Occupying the opponent's center
Posted: Sat Sep 02, 2006 1:48 am
Hi All,
One of my practice partners recently learned a technique from a friend of his who studies another style. I can't counter it and I'm wondering if anyone can provide any suggestions, advice, and more information.
The method seems to be to enter the opponent's body with the yi/mind/will/qi/intention of occupying their center, and displacing them from their core in order to make them unable to function. I'm not talking about center of balance here.
Now, I've had people track my center and I've tracked theirs--but always with the quality of being on the outside looking in. This is the first time I've experienced this kind of energetic incursion in training and it felt awful.
My training partner said that at higher levels, there's no external movement, but each partner is chasing the other like two little mice running around inside until boom, one flys out.
He also said that the only possible counter was a counter attack--I had to occupy his center before he could occupy mine. Is that true? What if I don't want to? It seems like one of the main points in tai chi is developing enough skill and control to have options beyond "the best defense is a good offense."
Another training partner suggested that because I tensed up I "took the hit" in full and would have done better to just allow the incursion to pass through me to the ground--or perhaps bounce it back up off the ground.
I'm wondering if more solid pung jin would enable me to counter the incursion before it reaches center? Can one learn to counter non-physical pushes with small circles of the yi alone? Is it possible to have a defense such that the other's yi cannot enter at all? I'm reminded of something from the Tao Te Ching: because he is without contention, no one can contend with him, but I can't quite work out how that would apply.
I'm interested in any theories, interpretations, insight, or references to the literature.
Also, if there's anyone out there practicing this kind of technique, how do you take care not to injure each other?
Thanks very much,
Kal
One of my practice partners recently learned a technique from a friend of his who studies another style. I can't counter it and I'm wondering if anyone can provide any suggestions, advice, and more information.
The method seems to be to enter the opponent's body with the yi/mind/will/qi/intention of occupying their center, and displacing them from their core in order to make them unable to function. I'm not talking about center of balance here.
Now, I've had people track my center and I've tracked theirs--but always with the quality of being on the outside looking in. This is the first time I've experienced this kind of energetic incursion in training and it felt awful.
My training partner said that at higher levels, there's no external movement, but each partner is chasing the other like two little mice running around inside until boom, one flys out.
He also said that the only possible counter was a counter attack--I had to occupy his center before he could occupy mine. Is that true? What if I don't want to? It seems like one of the main points in tai chi is developing enough skill and control to have options beyond "the best defense is a good offense."
Another training partner suggested that because I tensed up I "took the hit" in full and would have done better to just allow the incursion to pass through me to the ground--or perhaps bounce it back up off the ground.
I'm wondering if more solid pung jin would enable me to counter the incursion before it reaches center? Can one learn to counter non-physical pushes with small circles of the yi alone? Is it possible to have a defense such that the other's yi cannot enter at all? I'm reminded of something from the Tao Te Ching: because he is without contention, no one can contend with him, but I can't quite work out how that would apply.
I'm interested in any theories, interpretations, insight, or references to the literature.
Also, if there's anyone out there practicing this kind of technique, how do you take care not to injure each other?
Thanks very much,
Kal