Thank you Kei Lun
Originally posted by kei lun
Fiercest Tiger:
Im not sure what you mean but Ill try. In KuangZhou CLC taught Siu Sek See Kuen and Daai Sek See Kuen; it was originally one form but broken in half and the second half (daai sek see) was doubled/repeated. Some call these Siu Sup Ji and Daai Sup Ji as they are crosspatterns. In HK, CLC eliminated Siu Sek See in favor of Jik Bo Biu Jee, and Daai Sek See became Sek See Kuen (almost no modification).
I have heard of Sek See Sup Ji, which may just be the Sek See form. I saw Man Kwong Fongfs Sup Ji Kuen and it didnft resemble either form, but did have many movements from Daai Sup Ji Kuen
Kei Lun, thank you for this bit of information. It may explain some of the differences between Tsang Wai Bok’s lineage in Vietnam and other lineages.
(Have you heard of 3 small gates/questions AND three large gates/questions? I suspect that the 3 large gates practiced in Vietnam is either the other half of modern Sek See or of 3 small gates. In any case for all that may be interested, the PM school in Holland’s opening movement of “3 gates” is identical to our “3 large gates” and I have visited 10 PM schools and seen noone else do this. From salute the person makes a kind of spiral/circle with arms and strikes with sides of hands in downwards motion once to the West and once to the East, as right foot crosses left going towards West,and then right foot shoots out into a kind of sideways cat stance, then same to East. )
You seem to have many of the keys I lack in explaining, among other things the difference between how CLC taught in KuangZhou, in Canton and Hong Kong respectively.
I have one question though. If I understand you correctly, You seem to say that Jik Bo Biu Jee was added in his later years in Hong Kong. You say “it was favoured” over older begger form.
I can say with a certain degree of confidence that in our lineage of Tsang Wai Bok, Jik Bo is in fact called “Ly Kow pui Toui Kinh” or preperatory power generation exercice for 9 step push" (sorry I must translate from sino vietnamese to French to English). It is one of 3 preperatory exercices corresponding to power generation of advanced (original) forms.
When I discovered other PM schools, I found that they instead called it Jik Po, the first form learnt, but did not make (the obvious to me) connection with 9 step push, but said it was simply a stand alone basic form.
If you could, could you confirm that:
- Jik Bo did exist before CLC moved permanently to HK.
- That it indeed has NOTHING to do with Sek See form (although maybe some like to teach it as beginner form and some like us teach it latter on)
Also:
- Does your lineage have other “Jik Bo” type preperatory exercices?
Please flame me if I am wrong, FT and others, but my weak understanding of YKM is that they also incorporate this notion of preperatory exercice in Jik Po and call it something more complicated than simply Jik Po and they have other preperatory exercices as well.
Anyways thank you for the insight.
Kei Lun, may I be so forward as to ask what your lineage is?
EAZ