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Tai Chi, Baguazhang and The Golden Elixir: Internal Martial Arts Before the Boxer Uprising

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The Immortal & the Angry Baby…

General Qi Jiguang was coughing up blood, near death in a field hospital, when he received a visit from the Sage Lin Zhao’en. The Sage performed a martial exorcism with explosions and a talisman to capture pirate ghosts who blamed General Qi for their deaths. General Qi was completely healed. The Sage then taught General Qi the Golden Elixir, cementing a lifelong bond.

Sage Lin claimed that he learned the Golden Elixir in secret night-visits from the Immortal Zhang Sanfeng. The Immortal was a theatrical character, known for defeating twenty-four palace guards with thirty-two moves while snoring like an earthquake and smelling of booze and vomit—thirty-two moves that General Qi wrote about and later became known as Tai Chi!
The dragon-killer Nezha cut his flesh from his bones and returned it to his parents. He was done. Or so it seemed, until Nezha’s secret father Taiyi descended from the sky and gave him a new body made of lotus flowers and the Golden Elixir—making him invincible.

Nezha was China’s most important hero-god—so important that caravan guards and rebels nicknamed Beijing “Nezha City.” In 1900 thousands of Boxers possessed by Nezha died fighting foreign guns. Blamed and ridiculed for this failure, martial artists who practiced the dance of Nezha hid their history and gave their art a new name—Baguazhang!
The reason you never heard these histories is so dark that few have dared to speak about it, until now…

Completely new and meticulously researched, Tai Chi, Baguazhang and the Golden Elixir erases a hundred and twenty years of confusion and error to reveal the specific theatrical and religious origins of Chinese Internal Martial Arts.

280 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 29, 2019

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About the author

Scott Park Phillips

4 books9 followers
Scott Park Phillips has a reputation for making his students stronger, smarter, richer, funnier and better looking. He lives in Colorado, where he mixes martial arts with improvisational theater, dance ethnology, and Daoist studies.

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254 reviews
June 11, 2019
The books really taught me a lot and I wasn't aware of quite a few of the facts in this book. However, I feel that some of the assumptions are difficult to sustain. It IS a better solution with regards to the origins of internal martial arts.

However, it is a difficult thesis to sustain. There is not much left. Also, the section on Golden Elixir was not entirely clear to me.
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