Kung Fu Fan Video

Written by Joyce McDonald on April 2, 2009 — Filed under: Kung Fu, Videos

We are continuing to add audio tracks to the videos in our Video Vault. The following video is the Editors Choice of bunch. It combines the energetic martial arts movements of Kung Fu with the beautiful flowing brandishing of the fan. As such it embodies the dual concepts of Kung Fu as a martial art and as an art form. This form is performed with a plastic and silk fan, although regulation Kung Fu fans are weapons made with metal blades and sharp points on the spines.

Tai Chi Yang/Chen 12 Form Video

Written by Joyce McDonald on February 20, 2009 — Filed under: Tai Chi and Chi Gong, Videos

We have been busy adding audio tracks to the videos in our Video Vault. The first one we’d like to share with you is the Tai Chi Yang/Chen 12 Form. Developed by Grandmaster Yong So himself, this form aims to mitigate some of the challenges that Tai Chi presents to students with physical limitations, such as arthritis. This short form eschews some of the most demanding forms, such as Heel Kick and Snake Creeps Down in favor of forms that require skill and balance, but not exceptional flexibility. The biggest challenge to overcome in this form is that it changes direction twice (front to rear to front) during the performance. Both front and rear views of this performance are included in the following video.

Tai Chi Economics

Written by Joyce McDonald on November 18, 2008 — Filed under: In the News, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

Our news roundup this month starts with a unique article relating Tai Chi with economics.  Apparently the basics of economic (and any universal phenomenon) can be understood through the forces of Yin and Yang. Gary Jiang, the President of American Tai Chi Association, explains:

When too many bad sub-prime mortgage loans failed, which is one of the Yin factors in the economic system, it triggered the negative chain reaction in our economic system and out-powered all the healthy economic practices, which is the Yang, as the capability to originate new mortgages from the banking system diminished.

Read the full article here.

The Mayo clinic has published a nice article on Tai Chi, naming stress reduction, balance and agility as benefits you reap from a regular practice. 

And finally, the Orlando Sentinal reports on a study tracking centeniarians. What is the secret to living to 100 years of age? Emotional stability. The study concluded that “longevity was associated with being conscientious, emotionally stable, and active.” Tai Chi makes an appearance in a list of tools that type-a personalities can use to change their ways.

Tai Chi in the Olympics

Written by Joyce McDonald on September 9, 2008 — Filed under: In the News, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

An article at Bella Online features a video of the Wu Shu Tai Chi performance in the Olympics opening ceremony. The second half shows 2008 Tai Chi performers moving in perfect unison. It’s quite amazing. They also have a video from the 2006 Traditional Wushu Championships in China.

In more Olympic news, taekwondo gold medalist Chu Mu Yen credits Tai Chi for helping him achieve his gold medal aspirations in this article.

And finally, an article in Tampa Bay Online says Tai Chi can help those with mobility problems.

The Web site of the National Center on Physical Activity and Disability lists several benefits of tai chi, including promoting relaxation, improving lung capacity and cardiovascular and respiratory function, improving balance and posture, increasing flexibility and reducing pain.

Read more about it here.

Tai Chi for a good night’s sleep

Written by Joyce McDonald on July 29, 2008 — Filed under: In the News, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

A new study out in the Sleep journal shows that Tai Chi helps you get a good night’s sleep.

Nearly two-thirds of people who learned the slow, gentle tai chi chih moves experienced significant improvements in sleep quality.

Read the full article here.

In other Tai Chi news for July, BlogCritics Magazine has a review of 1993 film Tai Chi Master starting Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh. It is a work of Yuen Woo-Ping who has choreographed martial arts scenes for Kill Bill: Vol 1 & 2 and the Matrix trilogy. Read the review here.

If you’re in St. Paul, MN this summer, head over to Rice Park for free Tai Chi sponsored by the St Paul Public LIbrary. Get details here.

Have you thought about getting your kid into Tai Chi? This article might convince you to do so.

And here’s yet another study showing that Tai Chi is good for arthritis. The article also has information on free Tai Chi classes in Clinton, NY.

Tai Chi News Roundup for June

Written by Joyce McDonald on June 25, 2008 — Filed under: In the News, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

In the latest Tai Chi news, SeniorJournal.com reports that Tai Chi helps seniors sleep better and can even be as beneficial as a shingles vaccine.

[The study] showed that practicing tai chi chi alone boosted immunity to a level comparable to having received the standard vaccine against the shingles-causing varicella zoster virus.

Read the article here.

Stuff.co.nz has an interview with Tai Chi expert Loo-Chi Hu. Loo-Chi Hu is the subject of a documentary called Huloo that is screening at New Zealand International Film Festival in Wellington and Christchurch in mid-July.

Before I learned tai chi, I learned the hard martial art and with the hard martial art your behaviour is hot and you sometimes fight with people. My father advised me to practise tai chi, and since I have never got in a fight.

Read the article here.

And lastly, GadsdenTimes.com reports on a variety of meditative practices becoming popular among psychotherapists. Mindfulness Meditation, Tai Chi, Transcendental Meditation, and Yoga are among the most popular.

The National Institutes of Health is financing more than 50 studies testing mindfulness techniques, up from 3 in 2000, to help relieve stress, soothe addictive cravings, improve attention, lift despair and reduce hot flashes.

Read the article here.

Tai Chi for Everyone – Introduction

Written by Joyce McDonald on May 21, 2008 — Filed under: Tai Chi for Everyone

The following the introduction is from Tai Chi for Everyone, available in paperback at Amazon.com and as a digital download at Lulu.com.

Tai Chi teaches a person how to guide his own natural healing energies. Tai Chi practitioners believe that obstructed currents of energy cause a person to lose his sense of harmony with nature, and with it, the ability to maintain proper health.

Stimulating and restoring circulation can restore lost vitality. Tai Chi can return a body to normal, healthy flow with its no-impact movements and emphasis on daily practice and meditation.

The aim of Tai Chi training is to make the individual at one with nature and universe. The purpose of studying the art of Tai Chi as a moving meditation method is to restore in that individual a natural ability to self-heal and place the mind in a condition where peace and harmony replace illness and despair.

Practitioners of daily Tai Chi movements can free themselves of negative self-images and loss of flexible movement. Tai Chi should not be looked at as merely a simple way of curing and repairing the frailties of the human body but also as an opportunity to direct one’s life toward a more appropriate lifestyle which includes well being, as well as, “well-feeling.”

It is the hope of this writer that all who come to know more about the world of Tai Chi will come to know more about themselves and their place in the universe.

News Roundup: Keanu Reeves and Organic Dairy Farmers

Written by Joyce McDonald on April 30, 2008 — Filed under: In the News, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

News from Hollywood (or rather Korea) has Keanu Reeves planning a new tai chi movie. From CinemaBlend.com:

[Keanu Reeves] has been talking to Matrix stunt choreographer Yuen Wo Ping about doing a new kung fu movie. The film is called Tai Chi Tiger, and Keanu would be the villain. A guy named Tiger Chen Hu would star as the movie’s hero, a Tai Chi master.

The WCFCourier of Waterloo, Iowa has a nice article on the holistic health benefits of tai chi.

First Coast News of Jacksonville, FL discusses the local hospital’s recommendation of tai chi to ease the symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease.

And finally, CEE-foodindustry.com carries on the recent spate of articles linking dairy production with tai chi. Organic dairy farmers in the UK say it helps relax their cows which makes for good milk production:

Being an organic dairy farmer is hard work. I want to make sure I am as relaxed and focused as possible. My mood definitely transfers to my cows and as organic farmers we believe happier cows produce better milk.

Read the full article here (bottom of page).

Weekly News Roundup

Written by Joyce McDonald on April 16, 2008 — Filed under: In the News

Perhaps because of the Beijing Olympic Games coming up, a lot more tai chi news articles are appearing. With that in mind, we’ve decided to have a tai chi news roundup each Wednesday to keep you informed of what’s going on in the world of tai chi.

BBC News and the Straits Times of Singapore cover a report from the British Journal of Sports Medicine that tai chi can help curb the symptoms of type 2 diabetes.

The West, a West Australian newspaper, has an article about the general health benefits of tai chi.

If you happen to be in the Illinois area, there will be a World Tai Chi Day celebration April 26 in Quincy. Read more about it here.

In the truly bizarre news of the week (or rather the year), The Times Online writes about a man who swears by tai chi for putting his cows in the mood for milking. This article is complete with a picture.

“Tai Chi for Everyone” available on Amazon.com

Written by Joyce McDonald on April 3, 2008 — Filed under: Announcements, Tai Chi and Chi Gong

Tai Chi for EveryoneAt long last, Tai Chi for Everyone is now available in paperback on the Amazon website. Click here to see the listing. The book is intended for the beginner who would like to learn a short Tai Chi workout in a minimum of time, with or without class instruction. It includes a history of Tai Chi and several Tai Chi and Chi Gong forms that you can follow and learn at your own pace.

Tai Chi for Everyone is also available as a PDF download at a reduced price from Lulu.com. They have a preview of the book which will show you the first 30 pages before purchase.

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