Hi all
After a few weeks of Wing Chun and some research on the internet, I am pretty sure the first form I'm learning isn't Siu Lim Tau (correct spelling). I am a little confused and a little worried at how different it seems to be. I asked one of the other students who has been with the school for a couple of years what the name of the form was and although I don't remember the exact name, I remember it wasn't Siu Lim Tau.
I'm just wondering if this should be any cause for concern to me. I was trying to find it on the net so that I could have some documented guide to the moves, to help me remember them.
The sifu did say that different schools teach different versions of the forms, but the principles were the same. He mentioned that some forms will contain two seperate punches for instance, whereas this form combines the two into a low & high double punch.
Perhaps if I explain what I've learnt so far it will seem familiar I'm not too familiar with many of the terms but I'll try to be clear....
After the initial stance establishment and bringing fists to the sides of the chest, start off with a low crossed-hands move, left over right, bringing them up to a high crossed hands position, following the centreline as you move up. Return to original fists-beside-chest position.
Left straight punch, then open the hand face up, rotate to face down, make fist and return to position. Same again with right.
Left pak sau, double punch. Right tan sau, double punch. Return to position. Same again with opposite sides.
Then you pivot left with a kind of circular left pak sau (changing stance to toe-to-toe style), and step forward with a right punch over the left. Right tan sau, step forward with a left punch.
There are two more moves after that that I don't remember properly, then you go back to the head-on stance and pivot right, mirroring what you just did.
That's as much as I've learnt so far. Somebody please say this sounds vaguely familiar
