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Why I want to teach Tai Chi |
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Article by Yelena Gul – Brighton
Do you know that when we are teaching others we are learning much more ourselves? I always knew that and experienced it many times in my life. However, now I feel more then ever that this is true.
I started learning Tai Chi from Master Chin Min at the Brighton Centre in 1993and fell in love with this peaceful, graceful activity that also makes your muscles stronger and creates the energy that flows through every part of your body. I became a very enthusiastic and diligent student, never missing a lesson at the Centre and learnt many other routines besides the Yang Style from many wonderful instructors. I have attended all lessons at the end of each term at the Central park where I had revision sessions for many years. I felt rather confident in my knowledge of some routines and was able practicing them by myself during my holidays. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 11 September 2008 )
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Couples in the College - Lena and Edward Yong |
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I had never envisaged taking up Tai Chi. I’d always assumed that it was an exotic Chinese art form for “older people”!
However, seven years ago our son died in an accident while travelling overseas – something else I, or no other parent, wants to envisage, let alone experience. As we struggled to get through each new day without him, family and friends cocooned us with love and support. It was at this time that my sister, who had previously done Tai Chi with Master Eng Chor, encouraged Edward to try a class. |
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 15 March 2008 )
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Couples in the College - Yvonne and Noel Schmidt |
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Yvonne started Tai Chi in 1993 with Jean and Graham at the Waverley centre – her aim being to find a little balance in life, after running a very busy take-away shop. In early 1994, she moved to the new Glen Iris Saturday (the forerunner of the Ashburton class) morning class that had just started up in Toorak Rd.
There she met Noel, who was also a founding member of this new Saturday morning class, and who was looking for a mix of some gentler exercise (after doing all the standard energetic physical sports when younger and was now starting to feel the effect of some injuries) and his desire to further explore some Eastern philosophies. However, for the next two years, they both lived in their own separate work and Tai Chi worlds. |
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 23 August 2008 )
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Couples in the College - Nola Williams and Norm Morcom |
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Nola’s been practicing Tai Chi for about 14 years and Norm for about 4. We met in 2003 on an expedition to Svalbard which is about as close as you can get to the North Pole and still be on land. While there we discovered we lived less than a kilometre apart in Mount Waverley. (All was very proper during the trip – we didn’t even hold hands!)
When Nola mentioned she practiced Tai Chi, Norm said he had just purchased a video (not from Celestial) to learn something about it, but was finding it difficult. He had been having trouble with back pain and a frozen shoulder and had unsuccessfully tried Yoga and Pilates. |
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 15 March 2008 )
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Time for aCHIevement - Tony Hamilton |
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 aCHIevement My Tai Chi journey began with a journey. Approaching the Thailand border by car through the rolling hills of northern Malaysia, I was also approaching the limits of my persistence and patience. Ten days travelling through Asia with a full business schedule and a suffering stomach taking its toll. Sensing my flagging spirits, my kindly host initiated a lengthy discussion about the benefits of Tai Chi for my stress and health, albeit in broken English. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 15 February 2008 )
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Remembering Tai Chi - Practical Tips - Suzette Hosken |
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Now that many of us are taking classes with Master Yan Gen Lai as well as our regular classes, it might be timely to think about how we learn. We all learn at different speeds and in different ways, so what works for you? Do you have trouble remembering your tai chi?
Take a moment to go back to the basics and consider some of the ideas below to help you make the most of this great learning opportunity. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 20 October 2008 )
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Cultural Tour 2007 Reflections - Karen Dupleix |
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 Tour Reflections 2007 Our Tai Chi trip was so much more than the ESP that our guide in Seoul, Chris, says that travel is all about : Eating, Shopping and Photos and in our case Tai Chi .The members of the trip who did Tai Chi had extra early starts most days so we could fit in an hour's practice before our eating and touring started. |
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 17 February 2008 )
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Tai Chi: A Long but Interesting Journey |
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I have been interested in eastern arts and philosophy as long as I can remember. More than twenty years ago my wife pointed out a Tai Chi course in the local newspaper. Neither of us knew anything about Tai Chi at the time. It was not as well known then as it is now. She suggested I give it a go and I wisely followed her advice. I have practiced Tai Chi (with a few breaks) ever since. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 15 February 2008 )
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Tai Chi as a Way of Life |
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The subtle virtue of the universe is wholeness, It regards all things as equal.
- Lao Tzu
It all started 18 years ago when I found a leaflet in my mailbox, offering tai chi classes in Box Hill. As an ex-yoga practitioner from former Yugoslavia, I was looking for something that would give me more than just a physical exercise. One cool November evening, unknowingly, my search ended - I discovered Tai Chi, the ultimate form of exercise that satisfies the whole being. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 04 November 2008 )
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