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Among a couple hundred Chinese martial art styles,
it's a pretty safe bet to say that
long fist (chang quan) is the largest
style of them all. Now, if you count heads based only on
the name "chang
quan," you are likely to lose your bet. But as a matter of fact, as a matter
of
reality, long fist is truly the largest.
Some styles
in this family are actually called "chang quan:" tai zhu chang quan (tai zhu
long fist), jia men chang quan (Islamic style long fist), mei hua chang quan
(mei flower long fist), and so forth. Others have totally different names,
but still are long fist: for instance, mizong quan (lost track style) and
even taiji quan (grand ultimate style). Yes, taiji quan is chang quan.
Long fist technique is rooted in ancient Chinese
philosophy. Its theory emerged from
China's traditional wisdom. Long fist
fighting techniques, based upon this theory, evolved
over centuries of trial
and error: private bouts, skirmishes to defend family, employers,
and
villages, and the bloody battlefields of war.
Chinese
martial arts has a huge number of impressive fighting styles. Some are quite
unique, many are superb. What makes long fist stand out among them, what
makes it unique
is the balance and even development of its techniques and
its versatility in fighting situations.
Does it
emphasize arm or leg techniques? Long fist develops both.
How about long-range, midrange, or short-range fighting? Where is its
strong point? Not a relevant question: long fist uses all of
them.
Does it specialize in palm strikes? No, long fist
uses fist, palm, elbow, shoulder, torso: everything and
everywhere.
Which method of power-issuing does it employ? Long
fist uses all possible ways.
Does long
fist's fighting strategy call for initiating the first strike or waiting for
the opponent to attack before responding? Long fist uses all different
fighting strategies. And very importantly, the fighting plan must never be
pre-designed.
Equal Opportunity Training We might
conclude, from looking at its theoretical-philosophical basis, all-inclusive
range of fighting techniques, and flexible approach to handling situations,
that a long fist training program¡Ðfrom its basic
beginnings through the most advanced levels¡Ðhas to
be evenly composed and very well-balanced. And this is true. This is the
fundamental personality of long fist.
In actual
combat, long fist asks us to use every part of the body to deliver a multitude
of different blocks and attacks. It does not overly emphasize any one
special technique. In contrast, bagua zhang uses the zhang (palm); likewise
for pigua zhang. Praying mantis techniques center around the forearm, wrist,
and fingers; eagle claw also uses lots of wrist & fingers. Mantis and
eagle claw are styles that employ grabbing-seizing techniques a great
deal. Chou zhao style (chou zhao men) uses lots of kicks. Di gong men
specializes in ground techniques. Baji quan uses a certain way to issue
power. Tong bei style teaches specific ways to deliver the fist strikes,
making use of all the different areas of the human fist.
All of them are excellent styles, and all have definite
specializations.
Long fist, however, went to the
opposite direction. You could say that long fist provides
"equal
opportunity" training for the entire human person. Its more generalized approach is
quite comprehensive and develops the student's abilities in a
more even manner. It prepares
its practitioners to face any situation with
an arsenal of different techniques at their disposal.
Looking at it from this point of view, we can see how many kung fu styles
grew out of long fist. Long fist is like a mother to northern Chinese
martial art styles. All of her children carry characteristics inherited from
the mother, yet each has its own personality, interests, and abilities. Each
picked a certain area or perhaps several techniques from long fist and
developed them fully, in many cases pushing them to a very high level.
Long fist's well rounded training makes it an
excellent choice to start out one's kung fu training. It gives its students
a solid, basic foundation in kung fu—the building
blocks
necessary for the highest martial art levels. In contrast, there are
major risks to beginning
one's kung fu training in a specialized style.
Assume that I have a strong attraction to bagua
zhang. I am serious about my
kung fu and spend years practicing bagua, only to find down
the road that
I have no future with this style. Instead, my talents lie in xing-i quan.
What a
waste! All my time and effort in bagua do not transfer over to this
new style. I must begin
all over.
Perhaps I am
naturally gifted and have a bright kung fu future. I begin my training with a very specialized style. I practice hard and do very well. Later, if I wish
to switch to another style, I will encounter big problems. When I practice
my new style, the old techniques and flavor show through in all my
movements. My progress is slow and the shift extremely difficult. In the
end, my original style might well be the only one in which I can excel. Long
fist won't present this kind of problem.
When a child
starts practicing kung fu, it's almost impossible to know where his
potential lies or how good he can be. In the field of music, for example, we
may see that
a child has great ability. But will he be a composer,
conductor, a vocalist, master the cello? Will she become a professional, a
talented amateur, a world-class performer? Most often, we first steer
children to the piano and later on, support their interest in other instruments
such as drums, or fields such as film score composition or musical
analysis.
Long fist can somehow be compared to the piano:
students may choose to specialize in it or not but no matter what they
eventually do in music, it will help them a great deal. Long fist is an
ideal path for fledgling kung fu students.
This is an
era of specialization. Every field imaginable¡Ðmedicine,
computers, and so
forth¡Ðis filled with specialists.
Moreover, everyone is in such a great hurry. Therefore,
many people today
will automatically consider this lack a weakness in long fist. I myself
don't agree¡Ðespecially in view of modern
times.
In the old days, a narrowed focus and speedy
improvement were practical necessities. Not everyone who practiced martial
arts had any love for them. Many had no real future in kung fu. It wasn't at
all a question of talent, a burning interest, or a desire to achieve. You
were a farmer who labored from dawn to dusk; there was a need for defense and
you simply had to learn. You wanted to know just enough to effectively
protect yourself and your village and the quicker your training progressed,
the better. Social necessity, then, was one of the prime motivators in the
development of specialized martial art styles.
Today the
situation is altogether different. Given modern needs, the evenly balanced,
comprehensive training for both body and mind is a shining treasure long
fist offers to the contemporary person. This is an excellent style for us to
practice and use throughout our
entire lives. It is also an ideal way to
begin our training, even if we later switch to other styles.
If we switch,
we won't have wasted our time, efforts, or hopes for our kung fu futures.
And our experience with long fist will make us beneficiaries of the many
valuable gifts it gives to ourselves personally and to our
society.
Misconceptions Long fist is
known for its proud and courageous spirit which clearly can be seen in
its forms: the postures are dramatic and expansive; the movements are complex
and elegant. They are very beautiful to watch. When performed by a
high-level practitioner, an additional depth and power shine through.
Unfortunately, these positive attributes have also helped
foster some wrong
ideas about this art.
There is a tremendous amount of
valuable training buried within long fist's many forms. Of course nowadays
it's well known that the old masters deliberately withheld important
training and disguised real usage. Most students were given a form to learn,
then another, and another, with no clue as to what they were really supposed
to be practicing. Only a select few received the full training in secrecy.
Without this understanding, there was no way to digest the true content of
the training. It's no wonder people came to the conclusion that the more
forms you learned, the higher your kung fu would be. Chasing forms is one of the
reasons the level of contemporary martial arts is so low. Unhappily,
practicing this way
alone will make the road to mastery extremely difficult
for anyone, no matter how talented.
There are
several other important misconceptions people have about long fist. Many
think that with its wide-open movements, it may be a good exercise but it
lacks the mental training that Chinese martial arts are known for. Or it's
purely an external style, shallow and solely physical. Others consider it
just a pretty dance, filled with fancy movements that are beautiful to watch
but useless in combat—if your real interest is martial
arts, you'd be better off studying something else.
Nothing could be further from the truth!
Certainly
long fist itself must share the blame for these misconceptions because it's
possible the old masters held back too much of the art. It's so easy to look
back in history and pass judgment on them but in actuality, no one today can
really say what the correct dosage should have been. What we can say is that
because of this practice, some of the art has been lost.
People may wonder whether long fist's generalized focus ends up diluting
its own power and diffusing the fighting ability of its practitioners. Is it
less intense and effective
than styles with a specific focus? Not at all!
But it's quite true that talented students of
specialized styles can reach a
high level in a shorter amount of time, compared to their
long fist counterparts. In general, it is easier to achieve success by focusing on one
or a few
techniques than by working to make every technique equally
good.
For this reason, dedicated and capable long fist
students have quite often been known to lose matches to other stylists with
less training. Needless to say, this has demoralized many a promising
student and also supported the misconception that long fist can't be used to
fight. When long fist students receive incomplete training, then all the
criticisms about this style are true. But it shouldn't end up like this.
With full and correct training, delivered within a systematized, efficient,
modern program, students can follow the system step by step to reach the
highest levels. When the real chang quan can be fully performed, when the
practitioner
has matured in his art, the actual fighting level is very high
and deserves the utmost respect.
Ability and
character To fully understand the training you have to know
the usage. And let me mention again, for security reasons, usage was hidden.
The long fist family had a different attitude and approach to its students:
the emphasis was on improving the student as a whole person, not
just
teaching how to punch and kick others. Over years of training, the sifu put his
students through many covert tests of ability and character. Only when he
had complete confidence
in you, would he reveal the real heart of the art,
teach the missing links that previously had
been withheld in your training,
and show you the usage. After all, in ancient times he and his
entire family
would be executed if you went off to commit crimes against the
state.
Hidden usage
What does it
really mean to say that the usage is hidden? How could you practice the cha
quan form for years, know each movement so well you could perform it in your
sleep,
and not know its usage? Anyone can see that a punch is an attack. The
circular sweep
your other arm made before the punch is easily a block. This
high strike you're about to
deliver¡Ðyour
opponent better guard his nose! That forward kick¡Ðan attack to a
target in
front of you, and all of those circles your arms made as you were
kicking, well they kind of
protect your own face and besides, they look
really beautiful. No big deal¡Ðyou don't have
to strain very hard to explain the usage.
But pay
attention: very importantly, we all must understand that this interpretation is
quite elementary. In long fist forms, usage that is obvious to the eye and
easily interpreted is lower level. Long fist has very high usage; its
movements contain much, much more.
When I was in
high school, I myself began to study long fist. The training was often
puzzling to me. Why did my teacher insist that my palms be held in a precise
way when I was really practicing my kicks? And when I sparred with my
classmates, the results were totally unpredictable and inconsistent. So I
moved on to other styles that were more understandable and useful to me in
winning my fights. It was only much later, as an adult with many years of
hard training and martial arts exploration under my belt, that I realized
long fist is not at all useless. Its techniques are very very high, and the
strange demands made by its training suddenly made sense. Without them, it
would be virtually impossible to attain the full potential of this
art.
Fortunately, there is no longer any need to hold
back information and techniques. What we know we can share with people
comfortably, without guilt.
To this day,
I still practice long fist. It is central to the training program in my schools.
I continue to actively promote this style, sharing its true meaning and
value with my fellow martial artists.
In the next
issue, Sifu Hsu will discuss two long fist training systems, how long fist
supports weapons, and its powerful mental and leadership
training.
This is the first installment of a two-part article. In the next section,
Sifu Hsu will
discuss two long fist training systems and long
fist’s very powerful mental and leadership
training.
This article was first published in the Journal of the
Traditional Wushu Association. For information about the Journal and the
association, contact Email:
mahlethe@pacbell.net
copyright 1999 Adam Chi Hsu. All Rights
Reserved.
Adam Hsu 1999.7.10 |
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