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Guang Ping Yang tai chi

Tai chi style descended from Yang-style tai chi

Guang Ping Yang tai chi

Tai chi style descended from Yang-style tai chi

Distinctive "Single Whip" Stance of Guang Ping Yang tai chi

Guang Ping Yang tai chi () is a tai chi style descended from Yang-style tai chi. It claims to combine all the positive aspects of Yang-style with qualities that added strength and versatility. Its stances are lower and wider than Yang-style, but not as pronounced as Chen-style. Guang Ping is also distinguished by as little as a 51%/49% weight difference between leading and trailing foot in certain moves. A stronger, more balanced foundation gives the student more power and greater flexibility. Guang Ping Yang tai chi also combines Xingyiquan and Baguazhang energies, which can be seen in Guang Ping's spiral force energy and projecting force energy theories. It has become known as the "lost" Yang-style tai chi form.

Kuo Lien Ying is credited with bringing Guang Ping Yang tai chi to the United States.

There appears to be controversy on whether this is a "notable and even distinct" style of tai chi, and its adherents have battled this perception for many years. Thanks to the efforts of Grandmaster Henry Look, the first president of the Guang Ping Yang Ta'i Chi Association, Guang Ping Yang tai chi has been acknowledged and listed as a separate tai chi category in many competitions and tournaments across the country, such as the Kuosho International Martial Arts Tournaments and the UC Berkeley Chinese Wushu Tournaments.

64 Movements of Guang Ping Yang tai chi

Guang Ping Yang has 64 movements, symbolically linked to the 64 hexagrams in the I Ching.

64.Grand Terminus

History

The Guang Ping form is traced back to the great tai chi Master Yang Luchan (1799–1872), who had been adopted by the Chen family and had learned the Chen-style tai chi from them. Yang Luchan moved his family from the Chen village to the town of Guang Ping, and developed Yang-style tai chi. The stances of this modified form were not as low as the Chen-style tai chi form, with a combination of hard and soft styles, long and small circles and incorporated double jump kicks, and other wide sweeping kicks. The movements were long and deep, more energetic, with more apparent martial combat character. This Yang-style tai chi became known as Guang Ping Yang tai chi.

Yang Luchan taught his son, Yang Banhou, the Guang Ping Yang tai chi. Yang Banhou was reportedly the official teacher for the Imperial court of the Manchus. The indigenous Chinese, known as the Han, had been subjugated by the Manchus and therefore Yang Banhou did not want to pass down the family's true art to them. Also, the Manchurians were aristocrats and were not inclined to the more strenuous exercises, so Yang Banhou adapted his father's Guang Ping form to be more subtle and taught them a very elegant, middle-to-small frame form. This is the Yang-style tai chi style that has come to be known as the Beijing Yang-style. Yang Banhou secretly taught his father's form (the Guang Ping style) only to select students who were not his family, who then taught it to only a few of their students and the art was subsequently lost to the Yang family.

Yang Banhou's lineage-holding disciple was Wang Jiaoyu, a Han (native Chinese) and a stableman for the Imperial family. As the legend goes, one day Yang Banhou heard a noise over the fence and looked to see Wang Jiaoyu practicing the Guang Ping form. He confronted Wang Jiaoyu and demanded an explanation. Wang Jiaoyu told him he had been secretly watching Yang Banhou practicing the Guang Ping form. Yang Banhou told Wang Jiaoyu that if he could put his chin to his toe in the chin-to-toe exercise within 100 days, he would teach him. Jiaoyu succeeded. Since Wang Jiaoyu was a Han, Yang took Wang as his student and trained him in the secret Guang Ping style, and made him promise not to teach this art as long as the dynasty was in power.

Wang Jiaoyu kept this promise, and only began teaching Guang Ping Yang tai chi much later in his life.

Kuo Lien Ying learned the form from Wang Jiaoyu. Wang Jiaoyu, purportedly 112 years of age at the time, accepted Kuo as one of very few disciples. From Wang's teaching, it is said that Kuo learned all the true skill and essence of Guang Ping Yang tai chi.

Kuo Lien Ying moved to San Francisco in the early 1960s and opened one of the first tai chi studios in America with the help of Sifu David Chin. Sifu Chin first practiced with Kuo on the rooftop of the Sam Wong Hotel in Chinatown. Sifu Chin is the only living student of Kuo's to learn a second set of what he asserts Sifu Kuo called "the Original Yang t'ai chi," and that this "Application Set" is crucial for the development of the boxing art that Kuo passed on. Sifu Chin taught the Application Set to Tim Smith (Raleigh, NC) in 1996. Prior to Kuo moving to America, he taught Kwok Wo Ngai the complete system as well. Kwok fled the Chinese Communist Revolution like Kuo and also came to America. He began teaching in New Jersey where he was known as Peter Kwok.

Guang Ping Yang Tai Chi Association

The Guang Ping Yang Tai Chi Association was formed In 1997 to honor the memory of Sifu Kuo Lien Ying and in commemoration of his unselfish sharing of his many skills. The mission of the Association is to promote, perpetuate, develop interest in, and preserve the quality of Guang Ping Yang style tai chi throughout the world, and to provide support for research and education in Guang Ping Yang tai chi.

Guang Ping Yang Tai Chi Association Honorary Chairmen: Y.C. Chiang, Henry Look

Guang Ping Yang Tai Chi Association Past Presidents: Henry Look, Donald Rubbo, Nina (Sugawara) Deerfield, Nick D’Antoni, Dominick Ruggieri, Randy Elia, Lawrence Riddle, Lucy Bartimole, Grace Cheng, Valarie Prince Gabel

Current President, Guang Ping Yang Tai Chi Association: David Chosid

A mnemonic of thirteen tai chi movements

Let no one esteem lightly the Thirteen Movements

But bear in mind that your consciousness of them commences in the waist,

In performance, care must be exercised regarding your transposition

from one stance to another,

the twists and turns in each movement, and the distribution of blanks and

substantives in a given movement,

While keeping the chi freely circulating throughout your whole body.

All changes and motions are conceived and touched off in the stillness of absolute quietude,

Hence motion and action are kindred to rest and inaction, in other words, ultimately indistinguishable from each other.

Likewise, the mystery of Tai-Chi Chuan is that

It is your opponent's movements that condition your own as adapted by nature

to his own undoing.

Remember to be mindful of every single move by trying to feel its meaning,

And you will eventually come into possession of the art's secrets without conscious effort.

Rivet your attention, without even a moment's interruption, onto the waist interval, and

Keep your abdomen free from tension due to food or impurities, so that

Your vitality flux (chi) may, as it were, boil and rise like steam.

Keep the lowest segments of your vertebrae central in relation to gravitation all the while, when

Your limbs and body are gyrating with effortless nimbleness, and your head is held

buoyant as if suspended from above.

Carefully observe and investigate and convince yourself that

Your way of bending or straightening, your closing-in or throwing open should never

be as you will them to be, but as Nature wills.

A novice will require verbal instruction during the initial stages.

But practice will steer its own course and bring about its own perfection.

As to the theory and practice, i.e., the constituents and functioning of Tai-Chi Chuan,

The spirit is sovereign and the body its servant,

The end purpose of these exercises is to prolong life and endow it with the youth of eternal spring.

Oh, sing! Oh, sing! Sing this short song of 144 Chinese characters;

Commit every single word of it to memory without exception.

Enquiries and researches that deviate from this approach

Only waste time and leave behind regrets and sighings. From Kuo Lien Ying's book Tai-Chi Chuan in Theory and Practice

Books

  • The T'ai Chi Boxing Chronicle, Compiled and explained by Kuo Lien Ying, translated into English by Gordon Guttman
  • Tai-Chi Chuan in Theory and Practice,

References

References

  1. ''Tai-Chi Chuan in Theory and Practice'', Page 28 {{ISBN. 1-55643-298-4
  2. ''Tai-Chi Chuan in Theory and Practice'', Page 19-20 {{ISBN. 1-55643-298-4
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