Ask one question, ok. But make sure it is a good question (if you have just one, you choose more carefully), then really listen to the
Sifu's answer, and demonstrate (through practice) just how it made a difference that he answered you.
This is quite different from validation-seeking attitudes/ behaviors, where the student's main goal is to "be right" all the time, by amassing a lot of irrelevant information. After some length of time in committed practice, it becomes apparent what the art is, and what so many people say it is. This isn't done by trying to "second-guess" your
Sifu.
For example, at the
Gung Ji level, it does not particularly help to think about the
Gwa Da Chui as "Wood". If you are training the full Five Elements in your program, it can be a useful way to organize techniques. Otherwise, it's just another case of "too much information", lol.
Back on the topic of asking one's
Sifu questions (or other person whose opinion we respect), it can be quite valuable to understand that we may not have criteria to frame our question adequately.
Therefore, a question should just be looked at as a means to "get the ball rolling", and now we give the respected person his room to speak. Then, really give some thought to the reply, before just firing off another question.
This is due to the fact that, as "beginner/ indeterminate-level" students (and even if we may feel that we're "advanced"), what we think we want, and what we actually need, are quite likely not to be what we first thought.
Thus, your
Sifu has all the room he needs to set your concept straight from the foundation up, and you're not just asking him to build on some faulty assumption, equivalent to you having fired the last contractor for doing everything wrong, but now expect the next contractor to proceed, by building upon the faultiness left behind.
Do we really want the
Sifu just to humor us, with whatever it is we may think we want to hear?
