asked and answered
Originally posted by Sui
[B]hi yummy,incedently what staff do you practice?b/c the fundamentals of that staff is more suited to hung gar and not li-ga.
>>>>> My first post should tell you which staff patterns I do. Fishing Pole (very long), and the sapling staff that is fat at one end, thin at the other (maybe 7 feet?) and a basic one with a short (shoulder height) staff. The short and medium are similar to the YKM staff to a large extent, perhaps FT will chime in with his 2 bits. <grin>
for instance the li-ga staff only makes one sound.how many sounds does your staff make?[hyong]
>>>>> Sorry, I can’t answer that question. As a “fencing” style it jabs and it arcs, and you use the recoil tension. That should tell you something.
now its intresting that the point you make is"the man"not the weapon[true as it seems]but to work inwards would rely on the feet which is more art than the man.
>>>>> So we come back to the question of the Man versus the Art? Or did I miss your point properly? It is the art that beats the weapon/man versus the Man? I put my money on the Man, not the art. But, the art makes the Man.
i disagree. weapons cannot defeat other weapons and men cannot defeat men,also art cannot defeat art.so where does that leave us?
>>>>> That’s a question for another time, perhaps over some Bo li?.
how different in your opinion are the shorter staffs?
>>>>> Good question, it made me think. I thought rather different at first, but its all really the same, only shorter staffs change ends quicker, thus you can employ more of that technique, but essentially, all staff techniques can be applied across all lengths, but to much greater or lesser effectiveness. It comes down to the “fencing” style versus the end over end and slashing style, at least for me.
your si-fu sounds a smart man,however would it be correct to say you must epathise on how to be a well connected family for you to have good staff?
>>>>>>> Interesting. But, you lose me too easily. All this talk of staffs, it hard to tell where the seriousness ends and the jokes begin… <grin>
[/B]
Now, perhaps, you’ll tell me, do you prefer a solid or flexible staff - what physical characteristis make a li gar gunn?
Cloud
I would say the man is the weapon, and a tool is just an extension (be it blade, staff or gun), that adds options. I suggest the Man must learn to make the tool and extension of himself to use it properly.