@fabshq
You're welcome. Thanks for the alternative perspective on Krav - I'd only perused a few books on the subject. I was taught martial arts for health and exercise. The first rule of combat is avoid a direct confrontation, if possible - which is in alignment with SunZi et al. If you are forced to engage - be fast, precise, crippling if possible, deadly as the opportunity arises.
The art of surprise is critical in a forced confrontation - also derived from Sunzi et al.
So, depends on one's philosophy and purpose. Since you studied Krav - I assumed you were more interested in the self-defense aspects, with exercise being a secondary benefit.
FYI - All forms of Taiji (that I'm aware of in my very limited world) provide enhanced stance and ultimately balance bases - which will help you significantly in any other style. One way to verify your taiji instructor is an expert or master - check out his/her legs and thighs - they'll look like mini versions of an Arnold Schwarzenegger - hence the comment regarding the focus on stance and balance - both static and transitionary. One of my old buddies was (probably still is) a lifelong practitioner - but denied he was an expert - scrawny little guy - but his legs were like sprung steel. The drawback - he muttered something about finding pants that fit as his thighs were larger than most humans with his waist size, which may explain the loose fitting workout clothes.
Hope you find a great instructor and even more important - great students to commune with. Iron sharpens iron.
Announcing the new website Destination Lijiang
Posted byNice - just popped over to the site - and also logged in with my gokm userid - so that was nice (not having to re-register).
The summary of scenic sites in gallery format is a nice touch. Vivid.
And the Do's and Don'ts section was nice to read as a reminder, but I expected more information on how to be a desirable tourist from the local perspective (aside from buying lots of souvenirs and pictures etc).
Snapshot: Yunnan's annual flower expo wraps up in Kunming
Posted byDoing some research on rural projects and came across this ancient article on the yunnan flower industry - thought I'd bounce it. Good article.
Face masks finagled in Dali: officials punished
Posted byWell...yunnan was one of the frontier provinces where errant criminals were banished...the Australia of China...
Video and interview - the Kunming Free Trade Zone
Posted byThe FTZ video was interesting, but most important is the new website - investinyunnan.com - as all of the economic development zones in yunnan are in chinese language only.
So let's see how well the investinyunnan.com site and the new emerging process for bringing in foreign direct investment, matching partners, government support etc works..
I'm sure there's be hiccups - but as long as everyone's committed to the success process - things should work out.
Video and interview - the Kunming Free Trade Zone
Posted bySuper timely and useful article. Thank you.