~terry
Sun, Sep 14, 1997 (15:18)
seed
Many years ago I took T'ai from Master Choy Kam Man in San
Francisco. I learned the 108 movement long form and the short
form of 54 movements and a remarkable exercise called the I kun king.
Are there others who do T'ai Chi?
~terry
Sun, Sep 14, 1997 (15:19)
#1
from Tom Carr:
Started taking Tai Chi class. I did this years ago, but
haven't practiced in years. It feels better now than I remember
from the past. Very relaxing, flowing energy, wonderful.
So this evening I did some Tai Chi and then sat for a
while and then read Tao Te Ching and now I feel real good.
Haven't read Tao Te Ching in years either.
I feel so great now I was just wondering why I don't do this
more often and spend less time going to movies and reading magazines
and science fiction. There is an answer to that. Can't quite
put it into words now though.
~KitchenManager
Sun, Jan 4, 1998 (12:54)
#2
If I understood Stacey the other day, she
suggested that I take tai chi. Anybody
got suggestions as to where in Austin?
~terry
Sun, Jan 4, 1998 (12:59)
#3
There are lots of t'ai chi instructors in Austin. Finding a
good one would be the hard part. I'd start with that New Age publication
they give away, New Texas or something and call the teachers. Find out
if they learned it in a couple of weekends or spent years with a Chinese
master (or Si Fu). I studied with Master Choy Kam Man who learned it from
his father who learned it from several generations so felt pretty good about
getting the "real deal". The one I took a class from at the Q did it too fast and
didn't really ever become a t'ai chi master.
~cfadm
Thu, Jun 17, 2004 (23:53)
#4
Did you ever find a t'ai chi instructor, wer?