The Tai Chi Classics say: “Anyone who has spent years of
practice and still cannot neutralize and is always controlled by his opponent,
has not apprehended the fault of double heavy. To avoid this fault one must
distinguish yin from yang".
In meeting a student, I watched his Tai Chi form and his
standing still. At one point, the student asked me to correct his
stance, he then took the opportunity to “correct” mine. I observed
from several different angles that he would stand and move with a step size of
three-foot lengths and more, (this is typically a large frame stance). In
addition, I observed that he used a pushing motion to shift his weight and in
the “sit-back” posture would not work to obtain a “crease” in the front of the
trousers at the pelvic area. He actually would sit back in a perfectly
perpendicular stance, typical of large frame tai chi.
Typically, I will stand in either a Compact or Tight-compact
form with the step size ranging from one and a half foot lengths to two and a
half foot lengths. The photo above illustrates this step size. From a view that is looking down at the feet ( the only angle from
where the practitioner was looking), it may appear that the feet are
double weighted, particularly to a beginner. This, however, is one of the
very important advantages of the Classical Tai Chi footwork. It is indeed
hard to determine where the practitioner’s weight is, that is also a very
important strategic advantage. From these compact positions I can lift either
foot in a split second, a great advantage for speed and fluidity.
In thinking about this article, I decided to research the
term “double weighted” in numerous books which I list below. After
sifting through all of them, one thing began to stand out and that was their
ignorance of their own limitations. In every case the author makes a claim
that a student can become aware of their own weight distribution and work to
correct double weighting. The common thread in all these is that
“double-weighting” occurs at a moment in time when the weight is equal on two
sides of the body.
They ascertain what they think double weighting looks like
but what they fail to ascertain however is the root cause of the double
weighting. The root cause of double weighting is the “pushing from the
back foot” in going forward and “push from the front foot” in going backward in
a large frame that the vast majority of practitioners engage in while moving.
The root cause I speak of is a direct result of this pushing
because both feet are literally glued/frozen to the ground until the act of
pushing is completed. A foot that is stuck to the ground, cannot be
picked up and moved…hence the stance is double weighted.
As I observed in the student’s own stance in performing the
Tai Chi form and stance in push hands, the root cause comes from a large
frame stance. The act of pushing is also a built-in facet of large frame
stances, in other words, the large frame has to push in order to move…it cannot
use the feet to pull. The pull in those stances is ineffectual simply
because the larger size of the stance inhibits the act of pulling. To
compound the ignorance, practitioner’s of large frame insist that they are
doing an “internal” art when what they are really doing is external. It
takes no internal movement of the core to push with the back leg, if that were
true then the everyday act of walking would intrinsically be an internal
martial art. Walking defined by one author as the act of controlled
falling because of all the momentum one has to generate in order to keep
thrusting one leg in front of another. This done not only to move but to
stay erect while moving.
On the contrary, one can make the act of everyday walking
into an internal art by adapting the Classical Tai Chi walk with its important
characteristics of 1.) Using a “pull” walking motion, 2.) Keeping the body
center of gravity under control, not allowing it to fall forward as defined as
normal walking (we must eschew the act of controlled “falling”), 3.) Bodyweight
stays back until foot (whether in front or back) is flat on the ground, then
one pulls…one does not land the foot either on the heel or toe.
I find it interesting that some really good information on
double weighting came from my teacher’s own book: “Uncovering the Treasure” by
Stephen Hwa. The information comes from subjects in the book however that
large frame practitioners would never associate with double weighting…namely
the subject of “pushing”. PP., 48, 103 and 122 will find the use of the
word “pushing” associated with double weightedness.
P. 122: If you wish to stick to an opponent, you
cannot push with the back or front foot and expect to be fluid enough to follow
their movement. The act of pushing will always lead to double weight.
P. 103: One can certainly generate (jin or even fa
jin) force from a pushing leg in a large frame, but it still leads inevitably
to a double weight situation.
P. 48: Back foot pushing as front foot lands on heel
is a major contributor to slps and falls and in that situation the stance is
double weighted.
Actually, if one wishes to "push" an opponent, it
is best done with the front foot off the ground so that the pushing force goes
directly into the opponent not to the ground to be double weighted. As my
teacher says, "pushing is always strongest in the upward direction, look
at what track and field sprinters do before starting...they crouch".
My references include:
Arthur Orawski in : Tai Chi a personal learning experience,
pg. 1165, 1996
Ray Pawlett in The Tai Chi Handbook, pg. 83
Lawrence Galante in Tai Chi, The Supreme Ultimate, pg. 83
Additional “double weighted” references:
Black Belt Magazine October 1987 article by Wei Lun
Huang
he Essential Movements of Tai Chi”, p. 24, John Kotsias
he Essential Movements of Tai Chi”, p. 24, John Kotsias
The Tai Chi Book, p. 36 Robert Chuckrow
Additional references:
Complete Tai Chi, p. 87 Alfred Huang
Hwa yu tai chi, p. 80, Glenn Newth
Gateway to the Miraculous, p.115 by Wolfe Lowenthal
Sunrise Tai Chi, p. 6, Ramel Rones