ABOUT
THE WING CHUN CHI SAU (STICKY HANDS)
Chi
Sau (or Sticky hands) is so tightly linked to Wing Chun (Ving Tsun) that
it could be said that without Chi Sao there would be no Wing Chun, and
without Wing Chun there would be no Chi sau. Chi sau, much like the Mook
Yun Jong is very much apart of Wing Chun's signature.
Chi sao has intrigued martial
artists the world over. Chi sau (sticky hands) offers the Ving Tsun practitioner
a constructive laboratory to understand and experiment with Wing Chun
theories, principles and techniques found in the three empty hand forms
in a dynamic laboratory, while developing sensitivity without going into
full combat.
In the beginning, chi sao is
very structured so that a student learns both the proper mechanics of
chi sao and to see the basic principles of Ving Tsun in use. At the most
advanced stages of chi sau, a Wing Chun practitioner is free to explore
their own understanding of the Ving Tsun principles in a 'free-style'
unscripted practice. This level would include various forms of hand and
leg trapping, kicking, even takedowns.
The
Canadian Wing Chun (Ving Tsun) Fellowship believes that throughout chi
sau practice, it is kept friendly and in partnership, with the level of
training agreed to by the two practitioners. Chi sao is about learning
Wing Chun concepts by experience, not about beating partners.
At the Canadian Wing Chun (Ving
Tsun) Fellowship, we stress relaxation, softness and sensitivity during
lok sau (rolling hands). One critical component being taught in chi sau
is sensitivity. Without sensitivity, chi sau would be nothing more than
a form of wrestling. Wing Chun is about absorbing and redirecting incoming
energy (force) not meeting force with force. Without sensitivity, a Ving
Tsun practitioner would not be able to 'read' the incoming force and redirect
it efficiently, and fluidly.
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