Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Why can you resist beating by practicing Dachengquan, but not by practicing Tai Chi? They are all round piles.

Why can you resist beating by practicing Dachengquan, but not by practicing Tai Chi? They are all round piles.

Dachengquan, also known as Yiquan, is one of the traditional boxing techniques of the Han nationality and belongs to the internal boxing. Originated from Xinyiquan. Including: stance, strength test, footwork, force generation, sound test, push hands, single hand exercise, broken hands, and martial arts. It was founded by Mr. Wang Xiangzhai, a native of Weijialin Village, Shen County, Hebei Province (now Shenzhou) in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China, based on Xingyi Quan and drawing on the strengths of many schools. There are no fixed moves or gloves, and the emphasis is on guiding movements with thoughts, hence the name Dacheng Quan (Yiquan).

Tai Chi is a traditional sports and martial arts treasure accumulated by the Chinese through long-term practice that integrates the Book of Changes, the Nei Jing, and the Boxing Classic, and integrates health preservation, health care, and martial arts. It combines my country's long-established martial arts, Qigong Daoyin and Breathing, and absorbs the essence of the ancient Chinese Tai Chi Yin and Yang theory and the motherland's medicine, making it a holistic, internally and externally unified internal martial arts.

Dacheng Quan and Tai Chi are both traditional boxing techniques of the Han nationality, and both belong to internal boxing. Dachengquan does not have fixed moves and gloves, and emphasizes the use of thoughts to guide movements; Tai Chi has fixed moves and gloves, and its style is to use static braking, use softness to overcome rigidity, sacrifice oneself and follow others, take advantage of the situation, and use force to move a thousand pounds. Both have their own styles and characteristics. Whether they can resist a fight depends on how far they have practiced Kung Fu. ?