太極法說
EXPLAINING TAIJI
PRINCIPLES
[translation by Paul Brennan, Sep,
2013]
-
[On the front cover, there are two titles for the manuscript and five personal stamps:]
太極法說〔吳愛仁堂〕
Explaining Taiji
Principles (below which
is placed a Wu Airen “property of” stamp)
吳鑑泉〔吳鑑泉章〕
Wu Jianquan [signature] (with his
stamp)
吳氏家傳太極拳体用全書〔吳公藻〕
Complete Book of Wu Style Taiji
Boxing Theory & Practice (with Wu Gongzao’s stamp)
黎鐸珍藏 1948〔黎鐸之印〕〔黎鐸〕
“For Li Duo to Cherish” [in Wu
Gongzao’s handwriting] (with Li Duo’s stamp, below which is “1948”
written over a different Li Duo stamp)
[As to Li’s role, I was contacted by YL Yip, son of a disciple of Wu Gongyi, who has this to say: “Mr. Li was a disciple of the Wu family and a rich man living in Macao. In 1940s, the Wu family in Hong Kong was so poor that they gave this book to Li for a big sum of money. Thus you can see his stamp of collection, which is a ritual of all Chinese book lovers and collectors. In 1979, when Wu Gongzao was released from prison and came to Hong Kong, Li returned the book free of charge. When Gongzao got hold of the book, tears rushed out of his eyes and his hands shook.”]
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[On the inside of the back cover is:]
〔吳公藻印〕
(a different Wu Gongzao
stamp)
[The personal stamps appear also upon three other pages of the manuscript. On the first page of the contents and last page of the main text are the Wu Jianquan stamp, followed by the Wu Gongzao stamp, then both Li Duo stamps. The Wu Airen stamp appears below the other stamps on the first contents page, but is crowded out by the spacing of the stamps on the last page of the main text and so is placed on its own on the first page of the main text.]
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[On the inside of the front cover is this small introduction:]
此書乃先祖吳全佑府君拜門後由斑侯先師所授是於端芳親王府內抄本在我家已一百多年公藻在童年時即保存到如今
吳公藻識
After my grandfather Wu Quanyou
became a formal disciple, Yang Banhou gave him this manual. It is a
handwritten manuscript that was made in Duan Fang’s royal mansion.
It has been in our family for over a hundred years. I have
preserved it up to now since my childhood.
– comment by Wu Gongzao
[This Yang family manuscript
exists in two versions, placed side by side below. The pages on the
left are the version owned by the Wu family, first shared publicly
in its entirety in 1985, and the black & white photocopies on
the right are of the version owned by the Yang family itself, first
shared publicly in 1993. (Only the Wu family’s version is titled
and has a cover, intro, and personal stamps.)
To date these documents, all we really have to go on is Wu
Gongzao’s comment of “more than a hundred years”. But when did he
scribble his introductory note? The Wu family’s document was
included as an extra section for a 1985 reprint of a Taiji manual
Wu Gongzao had published in 1935, but Wu Gongzao had died in 1983,
leaving the reprint to be published posthumously. Going by Jin
Yong’s postscript to the reprint – dated Jan, 1980 – we are
probably safe in assuming the reprint version of the book was
already in preparation in 1979 and that Wu Gongzao’s introductory
note was made around that time. And if we then assume Wu Gongzao
was being accurate when he said “more than a hundred years”, the
manuscript would be from no later than 1878. Yang Luchan, Wu
Quanyou’s first teacher, passed away in 1872. The manuscript
probably cannot be from any earlier than that or Wu Gongzao would
more likely have been told that Yang Luchan was to be credited as
well as Yang Banhou. It is even possible that the loss of Yang
Luchan may itself have served as a motivator for preserving Yang
family teachings and that his passing pushed the manuscript into
being. Making a simple compromise between the two dates of 1872 and
1878, I will provisionally guess that the manuscript is from the
thereabouts of 1875.
One version was evidently copied from the other. This is
demonstrated by the fact that there are some idiosyncrasies of text
that are irrationally preserved. For instance, the title for
section 13 in the contents uses 体, whereas the title for 13 in the
body of the text uses the full version of the character: 體. All
other occasions of 體 are written as the variant
version 軆, except for one peculiar instance near the end of 13’s
text, where 體 is used instead of 軆. This situation
is identical in both documents. A more mindful act of re-rendering
the text would simply put the more consistent 軆 in
the places where 体 and 體 were
being used in the original document, but what appears instead is
the loyalty to words rather than text that is the hallmark of mere
expedient copying. This indicates the process of copying the text
was not done slowly and editorially in order to make a tidier
version of the manuscript, but was instead the act of quickly
copying words from one set of paper to another simply for the sake
of making a copy, resulting in what is actually a sloppier version
of the manuscript.
As can be seen from examining both versions, they are clearly by
the same hand, and so were probably not made very far apart in
time. In which case, how close in time could they be? Taking up a
pen and copying the text into a notebook myself, I found that to
maintain a decent balance between efficiency and legibility, I
averaged about twenty minutes to copy out a page of the manuscript.
A more skilled calligrapher ought to be able to do it in about half
the time, but a half dozen pages per hour still adds up to a full
day’s work. I think it is doubtful these two documents were
produced on the same day, but it is possible that one was copied
from the other the very day after the first was
completed.
Even if they really happened to be made only a day apart, we can
still reasonably conclude which of the two is the earlier document.
When going through the process of simply copying out words, it is
unusual to add words but very natural to accidentally leave a few
words out. There are more occasions of words appearing in the Wu
document being left out in the Yang document than the reverse. A
less mindful process of copying out words also tends to generate
more incorrect words than is the case with the thoughtful writing
of an original document. Again the Yang document has more mistaken
words than the Wu document. Both of these things indicate the Yang
document was most likely copied from the Wu document, which would
make the Wu document the earlier of the two. (*I have included a
list of the textual variations further below.) It remains open to
speculation as to why the Wu family should have the earlier version
and the Yang family possess only a copy, and whether there were
still earlier versions than the Wu version, or whether there were
any further copies made in between the Wu and Yang versions and
after.
Since it appears to be the authoritative draft of the two, my typed
transcription of the Chinese text below is entirely from the Wu
document. The punctuation indicators appearing in the Yang family’s
copy are absent from the Wu family’s version and so must have been
added by a later hand, possibly a great deal later, and therefore
in the interests of authenticity I have not included them in the
transcription.]
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目錄
CONTENTS
八門五步
[1] The Eight Gates & Five
Steps
八門五步用功法
[2] On the Training Method for the
Eight Gates & Five Steps
固有分明法
[3] Our Innate Ability to
Distinguish
粘黏連隨
[4] Stick, Adhere, Connect, and
Follow
頂匾丢抗
[5] Crashing In, Collapsing, Coming
Away, and Resistance
對待無病
[6] Fighting Without
Mistakes
對待用功法守中土
[7] Practicing Maintaining the
Central Ground in Fighting
身形腰頂
[8] The Body’s Posture – The Waist
& Headtop
太極圈
[9] Taiji’s Circling
太極進退不已功
[10] Taiji’s Skill of Advancing
& Retreating Ceaselessly
太極上下名天地
[11] Taiji’s Above & Below, or
“Sky & Ground”
太極人盤八字功
[12] Taiji’s Eight Techniques in
the Realm of Mankind
太極体用解
[13] Taiji’s Substance &
Application
太極文武解
[14] Taiji’s Civil & Martial
Qualities
太極懂勁解
[15] Taiji’s Identifying of
Energies
八五十三勢長拳解
[16] On the Thirteen Dynamics Long
Boxing Set
太極陰陽顛倒解
[17] Taiji’s Inversion of the
Passive & Active Aspects
人身太極解
[18] The Taiji-ness of the Human
Body
太極分文武三成解
[19] Taiji’s Separation of the
Civil & Martial Qualities into Three
Accomplishments
太極下乘武事解
[20] Taiji’s Lesser Accomplishment
– Its Martial Quality
太極正功解
[21] Correctness of Skill in
Taiji
太極輕重浮沉解
[22] Taiji’s Lightness &
Heaviness, Floating & Sinking
太極四隅解
[23] Taiji’s Four Secondary
Techniques
太極平凖腰頂解
[24] The Proper Alignment of Waist
& Headtop in Taiji
太極四時五氣解圖
[25] A Taiji Map of the Four
Seasons & Five Energies
太極血氣根本解
[26] The Essence of Blood &
Energy in Taiji
太極力氣解
[27] Strength & Energy in
Taiji
太極尺寸分毫解
[28] Taiji’s Reducing
Measurements
太極膜脉筋穴解
[29] Vessels, Channels, Sinews, and
Acupoints in Taiji
太極字字解
[30] Some of the Terms in
Taiji
太極節拿抓閉尺寸分毫解
[31] Taiji’s Reducing of
Measurements in the Context of Controlling, Seizing, Capturing, or
Sealing
太極補助氣力解
[32] Taiji’s Boosting or
Dissipating Energy & Strength
共三十二目
(Thirty-Two Sections in
Total)
[Supplementary
Texts:
太極空結挫揉論
(i) Taiji’s Emptying, Tying Up,
Filing, and Kneading
懂勁先後論
(ii) Before Identifying Energies
and After
尺寸分毫在懂勁後論
(iii) Reducing Measurements After
Identifying Energies
太極指掌捶手解
(iv) The Fingers, Palm, Fist, and
Hand in Taiji
口授穴之存亡論
(v) On Personal Instruction in the
Acupoints that Save or Kill
張三丰承留
(vi) What Zhang Sanfeng
Inherited
口授張三豐老師之言
(vii) The Teachings of Zhang
Sanfeng
張三豐以武事得道論
(viii) Zhang Sanfeng on Using
Martial Arts to Achieve the Way]
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八門五步
[1] THE EIGHT GATES & FIVE
STEPS
方位 八門
position / gate:
掤 南 坎
warding off – S / ☵
捋 西 離
rolling back – W / ☲
擠 東 兑
pressing – E / ☱
按 北 震
pushing – N / ☳
採 西北 巽
plucking – NW / ☴
挒 東南 乾
rending – SE / ☰
肘 東北 坤
elbowing – NE / ☷
靠 西南 艮
bumping – SW / ☶
方位八門乃為陰陽顛倒之理周而復始隨其所行也總之四正四隅不可不知矣夫掤捋擠按是四正之手採挒肘靠是四隅之手合隅正之手得門位之卦以身分步五行在意支撑八面五行者進步火退步水左顧木右聁金定之方中土也夫進退為水火之步顧聁為金木之步以中土為樞機之軸懷藏八卦脚跐五行手步八五其数十三出於自然十三勢也名之曰八門五步
The positions of the eight gates
are based on the principle of the passive and active aspects
inverting each other, cycling round and round, following each other
in their process. All of the four primary techniques [corresponding
to the cardinal directions] and four secondary techniques
[corresponding to the corner directions] must be understood.
Warding off, rolling back, pressing, and pushing are the four
primary techniques. Plucking, rending, elbowing, and bumping are
the four secondary techniques. The combining of these cardinals and
corners thus positions the trigrams.
The body makes its steps according to the five elements, bracing in
all directions. The five elements are: advance (fire), retreat
(water), step to the left (wood), step to the right (metal), and
stay in the center (earth). Advancing and retreating are the
steppings of water and fire, left and right are the steppings of
metal and wood, and the central earth is the axis for all of
them.
Embrace the eight trigrams as you step through the five elements.
Techniques plus steps equals eight plus five, amounting to
thirteen, naturally expressed as the Thirteen Dynamics, known as
the Eight Gates & Five Steps.
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八門五步用功法
[2] ON THE TRAINING METHOD FOR THE EIGHT
GATES & FIVE STEPS
八卦五行是人生成固有之良必先明知覺運動四字之本由知覺運動得之後而后方能懂勁由懂勁後自能接及神明然用功之初要知知覺運動雖固有之良亦甚難淂之於我也
The eight trigrams and five
elements are innate within us. You must first understand that they
are based in these four terms: perception, realization, activation,
action. [These four terms amount to “moving with awareness”. This
is a breakdown of four words – 知, 覺, 運,
動 – which would typically, and
especially so for modern Chinese speakers, only be considered as
two terms: 知覺 and 運動. To break movement (運動) and
awareness (知覺) into their component parts results in: moving = the
activation (運) of movement + the act (動) of moving, and awareness =
the perception (覺) that something is + the realization (知) of what
it is. In short, moving with awareness. This idea is further
elaborated upon in the next section, where the purpose of breaking
down the two terms into four becomes more clear.]
Once you have achieved moving with awareness, then you will be able
to identify energies.
Once you can identify energies,
then you will be able to be miraculous. But in the beginning of
training, you should understand moving with awareness. Although it
is innate, it is nevertheless hard to achieve within
oneself.
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固有分明法
[3] OUR INNATE ABILITY TO
DISTINGUISH
蓋人降生之初目能視耳能聼鼻能聞口能食顏色聲音香臭五味皆天然知覺固有之良其手舞足蹈於四肢之能皆天然運動之良思及此是人熟無因人性近習逺失迷固有要想還我固有非乃武無以尋運動之根由非乃文無以淂知覺之本原是乃運動而知覺也夫運而知動而知不運不覺不動不知運極則為動覺盛則為知動知者易運覺者難先求自己知覺運動淂之於身自能知人要先求知人恐失於自己不可不知此理也夫而後懂勁然也
From birth, our eyes can see, ears
can hear, nose can smell, mouth can taste. Sights and sounds,
smells and tastes – all innate senses. Dance of hands, prance of
feet – the abilities of our limbs are all innate forms of movement.
Pondering upon this, we find it is our random experience – “Our
natures make us the same, but our experiences make us unique.”
[Lun
Yu, 17.2] – that makes
us lose touch with what is innate. If we want to return to our
innate qualities, there will be no martial aspect unless we seek
the source of movement, and there will be no civil aspect unless we
grasp the basis of awareness. With these things, then there will be
moving with awareness.
If there is activation and perception, there will be action and
realization. If there is no activation or perception, there will be
no action or realization. When activation is at its height, action
is initiated. When perception is fully lucid, there is realization.
Action and realization are the easy part. Activation and perception
are tricky.
First strive to move with awareness for yourself, grasping it
within your own body, then naturally you will be able to spot it in
the opponent. If on the other hand you try to find it in opponents
first, you will probably never find it in yourself. You have to be
able to understand this concept in order to be able to identify
energies.
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粘黏連隨
[4] STICK, ADHERE, CONNECT, AND
FOLLOW
粘者提上拔髙之謂也
黏者留戀繾綣之謂也
連者舍己無離之謂也
隨者彼走此應之謂也
要知人之知覺運動非明粘黏連隨不可斯粘黏連隨之功夫亦甚細矣
Sticking means to lift up
high.
Adhering means to stay and be
attached.
Connecting means to let go of
yourself and not separate from the opponent.
Following means to follow him
wherever he goes.
If you want to move with awareness
and yet you do not understand sticking, adhering, connecting, and
following, it will be beyond your reach, for it is a very subtle
skill.
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頂匾丢抗
[5] CRASHING IN, COLLAPSING, COMING AWAY,
AND RESISTANCE
頂者出頭之謂也
匾者不及之謂也
丢者離開之謂也
抗者太過之謂也
要知于此四字之病不但粘黏連隨斷不明知覺運動也初學對手不可不知也更不可不去此病所難者粘黏連隨而不許頂匾丢抗是所不易矣
Crashing in means sticking your
head out.
Collapsing means not enough
pressure.
Coming away means
separating.
Resistance means too much
pressure.
You should understand that these
four mistakes will not merely interfere with sticking, adhering,
connecting, and following, but will also prevent you from moving
with awareness. When beginning to work with a partner, you must
understand and especially prevent these errors. The difficulty in
sticking, adhering, connecting, and following is in not allowing
yourself to crash in, collapse, come away, or resist. This is not
at all easy.
-
對待無病
[6] FIGHTING WITHOUT
MISTAKES
頂匾丢抗失於對待也所以為之病者既失粘黏連隨何以獲知覺運動既不知己焉能知人所謂對待者不以頂匾丢抗相對於人也要以粘黏連隨等待於人也能如是不但無對待之病知覺運動自然淂矣可以進於懂勁之功矣
Crashing in, collapsing, coming
away, and resistance will lose in a fight, and so they are called
mistakes. If you neglect sticking, adhering, connecting, and
following, you will not be able to achieve moving with awareness.
And if you are not aware of yourself, how will you be able to know
your opponent? Therefore when fighting, do not use crashing in,
collapsing, coming away, or resistance, thereby opposing the
opponent, instead use sticking, adhering, connecting, and
following, thereby awaiting the opponent. If you can do it in this
way, then not only will you be without mistakes, but moving with
awareness will be automatically accomplished, and you can then
progress to the skill of identifying energies.
-
對待用功法守中土 俗名站橦
[7] PRACTICING MAINTAINING THE CENTRAL
GROUND IN FIGHTING (COMMONLY CALLED STANDING LIKE A
POST)
定之方中足有根先明四正進退身掤捋擠按自四手須費功夫淂其真身形腰頂皆可以粘黏連隨意氣均運動知覺來相應神是君位骨肉臣分明火候七十二天然乃武並乃文
When standing centered, your
feet should be rooted.
Start by understanding the four
primary techniques, then advancing and
retreating.
The four techniques are
ward-off, rollback, press, and push.
You have to do a lot of work to
get them to be real.
For the body posture, your
waist and headtop should both be correct.
When sticking, adhering,
connecting, and following, your intention and energy are to be
uniform throughout.
Movement and awareness respond
to each other.
Mind is sovereign and body is
subject.
When you get the degree just
right,
you will naturally have both
the civil quality and the martial. [i.e. If the “degree” is not right, there is
“overcooking” or “undercooking”, in which case too civil would be
undercooked and too martial would be overcooked.]
-
身形腰頂
[8] THE BODY’S POSTURE – THE WAIST &
HEADTOP
身形腰頂豈可無缺一何必費工夫腰頂窮硏生不已身形順我自伸舒舍此真理終何極十年数載亦糊塗
For your body’s
posture, how could your waist and headtop be
ignored?
Neglecting either, all your
work would be in vain.
Waist and headtop are to be
exhaustively studied for your whole life.
When your body’s posture is
natural, it will naturally be loosened and
comfortable.
If you dismiss this truth, how
will you end up
but that after ten years you
will still be confused?
-
太極圈
[9] TAIJI’S CIRCLING [as in the
circles of the pushing hands exercise]
退圈容易進圈難不離腰頂後與前所難中土不離位退易進難仔細硏此為動功非站定倚身進退並比肩能如水磨摧急緩雲龍風虎象周旋要用天盤從此覔久而久之出天然
Circling while retreating is
easy, but circling while advancing is difficult,
so do not get sloppy with your
waist and headtop when going forward or back.
It is hard to stay in the
central position,
so the ease of retreat and
difficulty of advance are to be carefully
studied.
As this is a matter of movement
rather than stance,
stay close to the opponent
while advancing or retreating.
Circling can be like a
watermill as it speeds up or slows down,
or like the dragon-like clouds
or tiger-like winds winding all around.
If you use the sky as a model
to help you seek this,
then after a long time it will
be expressed instinctively.
-
太極進退不已功
[10] TAIJI’S SKILL OF ADVANCING &
RETREATING CEASELESSLY
掤進捋退自然理陰陽水火相既濟先知四手淂來真採挒肘靠方可許四隅從此演出來十三勢架永無已所以因之名長拳任君開展與收歛千萬不可離太極
It is natural to ward off while
advancing and roll back while retreating,
since passive and active, like
water and fire, exchange roles with each other.
First understand the four
primary techniques and get them to be authentic,
then you may move on to
plucking, rending, elbowing, and bumping,
performing the four secondary
techniques on the basis of the primary.
Then there is the Thirteen
Postures solo set, which goes on and on
ceaselessly,
and hence is called Long
Boxing. [“It is like a
long river flowing into the wide ocean…”]
You may spread out and gather
in as you will,
but by no means allow yourself
to stray from the taiji concept.
-
太極上下名天地
[11] TAIJI’S ABOVE & BELOW, OR “SKY
& GROUND”
四手上下分天地採挒肘靠由有去採天靠地相應求何患上下不既濟若使挒肘習逺離迷了乾坤遺歎惜此説亦明天地盤進用肘挒歸人字
Four techniques divide into
above and below, sky and ground:
plucking, rending, elbowing,
and bumping each having their source [pluck & rend based in sky, elbow &
bump based in ground].
When plucking and bumping are
coordinated with each other,
there is no worry of above and
below coming out of joint.
But if rending and elbowing are
not coordinated with each other,
you will lose the relationship
between sky and ground and be left with only sighs of
regret.
As this explanation is clearly
about the realms of sky and ground,
when advancing using elbowing
or rending, return to the condition of mankind
[i.e. the proper range, the
balanced position, man being the middle zone between sky and
ground].
-
太極人盤八字歌
[12] TAIJI’S EIGHT TECHNIQUES IN THE REALM
OF MANKIND
八卦正隅八字歌十三之数不幾何幾何若是無平凖丢了腰頂氣歎哦不断要言只兩字君臣骨肉細琢磨功夫內外均不断對待数兒豈錯他
對待於人出自然由茲往復於地天但求舍己無深病上下進退永連綿
This eight technique song
concerns the eight trigrams with its four primary and four
secondary techniques.
A mere thirteen dynamics is not
a lot.
But however many there might
be, if their standard is not maintained
and if the position of your
waist and headtop is misplaced, you will end up sighing with
woe.
The key to their being no division lies in but two
words:
the “sovereign” and “subject”
roles of the mind and body – ponder them
carefully.
Your skill should have no
division between internal and external,
and then there will be not any
mistakes however many contenders you fight.
What comes out of you during a fight should be
natural,
coming from such interactions
as between the realms of ground and sky.
When you no longer have a
problem with letting go of yourself,
there will never be hesitation
as you go upward or downward, forward or back.
-
太極體用解
[13] TAIJI’S SUBSTANCE &
APPLICATION
理為精氣神之軆精氣神為身之軆身為心之用勁力為身之用心身有一定之主宰者理也精氣神有一定之主宰者意誠也誠者天道誠之者人道俱不外意念須臾之間要知天人同軆之理自淂日月流行之氣其氣意之流行精神自隱微乎理矣夫而后言乃武乃文乃聖乃神則淂矣若特以武事論之於心身用之於勁力仍歸於道之本也故不得獨以末技云爾
勁由於筋力由於骨如以持物論之有力能執数百斤是骨節皮毛之外操也故有硬力如以全軆之有勁似不能持幾斤是精氣之內壯也雖然若是功成後猶有妙出於硬力者修身體育之道有然也
Principle is the substance of
essence, energy, and spirit. Essence, energy, and spirit are the
substance of the body. Body is mind applied. Power is the applying
of body. Mind and body have a specific controller: principle.
Essence, energy, and spirit also have a specific controller:
heartfelt sincerity. Sincerity is the way of nature and to be
sincere is the way of mankind, and neither of these ways leaves the
mind for an instant.
If you understand the principle that nature and mankind are of the
same substance, you will naturally grasp the solar and lunar [i.e.
active and passive] flow of energy, that the energy is the flow of
intention, and that spirit lies naturally hidden within principle.
Then you will obtain the martial and civil aspects, and the
qualities of wisdom and spirituality. In order to make use of
martial arts as a means to discuss mind and body or to develop
power and strength, keep it based in the Way, for this art is not
only for developing skill.
Power comes from the sinews. Strength comes from the bones. Looking
at it purely physically, one who has great strength is able to
carry many hundreds of pounds, but this is an externally showy
action of bones and joints, a stiff strength. If on the other hand
the power of your whole body is used, it may appear you are unable
to lift hardly any weight at all, yet there is an internal
robustness of essence and energy, and once you have achieved skill,
you will seem to have something more wonderful than one who has the
stiff sort of strength. Thus runs the method of physical training
for self-cultivation.
-
太極文武解
[14] TAIJI’S CIVIL & MARTIAL
QUALITIES
文者軆也武者用也文功在武用於精氣神也為之軆育武功得文軆於心身也為之武事夫文武尤有火候之謂在放卷得其時中軆育之本也文武使於對待之際在蓄發當其可者武事之根也故云武事文為柔軟軆操也精氣神之筋勁武事武用剛硬武事也心身之骨力也文無武之豫備為之有軆無用武無文之侶伴為之有用無軆如獨木難支孤掌不嚮不惟軆育武事之功事事諸如此理也文者內理也武者外数也有外数無文理必為血氣之勇失於本來面目欺敵必敗爾有文理無外数徒思安静之學未知用的採戰差微則亡耳自用於人文武二字之解豈可不解哉
The civil quality is the substance.
The martial quality is the application. The civil training within
the martial application is a matter of the essence, energy, and
spirit. It is the physical cultivation. The martial training of the
civil substance is a matter of mind and body. It is the martial
reality. The civil and martial qualities in the training process
are a matter of when to coil and when to release. This is the basis
of physical cultivation. The civil and martial qualities in a
fighting situation are a matter of when best to store and when best
to issue. This is the foundation of martial reality.
It is said that a dose of civil in the martial makes it a softened
physical exercise, the sinewy power of essence, energy, and spirit,
while adding more martial to the martial would make it a hardened
fighting drill, a solid effort of mind and body. The civil quality
without the martial quality at the ready would be just application
without substance. The martial quality without the civil quality in
tandem would be substance without application. Since one piece of
wood will not support a whole building, and since you cannot clap
your hands with just one hand, this is not just a matter of health
and fighting, but is a principle that applies to
everything.
The civil quality is the inner principle. The martial quality is
the outward skill. Those who have the outward skill but lack the
civil principle will be consumed by reckless glory. Discarding the
original purpose of the art, they will try to overpower opponents
and inevitably lose. Those on the other hand who have the civil
principle but lack the outward skill will be distracted by
meditative expectation. They will have no idea what to do in a
fight, and they will be destroyed the moment it turns chaotic. To
apply this art upon an opponent, you must understand both the civil
and martial qualities.
-
太極懂勁解
[15] TAIJI’S IDENTIFYING OF
ENERGIES
自己懂勁接及神明為之文成而后採戰身中之陰七十有二無時不然陽得其陰水火既濟乾坤交泰性命葆真矣於人懂勁視聼之際遇而變化自得曲誠之妙形著明於不勞運動覺知也功至此可為攸往咸宜無須有心之運用耳
Once you are identifying your own
energies, you will be working your way toward something miraculous.
Succeed at the civil aspect and then delve into the martial. There
are at all times in the body seventy-two channels for passive
energy [as well as seventy-two channels for active energy]. When
the active aspect is balanced by the passive, water and fire are in
a state of mutual benefit, skyness and groundness are at peace with
each other, and the genuineness of one’s life essence is
preserved.
Once you are identifying the opponent’s energies, in a state of
seeing them and hearing them, you are adapting to everything you
encounter, and will naturally obtain the subtlety of falseness and
trueness [i.e. the manipulating of emptiness and fullness]. The
postures will be performed with effortless precision and your
movements will be conducted with awareness. Once at this degree of
skill, everything you do will be appropriate and you will not have
to put thought into what you are doing.
-
八五十三勢長拳解
[16] ON THE THIRTEEN DYNAMICS LONG BOXING
SET
自己用功一勢一式用成之後合之為長滔滔不断周而復始所以名長拳也萬不得有一定之架子恐日久入於滑拳也又恐入於硬拳也决不可失其綿軟周身往復精神意氣之本用久自然貫通無往不至何堅不推也於人對待四手當先亦自八門五步而來跕四手四手碾磨進退四手中四手上下四手三才四手由下乘長拳四手起大開大展煉至緊凑屈伸自由之功則升之中上成矣
In your own training of each
posture, once you have learned them all, they are joined together
to make a long routine, flowing on and on without interruption, one
posture after another, and thus it is called Long Boxing. It is
crucial for the set of postures to be performed consistently,
otherwise it may after a while turn instead into either “slippery
boxing” or “stiff boxing”. You assuredly must not lose your
pliability, and the movement of your whole body should be grounded
upon mind and spirit. After practicing over a long period of time,
you will naturally have a breakthrough and attain everything you
have been working toward, and nothing will be strong enough to
stand up against you.
When working with a partner, the four techniques of ward-off,
rollback, press, and push are the first of the thirteen dynamics to
work on. Stand in one place and do the four techniques rolling in
circles, then do them advancing and retreating, doing them at a
middle height. Then do them higher and lower as well, practicing at
all three heights. Starting with the basics, work your way through
the solo set. Then begin working with the four techniques, larger
gross movements at first, then focusing on the finer details until
the skill of extending and contracting is fluent, and you will have
ascended through the midway of attainment, and then will continue
to the top.
-
太極陰陽顛倒解
[17] TAIJI’S INVERSION OF THE PASSIVE &
ACTIVE ASPECTS
陽乾天日火離放出發對開臣肉用氣身武立命方呼上進隅
陰坤地月水坎卷入蓄待合君骨軆理心文盡性圓吸下退正
Examples of the active /
passive:
☰ / ☷
sky / ground
sun / moon
fire / water
☲ / ☵
releasing / coiling
exiting / entering
issuing / storing
offense / defense
opening / closing
subject / sovereign
muscle / bone
the practice / the
theory
the energy / the
principle
body / mind
martial / civil
dedicated to / absorbed
in
square / round
exhale / inhale
up / down
advance / retreat
oblique / direct
盖顛倒之理水火二字詳之則可明如火炎上水潤下者水能使火在下而用水在上則為顛倒然非有法治之則不得矣辟如水入鼎內而治火之上鼎中之水得火以然之不但水不能下潤藉火氣水必有温時火雖炎上得鼎以隔之是為有極之地不使炎上炎火無止息亦不使潤下之水永渗漏此所為水火既濟之理也顛倒之理也若使任其火炎上來潤下必至火水必分為二則為火水未濟也故云分而為二合之為一之理也故云一而二二而一總斯理為三天地人也明此陰陽顛倒之理則可與言道知道不可須臾離則可與言人能以人弘道知道不逺人則可與言天地同軆上天下地人在其中矣苟能参天察地與日月合其明與五岳四凟華朽與四時之錯行與草木並枯榮明鬼神之吉凶知人事興衰則可言乾坤為一大天地人為一小天地也夫如人之身心致知格物於天地之知能則可言人之良知良能若思不失固有其功用浩然正氣直養無害悠久無疆矣所謂人身生成一小天地者天也性也地也命也人也虛靈也神也若不明之者烏能配天地為三乎然非盡性立命窮神達化之功胡為乎來哉
The inversion principle can be
explained with water and fire. Left to their own devices, fire
rises and water sinks, but if water is placed above fire then they
are in an inverted state. Of course, if not done properly there
would be no inverted state, [just a fire put out and some water
made into steam,] and so it has to be a situation of water being
put in a pot which is then positioned over a fire. When the water
in the pot receives the fire’s heat, not only will it not be able
to sink away, it will also absorb the fire’s heat and inevitably
become warm, and although the fire is rising to the pot, it is
stopped there and goes no further. By not allowing the fire to rise
freely or the water to sink away, this is water and fire as in
After Completion [hexagram 63 – made of water ☵ on top of fire ☲],
and is the principle of inversion. If the fire is allowed to rise
freely and the water to sink away, the result will of course be
that the water and fire will go their separate ways as two
entities, and this is water and fire as in Before Completion
[hexagram 64 – made of fire ☲ on top of water ☵]. So goes the
principle that in separating they become two and in joining they
become one, and thus it is said that one becomes two, then two
becomes one, which totals three, namely sky, ground, and
mankind.
Once you understand this principle of passive and active inverting,
then the Way can be discussed. Once you understand that the Way
cannot be departed from for a moment, then human beings can be
discussed, and it is through human beings that the Way can be
glorified. Once you understand that the Way is not far away from
human beings, then the universe can be discussed. It is all one
entity of sky above, ground below, and mankind in the middle. If
you can examine the world, and be one with the shine of the sun and
moon, with the grandeur and erosion of the landscape, with the wax
and wane of the seasons, with the growth and decay of plants, and
come to terms with the favors and frownings of spirits, and
understand the rising and declining of human affairs, then can be
discussed the larger universe of skyness and groundness, and the
smaller universe that is a human being.
To understand the human body and mind, study the awareness and
abilities of things in Nature. Then the human awareness and
abilities that come from Nature can be discussed. If you do not
forget your innate talents, nor your noble energy, constantly
nurturing it and never harming it, you will survive indefinitely.
And so it is said that a human being is a small universe. The sky
represents your nature, the ground represents your life, and your
naturalness represents your spirit. If you do not understand this,
how will you be a blending of sky and ground to make a third?
Unless you express your nature and sustain your life, the work of
spiritual enlightenment and transformation has nothing to build on
and cannot come to fruition.
-
人身太極解
[18] THE TAIJI-NESS OF THE HUMAN
BODY
人之周身心為一身之主宰主宰太極也二目為日月即兩儀也頭像天足像地人中之人及中腕合之為三才也四肢四象也腎水心火肝木肺金脾土皆属陰膀光水小腸火胆木大腸金胃土皆陽也茲為內也顱丁火地閣承漿水左耳金右耳木兩命門也茲為外也神出於心目眼為心之苗精出於腎脑腎為精之本氣出於肺胆氣為肺之原視思明心動神流也聼思聰脑動腎滑也鼻之息香臭口之呼吸出入水醎木酸土辣火苦金甜及言語聲音木亮火焦金潤土塕水漂鼻息口吸呼之味皆氣之往來肺之門戶肝胆巽震之風雷發之聲音出入五味此言口目鼻舌神意使之六合以破六慾也此內也手足肩膝肘胯亦使六合以正六道也此外也眼耳鼻口大小便肚臍外七竅也喜怒憂思悲恐驚內七情也七情皆以心為主喜心怒肝憂脾悲肺恐腎驚胆思小腸怕膀胱愁胃慮大腸此內也夫離南正午火心經坎北正子水腎經震東正卯木肝經兑西正酉金肺經乾西北隅金大腸化水坤西南隅土脾化土巽東南隅胆木化土艮東北隅胃土化火此內八卦也外八卦者二四為肩六八為足上九下一左三右七也坎一坤二震三巽四中五乾六兑七艮八離九此九宮也內九宮亦如此表裏者乙肝左肋化金通肺甲胆化土通脾丁心化木中胆通肝丙小腸化水通腎已脾化土通胃戊胃化火通心後背前胷山澤通氣辛肺右肋化水通腎庚大腸化金通肺癸腎下部化火通心壬膀胱化木通肝此十天干之內外也十二地支亦如此之內外也明斯理則可與言修身之道矣
The heart is in charge of the whole
body, the body’s taiji [the body’s “grand polarity”, the body’s
“1”].
[2] The eyes are the solar and lunar aspects, the “two
polarities”.
[3] The head represents the sky and the feet represent the ground.
The Renzhong acupoint [between lip and nose] represents mankind,
along with the Zhongwan acupoint [solar plexus]. The three combined
are the “three substances”.
[4] The four limbs are the “four manifestations”.
[5] The passive [or more solid organ] correspondences [to the five
elements] within the body are: kidneys – water, heart – fire, liver
– wood, lungs – metal, spleen – earth. The active [or more bag-like
organ] correspondences within the body are: bladder – water, small
intestine – fire, gallbladder – wood, large intestine – metal,
stomach – earth. The external correspondences are: headtop – fire,
jowls and Chengjiang acupoint [below the lower lip] – water, left
ear – metal, right ear – wood, both sides of the “life gate”
[earth]. Spirit is expressed from the heart. The eyes are the
sprouts of the heart [similar to “windows to the soul”]. Essence is
expressed from the kidneys. The brain and kidneys are the source of
the essence. Energy is expressed from the lungs. The gallbladder
energy has its source in the lungs. When the eyes see clearly, the
actions of the heart make the spirit flow. When the ears hear
clearly, the actions of the brain make the kidneys smooth. As
breath goes in and out, what is perceived by the senses of smell
and taste are: salty – water, sour – wood, spice [sweet] – earth,
bitter – fire, sweet [spice] – metal. And the sounds they produce
are: clear – wood, fire – hoarse, congested – metal, breathy –
earth, distracted – water. The scent and taste of the air as the
lungs pump it in and out, and as the wind (☴) and thunder (☳) of
liver and gallbladder produce the five manners of voice, comes and
goes as the five fragrances/flavors.
[6] Mouth, eye, nose, tongue, spirit, and intent make the six
internal unions by which the six desires will be overcome. Hand,
foot, shoulder, knee, elbow, and hip make the six external unions
by which the six paths [front, back, left, right, up, down] will be
straightened [i.e. moved toward efficiently].
[7] The seven external apertures are: eye, ear, nose, mouth, anus,
urethra, navel. The seven internal emotions, which are governed by
the heart, are: joy, rage, worry, obsessiveness, grief, fear,
shock. Inside, joy is in the heart, rage is in the liver, worry is
in the spleen, grief is in the lungs, fear is in the kidneys, shock
is in the gallbladder, obsessiveness is in the small intestine,
terror is in the bladder, anxiety is in the stomach, and
pensiveness is in the large intestine.
[8] The internal qualities of the eight trigrams:
☴☲☷
☳
☱
☶☵☰
☲: S /
Wu [noon] / fire / heart meridian
☵: N / Zi [midnight] / water /
kidney meridian
☳: E / Mao [dawn] / wood / liver
meridian
☱: W / You [sunset] / metal / lung
meridian
☰: NW / metal / large intestine /
transforming of water
☷: SW / earth / spleen /
transforming of earth
☴: SE / wood / gallbladder /
transforming of earth
☶: NE / earth / stomach /
transforming of fire
[9] Externally, ☵ is 1, ☷ is 2, ☳ is 3, ☴ is 4, the center is 5, ☰
is 6, ☱ is 7, ☶ is 8, and ☲ is 9. 2 and 4 are the shoulders, 6 and
8 are the feet, at the top is 9, at the bottom is 1, on the left is
3, on the right is 7 [producing a “magic square” in which every
line of three numbers – horizontal, vertical, diagonal – adds up to
the same number]:
4 9
2
3
5 7
8
1 6
These are the “nine palaces”
[eight trigrams plus the center]. The internal quality of the nine
palaces is the same.
[10] The inner and outer [alignment with the ten Celestial Stems
(the names of the days of the ancient ten-day week, a poetic
microcosm of the agricultural process: 甲 Jia – “Seed”,
乙 Yi – “Sprout”, 丙 Bing –
“Shoot”, 丁 Ding – “Ear”, 戊 Wu –
“Sickle”, 己 Ji – “Bundle”, 庚 Geng
– “Pestle”, 辛 Xin – “Sack”, 壬 Ren
– “Haul”, 癸 Gui – “Store”. The pulse of the days
is: active, passive, active, passive, the odd-numbered active days
intended as being more work-oriented days and the even-numbered
passive days intended as being more rest-oriented days. The order
is twisted below because the pairings are presented passive/active
rather than active/passive.)] runs thus:
Yi: liver and left ribs /
transformed by the metal of the lungs
Jia: gallbladder / transforms the
earth of the spleen
Ding: heart / transformed by the
wood of the gallbladder and liver
Bing: small intestine / transforms
the water of the kidneys
Ji: spleen / transformed by the
earth of the stomach
Wu: stomach / transforms the fire
of the heart, energy coursing through the mountain and valley of
back and chest
Xin: lungs and right ribs /
transformed by the water of the kidneys
Geng: large intestine / transforms
the metal of the lungs
Gui: kidneys and lower body /
transformed by the fire of the heart
Ren: bladder / transforms the wood
of the liver
These are the internal and external
qualities of the ten Celestial Stems.
The twelve Terrestrial Branches also have internal and external
qualities [which for some reason are not delved into here. The
Terrestrial Branches are the names of the ancient “hours” of the
day: 子 Zi (11pm-1am – “Conception” – picture of a
baby, representing also the new day beginning at midnight),
丑 Chou (1am-3am – “Curled Up” – in sleep),
寅 Yin (3am-5am – “Contortion” – curled up further
in sleep),
卯 Mao (5am-7am – “Shutters Opening” – i.e. dawn),
辰 Chen (7am-9am – “Slight Bowing” – looking down
away from the sun above the horizon), 巳 Si
(9am-11am – “Deep Bowing” – slouching over in response to rising
sun), 午 Wu (11am-1pm – “Oppression” – sun directly
above), 未 Wei (1pm-3pm – “Short Shadow” – shadow
finally moving off center), 申 Shen (3pm-5pm –
“Long Shadow”), 酉 You (5pm-7pm – “Wine Withdrawn”
– the wine going back into the bottle, i.e. sunset),
戌 Xu (7pm-9pm – “Depression” – woundingly missing
the daylight), 亥 Hai (9pm-11pm – “Bliss” – picture
of a man and woman in bed together). As a further side note, since
the Celestial Stems describe an agricultural process and the
Terrestrial Branches are based on the progress of the sun through
the sky, the 天干地支 Celestial Stems and Terrestrial
Branches probably should have been called the
地干天支 Terrestrial Stems and Celestial
Branches.]
Once you are clear about this theory [that there is a taiji quality
of passives and actives inherent in the body], you will then be
able to talk of the methods of self-cultivation.
-
太極分文武三成解
[19] TAIJI’S SEPARATION OF THE CIVIL &
MARTIAL QUALITIES INTO THREE ACCOMPLISHMENTS
蓋言道者非自修身無由得成也然又分為三乘之修法乘者成也上乘即大成也下乘即小成也中乘即誠之者成也法分三修成功一也文修於內武修於外軆育內也武事外也其修法內外表裏成功集大成即上乘也由軆育之文而得武事之武或由武事之武而得軆育之文即中乘也然獨知軆育不入武事而成者或專武事不為軆育而成者即小成也
As far as the Way goes, without
cultivating the self, there is no source from which to obtain it.
It is separated into three vehicles for cultivation, “vehicle”
meaning accomplishment. The greater vehicle takes you all the way
to the top. The lesser vehicle gets you at least to the bottom. The
middle vehicle is to succeed via sincerity. The methods are
separated into three kinds of cultivation, but are working towards
the same accomplishment.
Cultivation of the civil quality is internal. Cultivation of the
martial quality is external. Physical training is internal. Martial affairs
are external. When the cultivation methods, both internal and
external, surface and interior, are merged and achieved together,
this is a grand accomplishment, the top.
When one obtains the martial quality by way of the civil training
or obtains the civil quality by way of the martial training, this
is the middle.
When one knows only the civil training but knows nothing of the
martial part of it or focuses on only the martial part of it but
does not do the civil training, this is the bottom.
-
太極下乘武事解
[20] TAIJI’S LESSER ACCOMPLISHMENT – ITS
MARTIAL QUALITY
太極之武事外操柔軟內含堅剛而求柔軟柔軟之於外久而久之自得內之堅剛非有心之堅剛寔有心之柔軟也所難者內要含蓄堅剛而不施外終柔軟而迎敵以柔軟而應堅剛使堅剛盡化無有矣其功何以得乎要非粘黏連隨已成自得運動知覺方為懂勁而后神而明之化境極矣夫四兩撥千斤之妙功不及化境將何以能是所謂懂粘運得其視聼輕靈之巧耳
Taiji’s martial quality is to be
outwardly soft while inwardly hard, always seeking softness. By
being outwardly soft over a longer and longer period, you will
naturally obtain inner hardness, so long as your mind is focused on
the softness rather than the hardness. The difficulty lies in
containing hardness within and not letting it expose itself,
outwardly only engaging the opponent with softness. By using
softness to respond to hardness, his hardness is made to dissipate
until it is spent.
How is such a skill to be obtained? Once your sticking, adhering,
connecting, and following are complete, you will naturally have
achieved moving with awareness, and from there you will move on to
identifying energies, then gain a miraculous understanding, and
ultimately you will have been transformed.
As for the subtlety of four ounces moving a thousand pounds – how
could you have such an ability if your skill has not reached a
transformative state? Thus it is said that you are to recognize
when you are connected to the opponent, and thereby obtain the art
of keenly observing and listening.
-
太極正功解
[21] CORRECTNESS OF SKILL IN
TAIJI
太極者元也無論內外上下左右不離此元元也太極者方也無論內外上下左右不離此方也元之出入方之進退隨方就元之往來也方為開展元為緊凑方元規矩之至其就能出此以外哉如此得心應手仰髙鑽堅神乎其神見隱顕微明而且明生生不已欲罷不能
Taiji is round, never abandoning
its roundness whether going in or out, up or down, left or right.
And Taiji is square, never abandoning its squareness whether going
in or out, up or down, left or right. As you roundly exit and
enter, or squarely advance and retreat, follow squareness with
roundness, and vice versa. Squareness has to do with expanding,
roundness with contracting. [Squareness means a directional focus
along which you can express your power. Roundness means an
all-around buoyancy with which you can receive and neutralize the
opponent’s power.]
The main rule is that you be squared and rounded. After all, could
there be anything beyond these things? By means of this you will
become proficient at the skill. But “gazing up, it grows higher,
and drilling in, it gets harder…” [i.e. there is always more to
it], so magical it is. When you look upon it at last, it hides
again, revealing there is yet more subtlety to it, illumination
upon illumination. It generates new features infinitely, rendering
you “unable to quit even if there were the desire to do so.”
[Lun
Yu, 9.11]
-
太極輕重浮沉解
[22] TAIJI’S LIGHTNESS & HEAVINESS,
FLOATING & SINKING
雙重為病干於填寔與沉不同也雙沉不為病自爾騰虛與重不易也雙浮為病祗如漂渺與輕不例也雙輕不為病天然清靈與浮不等也半輕半重不為病偏輕偏重為病半者半有著落也所以不為病偏者偏無著落也所以為病偏無著落必失方圓半有著落豈出方圓半浮半沉為病失於不及也偏浮偏沉失於太過也半重偏滯而不正也半輕偏輕靈而不圓也半沉偏沉虛而不正也半浮偏浮茫而不圓也夫雙輕不近於浮則為輕靈雙沉不近於重則為離虛故曰上手輕重半有著落則為平手除除此三者之外皆為病手蓋內之虛靈不昧能致於外氣之清明流行乎肢軆也若不窮硏輕重浮沉之手徒勞掘井不及泉之歎耳然有方圓四正之手表裏精粗無不到則已極大成又何云四隅出方圓矣所謂方而圓圓而方超乎象外得其寰中之上手也
- [1a] Both sides fully heavy
[“double pressure”] is wrong. It is too full. It is different from
sinking.
- [1b] Both sides fully sinking is
okay. It has to do with being ready to move. It is different from
heaviness.
- [1c] Both sides fully floating
[“double vacuum”] is wrong. It is too empty. It is different from
lightness.
- [1d] Both sides fully light is
okay. It has to do with natural nimbleness. It is different from
floating.
- [2a] One side under-light and one
side under-heavy is okay. To underdo means one side is stable.
Therefore it is okay. Since to underdo is stable, it will not lose
squareness and roundness.
- [2b] One side over-light and one
side over-heavy is wrong. To overdo means neither side is stable.
Therefore it is wrong. Since to overdo is unstable, it will lose
squareness and roundness.
- [2c] One side under-floating and
one side under-sinking is wrong, for it is not enough.
- [2d] One side over-floating and
one side over-sinking [is wrong, for it] is too much.
- [3a] One side under-heavy and one
side over-heavy, you will be not only sluggish but also
unsquared.
- [3b] One side under-light and one
side over-light, you will still be nimble but you will be
unrounded.
- [3c] One side under-sinking and
one side over-sinking, you will still be balanced but you will be
unsquared.
- [3d] One side under-floating and
one side over-floating, you will be not only scattered but also
unrounded.
Both sides fully light [1d] is not a matter of floating, and thus
it is nimbleness. Both sides fully sinking [1b] is not a matter of
heaviness, and thus it is alertness. Thus it is said: “The best
technique is both light and heavy [2a], half and half, thus you
will have a balanced technique.” Anything beyond these three [1b,
1d, 2a] would be wrong.
When your inner naturalness is not obscured, it can be sent outward
as purified energy, flowing into your limbs. If you do not
exhaustively study these aspects of technique – lightness,
heaviness, floating, sinking – it would be like digging a dry well.
But if you possess squareness and roundness, then warding off,
rolling back, pressing, and pushing will all be there inside and
out down to their smallest detail, and you will have attained a
great achievement, and then plucking, rending, elbowing, and
bumping will also be squared and rounded. And so it is said:
“Square but round, round but square.” Going beyond the shape
[squareness OR roundness] takes you to the highest level
[squareness AND roundness].
-
太極四隅解
[23] TAIJI’S FOUR SECONDARY
TECHNIQUES
四正即四方也所謂掤捋擠按也初不知方能使圓方圓復始之理無已焉能出隅之手矣緣人外之肢軆內之神氣弗缉輕靈方圓四正之功始出輕重浮沉之病則有隅矣辟如半重偏重滯而不正自然為採挒肘靠之隅手或雙重填寔亦出隅手也病多之手不得已以隅手扶之而歸圓中方正之手雖然至底者肘靠亦及此以補其所以云爾春後功夫能致上乘者亦須獲採挒而仍歸大中至正矣是四隅之所用者因失軆而補缺云云
The four primary techniques,
aligned with the four cardinal compass points, are ward-off,
rollback, press, and push. In the beginning, there will be a lack
of understanding of the principle that squareness can lead to
roundness and that they may alternate. Thus ability will emerge in
the four secondary techniques of pluck, rend, elbow, and bump. Due
to your outer limbs and inner spirit not maintaining nimbleness of
squareness/roundness in the primary techniques, the mistakes of
lightness, heaviness, floating, or sinking will start to manifest,
and with them the secondary techniques.
For example [3a]: “One side under-heavy and one side over-heavy,
you will be not only sluggish but also unsquared.” This situation
will naturally lead to the secondary techniques. Or [1a]: “Both
sides fully heavy… is too full.” Again the secondaries will emerge.
If your technique has many flaws, you will be compelled to use the
secondary techniques to make up for them in order to regain a
roundness that is centered and a squareness that is squared. Even a
beginner can achieve this with the techniques of elbow or bump. But
one whose skill has risen to a higher level still has to maintain
the techniques of pluck and rend to regain a position that is
centered and squared. Therefore the purpose of the four secondary
techniques is to troubleshoot the mistakes you make in those
moments when your technique is performed contrary to the
theory.
-
太極平凖腰頂解
[24] THE PROPER ALIGNMENT OF WAIST &
HEADTOP IN TAIJI
頂如凖故云頂頭懸也兩手即平左右之盤也腰即平之根株也立如平凖所謂輕重浮沉分厘絲毫則偏顯然矣有凖頂頭懸腰之根下株尾閭至囟門也上下一条線全憑兩平轉變换取分毫尺寸自己辨車輪兩命門一纛搖又轉心令氣旗使自然隨我便滿身輕利者金剛羅漢煉對待有往來是早或是晚合則放發云不必凌霄箭涵養有多少一氣哈而逺口授須秘傅開門見中天
Your head is like a centered pole,
as in “your headtop is suspended”, and with your hands making the
trays to each side, your waist being the platform base, you are
“standing like a scale”. Whether you receive the slightest bit of
lightness or heaviness, floating or sinking, the tipping of the
trays to either side will reveal all to you. With your headtop
suspended and waist rooted below, you are connected from tailbone
to skullbone.
Standing in a vertical line,
all depends on a horizontal
rotation.
My adaptations can catch the
smallest change,
and I can distinguish all
measurements.
Rotating my waist,
the great flag is
waved.
My mind sends the command, the
energy carries the directing banners,
and I naturally move with
facility.
My whole body is activated
like a toughened arhat
warrior.
In fighting,
one will be either early or
late.
Joining with the opponent, I send him away,
but it is not necessary for me
to try to launch him into the stratosphere.
With an amount of power
contained,
I need only express a “ha!” and
he goes far enough.
But this is something that must
be taught personally
in order for the door to be
opened and the view to be seen.
-
太極四時五氣解圖
[25] A TAIJI MAP OF THE FOUR SEASONS &
FIVE ENERGIES [meaning the five elements]
夏
火
呵
南
春木噓東 ☯
西呬金秋
北
吹
水
冬
呼吸
土
中央
S: summer / fire / “he” [scolding]
E: spring / wood / “xu” [shushing] (taiji) W: autumn / metal / “xi” [sighing]
N: winter / water / “chui” [boasting]
Center: earth / “hu-xi” [breathing]
-
太極血氣根本解
[26] THE ESSENCE OF BLOOD & ENERGY IN
TAIJI
血為營氣為衛血流行於肉膜胳氣流行於骨筋脉筋甲為骨之餘髮毛為血之餘血旺則髮毛盛氣足則筋甲壯故血氣之勇力出於骨皮毛之外壯氣血之軆用出於肉筋甲之內壯氣以血之盈虛血以氣之消長消長盈虛周而復始終身用之不能盡者矣
Blood is for nourishment. Energy is
for defense. Blood flows through muscles, tissues, and limbs.
Energy flows through bones, sinews, and vessels. Healthy sinews and
nails are a sign of healthy bone. Healthy scalp hair and body hair
is a sign of healthy blood. When the blood is vigorous, the scalp
and body hair is lush. When the energy is full, the sinews and
nails are robust.
Thus the boldness and strength of the blood and energy when the
blood is emphasized manifests outwardly in the robustness of the
bones, skin, and hair, while the form and function of the energy
and blood when the energy is emphasized manifests inwardly in the
robustness of the muscles, sinews, and nails. The energy relies on
the blood’s burgeoning or depleting. The blood relies on the
energy’s decreasing or increasing. Decreasing then increasing,
burgeoning then depleting, the cycle goes on endlessly. Make use of
this your whole life and you will never be worn out.
-
太極力氣解
[27] STRENGTH & ENERGY IN
TAIJI
氣走於膜胳筋脉力出於血肉皮骨故有力者皆外壯於皮骨形也有氣者是內壯於筋脉象也氣血功於內壯血氣功於外壯要之明於氣血二字之功能自知力氣之由來矣知氣力之所以然自能用力行氣之分別行氣於筋脉用力於皮骨大不相侔也
Energy courses through the tissues,
limbs, sinews, and vessels. Strength emerges from the blood,
muscles, skin, and bones. Therefore a strong person has an outer
robustness to their skin and bones, a matter of posture, while an
energized person has an inner robustness to their sinews and
vessels, a matter of presence. Training the energy and blood with
emphasis on the energy will empower the internal. Training the
blood and energy with emphasis on the blood will enhance the
external.
If you awaken to the functions of these two things, both the energy
and the blood, you will naturally come to understand the basis of
strength and energy. Understanding what strength and energy are all
about, you will naturally be able to distinguish between the using
of strength and the moving of energy: the moving of energy will be
felt in your sinews and vessels, while the using of strength will
be felt in your skin and bones – extremely different things
indeed.
-
太極尺寸分毫解
[28] TAIJI’S REDUCING
MEASUREMENTS
功夫先煉開展後煉緊凑開展成而得之纔講緊凑緊凑得成纔講尺寸分毫由尺住之功成而后能寸住分住毫住此所謂尺寸分毫之理也明矣然尺必十寸寸必十分分必十毫其数在焉故云對待者数也知其数則能得尺寸分毫也要知其数非秘授而能量之者哉
Work first at training gross
movements, then finer details. When the gross movements are
obtained, then the finer movements can be talked of. When the finer
movements are obtained, then measures of a foot and below can be
talked of. When your skill has progressed to the level of a foot,
then you can progress to the level of an inch, then to a tenth of
an inch, then to the width of a hair. This is what is meant by the
principle of reducing measurements.
A foot has ten “inches”. An inch has ten tenths. A tenth has ten
hairs. These are the measurements. It was long ago said: “Fighting
is a matter of measuring.” Understanding the measurements, you can
achieve the reducing of measurements. But if you want to understand
the measuring, you will not be able to without the deeper
teachings.
-
太極膜脉筋穴解
[29] VESSELS, CHANNELS, SINEWS, AND
ACUPOINTS IN TAIJI
節膜拿脉抓筋閉穴此四功由尺寸分毫得之後而求之膜若節之血不周流脉若拿之氣難行走筋若抓之身無主地穴若閉之神昏氣暗抓膜節之半死申脉拿之似亡单筋抓之勁断死穴閉之無生搃之氣血精神若無身何有主也如能節拿抓閉之功非得點傳不可
Controlling his vessels, seizing
his channels, capturing his sinews, and sealing his acupoints –
these four skills are to be worked toward after you are able to
measure down from the level of a foot to the level of an inch, then
to a tenth of an inch, then to the width of a hair. When his
vessels are controlled, his blood will not circulate. When his
channels are seized, his energy will not move. When his sinews are
captured, his body will have no control. When his acupoints are
sealed, he will lose consciousness.
By controlling certain vessels, he will seem half dead. By seizing
certain channels, he will seem fully dead. By capturing certain
sinews, his power will be cut off. By sealing the lethal acupoints,
he will not survive. Basically, if he is without energy, blood, or
spirit, how will he have any control over his body? However, even
if you have ability in the skills of control, seize, capture, and
seal, these particular effects will not work without specific
instruction in them.
-
太極字字解
[30] SOME OF THE TERMS IN
TAIJI
挫柔捶打於己於人按摩推拿於己人開合升降於己人此十二字皆用手也屈伸動静於己人起落急緩於己人閃還撩了於己人此十二字於己氣也於人手也轉换進退於己身人步也顧盼前後於己目也人手也即瞻前眇後左顧右盼也此八字闗乎神矣断接俯仰此四字闗乎意勁也接闗乎神氣也俯仰闗乎手足也勁断意不断意断神可接勁意神俱断則俯仰矣手足無著落耳俯為一叩仰為一反而已矣不使叩反非断而復接不可對待之字以俯仰為重時刻在心身手足不使断之無接則不能俯仰也求其断接之能非見隱顕微不可隱微似断而未断見顯似接而未接接接断断断断接接其意心身軆神氣極於隱顯又何慮不粘黏連隨哉
Applying to either yourself or the
opponent: file, knead, punch, strike, push down, rub in, push out,
seize, spread, merge, ascend, descend. These twelve terms are all
techniques.
Applying to either yourself or the opponent: bending, extending,
movement, stillness, rising,
falling, quick, leisurely, evade, counter, incite, conclude. These
twelve terms apply to your own energy in relation to the opponent’s
techniques.
Applying to your own body in relation to the opponent’s stepping:
turn, switch, advance, retreat. Applying to your own gaze in
relation to the opponent’s techniques: look left, look right, look
forward, look behind. These eight terms have to do with your
spirit.
These four terms have to with intention and power: disconnecting,
connecting, bowing forward, yawning backward. Disconnecting and
connecting have to do with your spirit and energy. Bowing forward
and yawning back have to do with your hands and feet. The power may
disconnect, but the intention does not. If the intention
disconnects, the spirit can stay connected. If the power,
intention, and spirit disconnect together, there will be bowing
forward or yawning back, your hands and feet not touching or
landing where they would have. To bow forward is to end up cracking
your head. To yawn backward is to end up toppling over. To keep
yourself from cracking your head or toppling over, you must
disconnect then reconnect. Bowing forward and yawning backward are
important things to consider in fighting. At no moment allow there
to be in mind, body, hand, or foot a disconnection without
reconnecting, and then you will prevent bowing forward or yawning
back.
Seeking for the skills of disconnecting and connecting will not
work without seeing what is concealed and revealing what is subtle.
With concealment and subtlety, it is like you have disconnected but
not disconnected. With seeing and revealing, it is like you have
connected but not connected. By connecting and disconnecting,
disconnecting and connecting, in mind, body, and spirit, you will
ultimately be concealing and revealing, and then you will have no
worry that you are not sticking, adhering, connecting, and
following.
-
太極節拿抓閉尺寸分毫辨
[31] TAIJI’S REDUCING OF MEASUREMENTS IN
THE CONTEXT OF CONTROLLING, SEIZING, CAPTURING, OR
SEALING
對待之功既得尺寸分毫於手則可量之矣然不論節拿抓閉之手易若節膜拿脉抓筋閉穴則難非自尺寸分毫量之不可得也節不量由按而得膜拿不量由摩而得脉抓不量由推而得拿閉非量而不能得穴由尺盈而縮之寸分毫也此四者雖有髙授然非自己功夫久者無能貫通焉
When in your fighting skill you
have obtained the sense of a foot, an inch, a tenth of an inch, and
the width of a hair, you can then estimate the opponent. Regardless
of any ease you may have with the techniques of controlling,
seizing, capturing, and sealing, in order to control his vessels,
seize his channels, capture his sinews, and seal his acupoints, you
must make estimations of a foot, an inch, a tenth of an inch, and
the width of a hair.
To control without estimation, his vessels can be obtained through
pushing down. To seize without estimation, his channels can be
obtained through rubbing in. To capture without estimation, his
sinews can be obtained through pushing out. But as for sealing,
without estimation his acupoints cannot be reached, because [to get
to his acupoints] you have to work your way down from the level of
a foot to the level of an inch, then to a tenth of an inch, then to
the width of a hair. For these four skills, even if you receive
instruction from an expert, you will not be able to master them
unless you personally put a lot of work into them over a long
period.
-
太極補瀉氣力解
[32] TAIJI’S BOOSTING OR DISSIPATING ENERGY
& STRENGTH
補瀉氣力於自己難補瀉氣力於人亦難補自己者知覺功虧則補運動功過則瀉所以求諸己不易也補於人者氣過則補之力過則瀉之此勝彼敗所由然也氣過或瀉力過或補其理雖一然其有詳夫過補為之過上加過遇瀉為之緩他不及他必更過仍加過也補氣瀉力於人之法均為加過於人矣補氣名曰結氣法瀉力名曰空力法
There is difficulty in boosting or
dissipating your own energy and strength. There is also difficulty
in boosting or dissipating the energy and strength of the opponent.
When your awareness is insufficient, boost [your energy]. When your
movement is overdone, dissipate [your strength]. These are things
that are not easy matters when it comes to yourself.
When the opponent has too much energy, boost it. When he has too
much strength, dissipate it. By this means, you will win and he
will lose. Or you may when he has too much energy, dissipate it, or
when he has too much strength, boost it. The principle is the same
in either case, and yet to elaborate further: if he has too much
[of either], add more so that he is overdoing, or if he has too
little [of either], dissipate it further so that in his
insufficiency he adds more and again ends up overdoing. Both
boosting his energy and dissipating his strength induce him to
overdo it. Boosting his energy is called the method of “tying up
his energy”. Dissipating his strength is called the method of
“emptying his strength”.
-
[SUPPLEMENTARY TEXTS]
太極空結挫揉論
[i] TAIJI’S EMPTYING, TYING UP, FILING,
AND KNEADING
有挫空挫結有揉空柔結之辨挫空者則力隅矣挫結者則氣断矣揉空者則力分矣揉結者則氣隅矣若結柔挫則氣力反空揉挫則力氣敗結挫揉則力盛於氣力在氣上矣空挫揉則氣盛於力氣過力不及矣挫結揉揉結挫皆氣閉於力矣挫空揉揉空挫皆力鑿於氣矣總之挫結揉空之法亦必由尺寸分毫量能如是也不然無地之挫揉平虛之靈結亦何由而致於哉
To empty or tie up by way of filing
is different from emptying or tying up by way of kneading. Emptying
by way of filing, the opponent’s strength is boxed in. Tying up by
way of filing, his energy is interrupted. Emptying by way of
kneading, his strength is spread out. Tying up by way of kneading,
his energy is boxed in.
If you apply the tying & kneading filing, then his energy and
strength will be reversed. If you apply the emptying & kneading
filing, then his energy and strength will fail. If you apply the
tying & filing kneading, his strength will build up from his
energy until his strength is greater than his energy. If you apply
the emptying & filing kneading, his energy will build up from
his strength, making his energy overloaded and his strength
insufficient.
The filing & tying kneading and the kneading & tying filing
will both result in his energy getting sealed off by his strength.
The filing & emptying kneading and the kneading & emptying
filing will both result in his strength being chiseled away by his
energy. Basically, methods such as tying up by way of filing or
emptying by way of kneading all require that you work your way down
from measurements of a foot, to an inch, to a tenth of an inch, to
the width of a hair. If not, there will be no occasion of filing or
kneading and a flattened out void for emptying or tying, for they
will not be gotten from anywhere.
-
懂勁先後論
[ii] BEFORE IDENTIFYING ENERGIES AND
AFTER
夫未懂勁之先長出頂匾丢抗之病既懂勁之後恐出断接俯仰之病然未懂勁故然病亦出勁既懂何以出病乎緣勁似懂未懂之際正在兩可断接無凖矣故出病神明及猶不及俯仰無著矣亦出病若不出断接俯仰之病非真懂勁弗能不出也胡為真懂因視聼無由未得其確也知瞻眇顏盼之視覺起落緩急之聼知閃還撩了之運覺轉换進退之動則為真懂勁則能接及神明及神明自攸往有由矣有由者由於懂勁自淂屈伸動静之妙有屈伸動静之妙開合升降又有由矣由屈伸動静見入則開遇出則合看來則詳就去則升夫而後纔為真及神明也明也岂可日後不慎行坐臥走飲食溺溷之功是所為及中成大成也哉
Before you are identifying
energies, you will typically be making the mistakes of crashing in,
collapsing, coming away, and resistance. Once you are identifying
energies, you will perhaps still make the mistakes of
disconnecting, connecting, bowing forward, and yawning back. Before
you are indentifying energies, it is natural to be making mistakes,
but even after you are identifying energies, there are reasons as
to why there are still mistakes to be made. When in that vague zone
of almost but not quite indentifying energies, there is a lack of
precision in disconnecting and connecting, hence there will be
mistakes. And then when almost but not quite at the level of the
miraculous, bowing forward and yawning back may still not be
entirely under control, again resulting in mistakes.
As long as you are not making the mistakes of disconnecting,
connecting, bowing forward, or yawning back, you are doing it
right, for if your identifying of energies is not genuine, you
would not able to prevent such mistakes. What does it mean for it
to be genuine? Simply that a sensory foundation must be laid to
build it up into a reality. Be aware through observing: there is
looking forward, looking behind, looking left, looking right. Be
aware through listening: there is rising, falling, quickness,
leisure. Be aware through feeling: there is evading, countering,
inciting, concluding. Be aware through acting: there is turning,
switching, advancing, retreating. In this way, your identifying of
energies will be genuine.
You will then be able to reach the level of the miraculous, and
this is because there is a foundation, the foundation being the
identifying of energies. The subtleties of bending, extending,
movement, and stillness are automatically built upon that
foundation. Then spreading, merging, ascending, and descending are
in turn built upon bending, extending, movement, and stillness. By
way of bending and extending, movement and stillness, spread his
attack aside when you see him enter, then merge with him as he
tries to exit. Descend when you see his attack come in, then ascend
as he withdraws.
Once your genuineness in identifying energies reaches all the way
to the point of the miraculous, at such a level you will thereafter
be mindful in every activity – whether it be walking, sitting,
lying down, running, eating, drinking, or even going to the
bathroom. By this means, your achievement will go from middling to
great.
-
尺寸分毫在懂勁後論
[iii] REDUCING MEASUREMENTS AFTER
IDENTIFYING ENERGIES
在懂勁先求尺寸分毫為之小成不過末技武事而已所謂能尺於人者非先懂勁也如懂勁後神而明之自然能量尺寸尺寸能量纔能節拿抓閉矣知膜脉筋穴之理要必明存亡之手知存亡之手要必明生死之穴其穴之数安可不知乎知生死之穴数烏可不明閉而不生乎烏可不明閉而無生乎是所謂二字之存亡一閉之而已盡矣
If you strive for the reducing of
measurements before identifying energies, yours will amount to a
small achievement and be but a smattering of martial skill. You
will not be able to estimate the opponent even at the level of a
foot before you are identifying energies. After you have achieved
identifying energies, you will have a miraculous understanding, and
you will automatically have the ability to reduce measurements.
From there you will then be able to control, seize, capture, and
seal.
To understand the theory of vessels, channels, sinews, and
acupoints, it is necessary to be clear about which techniques will
save or kill. To understand the techniques that will save or kill,
it is necessary to be clear about the acupoints for life and death.
In the acupoint art, how could you go without knowing them [seeing
as not knowing them might result in killing someone by mistake]? To
know how to activate the life and death acupoints, it is necessary
to be clear about the technique of sealing. Sealing is what
determines both life and death.
-
太極指掌捶手解
[iv] THE FINGERS, PALM, FIST, AND HAND IN
TAIJI
自指下之腕上裏者為掌五指之首為之手五指皆為指五指權裏其背為捶如其用者按推掌也拿揉抓閉俱用指也挫摩手也打捶也夫捶有搬攔有指襠有肘底有撇身四捶之外有覆捶掌有搂膝有换轉有单鞭有通背四掌之外有串掌手有雲手有提手拿有十字手四手之外有反手指有屈指有伸指揑指閉指四指之外有量指又名尺寸指又名覔穴指然指有五指有五指之用首指為手仍為指故又名手指其一用之為旋指旋手其二用之為根指根手其三用之為弓指弓手其四用之為中合手指四手指之外為獨指獨手也食指為卞指為劍指為佐指為粘指中正為心指為合指為鈎指為抹指無名指為全指為環指為代指為扣指小指為幫指補指媚指掛指若此之名知之易而用之難淂口訣秘法亦不易為也其次有如對掌推山掌射雁掌晾翅掌似閉指抝步指湾弓指穿梭指探馬手湾弓手抱虎手玉女手跨虎手通山捶葉下捶背反捶勢分捶捲挫捶再其次步隨身换不出五行則無失錯矣因其粘連黏隨之理舍己從人身隨步自换只要無五行之舛錯身形脚勢出於自然又何慮些須之病也
The “palm” is the area of the hand
below the fingers and above the wrist. The “hand” refers to the
whole thing up to the fingertips. A “finger” refers to any of the
five fingers. A “fist” is when the five fingers are clasped inward
to emphasize the back of the hand. Palm techniques are matters of
pushing down and pushing out. Finger techniques are matters of
seizing, kneading, capturing, and sealing. Hand techniques are
matters of filing and rubbing. Fist techniques are matters of
striking.
Fist techniques: Parry & Block, Punch to the Crotch, Under the
Elbow, Torso-Flung Punch, and beyond these four there is also the
Overturned Punch. Palm techniques: Brush the Knee, Exchanging
Palms, Single Whip, Through the Back, and beyond these four there
is also the Threading Palm. Hand techniques: Clouding Hands,
Raising Hand, Seizing Hand, Crossed Hands, and beyond these four
there is also the Reversing Hand. Finger techniques: bending,
extending, pinching, sealing, and beyond these four there is also
estimating, which is also called “reducing measurements” or
“seeking acupoints”. The five fingers also have five-fingered
functions, operating as a whole hand as well as individual fingers,
and so these can be termed as either hand or finger techniques:
corkscrewing, planting, curling, or closing inward, and beyond
these four hand/finger techniques, there is also “standing
alone”.
The forefinger is the impatient finger, sword finger, assisting
finger, or sticking finger. The middle finger is the central
finger, closing finger, hooking finger, or smearing finger. The
ring finger is the completing finger, surrounding finger,
exchanging finger, or covering finger. The little finger is the
helping finger, healing finger, enticing finger, or hanging finger.
Though the names of these techniques are easy to comprehend, they
are difficult to apply, even with personal instruction in the
deeper methods.
Supplementary palm techniques: Palms Facing Each Other, Push the
Mountain, Shoot the Goose, Spreading Wings. Supplementary finger
techniques: Sealing Shut, Jab in a Crossed Stance, Bending the Bow,
Working the Shuttles. Supplementary hand techniques: Reaching Out
to the Horse, Bending the Bow, Capturing the Tiger, Maiden’s Hands,
Sitting Tiger Hands. Supplementary fist techniques: Punch Through
the Mountain, Punch Under the Leaf, Turning Behind Punch,
Momentum-Splitting Punch, Wrap & File Punch.
A further supplementary layer is that your steps are to go along
with your body’s changes and are never to perform a step
unassociated with the five elements, and thus you will be free from
making mistakes. Because of the principle of sticking, connecting,
adhering, and following, as well as letting go of yourself to
follow the opponent, your body in turn will go along with your
stepping, and as long as you remain true to the five elements,
there will be such a naturalness to your posture and steps that it
will not matter even if you do make some mistakes here and
there.
-
口授穴之存亡論
[v] ON PERSONAL INSTRUCTION IN THE
ACUPOINTS THAT SAVE OR KILL
穴有存亡之穴要非口授不可何也一因其難學二因其闗乎存亡三因其人纔能傳第一不授不忠不孝之人第二不傳根底不好之人第三不授心術不正之人第四不傳鹵莽滅裂之人第五不傳授目中無人之人第六不傳知禮無恩之人第七不授反復無長之人第八不傳得易失易之人此須知八不傳匪人更不待言矣如其可以傳再口授之秘訣傳忠孝知恩者心氣和平者守道不失者真以為師者始終如一者此五者果其有始有終不變如一方可將全軆大用之功授之於徒也明矣於前於後代代相継皆如是之所傳也噫抑亦知武事中烏有匪人哉
There are acupoints that save and
acupoints that kill. They cannot be learned without personal
instruction. Here are three reasons why: because of how difficult
they are to learn, the fact that they are a matter of life and
death, and the degree of a person’s talent. There are eight kinds
of people not to be taught:
1. the disloyal and unfilial,
2. those who are fundamentally unkind,
3. those with crooked intentions,
4. those who are rude and reckless,
5. those who think themselves superior to others,
6. those who care more about rules than they do about
people,
7. those who are fickle,
8. those who will have an easy time picking it up and then just as
easily discard it.
It must be understood that these eight people are not to be taught.
Criminals of course do not deserve to be considered at all. As for
those who may be taught, they are eligible to be given personal
instruction in its secrets. There are five kinds who may be
taught:
[1] those who are loyal, filial, and gracious,
[2] those with a mild temperament,
[3] those who will hold to the method and not discard
it,
[4] those who will be true to the teacher,
[5] those who will complete the study as ardent as when they
started.
These types will be resolved to complete the study without having
doubts and can be shown the whole thing, and what will be given to
the pupil is illumination. It goes from those who already know it
to those who will know it, the torch being passed down through
generations, always by this process. But what a shame it is that of
those who know martial arts, some turn out to be
criminals.
-
張三丰承留
[vi] WHAT ZHANG SANFENG
INHERITED
天地即乾坤伏羲為人祖畫卦道有名堯舜十六母微危允厥中精一及孔孟神化性命功七二乃文武授之至予來字著宣平許延年藥在身元善從復始虛靈能德明理令氣形具萬載咏長春心兮誠真跡三教無兩家統言皆太極浩然塞而冲方正千年立継往聖永綿開來學常續水火濟既焉願至戌畢字
“The sky and the ground made
the world.
Fu Xi was the progenitor of
mankind.
He drew the trigrams and
declared the Way
for Emperor Yao and Emperor
Shun, and for sixteen generations on.
The most mysterious of
pinnacles have consented access
to the most dedicated, such as
Confucius and Mengzi.
The skill of spirit transmuting
the life-force
went down through seventy-two
sages to King Wen and King Wu.
“Instruction has come to me
by way of the writings of Xu
Xuanping.
The medicine to bring about
longevity lies within ourselves,
in the perfection of our
original state being revived. [Basically, live every day as though it’s your
first, a lesson that could have been learned from pretty much any
Daoist poet.]
Your natural self can empower
and enlighten.
The truth when expressed can
fulfill you in spirit and body.
With countless repetitions,
chant of lengthening the springtime.
Heartfelt sincerity will have a
real effect.
“The three doctrines [Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism]
are not different
schools,
for all that each of them
discuss is a matter of the Grand Polarity
which runs through
everything,
centered and
everlasting.
The ancient wisdom is always
with us,
constantly inspiring new
students to learn.
When water and fire
cooperate [as in
hexagram 63 – water above, fire below, leading to a heated cooking
pot, as opposed to hexagram 64 – fire above, water below, an
absence of interaction which produces
nothing],
our goals are able to come to
fruition.” [The
metaphor in this last statement is that ancient knowledge is the
fire and the act of learning from it is the water being brought to
a boil.]
-
口授張三丰老師之言
[vii] THE TEACHINGS OF ZHANG
SANFENG
予知三教歸一之理皆性命學也皆以心為身之主也保全心身永有精氣神也有精氣神纔能文思安安武備動動安安動動乃文乃武大而化之者聖神也先覺者淂其寰中超乎象外矣後學者以效先覺之所知能其知能雖人固有之知能然非效之不可淂也夫人之知能天然文武目視耳聼天然文也手舞足蹈天然武也孰非固有也明矣前輩大成文武聖神授人以軆育修身進之不以武事修身傳之至予淂之手舞足蹈之採戰借其身之陰以補助身之陽身之陽男也身之陰女也然皆於身中矣男之身祗一陽男全軆皆陰女以一陽採戰全軆之陰女故云一陽復始斯身之陰女不獨七二以一姹女配嬰兒之名變化千萬姹女採戰之可也亦安有男女後天之身以補之者所謂自身之天地以扶助之是為陰陽採戰也如此者是男子之身皆属陰而採自身之陰戰己身之女不如兩男之陰陽對待修身速也予及此傳於武事然不可以末技視依然軆育之學修身之道性命之功聖神之境也今夫兩男之對待採戰於己身之採戰其理不二己身亦遇對待之数則為採戰也是為汞鉛也於人對戰坎離之陰陽兑震陽戰陰也為之四正乾坤之陰陽艮巽陰採陽也為之四隅此八卦也為之八門身足位列中土進步之陽以戰之退步之陰以採之左顧之陽以採之右盼之陰以戰之此五行也為之五步共為八門五步也夫如是予授之爾終身用之不能盡之矣又至予淂武継武必當以武事傳之而修身也修身入首無論武事文為成功一也三教三乘之原不出一太極願後學以易理格致於身中留於後世也可
“I understand the idea that the
three doctrines are basically the same: they are each a study of
life, each take the mind to be controller of the body, and are
purposed to maintain mind and body, to bring longevity to essence,
energy, and spirit. With essence, energy, and spirit, we can be
calmly civil and boldly martial. Calm and bold, civil and martial –
as these things are expanded and have a transformative effect,
there will come wisdom and spirituality. The earliest discoverers
of this found their way into truth and then took it to another
level. Later students then imitate what they did in order to
achieve their awareness. Such awareness is innate in everyone, but
to get at what they were doing, it is nevertheless necessary to
follow in their footsteps. Civil and martial are inherent to human
ability. The seeing of eyes and hearing of ears are inherently
civil while the dancing of hands and prancing of feet are
inherently martial, and so both aspects are clearly inherent.
Having achieved the layers of civil, martial, wisdom, and
spirituality, the forefathers advanced the teaching of
self-cultivation by way of physical training, though not by way of
martial arts.
“When the teachings reached me, I grasped the receive/oppose
[counterbalancing] nature of the dancing prancing, in which the
passive aspect of the other person’s body is borrowed to build up
the active aspect in one’s own. The active aspect is the masculine
quality. The passive aspect is the feminine quality. The body has
both qualities. While the maleness is active and the femaleness is
passive, the femaleness receives the active aspect to counter her
own passive aspect [as the maleness receives the passive aspect to
counter his own active aspect]. Thereby the active [or passive]
returns to its initial state [of being in balance with the other].
The passive feminine aspect within the body means more than a young
woman being developed enough to become pregnant. There are
countless ways in which a woman may enact counterbalancing, and
this is not about the bodies of men and women being somehow
corrected. It is said that taking advantage of the skyness and
groundness in one’s own body is what makes the counterbalancing of
the passive and active aspects. This means that a man may make use
of the passive aspect of his masculine side as a way to counter his
own feminine quality. [However, this work of balancing the
masculine and feminine qualities within oneself] is not as
efficient as the self-cultivation of two partners making use of
their masculine quality to work at balancing their passive and
active aspects [through the constant exchanging of passive and
active roles during the pushing hands exercises].
“Seeing as I have placed these teachings into a martial context,
martial arts must not be viewed as something trivial, but as a part
of physical education, a method of self-cultivation, a practice of
life-enhancement, a category of wisdom and spirituality. The work
of counterbalancing between two partners is no different in
principle from the counterbalancing within your own body, but when
working with a partner, it is like counterbalancing between mercury
and lead. [In the context of two partners pushing hands, the role
of the attacker is solid and heavy, like lead, while the defender
is fluid and yielding, like mercury.] When fighting, the four
primary techniques are a matter of active opposing passive, while
the four secondary techniques are a matter of passive receiving
active. The eight trigrams supply the eight techniques. The body
and feet stand centered. To advance is to oppose actively. To
retreat is to receive passively. To step to the left is to receive
actively. To step to the right is to oppose passively. The five
elements supply the five steps. Combined, they are the eight
techniques and five steps.
“These teachings of mine you may make use of for your entire life
and yet never be able to use them up. What I have gained and am
passing down is to be taught as a martial art of self-cultivation.
As to the method of cultivating the self, it does not matter if it
is approached by martial or civil means, for the achievement is the
same. The three doctrines, at any of the three levels [greater,
middle, lesser], are all inescapably based in the concept of the
grand polarity. I wish for the next generation of students to
examine the theory in the Book of Changes within themselves and that it be continued by
succeeding generations. That would be a good thing.”
-
張三丰以武事得道論
[viii] ZHANG SANFENG ON USING MARTIAL ARTS TO
ACHIEVE THE WAY
蓋未有天地先有理理為氣之陰陽主宰主宰理以有天地道在其中陰陽氣道之流行則為對待對待者陰陽也数也一陰一陽之為道道無名天地始道有名萬物母未有天地之前無極也無名也既有天地之後有極也有名也然前天地者曰理後天地者曰母是乃理化先天陰陽氣数母生後天胎卵濕化位天地育萬育道中和然也故乾坤為大父母先天也爹娘為小父母後天也得陰陽先後天之氣以降生身則為人之初也夫人身之來者得大父母之命性賦理得小父母之精血形骸合先後天之身命我得而成人也以配天地為三才安可失性之本哉然能率性則本不失既不失本來面目又安可失身軆之去處哉夫欲尋去處先知來處來有門去有路良有以也然有何以之以之固有之知能無論知愚賢否固有知能皆可以之進道既能修道可知來處之源必能去處之委來源去委既知能必明身不修故曰自天子至於庶人壹是皆以修身為本夫修身以何以之良知良能視目聼耳曰聰日明手舞足蹈乃武乃文致知格物意誠心正心為一身之主正意誠心以足蹈五行手舞八卦手足為之四象用之殊途良能還原目視三合耳聼六道目耳亦是四形軆之一表良知歸本耳目手足分而為二皆為兩儀合之為一共為太極此由外歛入之於內亦自內發出之於外也能如是表裏精粗無不到豁然貫通希賢希聖之功自臻於曰睿曰智乃聖乃神所謂盡性立命窮神達化在茲矣然天道人道一誠而已矣
“Before there was the universe,
there was the principle which governs the passive and active
energies. This governing principle by which the universe exists is
the core of the Way, and the way these energies flow is in the
manner of complementary opposites. For passive and active to oppose
and yet complement each other is a mathematical principle: to be
[zeroed out in a half-and-half state of] one part passive and one
part active is the Way. ‘The Way that cannot be described is the
origin of the universe itself. The Way that can be described is the
source of all things within the universe. [Daodejing, chapter 1]’ Before the universe existed,
there was merely nothingness, and thus nothing to be described.
Once the universe existed, there was finally somethingness, and
thus things to be described. Before the universe existed, there
awaited the principle of existence. Once the universe came into
being, there was then the creative principle.
“Pre-beginning, it was the principle of existence that brought
about the balanced passive and active energies. Post-beginning, the
creative principle then gave rise to the ways of coming into being:
gestation in a womb, hatching from an egg, spontaneous generation
from water, and metamorphosis. The Way is the way of neutrality,
nourishing all things by being in a balanced position between
skyness and groundness. The sky and ground are your greater
parents, of the pre-beginning. Your mother and father are your
lesser parents, of the post-beginning. When we are born, we are the
recipients of the energies of passive and active, of pre-beginning
and post-beginning, and on such a basis we begin. When we are born,
we are given by our greater parents our life-force and disposition,
and are endowed with reason. From our lesser parents come our
physical essence, blood, and bones. By the merging of the
life-force and body of the pre-beginning and post-beginning, we
each then become a person. For us to align with the sky and ground,
taking our place as one of the three substances, we cannot ignore
our fundamental origin [as a product of both].
“As long as we are able to follow our nature, we will not lose
touch with our origin. By not forgetting where we come from, we
will not lose touch with where we are headed, for if you want to
know where you are going, you must first know where you are coming
from. With our origin mapped out, our way ahead is a clear route
that will be traversed by way of instinct. We all, whether smart or
stupid, worthy or worthless, have an instinctive awareness that
will point us to the Way. If we cultivate the Way, we will be able
to know our origin and can fulfill our destiny. To know our origin
and fulfill our destiny lies in being able to cultivate the self.
Thus it is said [in the Da Xue]: ‘From king to commoner, it all comes down to
self-cultivation.’ The way to cultivate the self is through
instinctive understanding and ability: eyes keenly seeing and ears
acutely hearing, hands dancing and feet prancing, martiality and
civility. ‘Broaden your understanding by studying things deeply,
thereby improving your intellect and smoothing your
emotions.’
“Since mind is in charge of body, the intellect should be improved
and the emotions smoothed in order for the feet to perform the five
steps and the hands to perform the eight techniques. The hands and
feet amount to four, and they can be used in such a variety of
ways, but instinct is able to retrieve their basic state [of
unity]. The eyes see as a union of three [what the left eye sees,
what the right eye sees, what both eyes see by triangulating
together] and the ears hear along the six paths. The eyes and ears
amount to four, but within they function as one, instinct again
regaining the basic state. Ears, eyes, hands, and feet – they each
are divided into two, making two polarities, but each functioning
as a unity, totaling a grand polarity.
“Gathering inward from without, expressing outward from within, all
of it in this way can be reached, inside and out, specifically and
in general, all understood thoroughly, and we will naturally attain
the hoped-for achievements of the worthies and sages, their vision
and knowledge, their wisdom and spirituality. This is what they
meant by fulfilling one’s nature and facing one’s destiny, taking
spirit as far as it will go and thereby causing transformation. The
way of both Nature and mankind is sincerity and nothing
more.”
– – –
[*Survey of Textual Variations (Wu document left side / Yang document right side):
Harmless character
variants:
section 5 – 斷 /
断
7 – 淂 /
得
10 – 淂 /
得
13 – 淂 /
得
15 – 得 /
淂
21 – 顕 /
顯
23 – 缉 /
緝
24 – 憑 /
凴
30 – 顯 /
顕
ii – 淂 /
得 ; 也 / 矣
iv – 淂 /
得
vii – 淂 /
得 ; 淂 / 得 ;
淂 / 得 ; 之 /
者 ; 淂 / 得
Flipped words (one occasion in
each document):
24 – 絲毫 /
毫絲
vi – 濟既 /
既濟
Missing words (one occasion in
Wu document, seven occasions in Yang document):
1 – 五行者 /
五行
2 – 淂之 /
淂
13 – 淂矣 /
得
19 – 得成 /
得
22 – 半重偏 /
半重偏重
ii – 緣勁 /
勁
iv – 如對掌 /
對掌
vii – 補助身 /
補助
There are also two occasions in
Yang document of missing character components:
17 – 悠久 /
攸久
25 – 呬 /
四
As for accidentally added words,
there is one occasion in Wu document:
22 – 除除 /
除
In section 30,
於己人 is expanded in Yang document to
於己於人 five times, indicating deliberate addition in
Yang document rather than absent-mindedness in this section of Wu
document.
Mistaken words (one occasion in
Wu document, ten occasions in Yang document):
3 – 知 /
覺
5 – 匾 /
區
18 – 亮 /
毫
23 – 使 /
始
24 – 囟門 / 匃門
; 云 / 去
32 – 一然 /
亦然
iii – 末 /
未
vi – 戌 /
戍
viii – 壹 / 一
; 手 /
乎 ]
青春就应该这样绽放 游戏测试:三国时期谁是你最好的兄弟!! 你不得不信的星座秘密