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T'ai Chi
T'ai Chi Ch'uan
Sharon (Shaz) started studying T'ai Chi Ch'uan (the traditional Yang 108 long form - medium frame) with Bob Davies in Durban in 1997; began assisting with teaching classes as a licensed trainee instructor in 1999; and ran her own T'ai Chi classes in 2000 under the auspices of the T'ai Chi Institute of Health - part of the Wu-Shin Foundation for Self-Development. She started teaching full-time at the beginning of 2003 and has been head of the T'ai Chi Institute of Health since February 2003.
She obtained her black sash in 2000 and red sash in 2003 and has attended specialised training courses in T'ai Chi in the UK, Switzerland, Germany and Italy. 1999 - some training in Chen Man Ching short form with Aarvo Tucker; 2000 and 2001 - attended courses in Pretoria run by Dr Yang, Jwing Ming. 2002 - attended T'ai Chi Caledonia in Scotland for a week's training; 2003 - attended the 13th T'ai Chi Rehan in Switzerland as well as training with Cornelia Gruber in Neuchatel and La Chaux de Fonds and private training with Luigi Zanini in Vicenza, Italy; 2004 - attended internal strength seminars run by Mike Sigman in Frankfurt, and internal strength and push hands seminar by Mike Sigman in La Chaux de Fonds in Switzerland.
Sharon also chose to study other martial arts to broaden her knowledge base for T'ai Chi - this includes fours years of TodeJutsu (up to seventh level from 2000 to 2003) and Arnis de Mano for two years (1999 and 2000). She continues to study Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto Ryu.
She produced a small bi-monthly T'ai Chi publication, The Internal Ways, for two years (1999 and 2000), including research work for articles and conducting interviews. She has also written a number of articles on T'ai Chi, as well as compiled a set of comprehensive instruction notes.
Sharon has run Chi Kung courses since 2002, teaching the first and second sets of T'ai Chi Chi Kung and Hun Yuan Chi Kung. She has taught annually at the Buddhist Retreat Centre in Ixopo since 2003, where she runs workshops on breathing life into chi kung and chi whiz - introducing chi into your practice.
She runs ongoing T'ai Chi classes as well as teaching morning Chi Kung, T'ai Chi and meditation sessions to companies on an ongoing basis, as well as conducting ad hoc sessions for conferences and break away sessions as required. Katori Shinto RyuSharon began to study the art of Katori Shinto Ryu in 1999, following the Sugino style, and attended summer schools in Amsterdam with Hatakeyama, Goro Sensei and Erik Louw Sensei in 2000 and 2001, and with Sugino, Yukihiro Sensei in Switzerland and France in 2003 and two separate seminars in Switzerland in 2004. She also had private tameshigiri training with Luigi Carniel in Switzerland in 2004.
She was awarded her shodan by Sugino Sensei in Switzerland in 2003.
She has also attended numerous training seminars in South Africa conducted by Erik Louw Sensei in 2001, 2002 and 2003; by Willem Bekink Sensei in 2002 and by Loris Petris Sensei in 2004.
In 2005 Sharon changed to the Otake style of training, taking keppan in September 2005. She participated in a summer school conducted by Otake, Nobutoshi Sensei in South Africa in 2005 and travelled to Japan to train in the dojo in Narita under Otake, Risuke Shihan in December 2005. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 21 July 2009 )
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by Sharon Davis (Shaz)So often it is those apparently insignificant things that can be important – like a smile from a stranger or a compliment from a friend - that little ingredient that can brighten a day … In the same vein, it is often the seemingly little lessons that can be gained from the study of T’ai Chi that make all the difference to how one views the world, and more importantly ,to how one responds to it. With this in mind, I’d like to share some of the little, but fundamentally important, lessons that I have learnt from my journey along the T’ai Chi path. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 21 July 2009 )
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by Terence DunnThe concept of ch'i ("qi" in the more recent pinyin romanisation), has caused much confusion for Western students of martial, meditative and healing arts. What exactly is ch'i? Much talk about chi is perpetually steeped in mystical belief and metaphysical speculation that is ungrounded in yogic experience, sometimes projecting superstition and forming belief systems that take much for granted at the expense of common sense. This article looks at the growing fascination with ch'i and ch'i arts in the West and attempts to lay some basic foundations for understanding this esoteric concept. Ch'i is a potential energy that is latent in the body and also exists in all forms of life. It is bio-electro-chemical in nature, and by and large, it is invisible, intangible and immeasurable. In the human process, ch'i is intimately tied to breath, blood, and nerve. No wonder confusion pervades. |
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 05 July 2009 )
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Regardless of the weather and the temperature, if you happened to make an early morning visit to any of the parks in China, you would see a large number of people on their way to work stop off at the park to practice t’ai chi ch’uan together. You would see a large number of people who practice t’ai chi ch’uan early in the morning and again later in the afternoon – as regularly and as often as you would brush your teeth or have a bath or shower. Young and old alike gather together to perform their daily internal cleansing routine – t’ai chi ch’uan. For them it is a way of life.
Literally translated, t’ai chi ch’uan means “supreme ultimate fist”. It originated in China some 5 000 years ago as a martial art. The most popular story about the creation of t’ai chi is that its (possibly mythical) founder Chang San Feng, a Taoist monk, devised the moves of t’ai chi after watching a fight between a crane and a snake. It has been developed as an advanced means of combat and self-defence and a number of ‘styles’ have emerged - each named after the families that developed them. The most popular style, worldwide, is the Yang style. |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 13 September 2006 )
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Early morning T'ai Chi at Celtico's offices in Umbilo Road... Diresh, Neela and Lynette enjoy T'ai Chi in the early morning sun  Direshni doing Opening Posture, with Mona in the background  Lynette, Neela and Direshni  Sharon and Sandra, end of Single Whip, start of Raise Hands Lift Leg  Sharon at the end of White Stork Displays Wing  Sandra does Play Guitar  Mona does her favourite move...  Diresh in Brush Knee  Mandy in Deflect Sideways  Parry, Step Forward, Punch... |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 August 2006 )
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