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Bajifan
Yellow Belt

Joined: 27 Feb 2007
Posts: 38
Styles: Taiji Quan, Baji Quan, Chang Quan
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Posted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 1:26 pm Post subject: |
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Well, I figured you might be, but I wasn't sure... so I went ahead and answered anyway  |
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bushido_man96
KF Sensei


Joined: 31 Mar 2006
Posts: 13960
Location: Hays, KS
Styles: Taekwondo, Combat Hapkido, Aikido, and I research Medieval Combat
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Posted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 4:55 pm Post subject: |
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| Bajifan wrote: |
Well, I figured you might be, but I wasn't sure... so I went ahead and answered anyway  |
No worries! _________________ Success is where preparation meets opportunity.
www.chiefswarpath.com |
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Bajifan
Yellow Belt

Joined: 27 Feb 2007
Posts: 38
Styles: Taiji Quan, Baji Quan, Chang Quan
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bushido_man96
KF Sensei


Joined: 31 Mar 2006
Posts: 13960
Location: Hays, KS
Styles: Taekwondo, Combat Hapkido, Aikido, and I research Medieval Combat
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Posted: Wed Mar 07, 2007 11:30 pm Post subject: |
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Nice. Very sharp and snappy. _________________ Success is where preparation meets opportunity.
www.chiefswarpath.com |
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WingChunTonight
White Belt

Joined: 29 Apr 2007
Posts: 1
Location: San Francisco
Styles: Wing Chun, Shorin Ryu, Wrestling
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Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2007 10:08 am Post subject: |
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| Kante wrote: |
| Bajifan wrote: |
| Why do you want to practice Wing Chun more than anything else? |
The main thing that attracted me to it is its blocking techniques. |
wing chun is not about blocking, wing chun is about striking forward and being sensitive enough to get through any bridge and control your and your opponets energy.
The ideal fight for a wing chun practitioner would be to strike forward and have his opponet block his punch, then the wing chun guy should be sensitive enough to deal with the bridge very quickly.
There are very few blocks in wing chun.
Anything below the waist is blocked by your legs.
The tan sao is situational, ok for dealing with a bridge/
the bong sao is a last minute move, and your ribs are exposed when you do bong sao, so you want to hold bong sao for as little time as possible.
the jut sao is another option to get through a bridge.
fook sao is a lazy hand ok for riding your enemies energy I guess,
any other blocks in the system are variations of the blocks I stated above. So I wouldn't say wing chun is a very strong blocking style, I have been told not to be a weapon chaser, kill the source.
The principle of wing chun "blocking" is pretty simple, it's just developing the sensitivity to help you deal with the bridge once you make contact, that is the hard part.
At my school, all of the exercises train balance, timing coordination, sensitivity, and relaxation.
BTW I am yip man lineage, so this may not apply to pan nam or other lineages. _________________ not... kryptonite! |
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bushido_man96
KF Sensei


Joined: 31 Mar 2006
Posts: 13960
Location: Hays, KS
Styles: Taekwondo, Combat Hapkido, Aikido, and I research Medieval Combat
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Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2007 1:23 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for that information, WingChunTonight.
Welcome to the Forums! I dig your username, too! _________________ Success is where preparation meets opportunity.
www.chiefswarpath.com |
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RealWingChunKuen
Yellow Belt

Joined: 20 May 2007
Posts: 79
Location: London, UK
Styles: Wing Chun (Mainland chinese lineage).
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Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 11:55 am Post subject: Re: I really want to practice Wing Chun but it's not possibl |
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| Kante wrote: |
Hello,
I am very interrested in starting to practice Wing Chun but the thing is, there are no instructors where i live (Israel)...
I just really want to but it's not possible. I'm 15 years old so it's not possible for me to move, I've been training Shotokan Karate for 8 years and am a black belt, i think it would be great to learn a second martial art.
So what do you think i should do?
Thanks. |
You can google "kung fu schools in Israel" and see what you come up with. If you can't find Wing Chun, then you can consider other styles such as Baji Quan, Praying Mantis (Both northern or southern styles), Pak Mei, etc. All great styles that some would say superior to most of Wing Chun that you would find out there.
Of course, any kung fu school has to be a good one and that is what you will have to find out for yourself through practise and research.
Good luck.  _________________ Fighting arts that were not effective for fighting and selfdefense, never lasted long enough in martial arts history, to gain the Traditional Martial Arts - TMA - status. |
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Justin Treadaway
Yellow Belt

Joined: 24 May 2007
Posts: 82
Location: New Albany, Mississippi
Styles: CURRENT: Sil Lum Kungfu (Mainland chinese lineage), Modern Arnis, Incorperating (Tai Tzu Chang Chuan, Chin-na, Iga-Ryu). PAST: Isshinryu karate
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Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 2:00 pm Post subject: |
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I study Sil lum kung fu and super love it. If it is around you should check it out, pretty much the samething as shaolin kung fu but with shorter stances and gears more for self defense. It was designed for people who arent monks but for warriors. So its a very self defense oriented style, It has the 5 animals, mantis, monkey, and more, Also has a lot of weapons and weapon defenses.... _________________ "The most important technique is a smile"
http://www.kungfuarnis.com/index.html |
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stonecrusher69
Purple Belt


Joined: 23 Apr 2002
Posts: 550
Location: New Jersey
Styles: Buddha Hand Wing Chun
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Posted: Mon Jun 11, 2007 9:55 am Post subject: |
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I could give you some advice on Wing Chun.I've been training it for 25 years. If you really want to learn Wing Chun.I would either wait until you get a little older and travel to find a good Sifu or get a few people you kknow together that wants to learn Wing Chun.Contact a Wing Chun Sifu and ask him to come and dua weekend seminar or workshop.Then ever 6 months say have him comeback to learn more... _________________ When the student is ready the master will appear.. |
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