Perfect Practice – a personal story

Several years ago I read a phrase which has stayed with me ever since. “If practice makes perfect, imagine what perfect practice would do.” I thought this to not only be an excellent use of words, but one which contained one of those slightly hidden truths, the answer for which one would have to question further.  That, of course, was this notion of ‘perfect practice’.  What could that be? How does one find out what it is, if there is such a thing, and how does one consequently put it to use? These questions are particularly relevant to internal arts practice and Jiulong Baguazhang in particular since practice is the number one difficulty most practitioners face.

It has taken me many years of trial and error, mostly the latter, to come to understand proper practice.  I have personally found practice of any kind to be both the number one joy and bane of my internal arts experience. I have had times when I could never get enough and always looked forward to the next session. I have also had times when practice was the last thing I wanted to do and would become very creative in avoiding it. It’s amazing how important other aspects of my life would become when faced with an unwanted practice session. I would love to tell you all that I am the most disciplined man on the planet and have always overcome momentary lethargy by putting my nose to the practice grindstone. But that would be simply untrue. The fact is I have had many days and weeks over the years when I gave in to the resistance to practice.  Yes, there have also been many instances of overcoming the resistance and, thankfully, many times when I have enjoyed practice and gone deeply into it.  I suspect some of you have a similar relationship with internal arts practice. Times when you love it, times when you hate it, times when you don’t care either way.  Especially if you’ve been attempting to practice the various aspects of your art and finding that you really are not progressing.

I personally became quite concerned with my approach to practice back in 1995.  At that time I was deeply involved in another style of Baguazhang, Taijiquan, Qigong, and Meditation.  There was a lot to work on in order to progress in these various internal arts and I found I was having problems doing them all. I would devise training schedules for them and attempt to stick to my schedules as best I could. This was extremely difficult since I was running not only into the problem of training too many arts at once, I was also doing so while experiencing the on-going love/hate/apathy relationship I had with practice. The other thing which became very apparent was that I wasn’t progressing in any of the arts I was practising. I seemed to be floundering at a particular level for what seemed like a very long time in each of them, even though I felt I was working fairly hard at them. There was also the reality of there being many other styles of these arts, with different forms and approaches. Many of them were available on videotape so, in thinking that learning all these other forms etc. I would improve my skills, I started training what was on these tapes as well.  I know it must seem obvious to you that I was doing too much, becoming a jack-of-many-trades, master of none. But at the time, I truly thought that the more I learned, the better I would get. If you are honest with yourself, you’ll probably admit you’ve had the same idea at one time or other, and may have taken similar actions to my own.

Obviously all this was a burden and I was not enjoying myself.  It occurred to me that I could be on this “learn more stuff” path for the rest of my life and always feel like I wasn’t progressing. This was a depressing thought, and I couldn’t shake the notion that something fundamental had gone wrong or was missing altogether. Surely these internal arts have been passed down the generations because they had the desired effect for their practitioners. If everyone who undertook internal training was doomed to feel like they were spinning their wheels, what value would the training have?  Why would the various arts be passed on? In essence, the question I was faced with was what am I missing here?

This question prompted a new thought process.  Perhaps the essential truths in the various arts was not in their variety of styles and forms, but something similar within them. I became curious to know what they had in common rather than what was unique about each one. Was there a practice or concept that most, and preferably, all the internal martial arts embraced?  So I went back to the various books and videos I had collected over the years, to see what exercises were being suggested that most of the various arts contained. I came across one, which seemed to be common to all. The Wuji posture and Quiet Standing practice. Whether in Taijiquan, with its many styles and forms, or Baguazhang, or even Qigong for health, Wuji appeared over and over again as an important practice.

So I asked myself a question. If I was feeling like the attempt to practice all the various disciplines was getting me nowhere, what would happen if I only practiced one? What would happen if I spent all my practice time going deeply into one exercise? Since the Wuji standing posture was considered valuable to all the internal arts, perhaps that was the one to start this experiment with. So I stopped every practice except Wuji. I still attended classes and worked on the various skills there, but the practice time on my own was spent solely in Wuji. It was an enlightening experience to say the least.

The first thing I noticed was the absence of an inner pressure that I had come to associate with practice sessions. Namely, when doing a particular practice I was not doing any of the others. So there was always this feeling of not doing enough since there was always something else I “should” be doing. Now I was only interested in Wuji so there was no feeling of something being missed. The next aspect which became clear was that I was not really all that relaxed. As the days and weeks passed I clearly noticed that I was reaching deeper and deeper levels of relaxation. I could literally feel tension spots deep within my upper torso releasing their grip. What amazed me was that I had been involved in internal arts for several years, with a background in meditation going back even further. Frankly folks, I thought I was relaxed!  Not true. My focus on the simple act of just standing quietly revealed that there was more for me to do in this fundamental area. The third thing which became apparent was the dramatic improvement in my ability to root. Once again, I though I was reasonably proficient in this and, once again, I noticed improvements coming from this simple exercise. The final aspect of this experiment which I feel is noteworthy is the fact that all my movements in Baguazhang were becoming more fluid and natural, all due to the deepening of my level of relaxation. Fellow students were asking me things like how often I practice, and the length of my sessions. They noticed a change in the way I did things and naturally assumed I was diligently practicing all the various forms etc. After all, I must be doing everything since I seemed to be improving in everything. But it was all just from Wuji. I was amazed and intrigued!

So I concluded that there was something of fundamental value in going deeply into one practice rather than trying to do everything. Now I am not suggesting that only doing Wuji will automatically make us good at Baguazhang postures and movements if we haven’t practiced them. The fact that I had spent time with circle walking, or forms, meant that my body knew what to do. But what really struck me was the value of working on one exercise, or idea for a period of time and watching how it affected the rest of my practices. I came to think that perhaps there was a “secret” here.  Perhaps one developed real abilities by narrowing the focus of practice to one aspect at a time. The idea was that by spending quality time on one thing at a time, one might increase the depth of ability and expression of that one thing, i.e.: relaxed movement in the above example. After taking this approach to the various exercises, which make up one’s internal art, the overall depth of ability in the art might be truly improved.  It certainly seemed the case with my experiences after only practicing Wuji for a couple of months. Then I encountered Shifu Painter and Jiulong Baguazhang.

What struck me immediately was that Jiulong is taught exactly along the lines I had been pondering. Dr. Painter said repeatedly that the first practice one should engage in was Wuji. It was to be done for 15-20 minutes per day for 27 days before moving to the next standing posture. Talk about synchronicity! I still had to start over because the details of standing in Jiulong were different from what I had been training. But the idea was the same as that with which I had been experimenting. Practice one thing at a time. There were a couple of aspects of my Baguazhang which needed to be improved…..well ok there were several aspects…..alright , I needed to relearn from the ground up!!  And here was Dr. Painter saying what I had been wondering about. This was one of the reasons I started training Jiulong Baguazhang.

One of the major challenges for me in the early months had to do with circle walking. I had been doing this a certain way for the previous 5 years and found that the energy being expressed in Jiulong walking was different. I literally had to re-learn the linear steps, the all important ba step, and a host of other details I will not list here. What was quite clear was that I had to focus on circle walking. So, in keeping with the concept of practicing very specific things, I chose to do circle walking without lifting my hands. This I practiced daily for 2 months, until I started to get a vague feeling that I was starting to walk properly, and make the ba step turns without losing forward momentum. I was quite amazed to see that after only 2 months, there was a noticeable difference in the way I was walking. It was not perfect. It still isn’t. But I am convinced that by focusing on just the stepping portion of circle walking, I increased that specific skill level in far less time than it would’ve taken if I had been practicing many other things as well. I have applied this concept ever since then.

Perfect practice means practice one thing at a time. Get it feeling really good, then move onto something else, always taking the current skill with you. For example, let’s take Wuji. One of the goals of this practice is to simply stand very quietly and become still. Once this is felt, one can move on to linear stepping. But the stillness which was cultivated in Wuji is continued in the linear stepping. They are not separate. Remember that eventually, all the various inner skills which are developed in Jiulong should function as a whole. But the practice and cultivation of them is done one aspect at a time. So, if when practicing linear or circle walking you find you are tensing your hands or shoulders, or whatever, it means you need to return to Wuji and just become relaxed and quiet. In fact, by not going back to Wuji, I would suggest you actually training your body to walk while holding tension. Need I say more?

I am not for a minute suggesting that you should never play with other sections of your art. Of course you should play. In any given practice session you should be sure to have some fun as well as the disciplined approach. What we advocate is a simple formula. In every session, practice something you need to work on and something you want to work on. Always do the need one first, then finish up your session with something fun which makes you feel good. With the practice that falls into the need category, look honestly at what you are doing. What needs work? Ask your teacher what areas truly need attention. Then pick the one you want to improve and make that the singular focus of your practice for a month. At the end of the month, pick another one. Yes, you will come back to each and every aspect of practice over and over as the years go on. But by focusing on one thing at a time, you will go deeply into that practice, and really derive its benefits.  For example, if you are working on Heaven Palm, it’s better to stay focused on it for a long time, rather than doing Heaven today, Earth tomorrow, Thunder next week etc.  Just do Heaven.  Pick out the elements which make Heaven what it is for you and hone those elements until they become really familiar to you.  I am willing to bet  you will find many of the specifics of Heaven are applicable to other postures, with some variation. Eventually, it will be these variations which become the focus of practice.

In conclusion, I must say that I am not perfect with this approach. There are times when I attempt too many things, times when I practice poorly by scattering my attention too wide, times when I simply get lazy and don’t practice. But there are also times when it all comes together and I spend quality time on one or two aspects of practice which need attention at that time. It is amazing to me how these aspects benefit dramatically from even a little specific attention. So, after all this explanation, what is the bottom line? What is the formula for Perfect Practice. It is:

Pick the elements you know needs work. I suggest no more than three in one session.

Pick the length of time and number of days you want to devote to these elements.

Practice them with the knowledge that you are definitely improving your abilities in these areas since anything which receives such full attention will be enhanced and increased by this effort.

A final thought, as always, please have some fun.  Always end your practice with something which makes you feel good.  Happy perfect practicing.

Imagine the Gompa

Look into your mind’s eye. That fleeting part of your awareness that can see remembered images and create new ones. You know how to do this. You’ve known it since you were a child. When you were young you called it pretending. “Let’s pretend we’re tigers.” yelled a friend, and a chorus of high pitched children’s roaring would sound.  Your throat would become sore from roaring since it was a matter of compressing the vocal chords and throat to create the required ferociousness. Not only that, you were feeling ferocious so you could be sure the sound was coming out just right.

So, look into your mind’s eye. Create what is described here with the same vividness with which you became a tiger when you were a child.

You can see a wooden wall standing well above your height in front of you with a gate directly ahead. Entering the gate, you step from a the front yard of a suburban home onto a wooden walkway extending straight ahead. You walk along the walkway, which is suspended a few inches above trickling water, with well place plants and rocks on either side. The sound of the water is instantly soothing and you are aware of having left your normal world behind and entered a special place. It is quiet, peaceful and oddly foreign as if these surroundings had been transplanted from another time and place.

The walkway ends at a deck which forms the front yard of a two story building. A staircase runs up the left side of the building for access to the upper story. In the center of the building on the main floor is a single door with several square glass panes offering you a tantalizing glimpse to the interior. Above the doorway are large flags identifying this place with……actually you are not quite sure what the flags represent, but their prominent placement gives them obvious significance. To the right of building is a narrow area, flanked on its right with yet another closed gate. What is beyond this?

The door to the building now opens and you are bid entry along with several other travelers who have come to this place. You step across the threshold into a simple square room with a mirrored wall on the left, a plain wall on the right. On either side of the doorway are comfortable looking two-person couches. But what is most striking is the low, multi-tiered platform on the far wall with portrait photos, flowers, a beautiful small statue of an Asian woman, and various yet-to-be identified items. To the left of this platform is a large Chinese gong. To the right, a single wooden armchair with a tall back and beside this, a side table supporting metal bowls of various sizes.

All this decor creates a feeling of the mysterious and exotic. You wonder how exactly these things are used, and whether you will have a chance to find out first hand. These thoughts are cut short as it has been stated that is is time to go to “the garden”.  You follow the others out the door, each person pausing briefly to turn and bow momentarily as if to say to the room “Thanks for being here.”.

You hear the gate latch opening on that gate to the right of the building and follow the other people through it. Again you step onto another wooden walkway, this one being a bridge suspended over a concrete culvert which runs beside the building. You can clearly see that this bridge takes you to another walled enclosure. So you walk the short distance across the bridge and through a gate on the other side.

This “garden” is in fact an outdoor training area. It is divided into three main sections, the first which you are standing in. It is a concrete surface inlaid with a beautiful large Yin-Yang symbol surrounded by the Eight Trigrams of the I Ching. The size of it is such that around 10 people could walk around its perimeter without crowding each other. A warm, gentle breeze washes over you, rustling the various trees inhabiting this place.

At the far left of this area one of those trees defines the border with the next area. This one consists of a loose gravel surface, various training tools such as balance beams, short stumps of varying heights and a section for the famous nine posts of Bagua. As you continue your tour of the garden, heading toward the third area, you feel the urge to enter the nine posts and begin weaving your way amongst them. And this feeling happens whether or not you know anything about the way the posts are used. It is a strange inner compulsion, almost as if the posts a drawing you inside them.

Beyond this is the third area, a wooden deck surrounded by beautiful plants, another statue of that beautiful woman whom you have now been told is Kwan Yin, the goddess of compassion. This deck has low benches along one side which are ideal for meditation. There are tall trees scattered throughout the garden such that if you look up, you see a stunning canopy of tree branches and leaves which offer protection from direct sunlight. This is feeling is comforting in its simultaneous offering of protection and natural openness.

The effect of all this is to feel transported to an ancient world where time has stopped and deep learning can take place. It is a place of rejuvenation and solace from your regular life that can revive even the most weary of life travelers. It is the Gompa. It truly is as it has been described yet many amazing details have been left out of this description.

Read this again from the beginning and imagine the sights and sounds as best you can. Remember the feeling of being a child pretending to be an animal and try to create the sensations of being in a place like this. For those who have been there, this will all be familiar and will evoke those warm memories of experiencing the Gompa. For those yet to go there, see it in your mind’s eye and know that it is possible to see the real thing.

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Jiulong is a martial ART

Ok, so the title is stating the obvious, right?  Of course it’s is a martial art.  What I want to emphasize is the art portion and the significance of the structure of Jiulong.  As I have an extensive background in music, drawing analogies between it and Jiulong was clear to me from the beginning, and I will use these analogies to make my point.

In music composition theory, I studied the ways that various musical elements can be assembled to create the forward flow of the meaningful sounds we know as music.  In essence, the basic structure is notes arranged sequentially to create a motif (a single short musical idea).  The motif could be added to or expanded in various ways to create a phrase or statement.  The phrase could be added to or expanded to create a sentence.  Sentences could be expanded to create sections.

Sections could be expanded to create whole pieces of music.  By starting with a very small idea consisting of perhaps only 3 notes, one can expand them through various composition devices and, of course, pure creativity, to build a piece of music.

There are many other elements with which to be concerned such as harmony, rhythm etc.  but these could also be aspects of the initial motif.  And of course the initial motif is often a spontaneous creation coming in a moment of inspiration to the composer.  The point here is to see that the artistic process is a combination of initial creative input, combined with technical understanding of how to assemble the components into a meaningful whole we call art.

In Jiulong we start with basic elements such as stances, postures, etc. and learn to assemble them into different motifs.   For example, if you stand in a dragon stance and hold a Twin Yang Heaven posture (see picture) you have created a motif – another palm or stance, another motif.  Then we expand the Dragon/Twin Yang Heaven motif by stepping forward and lowering the arms to a Twin Yin Heaven posture.

We have added movement into another position.  This motion can be thought of as a phrase or statement.  Now expand the statement called “moving from Dragon/Twin Yang to Dragon/Twin Yin” by adding a martial application of this statement.  It becomes “moving from Dragon/Twin Yang to Dragon/Twin Yin and pressing into one’s partner’s center, causing them to be displaced.”

Observe what is happening: We have taken a simple single idea or motif called Dragon/Twin Yang and expanded it into a meaningful statement of martial application.  This is not a particular self defense move applicable to a specific situation, but a set of ideas built up from their component parts.

What is unique and artful about Jiulong is that the entire art is structured in this way.  We learn basic concepts or principles (musical notes).  Then we see how 2 or 3 of these principles can be assembled (motif).  These basic assemblies combine with each other in movement (phrase) and these in turn are applied in various situations (sentences or statements).  The longer statements are expressed one after the other, spontaneously to create one’s responses in a combat situation (musical work).

So what makes this a martial art is this teaching of principles which the practitioner puts together in any way she wants to express.  There are no fixed forms, rather there are creative ways of assembling the principles based on the situation at hand.

I will go one step further and add that the specific form of music that Jiulong most resembles is jazz.  Jazz is embodies spontaneous creativity based on an understanding of the principles of melody, harmony etc. the analogy is clear.  Jiulong is spontaneous creativity based on principles of body structure, movement, mental focus etc.

I hope this gives you, the Jiulong student, a way of thinking about their practice that is unique and, best of all, a personal expression of yourself  as a … wait for it … martial artist.