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This Lesson Contains:
Movement # 83 – Raise Hands
This is the third repetition of Raise Hands. In the previous two, the opponent attacked with his left hand. Here, the attack is with the right. I neutralize the strike to my right with the left hand, and slap the opponent’s face with my right.
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Yoshi starts his attack with his right fist to my center. I start to empty and retreat. Sink the
weight into the right leg and rollup onto the left toe. The torso is starting
to turn to the right slightly. I have broken the left foot root so I can
retreat. The arms
start to relax and close toward the front of the body, following the openness
of Slanting Flying. Focus on
the energy returning to the center. Note: Sinking
into the right foot and lifting the rear foot allow me to jump backwards if
need be. Test this yourself. Stand in Right Foot Bow Stance. Now jump
backward, keeping the right foot forward. Notice how you have to lift the
rear foot in order to replace it backward. The further you want to jump, the
deeper you have to sink into the right foot. |
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I empty my body, join with the punch, stick, and lead it to the right. Put the
left foot down with the toe facing halfway between north and west. Shift the
weight onto the left foot. Pull in the right foot onto the toe. The torso
faces slightly to the right of north. You are in Ding Bow Stance on right toe. The left
hand circles up and ends at the left side of the center of the belly. The palm
faces to the right. It attaches to Yoshi’s wrist. The right hand is still
relaxed by the right side of the shoulder. Focus on
the left palm for joining. |
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I slap Yoshi’s face. Step
down the right foot onto Ding Bow on heel. The toe faces slightly to the
right of north. This is a kick to the opponent’s foot or lower leg. The torso
also faces the same direction. The right
palm fills with energy and straightens a bit, staying at shoulder level. You
are doing Lieh Jing. The two palms are pressing towards each other. The left
palm is pressing to the right to stick with the opponent’s wrist and the
right palm is pressing to the left in order to slap. A well - balanced
movement. Focus on
the two palms pressing inward. |