I use the whole mountains as my training ground, and mother nature as my mentor. The goal of Taichi Skiing, so is the goal of my skiing, in term of techniques and tactics, is to“return to nature,” that is, to ski naturally; though what is to “ski naturally” remains quite a deep subject philosophically (e.g. Zen Skiing), but in here I'll just simply say, “to do it without your mind telling your body what to do [a particular maneuver],” or simply, “do it without deliberation,” as Blake and I have discussed, you can only achieve that (Natural Skiing) when you can “transcend”your own “style.” Next up, only the mother nature.pku 寫:我每年仍有上 CSIA 的 PDP, 都是很有經驗的 L4 教。
Of course, a L4 should have a lot of “experiences” to offer beyond those mere techniques; nevertheless, what you don't know is that you are also trapped in your system/style, so the knowledge and techniques of skiing are limited as you cannot see beyond your own system, so there are questions on your analysis.而且滑得比我差不表示他滑雪知識差,仍可給我意見,我不像你,我對任何人意見都會作出分析,而你郤什麼意見也聽不入耳
Gravity doesn't cheat, and Natural Skiing has only “muscles and bones,”and a soul that is true to the “feeling” to deal with it:
“As the feeling developing, Tai Chi Skiing starts to turn internal. As we seek gravity internally, Tai Chi Skiing becomes more philosophical than physical. ”
http://www.taomartialarts.com/ski/ski_dance.html
No, I don't think that your L4 could give you such an advice.
You haven't proved that your opinions are worth listening, so far. For a L2, you can try harder.
Gone skiing, :)
IS