To Yield is to Overcome - Part II of IV
“To yield is to overcome.” — Laozi
Martial Arts Application
In TaiJi Quan, “to yield is to overcome” is not poetic metaphor — it’s a daily, physical reality. Suppose an opponent pushes with great force. The untrained reaction is to push back, to stiffen, to meet power with power. But TaiJi teaches: if you yield, turning your body just slightly, relaxing instead of resisting, the opponent’s energy suddenly finds no target. They stumble forward, off-balance, defeated not by your superior strength but by your superior emptiness.
It’s as though you become invisible to their aggression. By not resisting, you allow them to defeat themselves. This is why yielding is considered the highest form of martial skill: victory without struggle.
Final Thoughts: Mind-Body-Spirit Integration
You deserve to feel safe, capable, and alive in your own skin. Self-defense training teaches you how to protect yourself, while martial arts cultivates focus, strength, and peace of mind. Together, they give you a mind-body-spirit connection that radiates into every corner of life. If you’re in Pittsburgh and ready to claim that power for yourself, come train with us — and see how quickly your world begins to change.