I was a student of Sifu Fong's many years ago. Witnessing the depth of his practice in person was very humbling. He was kind, witty, focused, and incredibly strong. Thankful for the time I had with him.
Hmm very cool, I can see the idea, he's working on that electric shock type power, I like the slow to quick to slow rythym... like waves. You can see he's really feeling the energy. I can see adding something like this into my chi gung.
To all the people "missing" the test...and calling this dancing. You wouldn't understand that "testing power" is unless you have a basic knowledge of I Chuan. Kind of how you won't know what "dribbling" is unless you have a basic knowledge of basketball. Both of these BASIC concepts are far beyond your feeble minds' ability to grasp. Go back to playing "Supremacy MMA" on your little Xboxes and fantasizing about how "badass" you are. It takes a minimum I.Q. to practice REAL martial arts.
Looks better than other yi chuan folks I've seen on you tube. But I seem to be missing something with the power testing too. Whenever I've trained with my sifu in HK force is tested with a training partner. The partner may apply force to your structure thus testing your alignment for weakness and you can discharge force through their structure. How can you truly test power without another person to pressure test and give feedback? I don't feel you can test power only in the air. How do you know your structure and power without resistance? You can't just go on how you feel, if you can feel strength and power in your body as you release into the air then you haven't released the power. If you actually release you won't feel power in your body. So you need a partner to release into to see the manifestation of your power.
Testing power is one translation. Seeking power is another. It’s a way of checking if you can keep the allighnments and the internal visualisation/sensation while moving