
Combat Application of Taijiquan

Sifu Wong demonstrating "Grasping Sparrows Tail"

Photos 1-4

Photos 5-7

"Low Single Whip", photo
8

"Fan through the Back", Photo
9

"Needle at the Sea Bottom",
Photo 10

"Cross-Hands Thrust Kick",
Photo 11
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COMBAT
APPLICATION OF TAIJIQUAN
Can Taijiquan be Used for Fighting?
Many people, especially in the West, will be quite surprised
that Taijiquan can be effectively used for fighting. In fact the
term "Taijiquan" means "cosmos martial art".
All great Taijiquan masters since classical times have practised
Taijiquan as a martial art and all Taijiquan classics have described
it as a martial art, although the older texts often paid more attention
to its function in spiritual cultivation than in combat efficiency.
If you do not know the martial dimension of Taijiquan, you would
have missed the essence of this wonderful art, and would probably
have practised it as a dance. Even if your main intention of practising
Taijiquan is for health reasons, you would have missed the best
health benefits of Taijiquan if you do not practise it as a martial
art. This is because if you practise Taijiquan as a dance, the most
you can get are the benefits a dance can give such as flexibility,
elegance, loosening muscles and blood circulation. The proverbial
good health of a Taijiquan master, including his internal power,
remarkable stamina and mental freshness, is obtainable only if you
practise it as a martial art, i.e. if you train yourself to become
a formidable fighter whereby these health features are essential.
Amongst the various dimensions of Taijiquan, those of internal force
cultivation and combat application are necessary if you train Taijiquan
as a martial art. Without internal force a Taijiquan exponent would
have no stamina to last a fight and no striking power to subdue
an opponent; without knowing how to apply Taijiquan techniques to
combat he would be helpless when attacked.
Manifesting the yin-yang principle of the Taiji unity, internal
force and combat application compliment each other. If a Taijiquan
exponent has only internal force but no combat application, he may
be able to give impressive demonstration of his power, such as taking
punches without sustaining injury or sending a demonstration partner
flying backward, but he would be unable to defend himself in a real
fight. If he has only combat application but no internal force,
he may be able to discuss the wonderful combative techniques of
Taijiquan intellectually or perform some pre-arranged sparring elegantly,
yet when involved in a real fight he may be easily defeated by a
clumsy but mechanically stronger opponent. Internal force cultivation
will be explained in another webpage; this webpage explain some
combat applications of Taijiquan. All styles of Taijiquan are effective
for combat; the examples illustrated here are taken from the Yang
style.
The Flowing Movement of Taijiquan
Some students may have heard that the First Patriarch of Yang Style
Taijiquan, Yang Lu Chan, defeated all his challengers and he used
only one Taijiquan pattern known as "Grasping Sparrow's Tail".
Although many people may find it hard to believe, it is true that
if you have sufficient internal force and are skillful in combat
application, you can successfully employ just this one pattern,
"Grasping Sparrow's Tail", to overcome virtually any forms
of attack, irrespective of whether the attacks are punches, kicks,
throws or holds!
Photos 1 to 4, (right) which should be viewed clockwise, illustrate
how this pattern may be used to counter a thrust punch, then fell
the opponent onto the ground. In Photo 1 the opponent (illustrated
by Goh Kok Hin) attacks with a thrust punch, which is a very common
form of attack. The exponent (illustrated by Sifu Wong), beginning
the Grasping Sparrow's Tail pattern, shifts his body backward slightly
to avoid the punch.. Without any break, he wards off the thrust
punch with the peng technique, Photo 2, then grips the opponent's
throat and follows through with the li technique.
Continuing smoothly in the same flowing movement, he fells the opponent
onto the ground, Photo 3. Notice that the exponent's grip is still
on the opponent's throat although the latter is already on the ground,
Photo 4. If the exponent lets go his grip and walks away, the opponent
could jump up and continue fighting, possibly striking the former
from behind. In a life-death struggle, which fortunately are extremely
rare nowadays, the exponent could maim or even kill the opponent
by gripping hard at the latter's throat and tearing out the Adam's
apple. But Taijiquan exponents, in line with the Taoist reverence
for life, usually stop short of this fatal move and let the opponent
go, after demonstrating his combative superiority.
Starting Later but Arriving Earlier
Photos 5 to 7 (left) illustrate a Taijiquan counter against a continuous
attack. In Photo 5 the opponent attacks with a left palm strike
to the throat, and the exponent responds with the warding technique
in Grasping Sparrow's Tail. Before the exponent could continue with
any movement, the opponent instantly executes a thrust punch to
the exponent's chest, with the first palm strike acting as a feigning
move.
The exponent shifts his front right leg backward into the momentary
unicorn step and wards off the attack with a left vertical arm block,
Photo 6. Without any break, he moves his back left leg forward into
a bow-arrow stance, and strikes the opponent's side-ribs with a
vertical fist, with his left arm still in contact with the opponent's
attacking arm. This Taijiquan pattern is called "Looking at
the Fist below the Sleeves", Photo 7. When executed skillfully,
the exponent would hit the opponent at the moment when the latter's
movement is just spent, implementing the Taijiquan tactic of "starting
later but arriving earlier".
It is a common mis-conception amongst some student to think kicks
are more formidable than punches because they are (apparently) more
powerful and have longer reach. Actually among the four categories
of attacks - hand strikes, kicks, felling and grips - kicks are
technically the easiest to counter.
One simple and efficient way to counter almost any kicks is the
Taijiquan pattern called "Low Single Whip". As the opponent
kicks, just lower your stance in the Low Single Whip pattern, Photo
8 (right). When you have become more skillful, instantly the moment
the kick is spent, you move forward to counter strike the opponent,
often before he could recover his kicking leg.
Some students seem to believe that the higher one can kick the better
is his martial ability. Personally I find high kicks both unsightly
to watch, as they expose vital parts that customarily need to be
covered and protected, and technically inferior in combat as the
kicking attacker offers so many advantages to his opponent without
his opponent having to do anything.
One simple, effective counter against high kicks is the pattern
"Fan through the Back", Photo 9 (left). If someone gives
you a high kick, shift your body backward without moving your legs,
and continuing the smooth movement move forward, floating his kicking
leg with one hand, and striking his groin (if you want to be nasty)
or his thigh (if compassionate) with the other hand.
In contrast with the high kick, the low kick is inconspicuous and
deadly. One effective counter against the low kick is "Needle
at the Sea Bottom", Photo 10 (right). When an opponent executes
a low kick at you, move your front leg backward, but still keeping
it in front of your other leg, into the false-leg stance, and sweep
your palm strike at the shin of the opponent's kicking leg.
As soon as the opponent places his leg on the ground in front, or
brings it back behind his other leg, you move in swiftly to strike
him with one hand while covering yourself with the other hand. "Jade
Girl Threads the Shuttle" or "Fan through the Back"
(which are actually quite similar) would be an appropriate follow-up
pattern.
If your attacker executes a round-house kick, an excellent counter
you may use is "Cross-Hands Thrust Kick", Photo 11. As
his round-house kick is approaching, you move diagonally to the
other side and execute the thrust kick. You can kick at his abdominal
energy field or groin, but to avoid hurting him seriously, you kick
at his thigh, manifesting not just your combat superiority but also
your compassion.
Even a brief study of its combat application as expounded here demonstrates
not only the efficiency but also the elegance and profundity of
Taijiquan as a martial art. Its combative movements are graceful
and poetic, without the staccato action, muscular exertion and emotional
tension characteristic of some other martial systems. Its combative
principles are profound, exploiting the opponent's weakness to the
full without giving away any advantages.
It is significant to remember that combat application of techniques
and tactics is only one aspect of its martial function. The Taijiquan
exponent must also develop internal force to back up the effective
techniques and tactics in combat.
Moreover, combat efficiency is only one of the many benefits of
Taijiquan training. Masters have generalized the attainment in Taijiquan
into three major levels. At the first level Taijiquan promotes good
health; at the intermediate level it is very effective for self
defence, and at the highest level it leads to spiritual fulfilment.
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