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RealWingChunKuen

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  • Martial Art(s)
    Wing Chun (Mainland chinese lineage).
  • Location
    London, UK
  • Interests
    Practicing kung fu, reading about and researching kung fu; listening to music, dancing and flirting with the ladies
  • Occupation
    Promoter.

RealWingChunKuen's Achievements

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  1. It would have to be another kung fu style. Any or all the following: 1.Five Ancestor Fist. 2.Chow Gar (Southern Praying Mantis) 3.Northern Praying Mantis. 4.Baji Quan 5.Hsing I In my next life I believe that I will be starting my kung fu training at an earlier age than in this life. That is, if I come across decent and authentic kung fu schools -which I didn't do earlier in my current lifetime.
  2. It seems that at least from the japanese karate perspective that the black belt merely demonstrates one's understanding of the basics of one's style. The main learning starts after one achieves the black belt level. That is the black belt is regarded as the beginning.
  3. The short answer is yes, but of course, how much will also depend on your teacher as well. I hope that you are training in a good/authentic school of karate which will teach you the real thing, this way your confidence will have real basis. Train with dedication, because with dedication you will grow in all aspects, including self-confidence, much faster. By the way, what style of karate are you practicing?
  4. I am sure that you will find this video clip interesting. The men in the video are masters of the Okinawan Uechi-ryu style of karate. This is real karate and with real essence, as opposed to an lot of "John Smith" styles of karate one comes across today. Enjoy. PS. There seems to be a bit missing from the clip, when the master breaks three wooden boards with his toes. You just see the broken boards, not him doing it. However, this is on the original DVD which I happen to have.
  5. I have jus had a quick look at the video clips. I honestly don,t think that this is Tai Chi Chuan. They bounce around too much and some of the techniques look more like Shotokan than Tai Chi. I 'll have a more careful look at these clips later.
  6. If it was me I would go for Praying Mantis, it is an effective and a high level kung fu system,if you find an authentic school that is. Furthermore, if it is a good school then,(as in most kung fu styles), your training will give emphasis to chi-kung (breathing and energy development) exercises, that will help you with your asthma problem.
  7. If you mean the Tao of Jeet Kune Do, then that is not strictly a Wing Chun book. Having said that, it will for sure have some Wing Chun concepts and so on. No, I mean the Tao of Gung Fu. They are two different works. Here is the link: http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbninquiry.asp? ean=9780804831109 Oh sorry. I didn't know that such a book existed. However, because Bruce Lee, as talented as he was, never completly learn the sytem of Wing Chun, I would still recommend books by actual Wing Chun teachers. However, I am still tempted to have a look at this book, to what it is all about.
  8. I would recommend the book called "Wing Chun, the art of simultaneous defense & attack" by Master Joseph Cheng. Also, "Yuen Kay-San Wing Chun Kuen, History and Foundation", by Rene Rirchie.
  9. If you mean the Tao of Jeet Kune Do, then that is not strictly a Wing Chun book. Having said that, it will for sure have some Wing Chun concepts and so on.
  10. My school of Wing Chun has nothing to do with the Yip Man lineage, even though it is still Wing Chun. It is a Mainland Chinese lineage of WC which seems, so far as I can tell from my own research, to have many techniques that do no exist in the Yip Man style. The reason why many Wing Chun schools are on each other's throats is the fact that there is a lot of money at play. Because of our friend Bruce Lee's connection with this style, as limited as it was, the Wing Chun name carries a lot of weight and money making potential.
  11. The biggest problem in the Chinese Martial Arts is the many incompetent Mc Sifus - some of whom may even have marketed a great name for themselves - that have not mastered nor even achieved a basic understanding of the systems they are supposed to be masters at. That is the main problem, in my opinion, with CMAs today. Not if he has been learning Wing Chun the way it was meant to be learnt, thus giving him the ability to use the WC principles to adapt to whatever opponent he is faced with. That is what WC (as well as many other kung fu styles) is all about. I don't think it is fair to suggest that Wing Chun, or any kung fu style for that matter, was created to fight only with the exponents of that same style.
  12. I would also recommend this books to anyone starting kung fu or anyone who is already practicing kung fu at whatever level. I would also recommend Wong Kiew Kits books to the many martial artists out there who are confused about Chi and hence go about simplifying its practice in order to hide their own inability to understand it or their unwillingness to accept that there are martial training methods that they do not understand. I seem to have met a lot of these type of people recently. Wong Kiew Kit explains these concepts and their relevance to meditation quiet well.
  13. You forgot the people who have also "practiced" kung fu in McKwoons and think that they "know kung fu". The current situation regarding what information is out there on Chinese martial arts is rather unfortunate. I believe that all authentic kung fu styles have an internal side to them that makes their total mastery very difficult and I suppose that is what makes our kung fu lives so interesting.
  14. Just wanted to add to that post. It is hard enough to learn a martial art from a competent instructor and long hours of training, how is one supposed to learn from books and self teaching? Having said that, books and dvds can be very handy when one is already putting a long hours of training in his chosen martial art, or if one has mastered or has working knowledge of one system and is trying to understand a similar system. They are also a good source for personal research into different types of martial arts that one might be interested in. I have my own small library of books on various kung fu (karate) styles. That does not make me a practitioner of those styles.
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