Mastering tai chi requires the following:
• A lifelong commitment to the furtherance of the art
• Spontaneous demonstration of every and any aspect of the art
• The ability to train other people to become tai chi instructors
• An embodiment of the principles outlined in the Tai Chi Classics
• Highly accurate rendition of every exercise/form/drill/application
• Extensive knowledge of every facet of every subject in the syllabus i.e.
'jing'
• An in-depth understanding of every facet of the
exercise/form/drill/application
• How the exercise/form/drill/application links to other aspects of the
curriculum
• The ability to dismantle and explain how and why the different components
operate
• Grace, ease, subtlety, sensitivity, nimbleness, appropriateness,
simplicity are all a given
• The willingness to train disciples to acquire every aspect of the teaching
and perpetuate the art themselves
• Unselfconscious, skilled and utterly effective application of the art in
combat employing chin na, jing and shuai jiao
• The ability to develop, improve and deliver a thorough, fully
differentiated syllabus suitable for all ability levels and all ages
• The ability to dismantle and explain how and why every form posture
operates and how it can be applied in at least 7 different ways
• Comprehensive theoretical knowledge and the ability to discuss and explain
how taoism, martial theory and actual practice all tie together
• The ability to apply the tai chi principles (yielding, stickiness, peng,
jing, composure, connection, 4 ounces etc) in every situation with absolute
ease and certainty
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