Traditional Chinese internal arts — tai chi chuan and qigong — as transmitted by classical lineages (Chen, Yang, Wu, Wu/Hao, Sun for tai chi; Ba Duan Jin, Yi Jin Jing, Liu Zi Jue, Wu Qin Xi, and other named sets for qigong) with an emphasis on alignment, rooted stance, breath-posture-mind coordination (the three harmonies), and the traditional lineage voice that Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming's YMAA line preserves. Also covers the safety boundary between traditional practice and clinical "medical qigong" claims. Use for queries about tai chi form learning, qigong set selection, internal-arts pedagogy, and the practical question of where to start.
Tai chi chuan (tàijíquán) and qigong (qìgōng) are two branches of the Chinese internal arts tradition — practices that train body, breath, and mind together through slow, deliberate movement and static posture. Both are rooted in classical Chinese cosmology (yin-yang, the five elements, the meridian system) and both have living lineages that trace back through named teachers for many generations. This skill presents them in the lineage-respectful voice that Yang Jwing-Ming's YMAA (Yang's Martial Arts Association) line has preserved for Western students, and it is careful to distinguish traditional practice, martial application, health practice, and modern "medical qigong" claims — because they are not the same thing and conflating them causes real harm.
Agent affinity: yang (traditional lineage voice, tai chi and qigong, martial context, Chinese medicine frame), iyengar (overlap with alignment and prop-assisted teaching), feldenkrais (overlap with slow deliberate movement and proprioceptive learning)
Concept IDs: mind-body-tai-chi-lineages, mind-body-qigong-sets, mind-body-three-harmonies, mind-body-rooted-stance, mind-body-internal-alignment
Wings covered: tai chi (primary), qigong (primary). Lineage roots: Chen Wangting's 17th-century Chen village for tai chi's origin, Yang Luchan for the Yang style and its transmission to Beijing, the subsequent emergence of Wu (Wu Yuxiang), Wu (Wu Jianquan), Sun (Sun Lutang), and Hao styles; Bodhidharma's legendary attribution of Yi Jin Jing at Shaolin for a marker of the qigong tradition's Buddhist-Daoist roots; the Ba Duan Jin as standardized by the Chinese state sports administration; Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming's YMAA line for the Western transmission used here.
The Chinese martial-arts world classifies practices as external (wàijiā) or internal (nèijiā). External arts (Shaolin-lineage kung fu and most karate-derived systems) train visible external properties — strength, speed, flexibility, striking power, conditioning — first, and internal properties later. Internal arts (tai chi, bagua zhang, xing yi quan, and qigong) train internal properties first — alignment, relaxation, breath, whole-body connection, sensitivity — and let external power emerge from that foundation. The division is not absolute. Every external art has internal content and every internal art produces external results. But the pedagogical order differs, and so does the feel of a first-month practice: an external art's first month is sore legs and bruised forearms, and an internal art's first month is "why are we standing here."
A routing agent needs to know this because beginners consistently import external-art expectations into internal-art practice and get frustrated. The correct framing for a new tai chi student is: you are training your nervous system to organize your body differently, and the external form is the scaffold on which that training happens. This is close to the Feldenkrais insight from a completely different cultural source.
The classical internal-arts frame is the three external harmonies and the three internal harmonies.
Three external harmonies:
Three internal harmonies:
These six harmonies are the classical alignment and intention rubric. They are easy to memorize and hard to embody. The internal arts are the slow, multi-year project of making them real in the practitioner's body.
The classical tai chi postural instructions, sometimes called the "ten essentials" of Yang Chengfu:
A tai chi form done without these instructions is a dance, not tai chi. A form that has them is recognizable at a glance by a trained observer.
Five major family styles descend from the Chen-village origin:
The oldest. Chen Wangting (17th century) synthesized older martial methods with Daoist breath practice and military manuals. Chen style preserves fast and slow movements, silk-reeling energy (chánsī jìn), fajin (explosive power release), and an explicitly martial feel. Chen Xiaowang, Chen Zhenglei, Chen Xiaoxing, and Chen Yu are prominent modern representatives. Beginners are often told Chen is "harder" than Yang — this is partly true because the fast sections exist but mostly overstated.
The most widespread tai chi in the world. Yang Luchan (1799–1872) learned in the Chen village and brought the art to Beijing, where it was taught to the imperial guard. Yang Chengfu (1883–1936) standardized the large-frame long form (108 movements) that is now the most-taught form on Earth. Yang style is slow, expansive, smooth. The Cheng Man-ch'ing 37-posture simplified form is a subset and a common Western entry point. The Beijing 24-form (simplified, created 1956) is the most widely practiced tai chi in the world but it was composed by a committee for public health, not by a single lineage master — useful but not the same as learning inside a family lineage.
A small and compact style developed by Wu Yuxiang (1812–1880). Not to be confused with the other Wu style.
Developed by Wu Jianquan (1870–1942), a student of Yang lineage. A small-frame style with a distinctive forward lean.
Developed by Sun Lutang (1861–1932), who was also a master of bagua and xing yi. Sun style incorporates footwork from bagua (the follow-step). Sun Lutang's written work is also historically important — he is the author of the first widely-distributed treatises on xing yi and tai chi that were accessible outside their family lineages.
For a Western beginner with no strong prior connection to a teacher, the practical answer is: study with the best teacher you can find, regardless of style. Lineage matters more than style label. A well-taught Yang-style class is better than a poorly-taught Chen-style class. A master who trained with a real lineage holder for decades is worth traveling to study with; a certificate from a two-week tai chi teacher training is not the same thing.
The form (taolu) is the memorized sequence of postures that the practitioner moves through. A long form might have 108 postures and take 20–25 minutes to perform slowly. A short form might have 24 or 37 postures and take 5–10 minutes. Forms are not choreography for its own sake — they are:
Forms are not magic. Doing the form sloppily for 20 years produces sloppy tai chi. Doing it correctly under a teacher's correction, for 5 years, produces something that is beginning to be tai chi.
Tui shou — push hands — is the partner practice where tai chi's internal training meets another person. Two practitioners stand in a rooted stance, wrists or forearms in contact, and take turns testing each other's root, stability, listening (ting jin), and ability to yield and redirect. Push hands is where tai chi stops being solo gymnastics and becomes what it originally was: a martial art.
Push hands is also where the biggest modern misunderstandings show up. Videos of tai chi masters apparently launching students across the room without contact are almost entirely staged or coerced demonstrations inside a student-teacher power dynamic. Honest lineage holders are explicit: no-contact throws are not a thing. What is real is the ability of a skilled practitioner to feel an opponent's balance and unbalance them with small redirections at contact — this takes years and is hard-won.
A routing agent should not promote the no-contact-throw narrative. It damages the credibility of the tradition and misleads students.
Qigong is the umbrella term for breath-posture-intention exercises in the Chinese tradition. The literal reading is "energy work" but "cultivation practice" is a better translation for Western ears because it does not pre-commit to a mechanism.
Qigong sits at the intersection of four streams:
Qigong in the modern West is surrounded by two bad framings: the one that dismisses it as "mystical" nonsense, and the one that sells it as a guaranteed cure for specific diseases. Both are wrong in the same way. Qigong is a well-developed set of slow-movement and breath practices whose effects on balance, stress, and parameters like heart rate variability are measurable and reproducible in moderate-quality studies. It is also not a substitute for medical treatment of any named disease. A routing agent must hold both of those truths at once and refuse to collapse to either side.
Specifically:
Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming (b. 1946, Taiwan) trained in White Crane kung fu (with Cheng Gin-Gsao), Long Fist, and Yang-style tai chi (with Kao Tao). He earned a PhD in mechanical engineering from Purdue and founded Yang's Martial Arts Association (YMAA) in Boston in 1982. YMAA is unusual for two reasons: Dr. Yang wrote extensive technical books (more than 35) that explain traditional material in terms a Western scientific reader can follow, and the organization has trained a second generation of lineage-respecting teachers in both martial and qigong lines. YMAA Publication Center books are a reliable first library for a student who wants written reference material inside a lineage voice.
The yang agent in this chipset inherits this scholarly-traditional posture. He is willing to translate classical content into modern terms, but he does not modernize away the lineage, and he is firm about the difference between traditional practice and wellness-industry repackaging.
Setup. Feet shoulder-width apart, parallel. Knees soft. Shoulders relaxed. Arms at sides. Breath natural.
Movement. Inhale. Interlace the fingers in front of the lower abdomen, palms up. On the continued inhale, raise the hands up the center line, turning the palms over so they are facing up as they pass the face, and press them overhead. Look up at the hands as they pass the face; when they reach overhead, eyes level again. The crown lifts; the shoulders drop; the elbows straighten but do not lock. The whole spine lengthens upward.
On the exhale, release the interlace, the arms lower out to the sides in wide arcs, palms turning over as they descend, returning to rest at the sides.
Repetitions. Eight repetitions on each side or eight repetitions total, depending on the teacher.
What it trains. Spinal extension, shoulder and thoracic mobility, full breath cycle, vertical alignment against gravity.
Failure mode. Shoulders ride up to the ears. Low back arches. Neck cranes backward. Correction: sink the shoulders before raising them; tuck the tailbone slightly; keep the chin gentle and neutral.
Setup. Feet shoulder-width apart, parallel. Knees slightly bent, tracking over the toes. Pelvis gently tucked so the lumbar spine is long. Shoulders relaxed. Arms raised in front of the chest, elbows out, fingertips of each hand nearly touching in front, palms facing the body as if holding a large invisible ball at chest height.
Posture. The crown lifts. The tongue touches the roof of the mouth lightly. The eyes are soft and looking ahead or softly closed. The breath is natural and nasal. The feeling is of being suspended between heaven and earth.
Duration. Begin with 3 minutes. Build over weeks to 10 minutes. Advanced practitioners hold for 30–60 minutes.
What happens. The legs will shake. The shoulders will want to collapse. The breath will want to speed up. The practice is to notice each of these and let them re-settle without forcing anything. The practitioner is learning to organize the body for sustained effortful rest.
Failure mode. Letting the shoulders rise, losing the knee tracking, holding the breath, bracing the abdomen. Correction: shorter holds until the alignment holds without guarding. Never compete. Never force.
Setup. From a preparation stance (feet shoulder-width, weight even). Shift weight to the right leg, turning the right foot slightly outward. The left foot is empty, toes touching the ground.
Movement. The left foot steps forward into a front stance. As the weight shifts onto the left leg, the left arm rounds up in front of the chest, palm facing the body, as if warding off an incoming force. The right hand drops to the hip, palm facing down. The waist turns. The whole movement is slow, continuous, and whole-body — not arm-driven.
What it trains. Root, weight transfer from back to front foot, whole-body coordination led by the waist, the ward-off energy that is the first of tai chi's eight energies (péng).
Failure mode. Leading with the arm. Losing the root in the back foot. Over-rotating the waist past its comfortable range. Correction: slow down, feel the back foot's contact with the floor, let the arm be moved by the waist rather than moving on its own.
A student learning a long form will not finish it in a month. Expected progress:
Daily practice: 15–30 minutes. Longer at the start is counterproductive; the student absorbs better in shorter focused sessions, repeated daily.
| User signal | Route to |
|---|---|
| "I want to learn tai chi from scratch" | yang (chipset), skill loaded, begin with Ba Duan Jin + short form |
| "I want the martial application / push hands" | yang, with lineage-teacher referral required for contact work |
| "I want qigong for my health condition X" | yang with explicit medical referral; health claims flagged |
| "I saw a master throwing people without touching them" | Halt. This is a misrepresentation. Present honest framing. |
| "I am over 65, balance is a concern" | Ba Duan Jin seated or simplified tai chi; fall-prevention evidence is strong |
| "I have a serious medical condition" | Medical team first; qigong supplementary only after clearance |