“Music in the soul can be heard by the universe.”
Bear Staff Form
Check out this bear performing a staff form.
I like his wrist flexibility and posture.
Not sure what style it’s practising. Probably some ancient Bear Style form.
Hmm, I must go outside and practice my form – up to where he bites the staff.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBB0F7naojM&feature=player_embedded#![/youtube]
Footnote: Discovered this clip on Al Simon’s ‘The Tai Chi and Qigong Blog’.
Working With Teenagers
Last night’s presentation (see previous post) to a junior football team went very well.
Twenty 15-19 year olds attended and they were not sure what was going to happen. Their coach said it would be special and to ‘watch out for the Sabre’.
I was a little apprehensive about the reception I would receive as it was my first presentation in a football environment. And Tai Chi can appear weird and silly in a macho culture.
But my concerns evaporated quickly as the boys got right into the spirit of what was offered by having a go to a very different approach to achieving their best.
Over the years, working with teenagers, regardless of the environment, I find the same themes keep coming up.
If you want to engage them in an activity you need to;
- make it fun
- challenge them
- talk their language
- make it relevant
- keep things moving
- encourage and praise them often
I finished the presentation with some weapons demonstrations to reinforce the difference between Yin and Yang energy. I did a short sword form, staff form and fans. They enjoyed the snapping fans demonstration.
It’s great fun working with teenagers.
And maybe why I enjoy it so much is because ‘I’m just a big kid too’.
Tai Chi & Aussie Football
This evening I will be delivering a presentation to about thirty 15-19 year old footballers.
The theme is Best Performance – a Tai Chi perspective.
I know from experience that if I present it in the traditional way I will lose the audience in the first few seconds.
Teenagers need excitement, movement, fun to keep their attention otherwise they get bored quickly.
I intend to ramp up the excitement and get them focused by using humour demonstrations and challenges. I’ll bring in the teaching points at the end of the fun stuff.
The key to the success of the presentation will be the language I use in relation to Tai Chi.
I’ll need to keep it simple and relevant to their football skills. Having an esoteric approach will only bore them.
Now excuse me while I go and practice my sabre form for the demonstration this evening.
And iron my Tai Chi shirt.
It’s a bit wrinkled. Just like me.
Every Little Bit Helps
It’s difficult fitting in all my Tai Chi and Chi Kung training sessions each week.
I don’t train at a set time each day because of the nature of running a facilitation business. I can be working any day of the week, morning, afternoons or during the evenings.
So I have to fit my training in around my work.
While taking out the rubbish bin the other day I discovered a way of fitting in extra training time.
I ducked into my garage and spent a few seconds training a specific skill on the punching bag.
I now do this at least once a day whenever I step outside my backdoor.
It’s only a light workout lasting a few seconds but every little bit helps.
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