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Sifu david ross
Sifu david ross







It gave me methods to drill them to make them “real”, to make them practical. It gave me a different way to look at them. Everything else just “fleshes out” the method.Īll the training I did in modern martial arts / mixed martial arts did not lead me away from Chinese martial arts. It is the skeleton, the connective tissues and the internal organs. Without Shuai Jiao, I don’t think I would have completely appreciated Chan Tai San’s method.Ĭhan Tai San’s method, syncretic and grounded in his actual experience in fighting, is the foundation of what I do. That the arm swings in Shuai Jiao translated into locks and throws prepared me to look at Chan Tai San’s method in a very different light. The short “forms” changed my view on forms practice. The Chang lineage disregarded “Qi” and “Qi Gong” and most of the mysticism. Shuai Jiao may be the Rosetta stone of my martial arts career. However, the irony would be that ultimately I abandoned deep stances, much of the bridge focused fighting, the mysticism of “Qi Gong” and several other aspects of the training. My Hung Ga training was an introduction to traditional format Chinese martial arts. And the join locks helped me learn the various Qin Na in all the methods I studied later, even though today I have abandoned 90% of traditional Qin Na as theoretical and not practical. My Hapkido training taught me to fall, that was VERY IMPORTANT (and ignored in most Chinese martial arts training). And I’ve done plenty of Muay Thai training to add to that mix. Of course, I’d have to add that my training in contemporary Wushu also helped with these kicks. If “pressed” I’d say my Taekwondo gave me the foundation to learn the many kicking techniques in Chinese martial arts. Simply put, I can not deny the influences, but I am not contained in any way to a single teacher, a single method or a single tradition. In my previous blog, I noted that I am ALL of these things, and I am also NONE.

sifu david ross

Considering I received 2nd Dan black belts in both Moo Duk Kwan Taekwondo and Sin Moo Hapkido, I’d say they are something I formally studied. Not surprisingly (to me at least) that was most Xingyi Quan and some Bagua Zhang.īefore I did ANY Chinese martial arts, I did Korean martial arts. There, my senior James Chin taught many of the classes and incorporated elements of the Long Fist he had learned previously.Īfter Chan Tai San passed away, I went about a decade until I found another Chinese martial arts teacher who I would consider learning things from. In between studying Hung Ga and meeting Chan Tai San, I was in Jeng Hsin Ping’s Shuai Jiao school. Because of this, I also learned some of Chan Tai-San’s village style Hung Kyuhn and some of his Hung Fut.

sifu david ross sifu david ross

The very first Chinese martial art I ever studied was Dang Fong lineage Hung Ga. So, let’s review… Chinese martial art I am most associated with? Lama Pai I learned from the late Chan Tai San…… Chan Tai San also was noted for Choy Lay Fut and White Eyebrow, which inevitably all his students learned some of. This is part two, you can find part one of this blog here (CLICK).









Sifu david ross