Xie Zhikai – Dian Xue (Dim Mak Death Touch) Kung fu
Xie Zhikai – Dian Xue (Dim Mak Death Touch) Kung fu
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Salepage: Xie Zhikai – Dian Xue (Dim Mak Death Touch) Kung fu
Xue Dian (Dim Mak Death Touch) Attacking Acupoint Kung Fu Dian Xue is also known as Dim Mak, Death Touch in the West.
The Touch of Death (or Death-Point Striking) refers to any martial arts technique that may kill with seemingly insignificant power directed at certain regions of the body.
Dim Mak (simplified Chinese: ) is a concept. in traditional Chinese: pinyin: dimmĂ i; meaning “push artery”; Jyutping: dim mak), or dimxuĂ© (simplified Chinese: dim xuĂ©). in traditional Chinese: Smiliey’s origins may be traced back to acupuncture in traditional Chinese medicine.
Tales of its use are common in the Wuxia genre of Chinese martial arts fiction.
Dim mak is portrayed as a hidden body of knowledge with methods that attack pressure spots and meridians, which are supposed to incapacitate or even kill an opponent immediately or in the future.
Dim Mak (Dian Xue) appears as a subset of Kung-fu styles. It is either Dian Mai or Dim Mak, which are two Chinese phrases in two separate dialects that imply Dim “press” and Mak “fist” (Artery or Qui channel)
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Beginning in the 1960s with American eccentric Count Dante, who gave it the English moniker “The Death Touch,” a number of martial artists claimed to use the method in actuality.
Dr Yang-Jwing Ming and Duan Bao Hua are also practitioners.
In real life, however, the death touch is a source of great dispute and controversy.
Beginning in the 1960s, when the word was sold alongside the English version “The Death Touch” by American eccentric Count Dante, a number of martial artists claimed to practice the method in fact.
An article in Black Belt magazine in 1985 stated that Bruce Lee’s death in 1973 might have been caused by “a delayed response to a Dim-Mak hit he suffered some weeks prior to his collapse.”
Other authors have also claimed that Bruce Lee’s death was caused by a “Quivering Palm method” (along with an article about teacher Wong Doc-Fai) and that “dim mak does genuinely exist and is still taught to a few chosen kung fu practitioners.” Dim mak is described as “one of the secret specialties” of wing chun in a 1986 book on qi.
Taika Seiyu Oyata created the Ry-te style of “pressure point combat” (Kyshojutsu) in 1990.
George Dillman, a karate instructor, established a style including kyshojutsu, a term he associates with Dim-Mak, in the 1990s.
Dillman later went so far as to claim to have invented qi-based assaults that operate without physical contact (“no-touch knockout” techniques), a claim that did not hold up to third-party scrutiny and was thus dismissed as fake.
In addition, Erle Montaigue (1949-2011) released a series of books and instructional films about Dim Mak with Paladin Press in the late 1980s.
Montaigue claims to be “the first Westerner to be granted the degree of ‘Master’ in taijiquan,” which he received in 1985 from Master Wang Xin-Wu.
Dim-Mak, according to Montaigue, is a component of classic old Yang style Taji Quan, which he began learning in 1978 from a master named Chiang Yiu-chun.
Montaigue indicated that this individual was an illegal immigrant, making it impossible to confirm his presence.
In 1995, Erle learned the final “qi disrupting” forms of Wudang Shan from Liang Shih-kan.
Kelly (2001) and Walker and Bauer (2002), both with a foreword by Montaigue, are additional volumes published by Paladin Press on the subject of Dim Mak.
This is a genuine Dian Xue (Dim Mak Death Touch) instruction from a Chinese Master.
A three-volume collection in Chinese with English subtitles that has been properly prepared.
3 DVDs (about 2 hours 45 minutes) Subtitles in English This is the ONLY collection of Dian Xue (Dim Mak Death Touch) Teachings in English from an actual Chinese Master, and it is highly ratio friendly. Dian Xue’s biography.
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