Bob's Blog

This Blog will follow my adventures - well holidays really. Hopefully you will want to tell me what you enjoyed in the countries I have visited and maybe recommend places to go.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Sung and the close embrace

Sung and the close embrace in Argentine Tango

Today my tai chi group talked about SUNG. Sung is pronounced more "soong" and has nothing to do with singing! It is about being totally relaxed while being alert. In tai chi and other martial arts, practitioners strive for this state. Critics point out that competitions in the martial arts, deflect people away from achieving this desired state of mind and body.

 "the vital quality of sung is lost by students who egotistically strive to ‘look good’ 
during their performance to the detriment of their energy flow."

This could equally apply to dancing tango! What is important, is not what onlookers see, but what partners feel when they dance truly together.
In the close embrace the follower should be striving for sung. She could be in the perfect physical position (maybe placed there by a teacher) and comfortable and confident she has got it right. However if she is not in the right mental state then a meaningful connection may not be achieved.
Of course, if the lead is not cherishing his partner and making her feel wanted and protected, then sung will be impossible. Equally if the follower is thinking, "I don't like being close to this man" or " when is he going to lead me into fancy steps" the connection will not be there. Believe me, leaders can sense their followers mental state as well as their physical presence, and I am sure the reverse is also true. 
Sung is an enhanced state of mind and body, it is NOT the follower switching off her brain!
Are these thoughts useful in achieving connection?

The full article on Sung, from which I quote, is on my blog
www.treboryarrum.blogspot.co.uk



Sung

Traditional Taijiquan and Qigong Society

The amazing power of sung in Taijiquan and Qigong.

Those who study the authentic methods of Taijiquan and Qigong with perseverance will experience amazing benefits in health and well being which cannot be clearly defined or explained. The ancient Chinese civilisation used the word sung which is a necessary pre-requisite before such benefits may be obtained. Only then can one experience and express the wonderful feeling of restful joy in the heart at every moment.

Sung is usually translated from Chinese to mean deep relaxation, but such a weak interpretation is woefully inadequate as the Real experience is far more profound. Students of the Esoteric and Martial Arts can travel along the road to perfection only if, from the very beginning of their training, they make their achievement of sung their paramount priority. Technical detail and refinement of each set exercise will improve gradually and naturally ‘when the student is ready’, but each stage of the training, the highest degree of sung is necessary to experience the union of mind and body taught by the Masters. Unfortunately, modern competitions have done much to undermine the essential quality of the Arts, were competitors are marked on their exaggerated and ‘flowery’ movements, which may nevertheless be martially impotent. In much the same way, the vital quality of sung is lost by students who egotistically strive to ‘look good’ during their performance to the detriment of their energy flow.

The great Masters of Taijiquan, such as 85year old Fu Zhongwen, heir to the Yang family tradition, with whom I studied in China, display the outward quality of sung at all times. Transmission of the arts cannot be taught physically but rather is felt as an awesome but loose power, which distinguishes the Real from the false teachers. However such great Masters may not score so highly in superficial competitions before less discerning judges. Fu’s teacher, Grandmaster Yang Chen Fu, used to say to his students, ‘Relax, relax and then relax again’; in order that not only the muscles, tendons and ligaments achieve the supreme conditioning of sung, but also the bone marrow, in the very depths of our essential nature. Sung cannot be explained in rational terms, but the following verse may help a little to unlock the mystery in body, mind and spirit.

Sung in the Body.
When we free ourselves from fixed rigidity, we have Sung in our posture.
Then stiff strength, brute force and aggression disappear from our movements
And give way before the gentle, relaxed softness of Sung.
We become moderate flexible and open in all our activities,
Knowing when to yield and accept the will of Providence.
And so our turbulent emotions and selfish desires melt away
Before the joyful inner power of Sung which holds all opposite forces in balance.


Sung in the Mind
Sung frees our mind from selfish conditioning and binding systems,
And enables us to give and forgive in equal measures,
So that we are free to become kind, gentle and tolerant.
Sung enables us to do our duty without being duty bound,
And allows us to practice a discriminating morality without piety
Sung gives us a detachment from our possessions and restrains our anger.
This freedom from worry and discord is the purest form of healing.

Spiritual Sung
Sung is found when we enter ourselves in order to be filled.
By the inner presence which lets go our fears and restores our wholeness
To enter into communion with the Tso at the highest level.
Only then are we able to express the unique Love Peace and Truth
Which leads to purity of Being in the here and now, and the realisation
Of the immortal ‘I’ which cannot be labelled in the mysteries of the Void.
Sung is the unlimited power and glory of God personified in one such as the Christ
So that you and I can find it in infinite measure within ourselves.
And then you will know that Sung is Love, and that you are Sung.


Written by Tony Henrys and transcribed by John Gent. February 1992.