Hou and Yang Chen Hou’s practices were both somewhat different from each other, as well as from modern practice. I think if they or their father were alive today and observed modern Taijiquan, they would not recognize much of what we call the Yang style Taijiquan.
BF: How did they practice then?
YF: First of all, they devoted most of their practice to gongfu and martial arts, not to health or “spiritual development,” although these two latter aspects certainly underlied their practice. Their emphasis was different. For example, they never practiced more than a two or three form or movements in sequence, in order to develop fighting skill and gongfu, and they never linked more than five forms together. There were no such things as the 24 or 85 or 108 form Taijiquan. Only two or three forms at a time were used for the solo practice of gongfu.
According to my grandfather, Yang Chen Hou’s practice stressed more form combinations while his brother, Yang Ban Hou, put more emphasis upon push hands for fighting and two-man practice.
So I got the following idea: Write the postures of the Standard form on blank playing cards, which are then shuffled. Draw three cards at random and then attempt to integrate them as seamlessly as possible.
This would only apply to solo practice, not as sanshou - sanshou is by its nature relatively open-ended.
I'd be grateful for your thoughts.
gvi