A Quote by Cheng Man-ch'ing

Tai Chi Chuan, the great ultimate, strengthens the weak, raises the sick, invigorates the debilitated, and encourages the timid — © Cheng Man-ch'ing
Tai Chi Chuan, the great ultimate, strengthens the weak, raises the sick, invigorates the debilitated, and encourages the timid
There is no mystique to Tai Chi Chuan. What is difficult is the perseverance. It took me ten years to discover my chi, but thirty years to learn how to use it. Once you see the benefit, you won't want to stop.
What we did with 'Tai Chi Zero' and 'Tai Chi Hero' was break down the martial-arts genre and make it younger, hipper, and kind of cooler for the younger kids.
If someone teaches you alignment and - I'm not a tai chi expert by any stretch - so interviewing me about tai chi is kind of the cart before the horse - but just from my point of view as a student, it's simply that Master Ren can show you the relationship of power, stance and form.
Performing tai chi in space - it is comfortable; we got more outer space chi.
Noble and manly music invigorates the spirit, strengthens the wavering man, and incites him to great and worthy deeds.
The five excellences include: calligraphy, painting, poetry, medicine, and t'ai chi chuan.
I meditate twice a day, T.M., and do yoga and tai chi.
From the physical aspect of things, I really enjoy Tai Chi.
I do yoga. I do tai chi. I do a lot to keep my body and my spirit together so I can work.
When I'm not at the keyboard, I'm generally reading, practicing tai chi or middle eastern dance, or cooking.
The Chinese used the symbol of tai chi, the undifferentiated reality - no separation, no left and right.
But I found tai chi when I was studying with Leung Shum, who teaches Eagle Claw and Wu Hao.
I've been doing Tai Chi on and off for 20 years. The fundamentals of all martial arts are the same.
The aim of tai chi is not to strike first to gain dominance over an opponent, but to wait and hit at the right moment.
If I was running a British School of classical music I'd employ Tai Chi teachers to help the conductors at the end of their lessons.
Music, when thus applied, raises noble hints in the mind of the hearer, and fills it with great conceptions. It strengthens devotion, and advances praise into rapture.
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