1 Product $340.00 Cart
Energy Arts
Home arrow About Us arrow Glossary
  • Free Newsletter!

    Get Bruce’s monthly articles in the ChiTalk newsletter delivered to your inbox! Sign up and receive Bruce’s FREE GIFT, 30-Day Longevity Breathing Program, downloadable now!



     

    Polls

    Would you be interested in a website or blog dedicated just to the art of Ba Gua and Circle Walking?
     
  • Glossary
    Ba Gua

    Also known as ba gua chang, ba gua zhang, pakua chang, ba gua jang. Eight trigram palm ba gua is one of China's three main internal martial arts. It is a Taoist practice based on the I Ching, which is simultaneously a longevity practice, a martial art, a healing modality, and a spiritual/meditation practice.


    Ba gua men
    A ba gua chang school that has the complete martial tradition of ba gua chang intact, usually from a lineage source.
    Ba ji chuan (pa chi ch'uan)
    An external/internal martial art of North China.
    Ba Mu Chang
    See Eight Mother Palms.
    Ba shr
    One of the forms of hsing-i, based on the Five Elements.
    Bai bu (pai pu)
    Toe out. The toe-out step of ba gua chang Circle-Walking, which allows a practitioner to step outside the circle.
    Bai shr (bai shi)
    The formal initiation ceremony that confers discipleship upon an individual in Chinese culture. Also known as a kowtow.
    Bando
    A martial art from Burma.
    Basic Power Training
    See Ji Ben Gung.
    Beng chuan (beng quan)
    Crushing Fist. One of the five basic techniques of hsing-i chuan.
    Bien hua (pien hua, bian hua)
    To change; changes. The nature of change itself. Basic to Taoism and the I Ching is that everything in the phenomenal universe is in the process of changing, except the Tao, which remains changeless. What occurs during the shift, how that change transpires, and the final result of the change are all aspects of bien hua. The term also applies to the shift experienced during Taoist alchemy between one level of energy or consciousness and another level, either higher or lower. Refers also to the way you change from one fighting technique to another technique in internal martial arts or from one healing intervention to another in chi gung tui na.
    Broadsword or knife (dao or tao)
    Both English terms are used interchangeably for the primary curved blade weapon used in chinese martial arts for fighting multiple opponents. This sword is relatively narrow at the bottom, widens in the top third of the blade, and again narrows down to a sharp point at the top. Either one or both sides of the blade may be sharpened.
    Bu diu bu ding
    A technical term in tai chi chuan for combat at touch, where the practitioner neither wants to push against, nor let go of, the point of contact between himself and his opponent.
    Buddhism
    One of the world’s major religions. Buddhism is based on the meditation teachings of Gautama the Buddha who lived and taught in India in the sixth century B. C. Buddhism has mostly vanished from India since the Muslim invasions occurring from the thirteenth to the sixteenth century, and is most prevalent in the cultures of Oriental Asia—China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, and Tibet. The four main branches of Buddhism mentioned in this book are , Tibetan, Tien Tai (Tian Tai), Vipassana, and Zen/Chan.
    Budo
    Japanese martial arts whose goal is to simultaneously cultivate martial technique, character, and spirituality.
    Bujitsu
    Japanese martial arts whose sole goal is the development of efficient fighting and killing techniques.
    Bunkai
    The fighting applications of a Japanese martial art move.