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Kinthissa's book offers a rare, and much needed, glimpse into a rigorous internal practice, a way of being aware of the body's inner landscape and the micro-movement that is the foundation of all movement. Through the pages of her book, Kinthissa guides the reader with patience and precision as she speaks about the most intimate and fundamental nature of the body, with the love and respect that comes from exhaustive involvement with its inner workings through meticulous observation.
We can follow step by step her thought processes as she tracks events and impressions throughout the daily-ness of her practice. Her writing is filled with beautifully articulate accounts of inner movement. Her use of image and metaphor gives elusive states an understandable materiality.
--Dance Research, the Journal of the Society for Dance Research, Vol.28, No.2, November 2010
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good journal describing her training in Chen Style Taiji,
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This review is from: Turning Silk: A Diary of Chen Taiji Practice, the Quan of Change (Paperback)
I totally enjoyed this book. As a Chen style taiji practitioner and one who was corrected many times by Grandmaster Chen Xiao Wang, I can related to her experiences. The few paragraphs interspersed throughout the chapters about the weather and environment are minor distractions -- it is a diary after all. The information about how she feels inside at each correction is well documented as I felt exactly as she had described. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to know what it is like to be corrected, regardless of whether you are coming from Yang style or Chen style. This is not a book about learning Chen style - simply a diary of her daily practice as the title implies. Well done, Kinthissa.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
centred,
By
This review is from: Turning Silk: A Diary of Chen Taiji Practice, the Quan of Change (Paperback)
review is from: Turning Silk: A Diary of Chen Taiji Practice, the Quan of Change (Paperback)
I bought this book in January and have loaned it to all my students in the hope that they could help with categorizing it. This has not happened: the best we could come with was that it was an inspired writing and a successful attempt to share the experience of living a centred life style based on the Chen style of tai chi. I have many books on Chen tai chi , all of them excellent. The older ones stress only the movement being written when Chen was new to the west, more recently they have begun to offer deeper insights and principles as students improve and require more. Kinthissa however seems to have taken us beyond form, knowledge and energy to the shared spirit of Chen tai chi. Something else I hardly dare say - the love and respect for the tai chi master and his teaching. Finally: this book works on all levels of training and I recommend it as such. (This is a copy of my original review to which I would like to add the following) When I bought this from Amazon other books were recommended -Chen: Living Taijiquan in the Classical Style by Jan Silberstorff (see my review) was one of those I also purchased. i have begun to recognise that these two books reflect and translate the subtle teaching of Chen Xiao Wang into Western thought. There is a twining of insight and concentration that leads the tai chi practitioner away from ingrained Western activity and thought toward a Tao centred view. Both authors do this by sharing how their living experience combined with Chen thought and practise has enabled them to arrive at a centred approach to daily living, though from different extremes. Kinthissa's book reflects the Lao Tsu, Ta Te Ching philosophy of the internal experience of Tao, Jan's the Confucian Tao experience of activity. One can almost see Master Chen listening, directing and following their Chi to their own centre, grinning like the Laughing Buddha. Great books - recommended. T Cleary translated The Buddhist I Ching - a perfect accompaniment to the above for anyone seeking a better understanding of the spirit, psychology and philosophy of the practical Tai Chi.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Strengths and Weaknesses,
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This review is from: Turning Silk: A Diary of Chen Taiji Practice, the Quan of Change (Paperback)
Kinthissa is Burmese and born and grew up in Rangoon in 1952 towards the end of the colonial era. However she has then spent most of the rest of her life in the West. She began her study with Gerda Geddes in the Yang style in the UK, who had a background in modern dance, and if we read between the lines her study of Yang style was heavily influenced by both an emphasis on "beautiful movement" and a therapeutic slant which was prevalent in the 1970s. While the practice of Yang style left her with a calm, fluid practice there were times towards when it felt that she was going through the motions, doing something which she knew was good for her and became somewhat of a chore. Thus throughout the book, there is an implicit critique of the Yang style as being somewhat empty, and missing the key internal Qi practice that Chen style has, which is really what Taichi is about, rather than the external movement. She even stopped practicing the Yang 108 form to concentrate on her Chen practice.
The strength of these descriptions is that it captures very well the frustration of many practitioners in the west who sign up with a teacher who emphasizes the form without the substance, and neglect the roots of Taichi in its martial aspect and try to overlay issues of therapy and other concerns on top of it. However sometimes she lets this slip into a critique of of Yang style itself, which does the Yang style a grave diservice. The strength of the book lies in her descriptions of the experience of learning Chen Taichi, Zhan Zhuang and Chansigong and being adjusted by CXW and her feelings on the inside as she is adjusted. Also of importance are her descriptions of how to open up the various meridiens and the long strenous practice and the internal change that is engendered through long periods of practice, spanning years and the movement from gross to subtle adjustments. The photos are also very helpful and are something that you do not see in other martial arts books, which are postures that are not perfect and highlight certain imbalances in the bodies structure. Most books show perfect posture, which are both unattainable for the beginner and do not illustrate what is going on internally. It is inispirational for any Taichi practitioner who is struggling along the path so see how one has gone before. If she had left it at this level I think the book would have been stronger for it, however the layout of the book is similar to the form of diary or a blog with individual passages with certain stream of consciousness topics on different days. There are long digressions into the changing of the seasons and her time in Lunigiana in Italy and quotations in Italian and German (Schoenberg), which feel highly foreign to the practice of Taichi which is a product of Chinese culture. And this is not a problem with the location so much as Kinthissa's treatment of it, for Liza Dalby succeeds admirably in the East Wind Melts the Ice in blending her experiences in California with her experiences in Japan. Kinthissa has a background in Asian art and philosophy and also is Asian herself as she states in her book. And she tries mightily to incorporate Chinese philosophy into her book also, with liberal sprinklings of Laozi and Zhuangzi. However, unlike Liza Dalby, one does not feel that she has lived and breathed and really understood the philosophy and the culture, it feels very much like she is an outsider looking in, and admiring the culture as one would admire a foreign work of art. Perhaps this is the difference between studying the culture at Vassar and the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, rather than living and breathing it living as a Geisha in Kyoto. Many of the translations she uses feel dated (Arthur Waley), and esoteric, and still coloured by some of the "New Age" baggage that may have been acquired when she started learning in the 1970s. One example is that she uses the word "daemonical" to translate the concept of Shen (or spirit). Perhaps this is also a fuction of her upbringing as asking a Burmese to explain Chinese culture is similar to asking a Rumanian, who spent most of her life in Latin America and studied Dickens at Unversity to explain English culture. However for all its flaws, the book should be read on its own terms and in many ways is a very beautiful book about a Taichi journey with many many valuable training tips buried in each section, for one who has the eye and patience to look.
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