admin on December 22nd, 2011

Our guest blogger is our good friend, Bob Ellal. The unique circumstances that brought Bob to the art dramatically shows the health benefits of qi gong and martial arts for healing. His path and insightful words come from experience, research and years of practice. Be inspired.


You’re in a convenience store, examining a can of Spam in one of the aisles. Suddenly a hooded man bursts through the door, pulls out a .45, and waves it in the cashier’s face demanding the contents of the cash register. You begin breathing shallowly, from the chest, as fear for you own life pervades you. Thoughts pinball through your mind: Will he shoot the cashier—and then me? Am I to die in a convenience store of all places? Where are the police?

The cashier complies; the robber bolts through the door. Your breathing slows and deepens and the thoughts in your mind slow. You become calm.

This scenario illustrates the connection between breathing and the mind: Breathe shallowly and quickly, and your mind generates a frenzy of thoughts. Breathe deeply, from the abdomen, and the thoughts slow and become manageable.

What has happened when you perceived danger was your body reacted with the fight-or-flight response—it’s kicked in the sympathetic nervous system, one of the two components of the autonomic nervous system. Your body floods with adrenaline from your adrenal glands as you prepare to confront the threat to your life.

As the threat passes you breathe deeply and the parasympathetic nervous system becomes engaged: heart rate slows, blood pressure returns to normal, adrenal glands stop pumping adrenaline into your system. Normality—you are calm and your body can return to normal operations, such as digestion.

The fight-or-flight response is vital for short-term situations—such as when our distant ancestors confronted deadly threats from saber-tooth tigers and immense short-snout bears. But if you are confronting a serious disease or condition, such as cancer or PTSD, your fear will trigger this response continuously, flooding your body with adrenaline and other chemicals such as cortisol. The effect? Your body cannot heal properly, as these substances compromise the immune system.

The solution? Learn to breathe deeply, expanding your abdomen and filling the lungs from the bottom up. You not only kick in the parasympathic nervous system but also provide much more oxygen to the blood, helping your immune system to operate at a high level.

And there’s another tremendous benefit from abdominal breathing: The lymphatic system, which relies on respiration and muscular action to work (it has no pump, such as the heart pumping the blood), will work much more efficiently. The lymphatic system contains vital elements of the immune system, such as the bone marrow—the blood factory—and the thymus gland, which kicks out T-cells, the body’s natural killer cells which destroy cancer and other invaders.

The lymphatic system does many things, such as producing lymphocytes that fight disease and removing toxins from the cells. If you are fighting cancer or another serious condition or disease, abdominal breathing is a crucial element in helping you win your fight.

I learned deep, abdominal breathing as the first step in my practice of qigong (chee-gung, which means energy work—Chinese internal energy exercises). It is also a vital component in other meditative and energy arts such as yoga, tai chi chuan and transcendental meditation.

You can learn abdominal breathing by expanding your abdomen as you breathe, focusing on filling the lungs with air from the bottom up. A good way to test if you’re doing it correctly is to lie on the floor and place a box of Kleenex on your stomach. As you breathe, the box will rise and fall with the motion of your stomach.

If you are fighting cancer, as I have many times years ago, you may be too tired from chemotherapy and/or radiation to do standing or moving qigong, tai chi chuan or yoga. But you can always lie down and breathe deeply, and still stimulate your immune system. It worked for me: four bouts of bone cancer, two bone marrow transplants between 1991 and 1996—and I’ve been clear ever since. Fifteen years of good health. I can’t catch a cold.

Bob Ellal

A special shout out to Bob, Geoff and Dylan! Happy Holidays!!

Visit Bob’s site: http://www.bobellal.com


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admin on December 16th, 2011

The Martial Warrior: “I can kick your ass – but I won’t.”
The Martial Scholar: “I can kick your ass – but first I’ll outsmart you.”
The Martial Monk: “I can kick your ass – but that’s not the issue.”

One of the three principles of TanDao’s Proactive Strategy is controlled degrees of response. Martial artists train to instinctively respond to physical threat. Bam! Hit the attacker without thinking. No thought – too slow. That’s how we should train in class. The opponent attacks we defend without thought.

But is this realistic?

At TanDao we apply practical self defense class training to different street contexts to explore the implications of our fighting skills. You would not use the same technique to deal with an obnoxious drunk, a violent mugger or a child who playful attacks you. The situation determines whether or not you use that snake strike to the eyes, a palm to the chest or a restraining joint lock.

True, an effective technique demands mushin the samurai or Shaolin monk’s zen notion of no-mindedness. While mushin is an ideal to develop unconscious mind/body reactions so we move like lightening, in the real world we must cultivate a higher awareness of controlled degrees of response. Aside from ambush or sudden assaults, which demands instinctive response, the choice whether or not to fight should not be instinctive . This is especially important, if you are trained in dangerous animal techniques like the tiger claw.

Controlled degrees of response is a characteristic of advanced martial arts that puts the martial warrior’s superior strength, kick ass prowess and ego under the control of the martial scholar’s discretion and the martial monk’s conscience.

For The Evolving Martial Artist – warrior/scholar/monk – options are power.

Keep Practicing,
Lawrence Tan

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admin on December 5th, 2011

Are you tough? Well here’s a tale of real tough:

In ancient China, Rambo Lee and Conan Chan were bitter enemies from rival warrior clans. One day while practicing his swordsmanship, Rambo saw an old monk about to be attacked by a wild tiger. He fearlessly intercepted the beast by shouting and waving his sword. The tiger fled.

The grateful old monk bowed to the warrior who saved him and said that he would grant Rambo a single wish – anything he desired. But he cautioned, think carefully, because what ever he asked for the monk would give his sworn adversary, Conan Chan, double. Rambo thought a moment, then said, “Take out one of my eyes.”

Now that’s macho!

This anecdote elevates martial machismo to the absurd. Machismo is a vital element of martial arts. Life or death. Victory or defeat. Kill or be killed. Virile characteristics such as strength, courage and aggression accompany the warrior’s ethos. However, exaggerated display of macho aggression that may lead to bullying born of uncontrolled testosterone drives, liquor manufactured courage and showing off at the expense of others due to ego insecurity must be tempered and transcended through experience and maturity.

TanDao teaches that the martial warrior’s bold actions should be tempered by the martial scholars insight and guided by the martial monk’s way of peace. In our TanDao Tiger Combat book, which teaches extremely vicious tiger claw techniques that are banned even from brutal MMA, there is TanDao saying: “The fiercest warrior has the gentlest heart”.

Evolving Martial Artists practice the martial arts – not the macho arts.

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Keep practicing,
Lawrence Tan



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admin on November 30th, 2011

Check out this funny video from Wong Fu Productions. It deals with kung fu movies, psychological and physical posturing, stereotypes and the distortions created by popular media images — in a humorous way. Watch it to the end.

From a martial arts perspective, this satire expresses a modern fighter’s skepticism on the practicality of stylized techniques. Despite the supremacy of flowery kung fu moves in chop socky films, the realism is not evident in MMA competitions, the testing ground from the popular sporting view of martial arts. Are flowery techniques found in kung fu, karate, tae kwon do bullshit?
Yes, if one is not initiated to the secrets of form. The traditional purist method that teaches the literal expression of stylized movements for street fighting without adapting them for modern application is outdated. Besides being inefficient, it’s dangerous.

At TanDao we are proponents of real fighting and we also preserve forms. A contradiction? To the initiated, forms are physical books of knowledge that imparts martial science. All real fighting strategies, tactics and biomechanical efficiency are encoded in the stylized movement. Evolving Martial Artists seek the hidden language behind stylized moves to enhance real fighting.

Props to our twitter buddy, Paul Ricketts, for showing us the video. You can follow Paul on twitter @sifu33 and, for more funny videos, visit Wong Fu Productions. Enjoy!

If you want to learn realistic Shaolin animal techniques for street defense, check out our Tandao Tiger Combat book and Tiger Claw DVD and video download.

Keep practicing and exploring,
Lawrence Tan



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admin on November 28th, 2011

It’s Cyber Monday, roar a little! Our Tiger Combat ebook is now available for all of your reading devices – Kindle, Nook, iPhone/iPod Touch, iPad, and more, on Smashwords.

Take your style beyond punching, with the TanDao Tiger System, an integration of Shaolin Animals and Bruce Lee’s JKD. You will find new strategic principles, hand/finger exercises, stances, diagrams, and photos to hone a powerful tiger claw for realistic self defense.

Get 20% off on our Tiger Combat ebook – TODAY ONLY! On Smashwords. Use coupon code TD29T.





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