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![]() Click on the cover for a flip book Or see the pdf: Tai Chi Chuan & Oriental Arts magazine No 63 You can order a single print copy of TCC&OA Click Here to order |
| In this issue | |||||
| From the Chairman |
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Moving on; health committee re-groups; more than a group of instructors |
Getting the full pie |
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Jenny Peters on the importance of experiencing the full range of tai chi chuan |
| Comment |
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A new look, a new team; made for the members; tell us your stories | Tai chi & bagua |
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Dov Weisenberger explores the connections between tai chi and bagua |
| The constant bear |
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James Chan translates Cheng Man'ching's treatise on the 'constant bear' | Yin and yang in gigong |
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In the first of a series Peter Deadman explores the yin yang elements in gigong |
| Connectivity in tai chi |
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Tina Faulkner Elders tells us that connectivity is a vital concept | The History |
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Marnix Wells continuess his exploration of the origins of the tai chi we practise |
| Tai chi in the park |
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One man's journey from a sun lounger to open air tai chi. | Qigong in cancer care |
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Tina Faulkner Elders, lead on the TCUGB health committee, discusses how gigong can help cancer patients |
| Meet the Teacher |
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Mike Henderson. From Orkney to Hawick creating Border Tai Chi | Book Review |
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Malcolm Davy-Barnes reviews Andrea Mary Falk's A Shadow on Fallen Blossoms, The 36 and 48 traditional verses of baguazhang |
| Breathing |
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During the pandemic Luigi Zanini put his martial art passion to use teaching his colleagues to breathe | Odds @ the end |
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A few random items |
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