1. Shi San Shi
Shi San Shi - Thirteen
Postures does not mean thirteen different postures or movements. Actually it
means thirteen basic skills; and moreover, it means thirteen basic
attributes for advance study. They are the foundation of all Taiji Quan
skills. It is said all other skills come from the different variation and
combination of these skills.
As mentioned in Wang’s
article above, there are thirteen characters for these thirteen skills. They
are Peng, Lu, Ji, An, Cai, Lie, Zhou, Kao, Jin, Tui, Gu, Pan, and Ding. The
first eight are about Shoufa - hand skills; and the last five are about Bufa
- footwork skills. The Taoist philosophical concept of Bagua (Eight Trigrams)
is the basic principle of the eight hand skills. The other philosophical
concept of Wuxing (Five Elements) is the basic principle of the five
footwork skills. Usually the eight hand skills are always called Bafa (Eight
Methods). They are put in order according to Bamen (Eight Gates) - the eight
positions of Bagua. The five footwork skills are always called Wubu (Five
Steps). Thus, the other common name of Thirteen Postures is Bamen Wubu –
Eight Gates and Five Steps.
2. Bafa
Ba means eight. Fa means
method. Bafa are eight hand skill methods. But with closer examination, it
also means eight kinds of basic Jin – trained force. It offers eight
features of skills. It expresses eight basic skill attributes. The hand
skills of Taiji Quan follow the principle of Bagua. It is said there are
eight basic attributes and everything is generated from them and all changes
are based on their combination. All skills and techniques are generated from
Bafa. Thus, Bafa is the basic skill of Taiji Quan.
According to the positions
of the eight gates in Xiantian (Pre-birth) Bagua, the eight skills of Bafa
are as listed in the following table.
Eight Methods |
Trigram Name |
Direction |
Attribute |
Key Acupoint |
Map to Five Elements |
Peng |
Kuan |
North |
Water |
Mingmen |
Water |
Lu |
Li |
South |
Fire |
Xuanguan |
Fire |
Ji |
Zhen |
East |
Thunder |
Jiaji |
Wood |
An |
Dui |
West |
Marsh |
Tanzhong |
Metal |
Cai |
Qian |
Northwest |
Sky |
Xinggong |
Metal |
Lie |
Kun |
Southwest |
Earth |
Dantian |
Earth |
Zhou |
Gen |
Northeast |
Mountain |
Jianjing |
Earth |
Kou |
Xun |
Southeast |
Wind |
Yuzhen |
Wood |
Here Peng, Lu, Ji, and An
are in four straight (eg principal compass) directions. They are called
Sizheng. Si means four. Zheng means straight, upright, pure, middle, normal,
main and positive. It also means fixed or unchanging which means it is not
influenced by the others. Thus, Sizheng skills are the main things in hand
skills. Cai, Lie, Zhou, and Kou are the four diagonal directions. They are
called Siyu. Yu means diagonal or sideway. They can be changed. They assist
or supplement the hand skills of Sizheng.
There are eight typical
methods for Bafa practice. For beginners learning them is very important
because it is the way to understand Bafa. To study correct movements is the
first step of the practice. Then one should understand how to apply the mind
in practice because in advance study movements should always follow the
mind. Bafa should be practiced very carefully and for a long time. Pay great
attention to every detail. For advance study, the physical movements are not
important. Internal details should be focused upon. To master the correct
use of the mind and to learn how to use the mind to control qi and jin
(trained force) are the basic skills. Here understanding acupoints and
channels is very important. For example, the key acupoint for Peng is the
Mingmen point and the key channel is Shenjin (Kidney Channel). By focusing
the mind on the Mingmen point, Peng will be generated automatically. Thus,
from the high level view, the eight methods are eight main ideas in push
hands and are applied by the mind. It is usually called "use mind, do
not use force". Here Peng just means to automatically generate barely
enough force by using the mind to push forward and up; this can keep the key
points from being locked or controlled by the opponent. Lu just means to
follow the opponent’s force and movement to move him with a slight change
of direction: it is like unloading his force from your body. Ji just means
to charge straight forward. An just means to empty the chest and push
diagonally downward. Cai just means to control and drop some heavy object
down. Lie just means to split suddenly. Zhou just means a short strike
within the reach of the elbow (or elbow circle skills). Kao just means a
body strike within the reach of the shoulder (or shoulder circle skills).
To learn Bafa well, one
should understand the relationship of Bagua and Dizhi. Dizhi are twelve
characters which are used to record and calculate time and years in the
traditional way. In Taiji Quan practice, people use these characters to
express twelve key acupoints on the body. The main idea is that from the
changing, usually called Chong (conflict) and He (harmony), of these parts
of the body the basic jin is generated automatically. Character Zhi is the
Mingmen point at the center of the lower back. Character Wu is the Xuanguan
point in between the two eyebrows. Character Mao is the Jiaji point at the
center of the back. Character You is the Tanzhong point at the center of the
chest. Their locations can never be changed. Peng, Lu, Ji, and An come from
these fixed points. Thus, they are called Sizheng – four straight
directions. The other eight points are on the arms and legs. They are
located according to the side of the body that has the weight. When the
weight is shifted, these points are changed. Cai, Lie, Zhou and Kou come
from these changeable points. Thus, they are called Siyu (four diagonal
directions). For example, character Zhi expresses the Mingmen point.
Character Chou expresses Huantiao point on the hip which one holds the main
part of the weight. When these two points (Mingmen and Huantiao) harmonize,
Peng will be generated automatically. In this way, finally the eight methods
just become application of the mind. This is the meaning of "use mind,
do not use force." This is what Taiji skills should be.
The basic Taiji skills
Zhan, Nian, Lian, and Sui are the foundation of Bafa. They should be
included in every Bafa application. Zhan means to adhere to something; this
means you can make your opponent move and follow you just as if he is
adhered to your body. Nian means to stick; this means you can follow your
opponent, like sticking on his body, giving him some trouble. Lian means to
link and connect; this means you can follow your opponent and never let him
leave your touch. Sui means to follow or comply with; this means you can
follow your opponent’s attacking technique keeping contact with him but
without his controlling you.
When Bafa are applied, all
the processes of Ting, Hua, Yin, Na, and Fa should also be included. Ting is
listen. It means to feel your opponent, to know what he wants to do. Hua is
dissolve. It means to dissolve your opponent’s force and not letting him
get you. Yin is seduce. It means to lure your opponent into trouble. Na is
hold. It means to control him and keep him in trouble. Fa is launch. It
means release force to throw the opponent away or hit him hard. Although
they are different skills, in fact they are combined together and are always
used together.
3. Wubu
Wubu are the five footwork
skills. Wu means five. Bu means step. In fact it is more about Shenfa - body
movement skills because footwork and body movement have a very tight
relationship. They should be combined together. It is said "the body
follows steps to move and steps follow the body to changed", "Body
movement and footwork skills cannot be forgotten. If any of these is
omitted, one does not need to waste his time practicing any more." The
body movement skills and footwork skills are about how to move the body in
fighting. Only when the body can move to the right position (distance and
angle), can the hand skills work well. Thus, it is said Wubu is the
foundation of Bafa. Wubu offers five basic skills which follow the idea of
Wuxing. The five footwork skills are discussed below.
Five Footwork |
Attribute |
Direction |
Element |
Acupoint |
Jin (or Jinbu) |
Step forward |
North |
Water |
Huiyin |
Tui (or Tuibu) |
Step backward |
South |
Fire |
Zuqiao |
Gu (or Zuogu) |
Sideway step forward |
East |
Wood |
Jiaji |
Pan (or Youpan) |
Sideway step backward |
West |
Metal |
Tanzhong |
Ding (or Zhongding) |
Central equilibrium |
Center |
Earth |
Dantian |
Jin (or Jinbu - step
forward) means to go forward; this really means to close in to the opponent
directly. The main idea is how to charge forward. It is water which is like
a flood, soft but powerful. It belongs to Shenjin (Kidney Channel). When the
key point Huiyin is focused on, the qi will automatically push the body
forward.
Tui (or Tuibu - step
backward) means to withdraw the body; this really means to open a distance
from the opponent directly. The main idea is how to move away. It is fire
which means hard outside and soft or empty inside. It belongs to Xinjin (
Heart Channel). When the key point Zhuqiao is focused on, the qi will
automatically push the body backward.
Gu (or Zuogu - left look
around) means to go forward sideways; that really means to close up to the
opponent indirectly. Here Zuo (left) means sideway; Gu (look around) means
look after or being careful. Usually in martial arts this term means
defensiveness within attacking skills. So the main idea of Zuogu is how to
rotate and advance forward from sideway with some defense skills. It is
usually called rotate attack. It is wood which means straight and grow up
continually. It belongs to Ganjin (Liver Channel). When the key point Jiaji
is focused on, the qi will automatically urge the body to rotate and advance
forward.
Pan (or Youpan - right
look forward to) means to withdraw your body sideways; this really means to
open a distance from the opponent indirectly. Here You (right) means
sideway; Pan (look forward) in martial arts terms means defensive ideas in
withdrawing skills. So the main idea is how to rotate and withdraw sideway
with some defense skills. It is usually called rotate withdraw. It is metal
which means springy and tenacious. It belongs to Feijin (Lung Channel). When
the key point Tanzhong is focused on, the qi will automatically push the
body to rotate backward.
Ding (or Zhongding –
central equilibrium) means to keep balanced and stable; this really means to
keep the central axis of your body stable. The main idea is how to keep the
balance so that your body is ready to do anything. The common explanation of
Zhongding is to keep Zhongqi – central qi quiet and stable. It refers to
the internal component not physical movement. It is earth which means
everything is generated from it. If the balance cannot be kept well, any
other skill cannot be done well. It belongs to Pijin (Spleen Channel). When
the Dantian is focused on, the qi will automatically adjust the balance.
To understand Wubu, first
of all one should understand the relationship of Wuxing and Tian Gan. Wuxing
means five elements which express five basic attributes or features of the
universe. There is a generation - destruction cycle relationship between the
elements. Tian Guan are ten characters which are used to record years and
directions. Wuxing and Tian Guan have a mapping relationship. Jia and Yi are
in the east and their attribute is wood. Geng and Xin are in the west and
their attribute is metal. Ren and Gui are in the north and their attribute
is water. Bing and Ding are in the south and their attribute is fire. Wu and
Ji are in the center and their attribute is earth.
To practice Wubu, some
ideas should be always included. They are Teng, Shan, Chou, Nian, Shuo, Qi,
Zuan, Wen, Huo, Kong and etc. Although they are used in many other styles as
common martial arts terms, in Taiji Quan some of them have different
meaning. Usually in Taiji Quan, to focus on qi and the mind when these are
practiced is more than on physical movements. Teng (or Tengnuo) means up and
down moving. Most of the time, in their practice people just think qi should
be sink down. In this way they can develop their stability well but usually
are not nimble enough. Thus, their steps will be slow. The Teng idea can
help people to get nimbleness from the stable steps. Use this word to raise
up the qi and make the qi balanced. It is said: "Qi in the body must be
Teng always." Shan (or Shanzhan) means side to side dodging. It also
means internal qi’s moving but not only physical movement. Chou means
withdraw. It is about how one can get away from the opponent’s control.
Nian means stick to. It is about how one can keep the advantage when he has
a good position. Shuo means lock and control. It is about how to lock the
opponent’s step and get control of him. Qi (or Qishen) means to close to.
Because fighting in close is much better for Taiji skills, how to get close
to the opponent is important. Zuan (or Zuanhuan) means Yin and Yang
exchanging. It is about how to change steps (footwork) smoothly, quickly,
nimbly and stably. Wen means stable or rooted. It is said "stable like
a mountain" or "root like a big tree". How to keep stable
when stepping is important. Huo means lively and nimble. It is said
"moving like a river". One should always feel excited inside the
body and mind. Kong means empty. In Taiji empty does not mean suddenly leave
(as done in most other styles). It is done by the mind not by physical body.
It is said "let your opponent see and feel that something is there but
cannot really get control of you there." Although the ten words are
separate words, there is some overlap in meaning among them. In fact they
cannot be explained in complete separation from each other. They all should
be applied together in Taji Quan practice.
It is said "the
origin of Bagua is Wuxing", that is Wuxing is the foundation of Bagua.
In the very beginning, Bagua and Wuxing were two separate philosophical
systems, and then they were combined together in Taoism and were developed
to a complete system. Taiji Quan skills were designed under this Taoist
principle. Footwork or body movement skills are the foundation of hand
skills. To understand this is the key point of application. People always
say "hands like a door, fighting depends on footwork",
"thirty percent in hands and seventy percent in step". It is a
very common situation for many people, that maybe they can do fixed step
push hands well but they cannot transfer their skills to real fighting. The
most important reason is they cannot do footwork and body movement well.
4. Taiji, Bagua, Wuxing in Taiji
Quan Practice
"Carry Taiji on the
head, hold Bagua in the arms, and step Wuxing under the feet" is the
basic guideline of Taiji Quan practice. It offers the main idea of Taiji
Quan and even for many other high level styles. Here Taiji is the main idea.
All skills of Taiji Quan must follow it. From Taiji principles, the idea of
exchange, generate, and transfer of Yin and Yang are applied. Any skill
which does not follow these principles cannot be considered a Taiji skill
(this does not mean the skill cannot be used). Based on Taiji, hand skills
must follow the Bagua idea. Here the changeable principle of Bagua is
applied. The original source of Bagua comes from Wuxing. So all hand skills
are based on body movement skills and footwork skills.
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As a high level
traditional martial arts, Taiji Quan was designed based on a complete
traditional philosophical system. Under this philosophical system, the
principle of skills was developed completely, deeply, in detail and clearly
generation by generation. This is a big reason why there are much more high
level classics in Taiji Quan than in other styles. Without the high level
principles, the skills can never be developed to a really high level. To
understand complete philosophical concepts will be very helpful in our
practice. Remember we are learning the skills which are based on these
principles.