AN INTRODUCTION TO CHINESE MARTIAL ARTS
By
Liang Shouyu
Translated by Bill Chen and Mike Sigman
Please bear in mind that "Wushu" translates to "martial arts" in general in
this context, and does not imply the negative connotation of empty showmanship
that some "wushu" may have gained.
[In this version, I have changed the Chinese romanization to consistent
Pinyin style. TWC]
INTRODUCTION TO WUSHU
Martial arts or Wushu, have been created and developed for self-defense and
survival throughout human history. Correct Chinese Wushu training improves
physical ability, health, and willpower; it gives an individual an excellent
method of exercise, a personal art form, a competitive sport, and a basis for
self-defense and sparring. Total martial training includes Ti (kicking), Da
(punching), Shuai (throwing), Na (controlling), Gi (hitting), Ci (thrusting),
etc. Related to each style are basic forms, or sequences, which may involve
defense strategies, offense, retreat, mobility and immobility, speed and
slowness, hard or soft postures, emptiness and fullness, with or without
weapons.
Other training will include practical defense using that particular style,
defense simulation such as two-man choreographed sequences for beginning contact
training. There are also internal and external body training methods to
strengthen the body to withstand strikes and blows. In the advanced stages of
training, a student begins full-contact training by sparring with semi-control
in order to add realism to the training.
Wushu (literally, "martial methods") was historically termed "Wu-Yi" or
martial arts. Fairly recently, the Chinese government changed the term to
"Guoshu," or "national method." The term most popular in North America is
"Kung-fu," which actually means one's ability in any skill, not necessarily
martial.
Under the present Chinese government, the term "Wushu" is accepted. Ancient
Chinese history records that during the "Spring and Autumn" and the "Warring
States" periods (770 B.C. - 221 A.D.), the king of the Zhou kingdom ordered a
sword contest. A young woman by the name of Yuh Niuy emerged from three thousand
swordsmen as the ultimate victor in a seven-day contest. Her sword methods and
philosophies were passed down for a thousand years. Some of her writings expound
timeless Wushu philosophies. For example:
- "When fencing, though highly alert,
- The appearance is as calm as a fair lady's
- But when in action, a vicious Tiger emerges.
On a similar note:
- "Weak and exposed in appearance;
- But powerful when unleashed.
- One's reactions may start afterwards,
- But the response arrives there first."
One further writing by Yuh Niuy dwells on the essence of Wushu:
- "The Way is so small and simple, but the meaning is timeless and profound.
- The Way has an entrance; it also has a Yin and a Yang.
- The entrance constantly opens and closes,
- Yin and Yang weaken and flourish.
- When the Way is battle, be full-spirited within,
- But outwardly show calm and be relaxed;
- Appear to be as gentle as a fair lady, but react like a vicious tiger.
- Though hidden within, the spirit of the body moves;
- Though obscured like a setting sun, the spirit moves like an unleashed
rabbit,
- Catching the body and outrunning shadow like a mirage.
- Back and forth in one breath.
- The spirit cannot be retained in form.
- And, though ever moving, it cannot be heard."
Ever since the Zhou Dynasty, which ended in 771 B.C., practical Wushu
training has included basic skills, such as strength training, fencing, staff
sparring, spear training, etc., and it has also included training by using
forms, such as the Shaolin Eight Methods, with the basic form supplemented by
weapons forms, two-man forms, staff forms, etc.
The emphasis and importance of this type of martial training has played an
important role throughout Chinese history. During the Tang Dynasty (618-907
A.D.), which was one of the most powerful periods of Chinese history, warriors
were actually chosen through martial competition and officers were promoted
through this same sort of competition. Since at that time communications were
well established with many neighboring countries; Chinese Wushu had a pronounced
impact on these countries and was called "Tang Soo Do," the Way of the Chinese
Hand. During the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 A.D.), various forms of Wushu were well
established in Korea, Japan, Tibet, and many other countries. What is called
"Karate" is actually a descendent of Southern Chinese boxing forms, and
similarly, Judo can trace its origins to the importation of Chinese wrestling
and Qinna, the precursor of Jiu-jitsu.
This spreading of Chinese Wushu has interested martial-arts researchers; some
researchers have found many rare martial arts styles from records or isolated
practitioners in neighboring countries. Currently, Wushu styles are being openly
taught, with martial artists sharing their knowledge and comparing their styles.
This movement has brought harmony to the martial community and has encouraged
the polishing of the individual styles. Training in the various styles of Wushu
has been supplemented by modern knowledge of physiology and the health
sciences.
Today, Wushu needs and uses recent advances in sports medicine, nutrition,
etc., because it is often practiced as a highly demanding sport and a delicate,
complex art form...not just a system of self-defense.
FORMS AND CLASSIFICATIONS OF WUSHU
To attempt to classify Chinese Wushu is very difficult because of the number
and variety of styles in the enormous country of China. Don=t forget that
one-fourth of the world population is in China! Traditionally, Chinese martial
arts are classified by one of three methods:
- Internal or External styles.
- Southern or Northern styles.
- As "Shaolin" or "Wudang" or "Ermei."
Roughly speaking, the difference between internal and external styles can
refer to whether the strength is from the torso and legs (internal) or whether
the strength is derived from training of the more specific arm and leg muscles
(external). The word "internal" often connotes a more pliable martial style.
Southern or Northern styles naturally refer to the general origin, but finer
distinctions are often made about style differences of these two schools.
Shaolin boxing styles are generally said to be derived from the form of
fighting practiced at the Shaolin Temple in Henan province. Similarly, Wudang is
the name of a mountain used by Taoists in Hubei province and Ermei is a
significant religious mountain in Sichuan province.
General classification aside, modern Wushu competition groups performances
into six categories for purposes of judging:
- Empty Hand Forms
- Weapon Forms
- Choreographed Routines (involving 2 or more people.)
- Group Practice
- Sparring Competition
- Qigong (Chi Kung) Power Demonstrations
EMPTY HAND COMPETITION
Empty hand competition involves the performance of a sequence, usually
traditional, demonstrating the function and essence of a particular martial
style. Competition normally falls into the following subdivisions:
A. Long Fist -- Styles such as Zha, Wa, Wha, Pao, Hun, Fangzi, and many other
Shaolin Long Fist styles. Each style may contain 20 to 30 routines.
B. Taiji [T'ai Chi Ch'uan] -Chen style, Yang style, Wu style, Wu [or Hao]
style, Sun style, Kun Lun, Spontaneous, Qigong, Bagua Taiji, etc. Also included
are Taiji styles derived from the above sets.
C. Southern Fist -- Hong Jia [Hung Gar], Cai Li Fo [Choi Li Fat], Mo, Tiger
& Crane, Southern Branch, Wing Chun [Yongchun], Wing Tsun, Diou Family,
Ermei Southern, Tai-I Five Elements, Hard Entrance Southern, Nine Temple,
Eighteen Kicks, Zi-men Southern, Hun-Men, Yu-Men, Gun-Men, Yui-Men, Wudang
Southern, White Eyebrow, White Crane, Crane Ha-Gar, Five Elders, Grand Elder,
Lo-Han, Yue-Chia, Kun-Men, Five Plum Flowers, Ermei Shaolin, Wudang Shaolin,
etc. It is estimated that in Canton alone there are more than 400 types of
Southern Shaolin.
D. Xingyi [Hsing-I] -- Five Elements and Twelve Animals, Linking Five
Elements, Four-Grasps Punches, Eight Postures, Ba-tze Kung, Twelve Crosses,
Tsu-Ru Ton, Mixed Form, Rin-Yan Jior, etc.
E. Bagua -- Basic Ba-Gua, Innate Ba-Gua, Latent Ba-Gua, Ba-Gua Consecutive
Palm, Close-body Ba-Gua, Ba-Gua Dragon Form, etc.
F. Imitating Styles -- Preying Mantis, Eagle Claw, Monkey, Tiger, Leopard,
Drunken-Style, Drunken Eight Fairies, Duck, Snake. Rooster, Do~, etc.
G. Other Styles -- Ba-ji, Ton-Bei, Ton-Bae, Six Harmonies/Eight Methods,
Wu-Ji Chuan, Liang-I, Ssu-hsiang, Gung-Li, etc.
WEAPONS COMPETITION
Although there are more than 400 different types of ancient Chinese weapons
and many usages of each, there are only about 18 standard weapons that you will
usually see in Wushu competition. Sometimes a practitioner will combine two
weapons in a form or do a variation involving two of the same weapons. Some
instances of forms often seen in competition are: Broadsword, straight sword,
spear, staff, Kwan-sword, double-swords, double straight-swords, double
hook-swords, double-ended spear, nine-section whip, rope-dart, chained hammer,
3-sectional staff, 2-sectional staff, daggers, double short-staff, etc.
CHOREOGRAPHED ROUTINES
Choreographed fighting forms are used by students in order to develop an
understanding of the offense, defense, distance, reaction, speed, and so forth
of a particular martial style. These forms can be practiced to the extent that
spontaneity replaces the more mechanical.
GROUP PRACTICE
SPARRING COMPETITION
Sparring competition is normally broken down into the following categories:
A. Bare-hand sparring -- with or without protective equipment.
B. Taiji Push Hands -- Stationary, moving, free-style, free-sparring.
C. Qinna -- This joint-locking and controlling is done seated or standing.
D. Chinese Wrestling.
E. Short Weapons.
F. Long Weapons.
QIGONG (CHI-KUNG)
The category of Qigong involves demonstrations of internal power and
strength. Practitioners of this esoteric art demonstrate the powers that
internal strength training and breath-training have given them.
In recent years, many of China's excellent Wushu teams have demonstrated
their skills in foreign countries. These displays of finely-honed martial
ability have caused a stir wherever they go. Although these teams have exhibited
the performance side of Wushu, many of the other beneficial aspects of Wushu
have not been equally extolled. In fact, some detractors of Wushu relegate it to
at best a form of gymnastic exhibition, having little to do with actual martial
arts. Such thinkers usually assign the term "Kung-Fu" to what they believe
contains true, functional martial arts, i.e., if a form is pretty, it is
probably not useful. It is the author's observation that this distinction cannot
so easily be made.
In many North American martial-arts competitions it becomes fairly obvious
that the distinction between "Wushu" and "Kung-Fu" is even less clear than in
China. In reality, "Kung-Fu" is "Wushu," the major difference being that Wushu
training has not only traditional fighting sets, but also difficult tumbling and
rigorous basic training of skills. Wushu has some extremely competent fighters
among its ranks, as well as those who are more interested in health or
performance. Whatever it is called, modern martial arts are evolving and
improving...the traditional basics give us a firm base upon which to build.
PHYSICAL TECHNIQUES
It is said that there four general techniques which apply to all styles:
Kicking, striking, throwing, and controlling. Of course, kicking can involve
tripping, in addition to foot and leg strikes. Striking refers to the blows from
all areas of the body. ..head, hands, elbows, hips, shoulders, etc. Throwing
refers to the techniques of wrestling, grappling, etc. which are used to down an
opponent. Controlling is a general term which includes joint locks, tendon or
muscle stretching (in a painful manner), striking of nerve points, and the
obstruction of breath or blood flow.
These four general techniques should be demonstrated clearly during the
performance of a form. In Chinese competition, the competitors receive
deductions in points if they cannot express these fighting techniques clearly,
superb performance of aerials and somersaults aside.
THE "EIGHT QUALITIES"
During the performance of a form, there are "Eight Qualities" which are
looked for and judged:
1. Hands.
2. Eyes.
3. Body Technique.
4. Steps.
5. Spirit.
6. Breath.
7. Strength.
8. Ability.
In Long Fist, the requirements for "Hands" are "fists like shooting stars,"
which infers that the movements of arms, hands, wrists, and fingers be with a
relaxed strength and speed. The motions in Long Fist will be from lightning fast
to a sudden, stable halt, and conversely, from motionless to a sudden burst of
power. The "Eyes" must be alert and alive, following the hands with lightning
speed. One's "Body" or torso, with its central point at the waist, must be agile
and lively. The stated traditional requirement is that the "waist behaves like a
crawling snake." The "Steps" must be stable and, regardless of how rapid the
movements are, the feet must stick to the ground. There is a pertinent
traditional saying, "To punch is easier than to walk.
First, we judge the steps, then we judge the attack; if the steps are not
stable, then the punches can but be chaotic. If the steps are stagnant, then so
must be the punches." "Spirit" refers to the mental state of the individual and
is as important as the physical expression. Again, we are not referring to
superficial facial expression or pretended aggression, but to that intangible,
"Shen." "Breath" or "Qi" is an integral part of sequence practice. By breathing
deeply to the lower abdomen we can chance our stamina and delay or avoid the
onset of breathlessness. This is often phrased as "sink the chi to the Dan
Tian." As an example, let your breath "come up" (fill your lungs) when you are
rising from a lower posture to a higher one. From a higher posture to a lower
one, "sink the breath" (let out air, keep the pelvis tucked). When generating
explosive force, focus the breath by explosively exhaling and allowing the
contracting muscles to add to your other focused strength. "Strength" in martial
arts is different from the strength in weight lifting.
In martial applications we are very interested in focusing the body's
strengths toward a small area of application. To execute a correct thrusting
punch, the stable ground provides the basis of power which goes from the feet
and is aligned through knees, hips, waist, spine, shoulders, and elbows to the
hand. This linked support of the entire body enable a practitioner to "focus"
the power of the ground and thereby produce more power than a person using brute
strength.
"Ability" is what "Kung Fu" means, i.e. the general ability which can be used
to describe any skill. In martial arts, "Ability" refers to the composite
strength, speed, endurance, agility, coordination, and technical skill. There
are "Twelve Descriptions" which characterize the desired qualities of "Ability:"
1. In motion, move like a thundering wave.
2. When still, be like a mountain.
3. Rising up, be like a monkey.
4. Land swiftly and lightly like a bird.
5. Be steady like a rooster on one leg.
6. One's stance is as firm as a pine tree, yet expresses motion.
7. Spin swiftly and circularly like a wheel.
8. Bend and flex like a bow.
9. Waft gracefully like a leaf in the wind.
10. Sink like a heavy piece of metal.
11. Prey like a watchful, gliding eagle.
12. Accelerate like a gusty wind.
To summarize the "Eight Qualities" of Long Fist practice, we make use of the
descriptive Chinese saying: "The fist is like a shooting star, the eyes are as
quick as lightning, the body moves like a writhing snake, the steps are sticky,
the spirit is full, the breath sinks low...the strength must be articulate and
the ability pure." By grasping the meaning of the "Four Fighting Methods," The
"Eight Qualities," and the "Twelve Descriptions," we can improve our practice
and performance of martial arts by tenfold.
THE REALISTIC APPROACH
Martial arts practitioners have many and diverse goals in practicing this
form of physical culture. It should be borne in mind that many people practice
Wushu for the health benefits and are not overly concerned with either fighting
ability or "machismo." There are many styles of Wushu and most do a good job of
exercising the entire body while not being too demanding about the size of the
workout area...gender and age are of little consequence. What a grand sport!
Contemporary Wushu emphasizes accurate, artistic movement. The more newly
created sequences often combine aerials, tumbling, etc. with the traditional
requirements to make the form more impressive or sophisticated. It is a quality
of human nature to love beauty of movement, so the practice of these
embellishments is understandable...as long as the core movements and the martial
philosophy remain intact. The rapid spread of Wushu practice and the
appreciation of its performance are good indicators of the general appeal this
sport has to people.
Once again it is worth repeating that the martial roots of Wushu should not
be forsaken in the rush to display physical ability, for therein lies the
distinction between Wushu and dancing. Of the hundreds of styles of Wushu, each
has its specialties and interesting history. It is good for an individual to
specialize in one style, but it is also important to continually improve by
being attentive to the good points of other styles.
The easily accepted "closed door" thinking should be discarded in order to
bring a healthy attitude which compliments our contemporary society. Fortunately
for all of us, there are many martial artists who are currently sharing their
knowledge and research of various styles. "Wu-de," or martial virtue, is the
foremost quality of a martial artist. A famous Chinese proverb says, "A full can
of water will not make noise, but a half can does." All truly good martial
artists, from ancient times to now, have displayed good character and
personality control as an example for us to emulate. Although there are
thousands of practical training methods, there is no absolute method.
Methods usually imply strict formulas, but people are all different.
Efficient use of martial formulas hinges on the understanding and judgment of
the individual practitioner. The key point in learning is understanding "why,"
not "how." The successful practitioner can implement one technique in many
variations if his understanding is good; an unsuccessful aspirer will learn one
technique and therefore know only one. Realistically, a person who learns a
sequence of sixty or so techniques will not be able to use them equally well in
an actual situation, but his learning of timing, essence, and the underlying
principles of a style make the study more than worthwhile.
In real life, many martial-arts masters were famous for using one simple
technique to defeat opponents. The process of discovery in the form that you are
learning is more important than the final answers at which you arrive, because
there is no absolute answer. That is why there are so many varieties of martial
arts! Strategy is another important consideration while learning the essences of
a form. You must constantly evaluate the environment, your opponent, distance,
etc.
As a simple illustration of strategy, if an opponent appears strong and
maintains an overpowering stature, one can pretend to be weak, even insipid, in
order to induce him to drop his guard or relax his concentration. A sudden
powerful attack from this weak-looking position can be physically and
emotionally devastating. Conversely, sometimes a confrontation can be disarmed
or won by a display of power, but tempered with caution. There is an applicable
Chinese proverb: "Attaining victory by inducing fear in your opponent is better
than expending yourself in a physical fight."
There are many "traditional" strategies such as "attack by defense," "retreat
to attack," "stay in the center in order to attack from the sides," etc. One can
trap an opponent by exposing some area to attack but have a counterattack
prepared. A sudden change in rhythm and direction can be effective. The
variations are endless; spend time thinking about them. In summary of practical
thoughts during your study of martial arts, consider the following: When
sparring, do not hurry to succeed and do not try to win through strength. Wisdom
and courage are the most important factors. The keys for winning are sharp eyes,
fast hands, courage, strong stance, solid strength...plus a confusing
combination of techniques. Always continue in your training of the basics,
because these have the greatest application in practical situations.
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