
Presenter: Chen Zhonghua Length: 10 mins Difficulty: 3/5 Language: English  
Year: 2026 Location: Queenstown, New Zealand
07-Arizona Push-Hands Seminar 20260206.
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An unseen thread brought Hong Junsheng, a frail young Confucian scholar, to the doorstep of Chen Fake, then a little-known master from rural Henan. Years later, in a quiet park, circumstance placed a university freshman before an elderly man whose modest bearing concealed a lifetime of depth. The meeting itself may have been chance.
What followed was not. The young student returned. He listened. He practiced. In doing so, Chen Zhonghua stepped onto a path that would gradually define the course of his life. From his early years with Hong to his later studies with Feng Zhiqiang—the last disciple of his grandmaster—Chen’s journey unfolded within a living chain of transmission. Yet lineage alone explains nothing. At each stage he had to decide: whether to endure, whether to continue, whether to accept the weight that accompanied genuine instruction. This article seeks the person inside those decisions. We follow Chen Zhonghua across countries and cultures, watching how a Chinese-Canadian martial artist confronts uncertainty, opportunity, and moments of real danger—including a journey marked by a once-in-a-lifetime volcanic eruption. Again and again, the same question emerged: how should he honor what he had been given? The answer was never automatic. It took shape through long practice, private doubt, sacrifice, and persistence. Ultimately, it led to a turning point that would redirect his entire future—the choice to devote himself fully to preserving and advancing Hong Junsheng’s Practical Method, and through it, a living current of Chinese history. |
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Adapted and translated from the article:
“Chen Zhonghua’s World Tai Chi Road.” by Xu Jiaqiang and Xie Yan 太极天下 — 许家强 谢岩 published in 2019年5月17日 |
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Comparing Taiji to MMA often leads to a false equivalence. Critics point to high-profile losses as proof that traditional claims are exaggerated—or even fraudulent—yet these comparisons ignore the differing objectives of each discipline. The legacy of Master Hong Junsheng (洪均生)’s Practical Method (陈式太极拳实用拳法) does not hide behind the philosophical or ethical justifications often used to shield traditional arts from scrutiny; rather, the system is based on Master Hong’s uncompromising premise: |
Taiji possesses a raw, mechanical efficiency that is as practical as it is profound. However, for those watching from the sidelines, the saying holds true: “A summer insect cannot be reasoned with about ice” (夏虫不可语冰). Until one moves from the distant shore of observation into the depths of dedicated practice, the true value of Taiji remains invisible. Sun Yang (孙洋) was once that observer on the shore. A veteran champion with gold in Bangkok (2019) and titles in the Beijing MMA League, Sun dismissed Taiji as impractical for the cage—until he attempted to take down a Practical Method practitioner. What followed was a total neutralization of his professional skill set that forced him to rethink the laws of combat physics. |
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Adapted and translated from the article:
“Why a MMA Champion Studies Under Master Chen Zhonghua.” by Sun Yang 格斗选手为什么会拜陈中华老师为师 — 孙洋 published in 2018 |
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