by Guidance » Tue Mar 10, 2009 2:30 pm
I have started Kungfu at a very late age. However I started with a Sifu that was very much into the totality of Kungfu (External and internal). His demand was to follow courses at least 1 year with him, or you would not be granted access to the school. Also you were required to have an intake. This teacher was very good. However he doesn't teach anymore (not commercially anyway). For some years after, I could not find time to start with Kungfu again. Then I read (though having seen Vin Tsun/Wingchun schools around) about Traditional Kungfu by the school I now am part of. When I went there (being overweight at 100 kg) and it was hard. The Sifu was drilling the students and the first weeks I was running after the facts. The learning of Hung Gar was tough. But due to the 'enduring' state, when I finally got the grasp, I couldn't see any other style.
Recently I have checked out a WingChun school, to see if we can cooperate (which will be happening in the near future, doing workshops), I was strengthened in my believe that Hung Gar is a fundamentally correct Kung Fu form that, once 'perfected' is nigh unbeatable. However, you will not understand until you have conditioned your body and start to 'learn' by yourself.
The last sentence is the problem for modern society to learn the style. Once you have mastered the stances (something often forgotten in other styles) and learn Kiu Sau and concentration, only then you are not interested in the wishywashy style of jumpy Wushu anymore (my apologies to those that perform wushu, as I am pointing at the schools that say they do Wushu, but mostly do some quick acrobatics).
Young people want the fast stuff nowadays. They see the arts in the speed and the things that look difficult (partially fault of the many 'interesting' Kung Fu movies').
As of soon, I will be part of the Hung Gar style, which I am grateful for. I hope to learn as much from it as I can and teach the right values to others, using it.
I think