Regarding the evolution of Wing Chun: is this term accurate?
I believe it is accurate. However, I don’t think it means what many who use it think it means. :eek:
Evolution is a blind process. Peahens, Puffins, Prairie Chickens, dinosaurs, and the many saber-toothed cats and like species of the Pleistocene, cases in point. Although many critters evolve, not all of these evolutionary wonders is actually an improvement over other species, even if in some narrow case, they are improvements over their predesessor species. Evolution is characterized and advanced by mutations and most mutations are weeded out.
For example, most animals can synthesize Vitamin C from glucose. Humans cannot, an evolutionary improvement brought about in our ancestors because there is something to be gained by eliminating the process in our cells, but it makes us dependent on a dietary source which contain the vitamin or we’ll slowly perish from scurvy.
Likewise, evolutionary movements in Wing Chun. Some slick marketing type decides to add in grappling techniques from outside, another perhaps sincere monkey modifies his stance, another learns an incomplete version and changes the art so radically, it cannot be recognized by proponents of the original. Or, elements of Hung Ga or other Kung Fu creep in to no purpose.
Many people learning Wing Chun have invested a lot of time in other martial arts or strength training. They may think, “Why should I give all that up? It’s always worked for me.” But if one clings to such baggage, progress in Wing Chun will come very slowly, if at all.
Wing Chun came in as a new style in '50s Hong Kong. Yip Man brought it to the limelight. The directness of Wing Chun was accepted very well in the Western world as well. If you follow the Yip Man ideas, then you are bound to end up with something of significance.
Wing Chun is open to interpretation. There are many versions of Wing Chun but the principles must be the same. Wing Chun has to be simple. I would be afraid without a lifetime’s study to add to it or delete from it. I am not qualified to do that. Those who add or delete from Wing Chun are only showing their ignorance.
The current generation of Wing Chun practitioners is not up to the previous standard yet. But they are slowly getting there. Yip Man taught many people. A lot of people spent lots of time with him. Some got some pretty good hands. Some memorized his pedagogical style and principles very well. There are however many differences in the students. But all should have the same principles. The principles must be the same. Elbows and knees—elbows and knees must be in and must work together. It must be simple. We owe it to posterity to try to pass on the true art.
Regards,