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Glossary›Taiji

Glossary

Taiji

Taiji (Tai Chi) is a Chinese internal martial art and moving meditation practice rooted in Daoist philosophy, characterized by slow, flowing movements that cultivate qi (vital energy) and balance opposing forces.

What is Taiji?

Taiji (太極, often romanized as Tai Chi or T’ai Chi Ch’uan) is a Chinese internal martial art characterized by slow, deliberate movements performed in continuous flowing sequences called forms. Rooted in Daoist philosophy and traditional Chinese medicine, Taiji integrates physical postures, breath control, and meditative awareness to cultivate qi (vital energy), develop martial skill, and harmonize the body’s yin and yang energies. While originally developed as a combat system emphasizing leverage, timing, and internal power over brute strength, Taiji is now practiced worldwide primarily for health cultivation, stress reduction, and moving meditation.

The term “Taiji” refers to the cosmological concept of the Supreme Ultimate—the dynamic interplay of complementary opposites (yin and yang) that underlies all existence in Chinese philosophy. This philosophical foundation distinguishes Taiji from external martial arts, emphasizing relaxation (song), sinking weight, spiraling energy (chan si jin), and the principle of “overcoming hardness with softness.”

Origins & Lineage

The historical origins of Taiji remain subject to scholarly debate. Traditional accounts credit Zhang Sanfeng, a semi-legendary Daoist monk variously dated to the 12th–15th centuries, with creating Taiji after observing a fight between a snake and a crane. However, contemporary martial arts historians generally trace verifiable Taiji lineages to Chen Wangting (1580–1660), a retired military officer in Chenjiagou village, Henan province, who synthesized martial techniques with Daoist breathing exercises and traditional Chinese medicine principles.

The Chen family style remained localized until the 19th century, when Yang Luchan (1799–1872) studied with the Chen family and subsequently developed what became known as Yang style Taiji. Yang’s teachings in Beijing attracted aristocratic and scholarly students, leading to Taiji’s spread beyond its village origins. From Yang style emerged several major branches: Wu/Hao style (founded by Wu Yuxiang, 1812–1880), Wu style (founded by Wu Quanyou, 1834–1902, and systematized by his son Wu Jianquan, 1870–1942), and Sun style (founded by Sun Lutang, 1861–1932, who integrated Taiji with xingyiquan and baguazhang).

In the mid-20th century, the Chinese government standardized simplified forms—most notably the 24-form Yang style routine created in 1956—to promote Taiji as public health exercise, removing many martial applications. These standardized forms accelerated Taiji’s global dissemination but created tension between traditional martial lineages and health-focused modern approaches.

How It’s Practiced

Taiji practice centers on learning and performing choreographed movement sequences (taolu or forms) ranging from short 24-movement routines to traditional long forms exceeding 100 postures. Practitioners move through stances like Grasp the Bird’s Tail, White Crane Spreads Wings, and Single Whip with continuous weight shifts, maintaining upright posture, bent knees, and relaxed shoulders. The aesthetic is slow and flowing, though Chen style retains explosive movements (fa jin) demonstrating the art’s martial origins.

Key principles guide practice: maintaining a “suspended” head as if pulled by a string, sinking qi to the dantian (lower abdomen), distinguishing “full” and “empty” in weight distribution, and moving from the waist as the body’s central axis. Breath coordination typically follows natural patterns rather than prescribed counts, with advanced practitioners cultivating reverse abdominal breathing.

Beyond solo forms, traditional training includes push hands (tui shou)—two-person sensitivity drills exploring yielding, listening, and redirecting force—weapons forms (sword, saber, staff, spear), and standing meditation (zhan zhuang). Serious martial study incorporates applications (san shou), teaching how form movements function as strikes, locks, and throws.

Taiji Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter Taiji through diverse contexts: park classes in Chinese communities, health-focused programs at senior centers and hospitals, martial arts schools emphasizing combat applications, and conscious movement workshops at retreat centers. Medical research has examined Taiji’s effects on balance, fall prevention in elderly populations, cardiovascular health, and chronic pain management, lending scientific credibility to traditional health claims.

The global Taiji community remains divided between those prioritizing martial efficacy and those focusing on wellness and meditation. Competition forms emphasizing aesthetic performance coexist with traditional lineage training. Online instruction has expanded access, though the importance of hands-on correction from qualified teachers remains emphasized in serious study.

Major annual gatherings include lineage-specific workshops, international push hands competitions, and interdisciplinary conferences exploring Taiji through lenses of somatics, neuroscience, and contemplative practice.

Common Misconceptions

Taiji is not merely slow-motion exercise for elderly people, though modified forms serve that population well. Traditional Taiji is a sophisticated martial art requiring years of dedicated practice to develop internal power and combat application skills. The slowness in training develops neuromuscular control, body awareness, and the ability to generate sudden explosive force—skills invisible to casual observers.

Taiji is not interchangeable with qigong, though they share principles. Qigong is a broader category of energy cultivation practices; Taiji is a specific martial art that incorporates qigong principles within its technical framework. Not all qigong involves martial applications or choreographed forms.

The health benefits, while real, are not mystical or guaranteed. Research supports modest improvements in balance, flexibility, and stress reduction with consistent practice, but Taiji is not a cure-all or substitute for medical treatment. The “qi” cultivated in practice can be understood through biomedical frameworks (proprioception, breathing mechanics, nervous system regulation) without requiring acceptance of traditional Chinese cosmology.

How to Begin

Prospective students should seek qualified instruction rather than learning solely from books or videos, as subtle postural details significantly impact practice quality. Look for teachers with clear lineage credentials, ideally 10+ years of personal practice, who can demonstrate martial applications even if health focus is primary. Many schools offer introductory workshops or trial classes.

Beginners typically start with simplified forms (24-form Yang style is most common) before progressing to traditional long forms. Expect 6–12 months of regular practice to memorize a basic form, and years to refine it. Supplementing class attendance with daily 15–20 minute solo practice accelerates progress.

Useful introductory resources include The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi by Peter Wayne for health-oriented context, and works by recognized masters like Yang Jwing-Ming or Chen Xiaowang for technical depth. The Tai Chi Classics—writings attributed to Wang Zongyue, Wu Yuxiang, and others—remain essential reading for serious students, available in multiple translations.

Related terms

qigongdaoismyin yangmartial artsmoving meditationnei gong
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