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Wing Chun Academy of Thailand WING CHUN
LESSONSCLASSROOM LECTURE IIIBALANCE
- Center of
Gravity
- Qi Balance
- Perpendicular
Spine
- Base
There is a point in every object where the
gravitational forces are in equilibrium. This point is called the
center of gravity. In a standing position, a person's COG is located
inside his body somewhere between his naval and the sacroiliac joint
(where the spine meets the hip bones). You can attest to that by
pushing a person's sacroiliac region with one finger and move him out of
balance. A tightrope walker must keep his COG perpendicular to the rope
to stay balanced. He uses a long staff to control it. The staff helps
him recover from derailment. Without it, the mobility of his center of
gravity is limited to his hip width. When the COG moves out of the hip
border, he loses his balance. He might be able to return the COG back
atop the rope if he swung it back with the help of his arms. In
essence, he has transferred his center of gravity to his arms and
extended the border to the width of his arms length. He recovers by
swinging the arm (that's on the falling side) towards the original COG.
By using a staff, he gets a better control of his COG as the borders are
farther extended. He becomes the fulcrum for the two ends of the staff.
The COG is no longer vulnerable to quick changes and narrow limits. If
you don't get the picture, here's another example. If you fitted a
marble in the center of a two-foot long, open-end, u-channel beam and
held it from the bottom, a slight tilt would have the marble running
down one end. You are able to return it to the center by tilting the
beam the opposite direction and then back and forth several times.
However, if the beam was only six inches in length, the likelihood of
recovery is very small. Generally, we are not aware of our center of
gravity. We have made it second nature from the time we learned to
stand and walk. When you get into activities other than the norm, an
awareness of it becomes crucial.
In martial arts, the awareness and control of Qi is the awareness and
control of one's center of gravity. As mentioned earlier, the Qi, as an
energy form, is best stored in the abdomen region. Likewise, Qi, as the
center of gravity is also best kept in the abdomen region. The energy
Qi, when raised, is thin. It dissipates quickly. The center of
gravity, when raised, is vulnerable. It topples easily. Take a tall
beer glass filled with beer. The center of gravity is situated
somewhere in the middle of the beer, halfway up the glass, from the
center point of the base. If you stood the glass against a small ledge,
and pushed it at the COG with a finger, it will topple over when the COG
goes past the base (which has been narrowed because of the lean). The
angle at which point you had pushed the glass to make it fall is
dependent on the size of the glass' base. Let's say for example that it
fell after you pushed it past 45 degrees angle. Now, if the beer was
half full, the center of gravity is lowered to about one third of the
glass' height. If you pushed it at this point, it will lean much
further before toppling, don't you agree? Now, hypothetically speaking,
if we were able to raise the (half full) beer to the top of the glass
and leave the bottom empty, the COG would now be two thirds or three
quarters up the glass. In this case, it will only take a slight lean
before toppling. Keeping our Qi low and centered allows us to control
our balance. If you don't believe it, try it. Breathe in through your
nostrils, and push the air (Qi) to your stomach. Breathe out, imagining
the air being released downward to the ground, through your legs, from
your stomach. Compare it with expanding your chest (and contracting
your stomach) while breathing in, and exhaling out of your mouth and
collapsing your chest. You will feel grounded when you breathe the
former way and flighty with the latter. When you think of your Qi as
the center of gravity, you will feel how it moves with your breathing
pattern. You will feel the COG in your chest when you use your lungs to
regulate the air. A push to the chest would knock you off balance. On
the other hand, Qi in the abdomen keeps the COG low and stable. A push
to the chest amounts to nothing.
I've noticed that most Wing Chun practitioners hunch and sway their
backs in their stances. Pictures of my Great-Grand-Master Yip Man show
him doing the same. I have the uttermost respect for GGM Yip Man, and
truly believe that he was one of the all time masters of Wing Chun. I
don't believe there will be another one like him, or possess the
knowledge that he had on Wing Chun. I don't believe he was able to (or
willing to) pass on all he possessed. By the time he opened the doors
to Wing Chun, he was an elderly man. His health was frail, and he
hunched. Pictures and movies of him demonstrating Wing Chun were done
in the last days of his life. I believe his hunching posture was due
to his age, or perhaps he was suffering from chronic back pain. I don't
believe the hunch was or is part of Wing Chun's concept. It doesn't
make sense. If someone has a good scientific explanation for it, please
tell me. Wing Chun is such, that it allows one to discover for himself
the truth behind it from the basic principles it outlines in Siu Lim
Tao. Unimpressive as it may look, the "secret" of Wing Chun is in the
Siu Lim Tao. If you don't understand Siu Lim Tao, you will never
understand Wing Chun. If you rush through it, you will pick up bad
habits. The bad habits remain with you all through your Wing Chun life.
You cannot possibly execute the other forms without a firm foundation
of Siu Lim Tao. Siu Lim Tao teaches balance, stance and posture among
other basics. The straighter you keep your spine, the better you are
balanced, the better you will be connected to your hips and legs, the
quicker you are able move, the firmer your stance will be. Think about
it. Would a straight pole balance better than a curved one? Would a
straight pole have a better chance of standing on it's own than a curved
one? Would not a straight pole have better rotation control over it's
attachments than a curved one? I know of no martial art styles that
teach students to hunch or sway. Wing Chun is a very advance form of
fighting. There is no reason for Wing Chun practitioners to sway like
they do. It seems like practitioners are just imitating what they have
seen of Yip Man in pictures and movies. I'm sure GGM Yip Man was a
superb in Wing Chun in spite of his old age and hunching back. However,
that doesn't mean that his posture was correct. If someone is to find
pictures of him doing Wing Chun twenty years younger, perhaps they would
find him postured straight. When a practitioner leans back when
punching forward, he is disbursing his flow of energy. He is drawing
some of it back. His force would strengthen if his spine (and body)
were squared to the punch. In addition to being squared, if he moved
forward (with his hips), the force would multiply. Supposing you were
moving a heavy table. Would you have your feet under the table, leaning
yourself backward to push it? Not only is it an awkward sight, but an
awkward position to be in. Most people do the opposite way, having the
feet far away from the table and leaning forward to push it. They are
using their upper muscles, like the shoulders and upper back, to push
the table forward. However, a stronger way to do it is to use your
lower muscles, the hip and leg muscles to push it. In fighting, it
would be impractical to lean your head forward with the punch. You're
likely to get hit before landing your punch or falling forward if you
miss. Throwing a punch with your spine perpendicular, not only secure
your defense and balance, but gives your punch power and support from
your heels to your hips to your knuckles.
Balance in pugilism cannot be over stressed. Most form of pugilism,
whether Asian martial arts, boxing or wrestling, begin with balance
training. This is the foundation of your force. Without a firm stance,
you cannot apply force. If you are constantly out of balance, you will
neither be able to defend or attack. Unfortunately, most form of
pugilism do not continue and concentrate on balance, particularly in the
West. The picture of a Western He-man is wide shoulders, narrow waist
and light legged. A picture of an inverted pyramid. The Asians
concentrate on strong legs (wide base), strong waist (waist generated
force), and completely relaxed shoulders. A picture of a standing
pyramid. Since we are two-legged creatures, we need to concern
ourselves with balance more than a four legged animal. We're not
fighting on horses like the knights of the ancient or in an armored
tank. We're fighting more like on a bicycle. We've got to keep our
balance while dueling with another bicyclist. Some styles are so
concerned about their balance that have created wide based stances for
all their moves. The only trouble is that they are slow in shifting.
The kick-stylists are light on both feet so they can use both of them.
The only trouble is they become unicyclist once they lift one leg up;
they become vulnerable to toppling. Wing Chun stance and shift is
shoulder width, the same as standing or walking. In terms of a bicycle,
it is a unique type. The two wheels are not inline, but shoulder width
apart . One's center of gravity is within one's centerline.
Vertically, it can move from the knees up to the head, depending where
one stores his "Qi". The best place to store it is in the Dantian,
three fingers below one's navel. It allows quick movement of ones feet
as well as the upper body without sacrificing balance. When a Wing
Chun practitioner faces his opponent, he is in tune to his opponent's
centerline and center of gravity. Whether the opponent is in wide
stance, narrow stance or in one line, Wing Chun directs his force from
his own center towards the opponents. Knowing how to apply the maximum
force with the least amount of energy can knock an opponent off balance.
Even if the opponent has a wide stance, the angle that a Wing Chun
practitioner approaches his attack will narrow the base and balance of
his opponent.
Copyright © Daniel Y. Xuan
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