====T'ai Chi Ch'uan Ching==== Attributed to [[ChangSanFeng Chang San-feng]] as researched by [[LeeScheele Lee N. Scheele]] In motion the whole body should be light and agile, with all parts of the body linked as if threaded together. The ch'i [vital life energy] should be excited, The shen [spirit of vitality] should be internally gathered. The postures should be without defect, without hollows or projections from the proper alignment; in motion the Form should be continuous, without stops and starts. The chin [intrinsic strength] should be rooted in the feet, generated from the legs, controlled by the waist, and manifested through the fingers. The feet, legs, and waist should act together as an integrated whole, so that while advancing or withdrawing one can grasp the opportunity of favorable timing and advantageous position. If correct timing and position are not achieved, the body will become disordered and will not move as an integrated whole; the correction for this defect must be sought in the legs and waist. The principle of adjusting the legs and waist applies for moving in all directions; upward or downward, advancing or withdrawing, left or right. All movements are motivated by I [mind-intention], not external form. If there is up, there is down; when advancing, have regard for withdrawing; when striking left, pay attention to the right. If the I wants to move upward, it must simultaneously have intent downward. Alternating the force of pulling and pushing severs an opponent's root so that he can be defeated quickly and certainly. Insubstantial and substantial should be clearly differentiated. At any place where there is insubstantiality, there must be substantiality; Every place has both insubstantiality and substantiality. The whole body should be threaded together through every joint without the slightest break. Chang Ch'uan [Long Boxing] is like a great river rolling on unceasingly. Peng, Lu, Chi, An, Ts'ai, Lieh, Chou, and K'ao are equated to the Eight Trigrams. The first four are the cardinal directions; Ch'ien [South; Heaven], K'un [North; Earth], K'an [West; Water], and Li [East; Fire]. The second four are the four corners: Sun [Southwest; Wind], Chen [Northeast; Thunder], Tui [Southeast; Lake], and Ken [Northwest; Mountain]. Advance (Chin), Withdraw (T'ui), Look Left (Tso Ku), Look Right (Yu Pan), and Central Equilibrium (Chung Ting) are equated to the five elements: Metal, Wood, Water, Fire, and Earth All together these are termed the Thirteen Postures A footnote appended to this Classic by Yang Lu-ch'an (1799-1872) reads: This treatise was left by the patriarch [[ChangSanFang Chan San-feng]] of Wu Tang Mountain, with a desire toward helping able people everywhere achieve longevity, and not merely as a means to martial skill. ---- [[TaiChi]]