San Jin is the first pattern in the white crane fighting system. It is the form that Fujianese martial arts basically are built
upon. The
actual time when the San Jin set was created is now impossible to determine.
What can be determined is that the San JIn is the core of southern close
fighting, especially in Fujian province all fighting styles have the San Jin
set and training method, and see it as the most central and introductory
training routine. From ancient times, southern China has always
had its own unique culture. From the time of the Han Dynasty, Fujian inherited
the ancient culture of the Chinese central plains, and also retained an
indigenous culture that was very different from the North. Southern martial
arts are the same, they had their own unique ways of expressing power and
fighting applications. San Jin and forms created upon this form are trade mark
of Southern martial styles. Not only all styles of White Crane but also Luohan
boxing, Taizu Boxing, Five Ancestors, Dog Boxing, Fujian Tiger
style have San Jian, as well as almost all Hakka styles that have their own
version of San Jin under different name.
The Mandarin "San jin" translates as
"Three Wars” and mean the conflicts of "mind, body, and spirit".
In ancient Chinese culture there was not a distinction between the mind and the
spirit, which is a more modern, western concept. In the traditional way the
wars of the form are between "mind, body and breath”, or "mind, body,
and qi (internal energy.) San Jin is the answer to these conflicts, or better said,
the form is a path to unification.
San Jin is a deceptively simple multi-level exercise
which gives
the student the basic platform needed to be able to do Kung Fu. Although
composed from just a few basic hand techniques and steps the form itself is
everything but that, it requires intense concentration, physical and mental
awareness and great control.
While all versions of San Jin have same underlining
concepts each version has its own characteristics which significantly differ
from style to style. In Zong He quan San Jin at very beginning teaches how to “sit”
in the stance and assume proper skeletal alignment today popularly known as
“body structure”. Basic stance along with proper execution of the hands
movements and footwork will over time transform joints and make them elastic
but strong. Proper structure is fundamental basis for stability (balance),
power is generated through proper structure and incoming force is dealt with
through proper structure. Hand movements in the form are not just simple
techniques, these movements embody the basic principles and strategies of the
style and teach how to apply force, how deal with incoming force, proper angles
of engagement, changing angles and sides, covering and controlling the space,
recovering strategies if control is lost ect. It also teaches how to
concentrate power in one point and deliver it.
San Jin teaches only step forward and step back. It looks very simple and
easy but the truth is just the opposite. These steps are not just simple
everyday steps but something completely different in every possible sense .
Normal walking is basically a sequence of interrupted
falls. When we stand still the central axis of the body along with the center
of gravity is perpendicular to the ground. When we start walking the central
axis is moving forward along with center of gravity in way that lowest point is
still at the same place and highest point is moving toward the ground, which is
basically falling. We put leg in front of the body and stop the fall
establishing new point of balance and then repeat the sequence for the next
step. In order to make a step we have loose balance every single time. San Jin
steps are totally opposite, the purpose of these steps is to maintain balance
and structure with all its qualities during changing position in space. One of
the old Chinese terms is to “move like a cloud”. There no excessive movement,
just appear forward or back. Once mastered this principle of moving can be
applied on any kind of footwork.
San Jin teaches practitioner focus and awareness, how
follow many things at the same time. Focus practice stars with attention payed
on inside and later as the training progress and the form becomes better it
slowly goes to the outside. This is essential to fighting because even the best
fighter will be defeated if he is not aware that he is under attack and what
the attacker is doing.
The last but not the least is Qigong part of the form.
Proper breathing sequence is not only essential for fighting but also activate
and cultivate internal energy. Zong He San Jin is specific in a way that even
if practitioner does not pay too much attention on Qi gong part of the form ,
Qi will be developed and after a while practitioner will become aware of a
great change in his way of executing the form. At the beginning ,practitioner
will have to put great mental effort to execute every movement correctly. After
a while this will become effortless automatic process without paying attention
to the details. At the end the Qi will
guide the movements without even have a full awareness of the movement, this is
a deep meditative state of San Jin form. The movements will come from inside
and the whole body will feel a constant flow of energy which will guide every
movement throughout the form , awareness of the environment will increase while
thought process will stop, mind will be free of thinking.
While composed only from a few movements and two basic
steps San Jin form is the hardest to master, it is a long and never ending road
of exploration and self development. Few simple moves can lead the practitioner
in some unexpected directions and reveal many astonishing secrets of himself
and the world around him.
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