Showing posts with label luo dexiu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luo dexiu. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 April 2016

Why do I practice Baguazhang

There are many perfectly understandable reasons I could give to explain why I practice Baguazhang.  Most of them have probably been covered elsewhere other Internet by other bloggers.

Health reasons, self defence,  improving the mind-body connection.  All are valid.

Mostly, though, I enjoy the act of practising and thinking about bagua.

Then, additionally,  I like the heritage aspect.  Perhaps a strange word to come from a Non-chinese when talking about Baguazhang.   However,  the tales of the venerable masters of the Yi Zong lineage really interest and excite me.

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Update

Okay, so house move and all the pressures that go with that along with a decent sized cyst has prevented me from attending baguazhang class as much as I'd like. Really, now I have a new home, with a large living room, spare room, empty garage and decking in the back yard mean I can't really use not having anywhere to train as an excuse anymore. As such, I am working a little practice in when I can. So looking forward to Luo Dexiu coming to do his seminar toward the end of next month, too. He is always so generous and accessible that I never fail to improve my understanding by leaps and bounds when I train with him. Can't wait...

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Luo De Xiu Manchester seminar 2013 & old article

This year's seminar with Luo Laoshi was amazing.  So much to take in that, though I learned a great deal, I still lament all the things I will have inevitably been unable to memorise.  Times like this make me wish I had an eidetic memory.

The seminar included Hebei Xing Yi, Gao style Baguazhang and Chen Pan Ling Tai Chi.  Though I'd only really experience the bagua before (excluding the Xing Yi we often touch upon in class), I really enjoyed every single moment, regardless of which particular style we were learning about at the time.

Luo Laoshi was so remarkably generous and good-natured, I honestly can't count the number of times he demonstrated a particular technique upon me, or corrected my posture, et cetera.

So, I found online this old (not sure how old, though) article written about Luo Laoshi.  I have to say, there was nothing like the crunching thump during our training (other than a few comedic (to us) techniques demonstrated on our teacher).



Webmaster's notes: I found this article on the web a while ago. I thought it was a good piece on Luo Dexiu. Don't know when it was written.



Bagua Training with Master Lou De Xiu
By Mario Sikora

This article was originally published in The Edge Self-Defense and Fitness Quarterly.



Thump. 

The student gets up and attacks again and the master moves slightly and slams his palm into the student's chest. There it is again, the resounding thump. The master spins him around and deposits him on the floor.  The moves are impressive enough, but it's the sound of palm hitting chest that gives you pause. And the way the student's head jerks back when the master grabs his arm and yanks him off balance.  Your body starts to ache just watching.

 This is bagua, an internal martial art. The internal arts are supposed to be slow and gentle; great for health, great for people who don't like to fight. Then comes the thump again and the student is tossed like a rag doll.

He struggles to look serene, but you know it's an effort.

Unless you've been involved in the martial arts for a while you've probably never seen or even heard of bagua zhang. If you have seen it, you've probably wondered why those guys are walking in circles and doing those weird things with their arms. There aren't many bagua instructors around, and those that are are less than impressive.  As a matter of fact, they start looking downright silly after you see the real thing.

Master Lou De Xuo recently gave a bagua demonstration in Philadelphia, and everyone there knew that any
bagua they had seen before was mere imitation. His art is a fighter's art, seeming to contain principles from a number of other more modern arts. Only his art was graduate school to their junior high. One gets the impression that a lot of the young bucks out there claiming to have combined systems and created new martial arts are just reinventing the wheel.

Master Lou also took some time to speak about his art.

He started his martial arts training, studying bagua, tai chi, and hsing-I in 1970 as a teenager in his native Taiwan. He says he didn't have much focus on what he wanted to accomplish; but he did like to fight. In the early 1970s, Taiwan was the host of a number of full contact tournaments that allowed Lou to satisfy his desire to fight and test his skills.

The rules of the tournaments were simple: the only protective equipment was a pair of thin cotton cloves, you could do anything except poke to the eyes or strike to the groin. (Animated throughout the interview, Lou really comes alive as he describes these tournaments through his interpreter, thrusting at the interpreter's eyes and groin. The interviewer slides his chair back slightly.) The winner was the last man standing.

The tournaments were open to all styles and Lou found himself fighting boxers, wrestlers, Thai boxers, and karate stylists. Eventually, the enormous number of serious injuries to participants (even the winner could barely walk the next day) caused the government to crack down on the tournaments and enforce more rules and the use of safety equipment.

After military service in 1978-79, Lou decided to devote himself to bagua. Even though he had been victorious in all the bouts he had entered, he was on the small side (although he is not small anymore) and didn't have the confidence he felt he needed when fighting a larger opponent. He believed that the body movement of bagua would give him the skills and the confidence for which he was searching. Watching him demonstrate his art leads one to believe that it did.

The exposure to real fighting in his early training made it easier to understand the theories of bagua that he learned later on, says Lou, but he would not recommend the same approach for everyone. It's just how it worked out for him. He advises others to explore the theory, philosophy, and meditation aspects of the art as well as the combat aspects if they want to reach the higher levels.

Going in Circles
So why do bagua practitioners perform their forms while walking in a circle? Lou offers a simple explanation: the art is based on angulation--moving off your opponent's line of attack and placing yourself in an advantageous position to counter-attack. The counterattack is usually linear, coming straight from that advantageous position. Bagua also has numerous linear forms, Lou says, but most western practitioners are not familiar with them.

Issuing Chi
When asked how he feels about claims by many internal-style martial artists of issuing internal energy, or chi, Lou just grins and says, "We like to stay neutral on that issue. I don't know about others, but I don't do it."
Nonetheless, chi development is important to his art, but he calls it "I" (pronounced "ee") development, or mind development. Instead of being some mystical force existing independently, chi occurs whenever the yin and yang are in balance.

Lou says that everyone has this energy, but resistance in the body and the mind impede its flow. If the impediments are removed, the energy will flow and one will feel the chi.

Proper bagua training seeks to balance the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems; the first excites the body and the second settles it. This hormonal balance, a balance of yin and yang, produces chi.
This idea of balance permeates Master Lou's bagua. There must be a balance between circular and linear techniques, a balance between the combat techniques and the health aspects of the art, a balance between focus on the opponent and the focus on the self. Finding proper balance takes years of practice under a legitimate master of the art. Most western practitioners and instructors have only studied with a master for a few years before going off on their own, which is why Lou believes that most of the bagua here is watered down, and even kind of amusing to watch.

Standing Meditation
Standing meditation is often overlooked by many who practice bagua, says Lou, and their art suffers for it. Daily practice of such meditation teaches the mind to focus and remain relaxed at the same time. It allows the body and mind to reset, something needed by everyone in our high-stress times. Don't focus on chi flow during meditation, he says, because if you concentrate on it you won't know if the energy is real or imagined. Instead, one should focus on heightening sensitivity.

Imagine the body surrounded by a bubble, he says. Move your finger slightly and feel the movement throughout the bubble. After the animated discussion on combat, Master Lou is settling down as he discusses meditation, becoming tranquil.

Have you ever heard your heart beat? he says. That is the goal.

It is that question that sums up Master Lou De Xiu's art, and martial arts training in general. Developing the strength and skill to punch straight through an opponent's chest, and developing the sensitivity and peace of mind not to do so. Developing the sensitivity to hear your heart beat.

Friday, 14 June 2013

Luo DeXiu London seminar 2013

Book & Pay NOW for Luo DeXiu London seminar 28/6/13 - 1/7/13


Evening of Friday 28th June -  3 hours of Fighting methods
All day Saturday 29th June - 6 hours of Houtian (Post-Heaven) Line 1 - Guiding principles
Morning of Sunday 30th June - 3 hours of Chi kung
Afternoon of Sunday 30th - Bagua wrestling/throwing
Evening of Monday 1st July - 3 hours of Xiantian (Pre-heaven) circle palm changes

For full Description of content and material depth please see the facebook event here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/358953124221667

You must follow the following two steps please in advance to attend this seminar:

1. Pay first by clicking the paypal button on the left and selecting the payment for you. You need to pay 100% in advance.

2 Send an email to  chris@palmchange.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it stating your name,  the seminars that you are attending and when you paid and any other details needed to track your payment - for example if paying through a company or different name - supply details.

 If you have any specific questions please contact chris@palmchange.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
Strictly limited to first 30 practitioners - So don't miss out :)
For more info, see:  http://www.palmchange.com

Monday, 27 February 2012

Forthcoming seminar

http://www.yizong.org/uk/classes-seminars-information.htm

The above is a link to the english language version of Luo Dexiu's website, detailing his itinerary for this year's seminars.

Just as last year, he will be giving seminars in both Manchester and London, though earlier this time, due to the timing of the Olympics.

Please note that the Manchester seminar will be closed-door, so only Yi Zong school students and instructors will be allowed to attend.  The London dates, however, are open to all.

 I was lucky enough to attend last year and found Luo Laoshi to be a very gifted and yet amazingly accessible teacher.  Despite my being a newcomer (at that time, training at the Manchester classes for less than a year), I found him happy to demonstrate techniques to/on me and he took great pains to communicate some very valuable tips and concepts to both myself individually and the class as a whole.

Anyone interested should use the contact details on the site to contact the instructors/organisers of the classes to arrange either a class or attendance at one or more of the seminar sessions.

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

About Bagua

Stolen from the website of my baguazhang class in Chorlton, Greater Manchester
(see http://www.manchester-bagua.org/)

Baguazhang is an "Internal" Chinese martial art that has constant change as it's defining principle. It is one of the 3 main styles of internal martial art along with Xingyiquan and Taijiquan. Bagua involves training various types of stepping on a circle with changes of direction called "palm changes" that involve twisting, turning and spiraling the body in order to challenge the practitioner in different ways. Emphasis is placed on developing fluid connected movement, mental calmness within that movement and on building structure and "whole body power".

There is much more to a complete system of Bagua than this classic circle walking practice however, and more "external" body strengthening exercises, single movement drills, angular stepping, fast mobile footwork, standing grappling, throwing and striking must all be trained and properly developed.

Indeed, the particular style of Bagua we study is called Gao style and comes to us fom Gao Yisheng - a Bagua practitioner who explicitly separated his training into Xiantian or "Pre-heaven" practices (the circle walking, palm changes, swimming body practices etc) and Houtian or "Post-heaven" practices (short linear "forms" similar in approach to Xingyiquan which more obviously address combat application and are concerned with developing solid structure and whole body strength) it is through training both the Xiantian and Houtian approaches that we develop both a strong , supple and healthy body and also develop usable combat ability.

This material was learned from Gao Yisheng by Zhang Junfeng to whom he gave the generation name Yizong. This was also the name of the school where he taught many students on Taiwan including the Hong brothers - Hong Yixiang, Hong Yimian and Hong Yiwen. It was in Hong Yixiang's Tang Shou Tao school that Luo De Xiu was introduced to the Internal martial arts and he became one of Hong's top fighters in full contact fighting competitions. Later he studied with the other Hong brothers as well as seeking out as many of Zhang Junfeng's original students as possible. Luo Laoshi also studied with Lui Qian a direct student of Sun Xikun in his investigation into baguazhang and is now regarded as one of the foremost practitioners of internal martial arts in the world.

Luo Laoshi continues to teach the Yizong material of Gao Baguazhang, Hebei Xingyiquan and Chen Pan Ling TaijiQuan in Taipei Taiwan and travels to England regularly to teach seminars.

For general information and links regarding more styles of Baguazhang, its history and practitioners please refer to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baguazhang