tai-chi
About
This skill enables developers to integrate guided Tai Chi practice into applications, focusing on movement sequences, breathwork, and martial applications. It's designed for users to begin or deepen their practice for health, mindfulness, and low-impact daily movement. Key features include instruction in forms, push hands, and cultivating whole-body coordination through relaxed alignment.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/tai-chiCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Practice Tai Chi
Build rooted structure, relaxed power, martial awareness via slow intentional movement + internal energy cultivation.
Use When
- Begin/deepen practice for health, martial skill, or both
- Whole-body coord + relaxed alignment
- Cultivate qi awareness through movement
- Prep body for partner work | self-defense
- Complement meditation w/ moving mindfulness (see
mindfulness,meditate) - Low-impact daily movement any age/fitness
In
- Required: Space (min 3m × 3m for form, less for standing/silk)
- Required: Comfortable clothing
- Optional: Surface (flat ground, grass, wood; avoid slippery)
- Optional: Level (beginner, intermediate, advanced; default beginner)
- Optional: Focus (health/relaxation, martial, competition; default health)
- Optional: Time (min 15m; recommended 30-60m)
Do
Step 1: Foundation (Zhan Zhuang)
Standing meditation → root, alignment, internal awareness. Foundation of all.
Stance Progression:
┌─────────────────┬──────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
│ Stance │ Duration (build to) │ Focus │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
│ Wuji (neutral) │ 5-10 minutes │ Relaxation, vertical alignment│
│ │ │ Weight sinking to feet │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
│ Holding the Ball │ 5-15 minutes │ Arm structure, peng (ward-off)│
│ (cheng bao) │ │ energy, shoulder release │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
│ Three-Circle │ 10-20 minutes │ Full-body connection, qi │
│ (san ti shi) │ │ circulation, root depth │
└─────────────────┴──────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
Wuji standing alignment:
- Feet shoulder-width, toes forward | slightly outward
- Knees slightly bent — never locked, never past toes
- Pelvis tucked slightly (posterior tilt) → straighten lower back
- Spine elongated — suspended from string at crown
- Shoulders relaxed + dropped, arms hanging natural
- Chin tucked slightly, tongue on roof of mouth
- Breathe natural through nose, belly expands on inhale
- Hold 5 min min, build to 20+ over weeks
Got: After 3-5 min, legs may tremble (normal muscular adaptation). Consistent practice → sense of heaviness in feet, warmth in hands, quiet alertness.
If err: Knee pain → check alignment; knees track over toes, no inward collapse. Reduce bend depth. Lightheaded → breathing natural (not held). Shorten + build gradually — forcing long stands too early creates tension.
Step 2: Silk Reeling (Chan Si Gong)
Spiraling whole-body movement → distinguishes tai chi from external martial arts.
- From wuji, shift weight right (70/30)
- Single-arm: right traces continuous figure-8 in front
- Movement from waist (dantian rotation), not shoulder
- Arm follows waist — never moves independently
- Coord breath: inhale rises, exhale descends
- 10-20 reps per side, switch left
- Progress to double-arm: both spiral coordinated opposition
- Add weight shift: waist turns, weight flows between legs like water
Key principles:
- Every movement = continuous spiral — no straight lines, no stops
- Whole body moves as one: feet, knees, hips, waist, shoulders, elbows, hands
- "Six harmonies": shoulders-hips, elbows-knees, hands-feet (external); mind-intent, intent-qi, qi-force (internal)
Got: Smooth continuous spiraling → arm follows waist natural. Looks effortless, feels connected feet → fingertips.
If err: Arm independent of waist → slow dramatic. Non-moving hand on dantian → feel rotation init there. Choppy → reduce range; small smooth circle > large jerky.
Step 3: Form Sequence (Yang 24)
Yang 24-movement = std entry point, essential postures + transitions.
Form Movement Categories:
┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
│ Category │ Key Movements │ Martial Application │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Ward-off/Roll-back │ Peng, Lu, Ji, An │ Deflect, redirect, press,│
│ (Four Directions) │ (Grasp Sparrow's Tail) │ push — the four core │
│ │ │ energies of tai chi │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Strikes │ Brush Knee, Deflect- │ Palm strikes, punches, │
│ │ Parry-Punch, Apparent │ closing techniques │
│ │ Close Up │ │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Kicks │ Right/Left Heel Kick, │ Leg attacks to knee, │
│ │ Golden Rooster Stands │ thigh, and midsection │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Transitions │ Cloud Hands, Wave Hands, │ Evasion, weight shifting,│
│ │ Single Whip │ positional advantage │
└────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
Learning approach:
- 2-3 movements/wk — memorize sequence first, refine later
- Practice each new section 10× before adding next
- Focus smooth transitions, not just endpoints
- Consistent height (no bobbing up/down between)
- Weight distrib clear: 70/30 | 100/0, never 50/50 (except open/close)
- Once full 24 memorized → 3-5× per session
- Full run ~5-8 min at proper speed
Got: After 2-3 mo consistent → full 24 memorized, performed continuously w/o stops.
If err: Forgot transition → return to last known posture, restart. Video valuable for self-study but no replacement for instructor's kinesthetic feedback. Mechanical → back to silk reeling (Step 2).
Step 4: Martial Applications
Every posture = martial application. Understanding intent → form from dance → martial art.
- Per posture: "What's this doing to opponent?"
- Ward Off (peng): intercept + deflect upward outward
- Roll Back (lu): redirect by yielding + waist turn
- Press (ji): close distance w/ whole-body forward pressure
- Push (an): uproot opponent through center of gravity
- Single Whip: hook hand controls one arm, other strikes
- Practice w/ partner slow, focus structure > speed
- Application works through alignment + timing, not muscular force
Got: Each posture gains martial meaning. Compliant partner reveals structural alignment correct — must use force = wrong structure.
If err: Forced/ineffective → revisit posture. Waist driving? Weight grounded? Spine upright? Martial = correct structure not aggression. Seek instructor teaching martial alongside health.
Step 5: Push Hands (Tui Shou)
Bridge solo form → free application. Develops sensitivity to opponent's force + intent.
- Single-hand fixed-step: face partner, wrists touching
- One pushes gently, other yields + redirects via waist rotation
- Maintain contact — "listening" (ting jin) to force, direction, balance
- Progress to double-hand: both engaged, circular patterns
- Add moving-step: advance + retreat maintaining contact
- Practice 4 core: adhere (zhan), connect (lian), stick (nian), follow (sui)
- Test principle: pushed → no resist; pulled → no lean forward
Sensitivities to develop:
- Detect moment partner commits force (before arrives)
- Feel when partner's root compromised (weight to heels/toes)
- Redirect incoming force to empty space, not head-on
Got: Practice → ability to feel intent through touch. Good yield = push "falls into nothing". Good issue = effortless, partner uprooted before realizing.
If err: Becomes shoving match → both stop, wuji 1 min, restart slower. Competitive ego = #1 obstacle. Goal = sensitivity not winning. No partner → solo yield + issue patterns vs wall | heavy bag, focus whole-body connection.
Step 6: Breath + Internal Energy
Conscious breath + qi → deepens beyond physical movement.
- Form: coord breath w/ movement:
- Inhale: rising, opening, gathering
- Exhale: sinking, closing, issuing
- Never force breath to match — slow movement to match breath
- Attention to lower dantian (3 finger-widths below navel, inward):
- Center of gravity + energetic origin
- Visualize breath gathering on inhale, dispersing through limbs on exhale
- Reverse abdominal breathing (intermediate):
- Inhale: belly draws in slightly, pelvic floor lifts gently
- Exhale: belly expands, pelvic floor releases
- Builds internal pressure → martial power (fa jin)
- Cultivate "song" (relaxed sinking): every exhale → release tension shoulders → feet
- Notice warmth, tingling, flow in hands + arms during form = qi awareness developing
Got: Movement + breath naturally synchronized. Calm energy pervades. Form feels less physical exercise, more moving meditation.
If err: Breath coord creates tension | lightheadedness → drop breath focus, return natural while moving. Develops gradually — forcing creates opposite of relaxation. Return to step after 3-6 mo consistent form.
Step 7: Apply in Context
Build into daily life as sustainable practice.
- Morning (recommended): 5m standing, 5m silk reeling, 10-20m form
- Integrate principles throughout day:
- Standing in line: wuji alignment (relax shoulders, sink weight)
- Walking: awareness of weight transfer + whole-body connection
- Sitting: spine aligned, feet grounded
- Complement w/ seated meditation (
meditate) for mental stillness - Complement w/ defensive mindfulness (
mindfulness) for situational awareness - Martial interest → seek school teaching push hands + applications
- Practice outdoors — fresh air + uneven ground develop balance + root
Got: Principles influence posture, movement, stress response throughout daily activities. Practice = welcome routine vs chore.
If err: Inconsistent → shorten session, don't skip. 5 min daily standing > 1 hr weekly. Motivation wanes → vary: alternate form days w/ standing-only, practice to music.
Check
- Wuji ≥ 5 min w/o significant discomfort
- Silk reeling from waist, not shoulders
- Form sequence memorized + continuous
- ≥ 3 postures explained in martial application
- Weight distrib clear every posture (no habitual 50/50)
- Breath not forced/held during form
- Session has standing + silk reeling + form (all 3)
Traps
- Lead w/ arms: Waist first, arms follow. Hands before waist → no power, no connection. Always init from center.
- Locked knees | over-bend: Locked → cut off root; over-bend → joint strain. Soft springy bend → weight sinks to feet.
- Rise/fall between postures: Consistent height. Head on level plane. Wastes energy + breaks structural integrity.
- Rush form: Tai chi deliberately slow. 24-form < 5 min = too fast. Slow → awareness, balance, internal connection.
- Skip standing: Form built on standing foundation. Skipping zhan zhuang = house w/o foundation, unstable.
→
aikido— complementary martial emphasizing blending + redirection; shares using opponent's forcemindfulness— defensive situational awareness supports martial readiness + moving meditationmeditate— seated meditation develops mental stillness deepening internal awarenessheal— qi cultivation supports energetic healingcenter— AI self-application; maps centering to cognitive load distribution + CoT coord
GitHub Repository
Related Skills
executing-plans
DesignUse the executing-plans skill when you have a complete implementation plan to execute in controlled batches with review checkpoints. It loads and critically reviews the plan, then executes tasks in small batches (default 3 tasks) while reporting progress between each batch for architect review. This ensures systematic implementation with built-in quality control checkpoints.
requesting-code-review
DesignThis skill dispatches a code-reviewer subagent to analyze code changes against requirements before proceeding. It should be used after completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to main. The review helps catch issues early by comparing the current implementation with the original plan.
connect-mcp-server
DesignThis skill provides a comprehensive guide for developers to connect MCP servers to Claude Code using HTTP, stdio, or SSE transports. It covers installation, configuration, authentication, and security for integrating external services like GitHub, Notion, and custom APIs. Use it when setting up MCP integrations, configuring external tools, or working with Claude's Model Context Protocol.
web-cli-teleport
DesignThis skill helps developers choose between Claude Code Web and CLI interfaces based on task analysis, then enables seamless session teleportation between these environments. It optimizes workflow by managing session state and context when switching between web, CLI, or mobile. Use it for complex projects requiring different tools at various stages.
