by vaulander » Fri Jul 03, 2009 10:43 am
I have this issue. When I got into Hung Gar and set my soul on it, I wanted to get as much of it as possible. I have bought far too many DVD's, and far too much equipment that it will take years to learn it all. Call it a greed for knowledge, fear that the supplier will go out of business, whatever. In either case, I have a stack of 21 DVD's, or forms. 3 of those were bad, in that the forms are either wu shu 'artful' forms that's all flash and fancy, and I also have two versions of Fu Hok Seung Ying Kuen, or Tiger Crane for short. That leaves 17 forms. One is the Dragon Fan of Choy Li Fut, another is Shaolin Three Section Staff, by Wing Lam. Nine Eyebrow Height Staff of the Shaolin Curriculum. Two are Ha Say Fu forms, I thought they expanded on the Five Animals Set, but are completely different. Of Hung Gar by Wing Lam, I have the following:
Introduction to Hung Gar and Arrow Hand set *
Lau Gar Kuen (obviously LAU instead of HUNG, but nevermind.) *
Kung Gee Fook Fu Kuen *
Tiger and Crane *(half)
Tiger and Crane Sparring * (lesson 18 of 21)
Five Animals
Five Animals Five Elements
The Monkey King Staff *
Southerns Butterfly Swords *
Coiled Butterfly Swords (Ha Say Fu)
Four Gates Sparring (Ha Say Fu) *
Panther (Ha Say Fu)
Tiger (Ha Say Fu)
Also six DVDs about Chin Na by Wing Lam.
* signifies I know the moves and don't get stuck, but still years and years away from mastery of the set.
A little obsessive perhaps. Will I be able to learn them all? Well, I learned the Southern Butterfly sword set in 3 days, or about 6-8 hours total. But there is no way I can even get close to pretty good in all of them.
I have worked Arrow Hand, Lau Gar, Kung Gee, and Monkey king staff fanatically every day, and I stopped going further in Tiger and Crane after starting this thread. I have gone back to basics, working stances, structure, movement, and made the punching bag whimper the moment I open the garage door. I have slowed down my Kung Gee to single movements, grinding and adjusting them, nitpicking everything. I have taken the shaky movements and drilled them repeatedly, trying to make them part of me, not just a step in the form. Derrick and I have worked the Tiger and Crane Sparring set, and I have taken the 'feel' of an opponent and brought that back into the Kung Gee, like I have been advised by people on this board. I have read Lam Sai Wing's treatise on the form, copying down names for moves, studied and considered the various options he has for applications. If I am not actively practicing or working out, I am reading and pondering.
And yet... there is this stack of DVD's by the TV, just waiting. I have two sets of Sai, two sets of Tonfa, a pair of Butterfly Swords, two Three section staves of wood, and two of Foam, two Rattan 6 foot staves, and two foam staffs for some fun sparring. While I still do my work with Kung Gee Fook Fu, I feel that I am at sort of a plateau, or wall if you like, and there's all these weapons going begging.
In my mind, which may be obsessively fanatic and very single minded, trying to learn several hand forms that build on each other can be confusing as they have a lot of the same movements but in different patterns. However, as Butterfly Swords and a staff are two completely different techniques, there is a distinct separation in the forms. So also for the Thri-section staff which has nothing to do with butterfly swords and just a few similarities with the staff.
Don't think I am just 'passing through' sets to get to the next and better one, I do them all. Each one is an entity unto itself, and I split and drill the moves from all of them. Every day I come home from work I change to lighter clothes in the garage, make the bag cry, and then do all forms I know, sometimes two or three times depending on what I have going on when I go to my apartment. On training days with Scott and Derrick, we work applications of the forms, and do the partner forms like Tiger and Crane Sparring, what we have learned so far. It's not like I decide to pick up the staff once in a while and twirl it around, then pat my back for remembering the form or some sh*t like that.
Sorry for being long winded, but I did say I am a bit obsessed.
V.