Frivolity in Kung Fu
14 03 2013Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Gong Fu, Gung Fu, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Kung Fu, Wu Shu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Jow Ga in America
While On the Subject of Tigers (Running Into Walls)
4 03 2013While we’re on the subject of Tigers…
Perhaps we should take this time to inform the readers that Tiger style Kung Fu has little to do with Tiger clawing and making “hwa” sounds. Sort of.
Tiger claw Kung Fu is a style of fighting in which one takes on the characteristics of a Tiger:
- No animal in its right mind attacks a Tiger. Not even the Lion. Seriously, when was the last time you saw a Tiger fight a Lion?
- The Tiger is indomitable
- He is powerful
- He is ruthless
- He is not known for speed, except at close quarters
- His footwork is a pouncing-style attack
- He does not retreat
- And, oh yeah, he has those claws
When Jow Ga refers to itself (and Jow Lung) as “Fu Pow”–Tiger and Leopard–we are referring to the combination of a fighting style that is powerful and cruel, like a Tiger, as well as quick and agile, like the Leopard. Without wanting to teach by blog, we’ll leave it at that.
In the Dean Chin school, considerable time is spend building the horse upon which the fighter stands. In other words, we build the strong and powerful legs that enable us to attack an opponent from what seems like a safe distance to the opponent. More than a kicking/leg’s distance away, but not so far that the opponent cannot be reached. The training starts by teaching the stances, and building the fighter’s ability to hold them for a long periods of time. Immediately after the fighter begins developing strength, we introduce movement–first short, basic movements, then later to more complex movements. Next, the movement with the feet will incorporate hand attacks, so that power is generated from the legs through the attacking motion of the body through the arms and hands and expelled through the destructive power of the attack.
Think of the difference between a 2 ton elephant swatting you, and a 1/2 ton Tiger rushing full speed and crashing into you. Both have power, but one is more devastating and sudden. When the elephant attacks, it has power but it is a power that one feels confident that you can escape it. However, when the Tiger attacks it is both intimidating and frightening because what is hurled at you is coming so fast even if you see it, you can’t escape it. If the Tiger has generated enough momentum, his power can feel like an elephant hit you when he lands.
And, like we stated earlier, his posture, his build, his presence is such that everyone in the room knows he’s there. It is a forceful, yet latent, presence. Can go from 0 – 60 in the blink of an eye. This kind of velocity has nothing to do with Tiger Claws. It all comes from the Horse. We must build the fighter’s physique into the personified image of a Tiger: Strong, explosive legs, powerful upper body, and a killer instinct. There are three important tools used to accomplish this:
- lifetime of stance training
- weighted handwork (dumbells, brass rings, bricks, etc.)
- plenty of impact training
Not exactly hi-tech stuff, but it’s very effective. And if you don’t want join problems, don’t look for shortcuts.
With this kind of training, we have no need to run from the opponent. In none of our Tiger forms, do we retreat. In one form–the Fu Pow Chune (Tiger and Cougar) form–there is one part that shuffles back to draw the opponent into attacking, and once the opponent does so, we capture him and tear his arm off. Just like a Tiger.
When the body rushes forward in a forward-moving attack, not only are we “shuffling” forward with the feet–we are actually attacking with our torso as well as the limbs. This way, if the opponent counters while we attack or is foolish enough to lunge forward, he will run smack into a wall. Although you may only weigh 190 lbs (like I do), the forward motion multiplies the force attacking him, and increases the damage we intended to inflict.
Wish I could tell you more, but you’ll have to hunt down a Jow Ga Sifu to learn more.
Thanks for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Fu Jow, Gong Fu, Gung Fu, Horse Stance, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Kung Fu, Kung Fu Stance Training, Ma Bo, Sei Ping Ma, Tiger Claw, Wu Shu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Jow Ga in America
Jow Ga Wheel Punch
4 03 2013Jow Ga has three important techniques that is emphasize through all Jow Ga forms: The Wheel Punch.
Branches will pick and choose which of the many techniques to be specialized, according to the tastes of that branch’s teacher. These three techniques happen to be some personal favorites of our late Master Dean Chin.
Instructor Sharif Talib demonstrates some basic uses for the Wheel Punch taught in the Dean Chin branch of Jow Ga.
The techniques have been honed, so that minimal modification is needed from form to fighting. There are many idiosyncrasies that exist within these techniques, although basic–they are very effective and are in no way trivial. For more information, please contact a Jow Ga teacher near you.
Thank you for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Double Broadswords, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga forms, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, kup choi, kup choy, look choi, look choy, luk choy, pao choy, pow choy, Sharif Talib, Siu Fok Fu, Siu Fook Fu, wheel punch, Zhou Jia
Categories : Technique and Strategy, Video Clips
Build the Tiger
4 03 2013In Dean Chin’s Jow Ga, we believe in Building the Tiger.
Jow Ga training is more than simply learning forms, a bunch of weapons, and performing Lion Dance. For most in the Kung Fu world this may be true, but training in the Dean Chin branch of Jow Ga is much more rigorous and (for many) quite boring. Our list of forms and techniques is as long as any other Southern style one would find, but considerable time is spent building strength in various parts of the body which enable our techniques to be effective.
This is one of those things misunderstood about Kung Fu. While many systems simply impart techniques that simulate tearing, strangling, dislocating and breaking–the Kung Fu student must develop his body to be able to actually use those techniques for what they were intended for. When the body has been forged properly, the fighter has, in effect become a Tiger:
- Powerful shoulders
- The Tiger’s Claw: the fingers, the hand, the wrist and forearms
- A strong and destructive fist
- Strong neck and abdomen
- Strong, explosive legs
- A courageous and fearless, and where necessary–ferocious–heart
Take your system’s clawing techniques. If you were to use those techniques on a real attacker, what damage would you be capable of inflicting? The Jow Ga man, if properly trained, can answer that question. Rather than learn forms on top of forms on top of forms–one’s time would be better spent if a full year were devoted to developing the body much in the way a Tiger’s body is developed:
- powerful upper body to overpower an attacker
- powerful grip for grappling, seizing, strangling and for forming the fist
- a desensitized fist that can be used as a blunt-force weapon against the opponent
- a durable body that can withstand the opponents’ attack
- strong neck that can resist a neck-snapping knockout punch
- legs that allows the fighter to explosively pounce on or chase down an escaping opponent
- the confidence that your opponent cannot hurt you
- the ability to turn on the malicious intent when the appropriate time calls for it
That last item is what is often referred to as “Fighting Spirit” in the old school. It is one aspect that is too often omitted from Kung Fu training. In other words, the psychological capacity to injure, maim, or kill the opponent where necessary. A Tiger is never dangerous when he is not hungry or under attack. This is because although he has the ability to destroy anything in its path, it is unnecessary. The law of nature does not allow the Tiger to just go through the jungle killing everything it encounters. Yet when provoked, or hungry, or defending its young–nothing will stop it from a merciless, cruel attack.
The Kung Fu fighter must have all of the above: Technique, physiology, courage, and the mental switch to turn him from law-abiding citizen into unstoppable killer. This is not a technique one can learn from a book or video. It is a principle; one that must be cultivated and developed through years of training to turn a man–regardless of what he comes through the school doorway with–into a Tiger through proper Kung Fu training. The body must be transformed into something extra-human, and the kind of training that this requires is a slow, patient, arduous process. You cannot develop this kind of Kung Fu ability if you are concerned with partying and celebrating all the time. Dean Chin was not a Kung Fu historian. He was not a collector of forms. He was not a Kung Fu politician, nor was he a Kung Fu party animal.
Thank you for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Fu Jow, Gong Fu, Gung Fu, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Kung Fu, Tiger Claw, Wu Shu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Technique and Strategy
Patient Learning
3 03 2013When two Kung Fu men of the same style meet, a popular greeting in place of “nice to meet you” are the words
“What Form Are You On?”
Did I hit the nail on the head? I know I did.
Kung fu students must avoid the pitfall of becoming form collectors. This art has so much more to offer besides forms. We walk into our schools and look on the wall, and see the list of interesting-sounding forms: Tiger and Cougar. Five Animals. Nine Ring Big Knife. Dang, that stuff sounds cool.
What we are really looking for, when learning the next new form, is often those fighting techniques we believe will turn us into Kung Fu Fighting Machines, just by learning the forms, aren’t we? I think I just heard a chuckle.
I mean, no one really wants to learn forms just to step out in front of a crowd and give a dazzling demonstration of “cool-looking” techniques. Hopefully, the Kung Fu community has matured beyond that. No, we are in the age of proving that Chinese Martial Arts are not outdated, useless martial arts technique. Back in the 80s it was enough to demo an interesting form with Shaw Brothers – looking moves. In the current age of the internet, MMA and the popularity of fight sports, Kung Fu people are struggling for relevancy, and it is only a matter of time we see pure kung fu guys enter the cage and restore the respect Bruce Lee gave us on the big screen.
But it won’t happen overnight. And today, you young guys, who have yet to degenerate to rubbing elbows with masters or name-dropping styles and titles to prove yourselves–it is up to YOU to bring Chinese Martial Arts back to prominence. Nobody really cares how much Cantonese you know. Nobody is impressed that you know 30+ forms, or that you once got Chiu Chi Ling’s autograph. No one gives a damn if your lineage is recognized in China. They don’t care if you were the first one to bring your art to town, or how many awards you’ve won, or if your version of forms is the “original” version. That stuff is so 80s.
In the current community of martial artists, all they really care about is can you thump. Can you step out onto the floor and check your “can’t-use-my-deadliest-stuff-because-of-the-rules” excuses at the door and PROVE that your time with your Sifu was not a waste of time. Trust me, if Kung Fu is to be respected for the reliable form of self defense that we say it is, now is the time for you young cats to get out there and show us what you’re made of.
And the first virtue you must embrace and adopt is that of patience.
Patience in training and learning are of the same variety, and they are by products of two of the five virtues of Kung Fu–Loyalty (to teacher, style, school and training) and Humility (to remain a student long enough to truly learn and develop, and not try to be a master before you were ready). If you strive to learn more and more forms, you will end up with just that–forms. Likewise, if you strive for more and more fighting skill, you will end up with the same: Fighting Skill. Fighting Skill is what people respect, and fighting skill is where true confidence originates in the Kung Fu man. Yes, they will respect other things, like age, intelligence, even skill at forms. Yet nothing silences a room, nothing humbles the arrogant, like a man whose physical presence has just entered because everyone knows who the Tiger is. The Monkey is the guy who jumps around with the loud noises and gets noticed, with his boisterous personality. The Owl is the guy who is wise, been around a long time and people look up to him. The Peacock is beautiful, flashy and may even scare you with his feathers and array of colors. But when that Tiger walks into the room, no animal feels safe, and I don’t care how many Masters you befriend or how many articles you write or what you call yourself. The Owl can rationalize that killing ability is not the point of Kung Fu, but he’d better stay up in that tree. The Mouse can talk of getting along and being friends. In the world of Animals and killers and prey, no one relaxes around the Tiger. And here’s the thing about the Tiger: as a cub he was just as helpless as any animal and his growth from cute furry animal to the most feared predator in the jungle didn’t happen overnight.
Trust me, it won’t happen overnight for you either.
Train hard, study patiently, listen closely to your Sifu, be acutely aware of other styles and their habits, and your style’s strengths and weaknesses. Give yourself time to absorb the training and build your body. In time, you will be a Tiger yourself. Alliances, forms, terminology, and lineages mean nothing in combat. There is a saying that good soup takes time, and so does good skill. Most people are not patient enough to acquire it, so they spend their time self promoting and trying to convince you that they are Tigers in every way except in the #1 way a Tiger does it.
Trust me when I say this: Every Kung Fu man who adopts this virtue will eventually become a Tiger, regardless of what style you do, who your master is (or who your master isn’t), what version of forms you’re doing, or how many forms you know. Kung Fu skill lies in the training and the way you approach your training and how you test it. Never forget that. The whole process takes honor, respect, loyalty, integrity, and humility. It takes time.
Thank you for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Gong Fu, Gung Fu, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Kung Fu, Wu Shu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Kung Fu Philosophy
Lesson #1 from the Dean Chin Rule Book (Attendance)
3 03 2013Well, it’s a little more than just attendance.
I don’t have the list of rules anymore. Some years have gone by that my box of Jow Ga memorabilia is in an attic in either my aunt’s or father’s house–basement or something. But I do remember possibly one of the first three rules, and hopefully one of my Si Hing can help me out with this:
Students must attend a minimum of 8 classes per month to remain in good standing and continue membership.
In other words, Sifu Chin wasn’t begging anyone to be a student here. See, one of the dark clouds that hovered overhead for the Jow Ga student under Sifu Chin was the possibility that he might ask you to leave his school. We were ordered to practice, clean the school, attend enough classes to make Jow Ga look good, abstain from alcohol use, show courage and reject cowardice… Yeah, other schools said that stuff too, good grades, show respect, blah blah blah. But in the Jow Ga school, it was a reality, and you would be hard pressed even in the 1980s to find a teacher more demanding. This was the kind of school where the students who cut out right after class (despite that they showed up to attend every week) were considered “un-dedicated”, and the REAL kung fu training started about an hour after the last of them left. Few people know what I’m talking about, because most people in those days despised Sifu Chin’s classes and did not hang around long after classes to see what went on in the school.
There were several full instructors in the school who taught classes and had their own followers during the 80s, and very few learned directly from Sifu by that time. Those who did were part of a sort of “Secret Society”, a fraternity of Jow Ga people who were a school within the school, long after Sifu Chin taught his last scheduled class. It was here, that Sifu’s requirement of “Attend 8 classes” was enforced. There are four weekends in a month, and Dean Chin was present nearly every weekend day, after class. You were not really expected to attend the regularly scheduled class in the morning that most students took. But attendance to the 2 hour sparring taught by Tehran Brighthapt and Lemuel Talley was strongly encouraged, and after that was when you got to learn from Sifu. Sometimes it was technique. Sometimes it was form. And it was always lecture.
But what’s your point, Mo?
Sifu did not treat the Kung Fu education like a class. He looked at Kung Fu as a calling. This is not just something you are taking and paying for. It is a total lifestyle change, and only few people who dared walk through those doors and actually sign up are of the caliber he was looking for. Anyone with $35 could join the school. But once inside those walls, only a few of them would become the kind of person he actually taught himself. Most people wouldn’t like it. People actually got mad at Sifu because of how he taught or how he talked to you, and then wanted to post websites decades later about how they were his students. (excuse the personal feelings)
Back to the article.
So if you truly want to understand what separates the men from the boys in Jow Ga, what makes some people proud of their skills versus proud of their alliances, or what makes some people Kung Fu teachers versus Kung Fu men–you must look at the lifestyle one leads as a Kung Fu practitioner. Some people are lucky to find a way to make a good living doing what we do. Most will not, but still practice this art, well beyond the days where they are no longer physically able to do it, broke or not, until the day they die. How they live the art as a Sifu at large depends on how they treated it as students. Your martial arts training should not depend on class availability, finances, or what you’ve got going on in your personal life/the job. If you miss Kung Fu training because “things are crazy”, you’re not a Kung Fu Man–as Sifu Chin would describe it–you’re just a Kung Fu student. And therefore, if you cannot commit to 8 measly classes out of a 30 day month–he didn’t want you as a student.
I could say more, but due to my promise to my Si Hings that this blog would be a happy, happy, joy, joy, positive blog–pull me up next time I’m in DC. I’ll tell you exactly how I feel.
The path to Kung Fu excellence, not just Jow Ga excellence, is how you treat your art. This is a vocation, a life purpose, an identity. It is NOT a class. Nothing should get in the way of your Jow Ga. As Sifu once put it, there are tons of schools in Washington DC. This training is for serious students only.
Amen.
Thank you for visiting DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Gong Fu, Gung Fu, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Kung Fu, Wu Shu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Kung Fu Philosophy
Fighting Techniques – Instructor Sharif Talib
15 01 2013Jow Ga Instructor Sharif Talib began studying Jow Ga under Sifus Raymond Wong and Craig Lee in 1986. Since then, he has trained with many other Jow Ga Sifu, acquiring knowledge in various interpretations of Dean Chin’s Jow Ga. He has taught Jow Ga in Europe as well as America and today is as skilled as he was when he was younger.
The following is a small sampling of various ways to apply the Jow Ga foundation technique known as the “Small Tiger Technique”. The book he references is Ron Wheeler’s The Power of Shaolin Kung Fu, available on Amazon.com
Thank you for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Double Broadswords, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga forms, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Sharif Talib, Siu Fok Fu, Siu Fook Fu, Zhou Jia
Categories : Video Clips
Jow Ga Double Broadswords – Sifu Craig Lee
9 01 2013This is our version of Jow Ga Double Broadswords, demonstrated by Sifu Craig Lee.
Thank you for visiting the Dean Chin Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Craig Lee, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Double Broadswords, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga forms, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Zhou Jia
Categories : Video Clips
Sifu Craig Lee Performing Jow Ga’s 10,000 Fist
8 01 2013This is Sifu Craig Lee, performing 10,000 Fist behind the school in Chinatown.
No other information is necessary. I will post more about him later. Enjoy.
Thank you for visiting the Dean Chin Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Craig Lee, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga forms, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Man Jeet Chune, Zhou Jia
Categories : Video Clips
DC Jow Ga’s Fu Pow Kune
6 01 2013Performed by Sifu Maurice Gatdula in Sacramento, CA. Joined the Jow Ga school in 1981, and was a part of the “Sunday” bunch, who trained with Sifu Raymond Wong in the morning, and Sifu Chin in the afternoon–followed by a two hour sparring class taught by Tehran Brighthapt. Also trained during the week with various instructors and was promoted through both the weekend curriculum as well as the official school curriculum, led by Sifu Deric Mims.
Those of you who know this form will notice a section left out of the form, which was intentional. The goof-up during the introduction was un-intentional. 😉 This is what we in the Dean Chin lineage refer to as the “Warlock” version. This form was learned from Sifu Craig Lee in 1986 at Raymond Wong’s school. The Hong Kong version of Fu Pow begins in the standing “Goat Shearing Stance”, while Sifu Chin’s begins with Chan Man Cheung’s Hoi Lai, followed by the tension set in the Sei Ping Ma.
FYI, in other branches of Jow Ga, there are several versions of the Fu Pow form within the same school. One possible reason for this, is that one of the nicknames for Jow Ga was “Fu Pow Chune”. In Sifu Chin’s lineage, there is only one.
Thank you for visiting the DC Jow Ga Federation.
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Tags: Chin Yuk Din, Chow Ga, Chow Gar, Dean Chin, Dean Chin Students, Hung Tao Choy Mei, Jow Ga, Jow Ga forms, Jow Ga Kung Fu, Jow Gar, Zhou Jia
Categories : Video Clips

