2019 Queens Birthday Seminars and Tournament

Seminar and Tournament Form


As per tradition this years Annual Tournament weekend will be held on Queens birthday weekend (June 1st and 2nd)

HQ in Christchurch will again be holding all the events this year since it worked out so well last year (Bowls Pavilion - 23 Compton St, Woolston, Christchurch)

Tai Chi and Kung Fu Seminars

These annual seminars are important to attend for all students from beginners to advanced. Seminars are always great for students coming together to meet and catch up with other students from other branches around their region, NZ and overseas. However the value you derive from attending seminars can be of the utmost importance, a slight tweak in your training and attaining a bit of useful information can give you an epiphany that can make a drastic change in your training outcomes.

Grandmaster Chan will be presenting and explaining some very important methods of training this year at these Kung Fu and Tai Chi seminars that you DO NOT want to miss out on.

Advanced ranks (red and above) will be expected to attend as well as all Instructors and assistant instructors (TC & KF).

Kung Fu Tournament

Tournaments have been gaining more and more momentum in the last couple of years and it is expected to keep growing this year. There will again be two categories for tournament this year: Fighting competition and patterns competition.

Entry to the fighting and patterns competition will be strictly by invitation by your Branch Chief Instructor. If you are invited by your instructor and decide to enter you are obliged to compete with dignity and honour.

We are only several weeks from the Tournament weekend however you should still have plenty of time to prepare. If you were to start some regular conditioning work now (15-20 mins a day) and keep attending regular classes you should be prepared for Queens Birthday weekend.

A portion of regular classes will be allocated to train specifically for Tournament fighting. All students will be involved whether they are going to compete or not. Advanced students should all consider competing unless injured.

Remember that tournament fighting is only a limited method of fighting and is not fully realistic, however the spirit of competition can teach you a lot about yourself.


June 1st Saturday - Seminars
9am - 11am (Tai Chi)
11am - 12:30pm (Tai Chi Instructor & Assistant Instructor)
2:30pm - 4:30pm (Kung Fu)
4:30 - 6pm (Kung Fu Black Belt)

June 2nd Sunday - Tournament
9am (Weigh In)

Prices
Seminars ($35 Each)
Discounted options: Two seminars ($60), Three seminars ($85), Four seminars ($100)

Fighting competition ($30)
Patterns competition ($30)
Patterns & Fighting ($50)


IMPORTANT NOTES:
All forms must be collected by your branch instructor. HQ will not be taking seminar and competition application forms directly.

Competition applications MUST be checked and signed off by branch instructor.

Competition entries will NOT be accepted after the due date (24th May)

Seminar and Tournament Form

Newsletter 2019-1

Last Friday

We had a very good start to the year until last Friday. This evil person and his supporters had brought death, injury, pain and shattered the fragile peace we were just beginning to enjoy after recovering from the death and destruction from the earthquakes in recent years. I have been told that a couple of our young students are still waiting for information of their missing father, a highly educated individual who had gone to pray at the mosque. It is even painful for me to think about it, let alone for the young ones to deal with it. Our thoughts are with the family, our other muslim students, their instructors and all those who are suffering from this horrific act. 

I believe these terrorists would have just shot any dark skinned or Asian person who happened to be at hand. We have to be thankful that the Police were so efficient in apprehending the shooter. 

So, where do we go from here? It is natural that we are shocked and then we grieve. It will then naturally turn to anger. Anger however, is destructive and if it consume us, we cannot think clearly. Hate can turn us into the very type of people that causes these terrible acts. Grief and anger will also make us unwell physiologically. Therefore, we cannot dwell in anger or grief for too long or it will destroy us.

Instead, after healing ourselves, we should look at what we can do to foster better relationships between religions, races and culture. Interacting with people of different backgrounds can be very awkward to us.  Like in Kung Fu training, we must not let awkwardness and challenges deter us from our goals. We have to be patient, kind and sensitive as with training partners. Then we will develop to be better martial artists, better people and create a better society and a better world.

Calming the Mind

All our instructors have been instructed to lead and end classes with our enhanced breathing exercises to calm the mind and relax the body. These type of exercises have been scientifically proven to have huge benefits to lift the spirit and mental capacity of the practitioners. It is even more important that we practice this really well in these difficult times. 

Terrorist Attack

This is what is taught by anti-terrorist experts such as Mr David Joker (Police trainer for special tactics units in SI). 

If terrorists are holding you hostage: do not look them in the eye, go along and wait for Police to arrive. 

If terrorist are shooting already: 1) try to escape as quickly as possible; 2) if escape is not possible hide and barricade doors; 3) if escaping or hiding are not possible - you must fight back to disarm the terrorist. Use small heavy objects as missiles to upset their aim/balance and give you a chance to close the gap to strike and disarm them.

Professor Leon Jay

After eleven long years we had Professor Leon Jay back for a series of seminars. It has been a long time between drinks even for those of of us who were at the Sacramento Convention in 2012. We had very good support from the instructors who brought many students to the seminars. This was with the Tai Chi instructors and students as well. It was great to see Professor Jay back in good health again after suffering from serious health challenges a year and a half ago. He said he had great support, acupuncture, psychology and Qigong to help him make this remarkable recovery after chemo and radiotherapy.

He taught more Small Circle refinements to the finger locks, arm bars, as well as closing and trapping. He pointed out the pressure points that are used in the Small Circle techniques and demonstrated his explosive speed and transitional flow. He also demonstrated and let everyone try to experience the effect of Qi flow and its effects. As always, everyone enjoyed his humour and charisma in getting his points across. 

It was very good to hear that all the principles of footwork, balancing, accuracy, relaxing, pressure points, utilisation of Qi are exactly what we have in our curriculum and reinforces what we do. We should use the new understanding to improve how we train the material in our syllabus. It will be good to have him back again, probably sooner than eleven years.

New Students

We are happy to welcome the many new students and old that have returned to training. I would like to repeat what I said last year about how to train martial arts successfully.

“To be successful in training: you must know how to train and be regular in your training.” To know how to train you must listen carefully to your instructor. The operative word is ‘carefully.’ If you are not careful, it is very easy to misunderstand the information and interpret it in your own way. 

Therefore, we must begin with a serious attitude to training. As soon as you arrive at training try to calm down mentally and relax physically. Do not engage in boisterous exchanges or banter with anyone till training is over. A little quiet stretching is the best thing to do to relax a bit more.

When you train, try to keep good posture: ie keep your head up, with eyes level & steady so as not to be easily distracted. Visualise your opponent at all times and respond immediately to the instructors command to train your reaction and focus. 

Make sure that you can feel the stability and mobility of your stances. You should also feel the timing of your techniques harmonised with your breathing. Finally you must feel the load you are putting on each muscle as you generate your technique. 

If you train like this and follow the instructor’s guide to alignment, loadings and flow of movement, you will make good progress with little risk of injury or failure. However, if you interpret it in your own way you will struggle to improve and probably injure yourself often. 

With good training you will get to enjoy a state of peace and calmness. You will also enjoy the flow and correct execution of techniques. You will also feel a satisfaction that you are improving your chances of defending yourself with every class.

Use your training to calm your mind, cultivate good skills and relationships.

May Chi be with you,   

Grandmaster SC Chan


Upcoming Events

23rd & 24th Mar:

SOTC Student Camp at HQ

9th Apr:

Canterbury TC Ex Grading 

13th Apr: 

Canterbury KF Grading

27th Apr: 

Invercargill KF Grading & Seminar

28th Apr:

Invercargill TC Grading & Seminar

4th May:

Wellington KF Grading & Seminar

5th May:

Wellington TC Grading & Seminar

18th & 19th May: 

Auckland SOTC Seminar

1st June:

Annual TC & KF Seminars

2nd June:

Annual Tournament

6th July:

Sydney SOTC Seminar

7th July:

Sydney KF Seminar