Baguazhang has one principal edge.
The Tao Te Ching is littered with examples of it and illustrations of how to use it.
That edge is yielding.
But what does it mean? How can it be used? What are the advantages? Why is yielding an edge?
The answers to these and other questions lie within the syllabus you are training.
You must open your mind to the concept of yielding and scientifically investigate the possibilities it affords you.
Do not be tempted to dismiss the significance of yielding or trivialise it.
Our syllabus can ably demonstrate that a person who yields is a person with power.
The less effort you exert, the move power you can produce. This is a perverse, perplexing yet delicious outcome of yielding.
When nothing remains fixed or immobile, it is easy to yield.
The simple act of stepping changes your spatial relationship; and opportunities occur.
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