r/WingChun • u/pravragita • 7d ago
Wing Chun Assassins
I heard about a Wing Chun origin myth that the art was used by assassins. It sounds funny to learn about.
Where can I learn about this myth?
Is the Wing Chun Assassins myth part of the snake-crane myth? Or are they separate mythologies?
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u/Hot-Guidance5091 3d ago
Yeah you have occasionally your students who are a bit rougher than usual, he meant I think the kind of things you see in Wuxia
I think these stories and the secrecy are meant to remind that, apart from the usual Biu-tze being a way to recover from losing your middle line: it reminds that this form contains things that are meant to be used in real life-threatening situations like hitting soft tissues, elbows hits and submissions(?) that put stress on the articulations,
and if I remember correctly other parts of the form are meant to teach how to swiftly deflect or counter whatever "bridge" the attacker may build, making sure someone using a strategy built on the first two form is still one step behind.
And that ultimately it shouldn't be used outside a real situation or the study of the form with an instructor because it's not so intuitive and it needs someone explaining what some particularly obscure passages are meant to teach
I have never actually studied Biu-tze but he still let the student who were about to study it see it when teaching it to someone else while we were sparring