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tai-chi

pjt222
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Esta habilidad proporciona práctica guiada de tai chi para la salud y el desarrollo de habilidades marciales, abarcando ejercicios fundamentales, formas y ejercicios en pareja. Ayuda a los desarrolladores a construir una práctica diaria de movimiento centrada en la alineación estructural, la integración de la respiración y la coordinación consciente. Úsala para comenzar o profundizar en una rutina de tai chi de bajo impacto, adecuada para complementar la meditación o mejorar la conciencia corporal integral.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/tai-chi

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Practice Tai Chi

Develop tai chi chuan practice. Build rooted structure, relaxed power, martial awareness through slow, intentional movement and internal energy cultivation.

When Use

  • Beginning or deepening tai chi practice for health, martial skill, or both
  • Developing whole-body coordination and relaxed structural alignment
  • Cultivating internal energy (qi) awareness through movement
  • Preparing body for partner work or self-defense applications
  • Complementing meditation practice with moving mindfulness (see mindfulness, meditate)
  • Building low-impact daily movement practice suitable for any age or fitness level

Inputs

  • Required: Available space (minimum 3m x 3m for form practice, less for standing/silk reeling)
  • Required: Comfortable clothing that does not restrict movement
  • Optional: Practice surface preference (flat ground, grass, wood floor; avoid slippery surfaces)
  • Optional: Experience level (beginner, intermediate, advanced; default: beginner)
  • Optional: Focus area (health/relaxation, martial application, competition form; default: health)
  • Optional: Available practice time (minimum 15 minutes; recommended 30-60 minutes)

Steps

Step 1: Establish Foundation (Zhan Zhuang)

Standing meditation builds root, structural alignment, internal awareness — foundation of all tai chi movement.

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:

  1. Feet shoulder-width apart, toes pointing forward or slightly outward
  2. Knees slightly bent — never locked, never past the toes
  3. Pelvis tucked slightly (posterior tilt) to straighten the lower back
  4. Spine elongated — imagine being suspended from a string at the crown
  5. Shoulders relaxed and dropped, arms hanging naturally
  6. Chin tucked slightly, tongue on the roof of the mouth
  7. Breathe naturally through the nose, letting the belly expand on inhale
  8. Hold for 5 minutes minimum, building to 20+ minutes over weeks

Got: After 3-5 minutes, legs may tremble (normal muscular adaptation). After consistent practice, sense of heaviness in feet, warmth in hands, quiet alertness develops.

If fail: Knee pain? Check alignment — knees must track over toes and should not collapse inward. Reduce depth of bend. Lightheadedness? Ensure breathing natural (not holding breath). Shorten duration, build gradual — forcing long stands too early creates tension rather than releasing it.

Step 2: Practice Silk Reeling (Chan Si Gong)

Silk reeling exercises develop spiraling, whole-body movement that distinguishes tai chi from external martial arts.

  1. From wuji stance, shift weight to the right leg (70/30 distribution)
  2. Begin single-arm silk reeling: right arm traces a continuous figure-eight in front of the body
  3. The movement originates from the waist (dantian rotation), not the shoulder
  4. The arm follows the waist — never moves independently
  5. Coordinate breath: inhale as the hand rises, exhale as it descends
  6. Practice 10-20 repetitions per side, then switch to the left arm
  7. Progress to double-arm silk reeling: both arms spiral in coordinated opposition
  8. Add weight shifting: as the waist turns, weight flows between legs like water

Key principles:

  • Every movement is a continuous spiral — no straight lines, no stops
  • The whole body moves as one unit: feet, knees, hips, waist, shoulders, elbows, hands
  • Maintain the "six harmonies": shoulders-hips, elbows-knees, hands-feet (external); mind-intent, intent-qi, qi-force (internal)

Got: Smooth, continuous spiraling movements where arm follows waist rotation natural. Movement looks effortless, feels connected from feet to fingertips.

If fail: Arm moves independent of waist? Slow down dramatic. Place non-moving hand on lower abdomen (dantian) to feel rotation initiating there. Movement feels choppy? Reduce range of motion — small, smooth circle better than large, jerky one.

Step 3: Learn Form Sequence (Yang 24)

Yang-style 24-movement form is standard entry point, contains essential postures and 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:

  1. Learn 2-3 movements per week — memorize the sequence first, refine later
  2. Practice each new section 10 times before adding the next
  3. Focus on smooth transitions between postures, not just the endpoints
  4. Maintain consistent height (no bobbing up and down between movements)
  5. Keep weight distribution clear: 70/30 or 100/0, never 50/50 (except opening/closing)
  6. Once the full 24 is memorized, practice the complete form 3-5 times per session
  7. One full run of the 24-form takes approximately 5-8 minutes at proper speed

Got: After 2-3 months of consistent practice, full 24-form sequence memorized, can be performed continuous without stopping to recall next movement.

If fail: Transition forgotten? Return to last known posture, restart from there rather than guessing. Video reference valuable for self-study but cannot replace kinesthetic feedback of qualified instructor. Movements feel mechanical? Return to silk reeling (Step 2) to reconnect with spiraling quality.

Step 4: Understand Martial Applications

Every posture in form has martial application. Understanding intent transforms form from dance into martial art.

  1. Take each posture and ask: "What is this doing to an opponent?"
  2. Ward Off (peng): intercepts and deflects an incoming force upward and outward
  3. Roll Back (lu): redirects force by yielding and turning the waist
  4. Press (ji): closes distance with whole-body forward pressure
  5. Push (an): uproots the opponent by pushing through their center of gravity
  6. Single Whip: simultaneous hook hand controls one arm while the other strikes
  7. Practice each application slowly with a partner, focusing on structure over speed
  8. The application should work through alignment and timing, not muscular force

Got: Each form posture gains clear martial meaning. Practice with compliant partner reveals whether structural alignment correct — must use force? Structure wrong.

If fail: Applications feel forced or ineffective? Revisit posture in form, check: Is waist driving movement? Is weight grounded? Is spine upright? Martial effectiveness in tai chi comes from correct structure, not aggression. Seek instructor who teaches martial side alongside health form.

Step 5: Practice Push Hands (Tui Shou)

Push hands bridge between solo form and free application. Develops sensitivity to opponent's force and intent.

  1. Begin with single-hand fixed-step push hands: partners face each other, wrists touching
  2. One partner pushes gently, the other yields and redirects using waist rotation
  3. Maintain contact — "listening" (ting jin) to the partner's force, direction, and balance
  4. Progress to double-hand push hands: both hands engaged, circular patterns
  5. Add moving-step push hands: partners advance and retreat while maintaining contact
  6. Practice the four core skills: adhere (zhan), connect (lian), stick (nian), follow (sui)
  7. Test the principle: when pushed, do not resist; when pulled, do not lean forward

Key sensitivities to develop:

  • Detect the moment your partner begins to commit force (before it arrives)
  • Feel when your partner's root is compromised (weight shifts to heels or toes)
  • Redirect incoming force to empty space rather than meeting it head-on

Got: With practice, ability to feel opponent's intent through touch. Successful yielding feels like push "falls into nothing." Successful issuing feels effortless — partner uprooted before they realize it.

If fail: Push hands becomes shoving match? Both partners should stop, return to wuji standing for 1 minute, restart at slower pace. Competitive ego primary obstacle. Goal not to win but to develop sensitivity. No partner available? Practice yielding and issuing patterns solo against wall or heavy bag, focus on whole-body connection.

Step 6: Integrate Breath and Internal Energy

Conscious breath and qi (internal energy) integration deepens practice beyond physical movement.

  1. During form practice, coordinate breath with movement:
    • Inhale on rising, opening, and gathering movements
    • Exhale on sinking, closing, and issuing movements
    • Never force the breath to match — slow the movement to match the breath instead
  2. Direct attention to the lower dantian (3 finger-widths below the navel, inward):
    • This is the center of gravity and the energetic origin of movement
    • Visualize breath gathering here on the inhale, dispersing through the limbs on the exhale
  3. Practice reverse abdominal breathing (intermediate):
    • Inhale: belly draws in slightly, pelvic floor lifts gently
    • Exhale: belly expands, pelvic floor releases
    • This builds internal pressure that supports martial power (fa jin)
  4. Cultivate "song" (relaxed sinking): on every exhale, release tension from shoulders to feet
  5. With practice, notice warmth, tingling, or a sense of flow in the hands and arms during form practice — this is qi awareness developing

Got: Movement and breath become natural synchronized. Sense of calm energy pervades practice. Form feels less like physical exercise, more like moving meditation.

If fail: Breath coordination creates tension or lightheadedness? Drop breath focus, return to natural breathing while moving. Breath integration develops gradual — forcing it creates opposite of desired relaxation. Return to this step after 3-6 months of consistent form practice.

Step 7: Apply in Context

Build tai chi into daily life as sustainable practice.

  1. Morning practice (recommended): 5 minutes standing, 5 minutes silk reeling, 10-20 minutes form
  2. Integrate tai chi principles throughout the day:
    • Standing in line: practice wuji alignment (relax shoulders, sink weight)
    • Walking: maintain awareness of weight transfer and whole-body connection
    • Sitting: keep spine aligned, feet grounded
  3. Complement with seated meditation (see meditate) for mental stillness
  4. Complement with defensive mindfulness (see mindfulness) for situational awareness
  5. If interested in the martial dimension, seek a school that teaches push hands and applications
  6. Practice outdoors when possible — fresh air and uneven ground develop balance and root

Got: Tai chi principles begin influence posture, movement quality, stress response throughout daily activities. Practice becomes welcome routine rather than chore.

If fail: Practice becomes inconsistent? Shorten session rather than skipping it. Five minutes of standing meditation daily more valuable than one hour weekly. Motivation wanes? Vary practice: alternate form days with standing-only days, or practice to music.

Checks

  • Wuji standing can be maintained for at least 5 minutes without significant discomfort
  • Silk reeling movements originate from waist, not shoulders
  • Form sequence memorized, can be performed continuous
  • At least 3 postures can be explained in terms of martial application
  • Weight distribution clear in every posture (no habitual 50/50)
  • Breath does not become forced or held during form practice
  • Practice session includes standing, silk reeling, form (all three components)

Pitfalls

  • Lead with arms: In tai chi, waist moves first, arms follow. Hands arrive before waist turns? Movement has no power, no connection. Always initiate from center
  • Locked knees or over-bending: Locked knees cut off root; over-bending strains joint. Keep soft, springy bend that allows weight to sink into feet
  • Rise and fall between postures: Maintain consistent height throughout form. Head should travel on level plane. Rising and falling wastes energy, breaks structural integrity
  • Rush form: Tai chi deliberate slow. 24-form takes less than 5 minutes? Too fast. Slowness develops awareness, balance, internal connection
  • Neglect standing practice: Form built on foundation of standing. Skipping zhan zhuang like building house without foundation — structure will be unstable

See Also

  • aikido — complementary martial art emphasizing blending and redirection; shares principle of using opponent's force
  • mindfulness — defensive situational awareness supports martial readiness and moving meditation quality
  • meditate — seated meditation develops mental stillness that deepens internal awareness in tai chi
  • heal — tai chi's qi cultivation supports energetic healing modalities
  • center — AI self-application variant; maps tai chi centering principles to cognitive load distribution and chain-of-thought coordination

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman/skills/tai-chi
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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