Many people practice Wing Chun for health reasons or as a
fitness system. Some practice the art as a part of their tradition or the
tradition they want to be part of. There are those who practice the art as a
surrogate religion or spiritual path. If you belong to any of these categories,
this article is not for you. This article is for people who practice, or
believe to practice, Wing Chun as a martial art, a system of combat.
At some point Wing Chun became an “internal” art, that is
the latest trend in Wing Chun business. If the style is not “internal” it is
not good enough, it is “inefficient”, not original, in one word worthless. There are a lot of teachers who effortlessly
“win” over a larger opponent in sticky hands drills and exercises, Wing Chun is
done slowly and softly, like Tai Chi, they are doing inch punches and perform a
lot of different “internal” power demonstrations. All these demonstrations look
really cool and leave an impression of great skill and power, and with an
aggressive marketing they are making audience to believe that those skills and
power are genuine. Unfortunately truth is very much different from that
impression.
Truth to be told, some of these teachers have good grasp
of basic “internal” concepts, good, but unfortunately not complete, or they do
but do teach it because their customers cannot accept it. Most of them are
completely lost and have totally wrong understanding of what “internal” is.
Before we define what internal training is we must
explain the place of Qigong in internal martial arts training. First thing that
must be said is that Qigong and internal martial training are not same thing.
These two disciplines are completely unrelated. Qigong is way older than any of
the martial styles practiced today and had been developed and practiced
independently of martial arts for the most part of its history. Qigong became a
part of martial arts less than 100 years ago, during the republican period in
China(1911-1948). Although incorporated in so called “internal” martial styles Qigong
is still independent discipline and it is practiced separately from martial
aspects of the these arts. So why many people believe Qigong is connected to
martial training? Confusion came from Chinese teachers who are using term Qi
describe some points is both disciplines. Term Qi, at least in earlier times
was also used as a description of many other things, weather for example , but
no one today mix weather conditions in martial arts training. Mixing Qigong
with internal martial training or Neigong is one of the worst things that
happened to kung fu after Boxer rebellion. Instead to be properly trained,
people believe that breathing exercises and the lightest possible fitness
training (what Qi gong in essence is) will increase their fighting abilities.
“Qi” just bring martial training to the area of esoteric practice and once
there martial arts are unrepairable damaged, at least for fighting purposes.
Tai Chi is the best example, once extremely efficient combat style today is
nothing more than a light exercise system and most of Tai Chi instructors do
not teach ,even on theoretical level , any fighting applications. Historical
sources are telling us that members of Chen village, a birth place of Tai Chi,
had several successful fights and they repelled several attacks on their
village in 19th century (they used spears and swords to defeat large
number of gang members who tried to raid their place). Today ,Tai Chi is
concentrated on Qi cultivation and martial aspect of the art is for the most
part lost. While practicing Qi gong may have some health benefits, it certainly
does not have any combat value, it does not increase someone’s fighting
abilities for even a smallest part. It is important to say that Qi gong in its
essence is an esoteric art which main purpose, for what it was invented for, is
reaching eternal life. People often forget this fact, or do not know it, or do
not want to know it. Qi gong and martial training ,including neigong, can be parallel
but they cannot be mixed .
Neigong or internal training is nothing more (and nothing
less) than biomechanical efficiency. Often times Chinese teachers call this
efficiency –Qi, making a lot of confusion. Every single teacher of “internal”
arts claiming and some deeply believe in their claims, they are the only one
who know the “secret” of internal training , or at least they are doing it
better than others. Every one of them have couple of “secret” details which
will be shared only with the most loyal students (those who payed the most).
And most of them, I cannot say all because I haven’t seen all, insist that
internal training is the opposite of external training in every possible way.
They , insist that expression of “internal” skills must look exactly as they
picture it, soft , fluffy , powerless and effortless. They also do a lot
of things they to prove their stuff
works. But this is, I have to be blunt here , complete bullshit.
Classification that divides styles on internal and
external is a nonsense. History of that divide leads us to 1928 when Goushu
academy organized a tournament and for pure marketing reasons, in order to
advertise styles practiced by leading people of the academy, called their
styles “internal” while all other styles were called “external” Shaolin styles.
Before 1928 we don’t have such classification. The fact is one without another
do not exist. Every martial style practiced long enough will eventually become
internal. Internal is nothing else but the level of efficiency someone is using
his body. At the beginning of every training, movements will be inadequate, led
by conscious thought, not precise, performed with too much power ect. As the
training progresses the efficiency of the movement will increase until
eventually become internal. This is valid for all martial styles, not only
Chinese. There are teachers who teach and believe that only specific body structure and power generation can be
considered “internal”. That is very far from truth, first, there are many
different “internal” styles with different body structure and different ways of
power generation, second , many style which are not considered “internal” also
base their foundation on specific body structure ,relaxation, and explosive
power (fajin).
Can some art be practiced internally from the very
beginning? Yes, it can, and that is exactly what “internal” teachers are
selling to their customers. From the very beginning they insist on the quality
of movements that comes only after years of serious martial practice. And
people quickly learn these things and develop them further. But there is a
catch. If “internal” skills are developed form the very beginning that means
only one thing, people cannot fight with them. The reason for this is simple.
Like I said before, for internal skills are considered those which are relaxed
, without too much muscle power, precise , fast etc. To develop these skills
normally, a lot of extremely hard and painful , so called “external “ training
is necessary. It is first necessary to be exposed to the real force that is
used in real fighting, At the beginning there will be a lot pain, fear,
uncomplete control of the body… but in time, body and mind are learning how to
deal with the incoming force more efficiently until they reach such a level of
coordination and effectiveness that they enter the domain of “internal” skills.
Practitioner will through experience learn how to relax, how to instinctively
and with a smallest amount of effort to deal with an incoming force. Only
through hard training practitioner will be able to rely to internal power
generation in real fight. These skills
are gained through hard and painful process and they will work in a real
fighting situation, because they are trained and learned in similar conditions.
On the other hand, if “internal” skills are practiced
“internally” from the very beginning, to be achieved and refined to match what
is considered “internal” by most of the teachers today all hard training (read sparring, realistic
combat drills, training under the stress of the real fight) must be left out.
All we can see in this approach is chi sao\push hands as an ultimate test of
the skill. Of course in controlled and safe environment, where everyone does and
think the same, where all people are compliant, these “internal” skills are
working perfectly. Every time when these people get out of their comfort zone
and try to prove their systems work, they got their ass kicked.
I never saw anyone
with internal skills passed basic level. Many believe that they achieved the
highest level of skill but they are wrong. Level of their skill maybe the
highest in their system and maybe high for noncontact discipline, but for full
contact fighting these skills are just the basic foundation. Avoiding full
contact training, instructors loose perspective and develop the skills in
totally wrong direction, instead to be focused of real effectiveness they pay
much more attention on visual effect. Of course, good visual effects brings more
students which means more money. There is another reason for this. After being
involved in kung fu since high school, almost 30 years now, I have noticed that
vast majority of people involved in kung fu do not really want to fight, nor
they want to learn fighting skills , they want to be a part of kung fu school
for many reasons but fighting is not one of them. Also a large number of people
simply lie them self and they practice light noncontact disciplines believing
they will achieve great fighting abilities, especially through “internal”
training and “qigong”. That is why it is so important for so many teachers to
make their arts visually attractive. People who really want to fight, usually
are going to classical boxing, kick boxing ,Muay Thai or similar disciplines,
which are not visually attractive but everyone knows their fighting
effectiveness.
Like I said, there is no one I saw whose internal skills
passed level of siu lim tao , level where all these structure tests and chi sao
were done. Chum Kiu level should be fighting level and at this level all these
internal skills achieved previously ( and so nicely demonstrated by so many
masters and grandmasters) should be applied in real combat . I still didn’t see
anyone who can do that , further more I never found anyone who even talks about
it , who even have an idea how to practice internal skills for real fighting.
To conclude this article, there is no difference between
Internal and External training, only the
difference is level of biomechanical efficiency. If the training is not hard,
painful, physically and emotionally demanding it is not martial training , it
is fitness. If “internal” skills are practiced as the opposite to “external”
that system is simply teaching wrong things.