
Sifu Wong practicing Taijiquan

Sifu Wong demonstrating
"Golden Bridge"

A priceless old photograph taken
more than 30 years ago showing
a lion dance demonstration by
Uncle Righteousness at the lion head
and Sifu Wong at the tail
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QUALITIES
OF A GOOD MASTER
Having a good master is definitely a tremendous blessing in kungfu,
taijiquan and chi kung training. As mediocre instructors are so common
nowadays --
some even start to teach after having attended only a few week-end
seminars -- finding a great master is like finding a gem in a hay
stack. Here are some guidelines to help you find one.
An Example of What He Teaches
A good master must be a living example of what he teaches.
A kungfu master must be able to defend himself, a taijiquan master
must have some internal force, and a chi kung master must exhibit
radiant health, as these are the basic qualities these arts are
meant to develop.
A master of kungfu, taijiquan or chi kung does not enjoy the luxury
of many coaches in modern sports like football and athletics who
often cannot dribble a ball or run a race half as well as the students
they teach. They are also some kungfu, taijiquan or chi kung instructors
today who cannot perform half as well as their average students,
but they are certainly not masters, although as a form of courtesy
they may be addressed as such
by their students or the general public.
Understanding Dimension and Depth
Besides being skillful, a good master should preferably
be knowledgeable. He should have a sound understanding of the dimension
and depth of the art he is teaching, and be able to answer basic
questions his students may have concerning the what, why and how
of their practice. Without this knowledge, a master will be limited
in helping his students to derive the greatest potential benefits
in their training.
However, especially in the East, some masters may be very skillful
but may not be knowledgeable. This is acceptable if we take the
term 'master' to mean someone who has attained a very high level
in his art, but who may not be a teacher.
The reverse is unacceptable, i.e. someone who is very knowledgeable
but not skillful, a situation quite common in the West. A person
may have read a lot about kungfu, taijiquan or chi kung, and have
written a few books on it, but has little kungfu, taijiquan or chi kung
skills. We may call him a scholar but certainly not a master.
Systematic and Generous
The third quality of a master as a good teacher is that
he must be both systematic and generous in his teaching. Someone
who is very skillful and knowledgeable, but teaches haphazardly
or withholds much of his advance art, is an expert or scholar but
not a good master.
On the other hand, it is significant to note that a good master
teaches according to the needs and attainment of his students. If
his students have not attained the required standard, he would not
teach them beyond their ability (although secretly he might long
to), for doing so is usually not to the students' best interest.
In such a situation he may often be mistaken as withholding secrets.
Radiates Inspiration
The fourth quality, a quality that transforms a good master
into a great master, is that he radiates inspiration. It is a joy
to learn from a great master
even though his training is tough.
He makes complicated concepts easy to understand, implicitly provides
assurance that should anything
goes wrong he is able and ready to rectify it, and spurs his students
to do their best, even beyond the level that he himself has attained.
High Moral Values
The most important quality of a great master is that
he teaches and exhibits in his daily living high moral values. Hence,
the best world fighter who brutally wounds his opponents, or the
best teacher of any art who does not practise what he preaches,
cannot
qualify to be called a great master.
A great master is tolerant, compassionate, courageous, righteous
and shows a great love and respect for life. Great masters are understandably
rare; they are more than worth their weight in gold
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