Autobiography
Biography introduction
1. Studying Taijiquan as a young boy (Shanghai, 1949-1965)
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Dr. Wu BaoYuan
1.3 Professor Yao Huanzhi
1.4 Tian ChaoLing
1.5 Afterword
2. How the Cultural Revolution made me a Taijiquan teacher
2.1 Escape from XinJiang (Xianjiang, Autumn 1966)
2.2 Illness and recovery (Shanghai, Spring 1967)
2.3 Teaching in FuXing park (Shanghai, 1967-1972)
3. During the Cultural Revolution (Xinjiang, 1972-..)
3.1 Return to Xinjiang
3.2 Flight from prosecution
3.3 In hiding
3.4 Cleared of all charges
3.5 To Heaven Mountain
3.6 Away from Heaven Mountain
3.7 A sad homecoming
3.8 Into the desert
4. Article: How I slowly rediscovered Buqi
1.2 Dr. Wu BaoYuan, my first Taijiquan teacher
Dr. Wu was one of the early students of Professor Yao. They met at ZhengDan
University, where Dr. Wu studied medicine, and Professor Yao read Classical Chinese and English.
Every Sunday afternoon Dr. Wu and his students practised Taijiquan in the garden of
his mother-in-law's house. The garden was big enough to practise at leisure with about a dozen students -
before the revolution the family was quite rich and had a garden of more than 200 square meters.
Dr. Wu taught me the standing postures such as the basic standing position, An,
Bai.He Lian Chi (White crane spreads its wings) and Ti Shou Shang Shi (Lift the hand). He taught me the
basic Yang style form and pushing hands. I still practise what I learnt from him.
Dr. Wu was not tall, at just 1.69 metres, but he was very strong with piercing eyes.
During pushing hands he often told me to run very quickly towards him in order to push him. When I was just
in front of him, he would lift his arm, or move his foot, and I would feel a pushing force and fall
backwards, or a pulling force and be pulled forwards to just in front of the wall. He would use different
Taijiquan postures during pushing hands: he would name the one he was going to use, and then do it with one
of his students, who would invariably be thrown aside. Some of his students were much taller than him - he
looked like a child next to them - but he would control them completely. Dr. Wu would also use Taiji forces
to heal his patients.
source: www.shenhongxun.com
Copyright © Buqi Institute International 01 November 2007
Copyright © ShenBUQI® International 08 August
2014