Immersed into the fun!

Worldwide Martial Arts


Dear I Liq Chuan Instructors, Students, and Disciples,

In this entry to 2016, as I am reflecting back on my journey, I want to thank you all for following me and trusting in my guidance. I am grateful to have such a supportive network of students working to deepen your understanding and always approaching my teaching with the greatest of respect. I am also grateful for all who have trusted and followed me in the early years before the formalization of the curriculum and who have changed with change.

I appreciate you all for seeking, recognizing, and valuing the cultivation aspects of I Liq Chuan, and I am proud to announce that it is time to truly distinguish the cultivation process of our art. This process will now be going by the name of Zhong Xin Dao (中心道).

During my time at the Chuang Yen Monastery I began to develop and better clarify the philosophy and the viewpoint which has driven forward my martial understanding, and which has now evolved to the point that I feel it is important to define and name.

I Liq Chuan has been transformed and completed because of the work I have done in looking into the heart of the process, my reflections on the neutral mind, the neutral touch, ultimately the neutral path. Those of you who have been following the curriculum and grading process that I have created for I Liq Chuan are already on the path of Zhong Xin Dao. With this new turning point, I am hoping to create more clarity around the philosophical aspects of your current training. A way to more fully embrace the cultivation aspects and see it as something that I have evolved and created since those early years in Chuang Yen Monastery, something I continue to evolve today.

People may ask, does a master still evolve? Of course, I must always be refining and deepening my understanding. This is what has happened more and more over the years. This is why everything continues to dissolve ever more into just one thing. What this means is that Zhong Xin Dao does not just apply to I Liq Chuan, but to all martial arts, and throughout life. This viewpoint for me transcends I Liq Chuan - We train martial arts for self defense, and to cultivate discipline and health. But ultimately, why do we train martial arts? The inherent nature of martial arts is that martial contact provides immediate feedback for training readiness and alertness. At the heart of that feedback, there is a dialogue, between your mind and your body, as well as you and your opponent. This mind-body dialogue is where the deeper cultivation begins.

As a young man, I first looked to my father for my martial training. Later in life, during the years of working at the Monastery, I was granted deeper insight into the mechanism of attention, eventually finding a viewpoint which was destined to transform my father’s I Liq Chuan. At first I continued to incorporate these insights and apply them to martial practice.

My father taught the approach of knowing yourself and knowing your opponent. During my time at the Monastery I realized that to look into the cause and effect one must understand the conditions. How can we talk about knowing yourself or knowing anything at all for that matter? In order to really know, you must ask yourself what is knowing, how can you know, and knowing from what reference? Only then can you have the right process for understanding the conditions.

Traditionally, high martial skills were carefully guarded, and passed only through direct contact and years of personal one-on-one guidance. Often only the eldest son, or a single chosen student was allowed access to the “Xin Fa" (心法), or Heart of the Knowledge of the art itself. This way masters ensured strong loyalty and support of their students. It was often not practical or possible for them to transmit this highest skill to a larger community without direct contact. For this reason, generally close ‘indoor’ disciples gained more than the wider community.

I hoped to change that, I wanted to share the highest skill without diluting or diminishing the quality of transmission. Devising a methodology for transmitting the deepest kinds of knowing took me nearly twenty years. I designed the curriculum of Chin Family I Liq Chuan with such high clarity that those students who do not always have direct access to me are still able to tap into the essence, because the essence is based on the very nature of nature.

Mastery is a product of cultivation and understanding the essence of things. In order to share with all my students the path to mastery, not just mastery of martial arts, but mastery itself, I am now introducing you to my process, … the process of Zhong Xin Dao.

Thank you all for spreading the art and for cultivating the neutral way.

With Gratitude,

I Liq Chuan Gatekeeper / Lineage Holder

Zhong Xin Dao Founder

International Chinese television network CCTV featured Master Sam F.S. Chin and his students on a near 90 minute documentary.

First air date on January 24th, 2016 on CCTV 9.
CCTV channel 9 has a viewer audience of over 1 billion people.

I Liq Chuan is the fastest growing Chinese internal martial arts system in the world with certified instructors in over 20 countries.
It's unique comprehensive grading system; a hallmark of I Liq Chuan - has proven to ensure a high level of quality control with the transmission of the art to future generations.
Once an art reserved only for 'Masters'; today this same grading system has expanded the scope of the I Liq Chuan's invaluable teachings,
enhancing the lives of people living with blindness, physical handicaps, and the elderly.
I Liq Chuan is featured now in this documentary film which has now been viewed by hundred of millions of people worldwide.
Watching this will give you a special glimpse into Master Sam Chin's private life and his inspiring fortitude with his own health challenges.

After looking worldwide for over a year, CCTV decided to feature I Liq Chuan and the Chin family for this exploration of Chinese Martial Art Systems practiced outside of mainland China

with comments by

New York Times Reporter and Pulitzer Prize Nominee - Alan Schwarz at 14 min 36 sec

Dean & Professor of NYU Silver School of Social Work - Dr. Lynn Videka PhD at 14 min 54 sec

Stanford University Medical Center Program Director - Dr. Beverley Kane MD at 1 hour 5 min and 49 sec



Share this article





Related Posts


Orlando Martial Arts
Orlando Martial Arts
Florida Martial Arts
Florida Martial Arts
Source Martial Arts
Source Martial Arts

Latest Posts
Aikido Fellowship
Aikido Fellowship
Rebeca Willis-Conger, sophomore sociology…
Aikido Victoria BC
Aikido Victoria…
Come and try this non-aggressive, family-friendly…
Scarsdale Aikido
Scarsdale Aikido
For new members, welcome to our dojo…
Aikido Hamilton
Aikido Hamilton
Chief Instructor: Takeshi Kimeda, 9th…
Yoshinkan Aikido UK
Yoshinkan Aikido…
It is very unfortunate that in modern…
Search
Featured posts
  • Orlando Martial Arts
  • Florida Martial Arts
  • Source Martial Arts
  • Famous Martial Arts
  • United States Martial Arts
  • Martial Arts Sports
  • Olympic Martial Arts Sports
Copyright © 2024 l www.aikidoofgreensboro.net. All rights reserved.