Interview Shi Ming
Interview Shi Ming
Interview Shi Ming
Shi Ming is known as one of China’s preeminent taiji masters. He is a strict disciplinarian of
the old school, inspiring his students to practice long hours in the park under all conditions,
including the sub-zero temperatures of winter. He holds himself to the same standards.
During the disturbances in 1989 in Beijing, bus service was interrupted for weeks, but Shi
Ming rose early to walk 2 ½ hours across town to where he teaches his students every day.
Like the legendary taiji teachers of the past, Shi Ming’s skill in hand-pushing borders on the
magical. It gives peerless authority to his ideas on taiji. Opponents are discharged in the air
with a flick of the wrist or bounced backward 20 feet with the turn of the waist. And,
according to taiji standards, no force is used. Each Sunday Shi Ming gives hand-pushing
demonstrations in the park to convince onlookers that taiji is profound practice, not merely a
poetic dance form, which it has become so often in China.
According to Shi Ming, taiji is the application of the principle jing zhi dong, stillness controls
movement, or quiet dominates activity. Stillness can dominate over movement because it is
egoless and non-resistant. In taiji thinking, wherever there is a self, there is a weakness, a
place of stagnancy. The key to hand-pushing then is to completely eliminate these
weaknesses by forgetting the self.
In the following interview, Shi Ming discusses his taiji system of training and how taiji
interfaces with Chinese culture. The basis of his teaching, he says, is standing meditation and
tanhaizhuang. Tanhaizhuang (tanhai for short) is a rarely seen exercise of the spine that
rigorously opens and separates the vertebrae in continuous cyclic undulations. Suffice to say
it is very powerful.
Our conversation begins with Shi Ming’s opinion on Western approaches to exercise.
Understandably, compared to the subtle sophistication of Chinese exercise, Western exercise
seems coarse and mechanistic. A case could be made that the attitudes of Americans toward
the body and exercise in the 90’s are analogous to their attitude to diet in the 50’s. Today, the
“food group” mentality of the past is thoroughly discredited – it’s seen as a prime cause of
disease. Similarly, in 20 or 30 years, the vogue in America to treat the body as machine
calibrated according to quasi-scientific formulae may appear, as it does to many Chinese, a
curious lapse of common sense.
The Western approach to exercise seeks to
increase overall physical capacity and has various specific goals such as quickening the
heartbeat, increasing air intake, etc. I’m not in favour of this approach. Man’s physical nature
results from laws which should be observed. Harmony is the most important of these. The
heart and every other part of the body is interconnected. To focus on one part causes
imbalance in the rest of the body. I don’t think this is very good.
The Chinese method of exercise is xingming shuangxin, dual cultivation of life energies and
self-nature, a comprehensive approach to the human organism. From this view, to limit
exercise to one area is a mistake. Jogging is a good example. Pounding on the ground injures
the knees and stresses the skeletal structure. Whatever advantages there may be are lost to
injury. Exercise which merely seeks to increase physical strength is based on faulty premises.
It’s like running an engine at high RPM. Breakdown is assured. This approach violates the
car’s nature. We have a saying: “There is nothing in this world that does not have a self-
nature.” How long you use things depends on your respect for this nature. Use it up and it’s
exhausted.
Our body cells replicate 4 to 5 times in their normal life-span. After that, they’re done for. So
we can imagine a cell, if it could decide, would like to space its replication over a longer time
span, like once every 10 years they may then live 50 years. If replication came every 30
years, its life increases to 150 years. What’s important here is the idea that by lengthening the
periods of sexual inactivity, the life-span increases. The aging process is countered by not
exhausting the organism. These ideas are not found in Western approaches to exercise.
Even though we talk about something as tiny as a cell, we can nevertheless say that the cell is
dependent on thinking and feeling. Someone has an illness, but the doctors don’t tell him, and
he keeps living for a long time. But if they mention the word “cancer” or “AIDS”, the patient
dies within weeks. Fear kills more quickly than disease. My wife once had a cancerous
tumour, but she never gave in to fear or stress. After 17 years, she’s fine; nothing happened. I
told her, don’t concentrate on it. Continue to exercise and take care of yourself. Don’t let it
upset the pattern of your life. All phenomena that arise must disappear.
When people see you demonstrating hand-pushing, and your opponents are repelled twenty
feet as if yanked from behind by a rope, they have no idea what’s going on.
They think it’s fake. They don’t the principle underlying hand-pushing. We say that the
dantian has no fixed place (wudingwei). You can place it outside your body. If you and I are
doing hand-pushing, I put my dantian behind you. That makes me insubstantial. When you
attack, I’m soft and empty. You can never beat me. My mind, which is substantial, is behind
you. That makes me empty and your attack will never succeed.
When you teach taiji, you always talk about taiji jin as the
critical element in hand-pushing. What do you mean by
taiji jin?
Though we say jin, internal force, it’s better to
talk about a field. We can also say yinian li, the power of the mind, which means the power
derived from the mind harmonizing with the body. This is also taiji jin.
Another way of talking about it is the body is soft and the thought is hard. Thought must be
put outside the body. Then softness and hardness mutually correspond. This is taiji jin.
Jin is not something you have after so many years of practice, like a commodity you can
show. People talk about qi like this. That’s not it.
Putting the mind in the dantian is one means of cultivating this jin. With the mind in the
dantian, the qi radiates outward, like waves on a pond. This produces power. If you catch a
cold, you put your mind in the dantian and it gets real hot, and qi courses through the body.
Soon the cold’s gone. This is really beautiful. Most people have heard of the principle yishou
dantian, put your mind in your dantian. Few have heard of qisan dantian, radiate qi from the
dantian.
So only through qisan dantian can the qi move throughout the body and the lesser and greater
heavenly circulations be accomplished.
According to what you say, taiji jin is not really qi. But
isn’t the object of practicing standing meditation or the
form to develop high levels of qi?
No. You aim to develop a field, a surface of qi. If the qi is too high or too concentrated, then
there’s an obstruction. If qi reaches an extreme, there must be a reversal. Just as when jing,
sexual feeling, becomes extremely strong, there will be a release. If there is no release, there
are consequences, like stagnancy, mental problems, etc. You don’t want more and more qi.
You want qi to radiate throughout the body.
Look at how jing works. When jing is full, it releases naturally. If it doesn’t, you feel very
uncomfortable. Strictly speaking, there is no monk who is truly chaste, that is, without
orgasm. He has involuntary emissions. This is a natural phenomenon. The important point is
not to go to an extreme in emitting jing, in having orgasms. You want to bring harmony to
your body and extend that to the universe.
For most people, taiji is just a dance-like form. But now they hear it’s not the form but qi
that’s essential. But what you seem to say is it’s not the form or qi, but something beyond
these.
What is it we call qi? Qi is just the movement of yang, of the substantial, leading to stillness,
to cessation. This continuum of movement and stillness is qi. People can’t figure out what qi
is. Qi isn’t air. It’s what manifests from the movement of yin and yang. The movement
creates a field. This is qi. Movement alone isn’t qi; stillness alone isn’t qi. It’s the harmonious
changes we call qi.
There are many family traditions in taiji and many individual styles among these. How can
one know if a certain taiji form is worth spending the years to learn?
You know the quality of the form by seeing the teacher’s hand-pushing. Does he listen to taiji
jin? Does he demonstrate taiji principles? Hand-pushing is the final arbitrator of taiji. You
can tell me, “I’ll live to a great old age,” but I’ll have to wait a long time to see if your right.
However, hand-pushing demonstrates a relationship and a process right now. You’re hard,
I’m soft. If I’m truly soft, you can’t defeat me. We can reach a real conclusion from this.
I’m not talking about ego-games or personal victories. Taiji leads to harmony and peace, not
conflict and resistance. I’m totally opposed to martial arts competitions whose result too often
is self-aggrandisement. Conflict and resistance are not productive in the long run. Look at
Muhammed Ali – a world champion with all the glory. Now look at his life. This is a sad
example of what a life of resistance can produce. This kind of athleticism is a slaughter of the
body.
Taiji is totally different. Taiji relies on Chinese philosophy to coordinate inner and outer in
order to produce great harmony. I teach taiji boxing (quan) so you can understand taiji
philosophy and principles. Mastering these principles allows you to do many other things:
cure people’s illness, paint, cook great cuisine, study the Book of Changes, etc.
I can accept you calling me a taiji boxer or taiji practitioner, but not a taiji specialist. Why?
Taiji covers a vast territory. It includes the great traditions of Chinese culture and philosophy.
I can’t pretend to any expertise as a taiji specialist in this vast realm.