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New Sounds interesting
As I may have posted before, I've had back surgery and have metal bars and a mile of wire around my spine. (well, maybe not a mile, but the two metal bars are there, and they are anchored by wire.)

As such, I hesitate to try things that pretty much require tossing and falling; I *might* be able to take it, but I'd rather not chance it. From the description of Tai Chi I see here, it's a physical exercise that can be used (if needed) in self defense. That sounds good from my perspective; practising something that one never hopes to use so that one can use it effectively when one has to.
Who knows how empty the sky is
In the place of a fallen tower.
Who knows how quiet it is in the home
Where a son has not returned.

-- Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966)
New Tai Chi is extremely low impact...
I don't know of any falls/tossing in Tai Chi. There's not even (really) punches and kicks. (In fact, that's why I went to Japanese Karate, I wanted to throw people and punch and kick. ;-)

Most instructors are willing to talk with potential students and can show you exactly what movements are involved. (In fact, most good ones will insist on it).

It's not a bad art...and it's harder than it looks, but I prefer doing a move and watching someone fly though the air.
New Re: Tai Chi is extremely low impact...
Not necessarily low impact for an opponent.
I'll have to track it down,
but I swear I've seen footage of a Tai-Chi master pushing an opponent away.
Such that the opponent whent 'flying' and the master appeared rather unperturbed.
New Yeah, but that's extremely top end.
and it is a MA. <grin> But push-hands (tai chi ...um...kumite?) is putting the back of your hand against the back of your opponent's hand and moving slowly back and forth. (Certainly not high impact. :-)
New I saw the same thing
I think it was on 60 minutes or some similar pop news show. A Tai Chi master - one of those ancient white bearded types just like in Kung Fu movies - had an American try punch him to demonstrate how he could channel an attackers energy against him.

The American threw the punch at the Tai Chi master. The master put up an open palm and blocked the punch. But what was remarkable was a split second later the American fell back and looked dazed. They asked the American what happened and he said that after his punch was blocked, it felt like the wind got knocked out of his chest and his legs went numb.
Ray
New I've had some personal experiences...
Not quite on that level, but there is something to it.

One exercise we did in Aikido had us close our eyes, and then our partner for the exercise approach us. Whenever they stepped near us, we would lift up our hands.

According to my partner, I lifted my hand every time that they came close, and I witnessed the same for them.

Then, I had the !@$!% scared out of me, when while I had my eyes shut, my sensei walked up to me and tapped me on the forehead. I couldn't feel him coming AT ALL.

Freaky.
"He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche
New he is matching your life rythms
Very easy to sneak up on someone except for the last 3 feet. That is why taking out a sentry demands a fast jump and faster action.
thanx,
bill
What is a user? You mean userid isnt the same as uid?, gid? whats that? I dont understand "ask the requestor to send a non formal email request for ftp access? whaddya mean dean?
Halp Iam drowning in Bovine Fecal Matter!!!!
Bill
New Think extremely slow motion
There was a group at Dartmouth College who used to go into a squash court with a motion sensor, wait until the motion sensor went off because things were still long enough, and then they started their exercises. If the lights went on, someone wasn't smooth enough. :-)

Cheers,
Ben
New They may have been on to something. Feldenkrais
(A Swiss? physicist) who developed a technique for 'talking' or at least interfacing with body, the thought, "I want to move ___ by using just ___ muscles -- v e r y .. s l o w l y".

Even those too injured (trauma from auto accidents, for ex.) could mentally go through the exercises, with a certain amount of 'energy' via being in a group performing the exercises.

I know one such person (car hit her) - who was pronounced to be a permanent basket case. She could barely move *anything*. Just present on a gurney and doing the exercises mentally, at first. She is today lithe as a mime. (It helps that she was a runner, even an obsessive-athlete prior) She also teaches Feldenkrais now. I'm learning too that, however improbably, (always as deemed by the smartass logical mind):

it works.
(If... You are willing to pay attention and work, too - that is) No magic pill.



A.
     Question about Tai Chi. - (static) - (15)
         Slo-mo kung fu - (kmself) - (2)
             Hmm. That's what I thought it was. Thanks! -NT - (static)
             variation of poison hand kung foo - (boxley)
         Think ~ yoga. - (Ashton)
         Here's what I've heard - (jb4)
         Tai Chi Chuan - Grand Ultimate Fist... - (Simon_Jester) - (9)
             Sounds interesting - (wharris2) - (8)
                 Tai Chi is extremely low impact... - (Simon_Jester) - (5)
                     Re: Tai Chi is extremely low impact... - (Gibbo) - (4)
                         Yeah, but that's extremely top end. - (Simon_Jester)
                         I saw the same thing - (rsf) - (2)
                             I've had some personal experiences... - (inthane-chan) - (1)
                                 he is matching your life rythms - (boxley)
                 Think extremely slow motion - (ben_tilly) - (1)
                     They may have been on to something. Feldenkrais - (Ashton)

The very ink with which history is written is merely fluid prejuidice.
50 ms