More T'ai Chi
May. 13th, 2004 12:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Remembered more from class--hands need to face each other a lot of the time, but it doesn't have to be palms directly opposite each other--that tends to be forcing things. The same applies to "holding a ball"--the hands and arms can be anywhere on the surface. What's important is keeping the arms/shoulders/upper body open and not jamming or pulling on anything.
And the lower hand needs attention as well as the upper hand--the lower hand has to be someplace where it's actually got a chance to protect a knee or the groin or something, not just vaguely in the air. I mostly worked on the stuff in the first paragraph, though.
These are both really valuable--a lot of what Dave Borofsky (my teacher) and I have been working on lately has been cleaning up the effects of earlier teaching approximations.
Still no comments on T'ai Chi stuff. Maybe it should be a separate lj?
And the lower hand needs attention as well as the upper hand--the lower hand has to be someplace where it's actually got a chance to protect a knee or the groin or something, not just vaguely in the air. I mostly worked on the stuff in the first paragraph, though.
These are both really valuable--a lot of what Dave Borofsky (my teacher) and I have been working on lately has been cleaning up the effects of earlier teaching approximations.
Still no comments on T'ai Chi stuff. Maybe it should be a separate lj?
no subject
Date: 2004-05-13 09:37 am (UTC)Or perhaps not many people have found you yet (I found you today thanks to
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Date: 2004-05-13 09:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-05-13 09:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-05-13 11:03 am (UTC)It's not lame to read more than you comment. If everyone commented as much as they read, LJ would turn into a verbal black hole.
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Date: 2004-05-13 12:55 pm (UTC)