Tai Chi Sword
The Tai Chi Sword art prominent use is now through sport competition.
There are several weapons employed in Tai Chi Chuan. Students may use a Chang, or spear; sometimes, staffs are
preferred instead. Another choice is the Tao, which is a large one edged broad sword, much like a cutlass or a
Saracen scimitar. And there is the Chien, a straight, double edged sword. Of the three, many Tai Chi practitioners
consider the Tai Chi Sword as the deadliest weapon. It’s lightweight enough to afford speed and quick flourishes;
the long blade gives the user maximum reach without sacrificing its lethality and the flexibility of its blade can
be very misleading to an opponent.
Tai Chi Sword Art, or the Wushu, is often jealously guarded in Tai Chi history. Masters may teach students the
Tao or the Chang, but rarely would they teach Chien. It is because the strongest combat element of the Tai Chi art
lies in this sword-art form. Today however, most teachers allow students to begin learning the Tai Chi Sword after
learning the basic Tai Chi forms. It is because the decreasing effectiveness of this art. But, as the masters tend
to argue, there are times when the need to defend arises, and there’s nothing aside from things normally available
in any situation such as umbrellas and walking sticks. They point that should that time comes, knowledge in Tai Chi
Sword forms could be an immense help. The concept of Tai Chi Sword Art is the study of the forms and its
application, and not of the weapon itself.
The Tai Chi Sword Art’s prominent use is now through sport competition, much to the consternation of
traditionalists. They have complained the fact that the Tai Chi Sword Art has become more flamboyant than being
functional, the graceful and flowing manner had instead degraded into more like a dance than a maneuver,
emphasizing more on gracefulness than of martial energy. The Tai Chi Sword form has many subtle techniques that
aren’t employed in tournaments since pretty wrist movement scores higher with the judges than the subtle flicks of
the wrist. This effect, divergent sword-using sects have formed: those who do Tai Chi Sword Art as martial arts,
those who do it as a dance, and those who do Tai Chi Sword Art as both.
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