Wing Chun – The martial art of spring

Spring - One of the four seasons that nature has created, ranked first among the four seasons.

Spring brings us a bright and brilliant image, a lightness, gentleness, and affection, but also full of new vitality with growth and buds.
The person who created the Wing Chun martial art was a female monk, a great master of Shaolin (Mrs. Ngu Mai Su Ba).
Wing Chun requires the practitioner to be soft and relaxed right from the beginning of practice and this also continues throughout the entire Wing Chun practice process.
The inherent image of a martial artist like Nguyen Du describing Tu Hai in the story Kieu, or the image of a martial artist with bulging biceps and a toned body is not the image of Wing Chun disciples, nor can it be.
In recent years, Wing Chun martial art has become more and more interested, learned about and studied by more and more people.
We hope that everyone, especially those working in knowledge, art, and women, will find in the martial art of Wing Chun something beautiful, close, and suitable for them.
Published in Today magazine, Spring At Dau issue - 2005. (No. 2 3 4 from January 15 - February 30, 2005)
Martial arts master and engineer Nguyen Ngoc Noi

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