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5 Common Mistakes Beginners Make in Tai Chi (and How to Fix Them)

July 14, 2026 by Dr. Daniel Hoover

Tai Chi is famously forgiving, which is part of what makes it so wonderful to start. But like any skill worth learning, it comes with a handful of predictable stumbling blocks, small habits that quietly slow your progress if no one points them out. The good news is that every one of them is easy to fix once you’re aware of it.

Here are the five most common mistakes beginners make, and exactly how to correct each one so your practice feels smoother and progresses faster.

Mistake 1: Moving Too Fast

New practitioners almost always move quicker than they realize. It feels natural to hurry, especially when you’re trying to remember what comes next.

Why it holds you back: Speed hides the very things Tai Chi is meant to develop: balance, control, alignment, and awareness. When you rush, you glide over the details instead of feeling them.

The fix: Slow down, and then slow down again. In Tai Chi, moving slowly is the skill, not a limitation of it. Imagine moving through calm, waist-deep water: smooth, continuous, unhurried. If you think you’re going slowly enough, try going half that speed. This single adjustment improves almost everything else.

Mistake 2: Holding Tension in the Body

Beginners often grip: tight shoulders, clenched hands, a stiff neck, locked joints. It usually comes from concentrating hard on “getting it right.”

Why it holds you back: Tension blocks the relaxed, connected flow that gives Tai Chi its power and its calming, restorative quality. A stiff body can’t move as one coordinated whole.

The fix: Cultivate what Tai Chi calls song (pronounced “soong”), a state of relaxed, alert readiness. Let your shoulders drop, soften your hands, keep your joints “open” rather than locked, and release any tension you notice in your face and jaw. Aim for the quality of a cat that’s resting but ready to move: soft, yet present.

Mistake 3: Poor Posture and Alignment

Two opposite errors are common here: collapsing (slouching, leaning, or letting the chest cave) and over-straightening (standing rigidly, locking the knees, or arching the back).

Why it holds you back: Good posture is the foundation that lets you balance, root, and move freely. Without it, movements feel unsteady and effortful, and you tire quickly.

The fix: Set up your structure before you move. Keep your feet grounded and about shoulder-width apart, knees softly bent (never locked), spine long, tailbone dropped, shoulders relaxed, and the crown of your head gently lifted, as if a thread suspends you from above. This aligned, grounded stance is the basis of rooting, and it makes every movement easier.

Mistake 4: Holding or Disconnecting the Breath

When focused on the choreography, beginners frequently hold their breath or breathe in a shallow, disconnected way.

Why it holds you back: Breath is what turns a series of physical motions into Tai Chi. Disconnected breathing keeps the mind busy and the body tense, and you miss much of the practice’s calming effect.

The fix: Breathe slowly and naturally through your nose, letting your lower belly gently expand on the inhale rather than lifting your chest and shoulders. Don’t force a specific pattern at first, simply keep the breath soft, steady, and unbroken as you move. Over time, breath and movement begin to synchronize on their own.

Mistake 5: Trying to Learn Too Much, Too Soon

In their enthusiasm, many beginners try to memorize an entire form quickly, or they practice sporadically in long, infrequent bursts.

Why it holds you back: Rushing to cover ground leads to sloppy movements and frustration, while inconsistent practice never lets the body absorb what it’s learning.

The fix: Learn one movement at a time and repeat it until it feels smooth before adding the next. And prioritize consistency over duration, ten focused minutes most days will take you far further than one long session every couple of weeks. Small and steady is the fastest path in Tai Chi.

A Bonus Pitfall: Practicing Without Any Guidance

Because Tai Chi is easy to start on your own, it’s also easy to unknowingly ingrain small errors, a locked knee here, a rushed transition there, that become harder to unlearn the longer they go uncorrected.

The fix: Get some form of guidance early, even if you practice mostly at home. A knowledgeable instructor, in person or through structured online lessons, can catch the little things you can’t see in yourself and set you on the right path from the start. Filming your own practice occasionally can help too.

Common Questions About Beginner Tai Chi Mistakes

What is the most common mistake beginners make in Tai Chi? Moving too quickly. Slowing down is the single most valuable adjustment most beginners can make, because speed hides the balance, alignment, and awareness the practice is meant to build.

How do I stop feeling stiff during Tai Chi? Consciously release tension in your shoulders, hands, neck, and jaw, keep your joints softly bent rather than locked, and aim for song, a relaxed but alert state. Stiffness fades with slow, regular practice.

Am I breathing wrong in Tai Chi? If you’re holding your breath or breathing only into your chest, gently shift to slow, natural breaths that expand the lower belly. Don’t force it, smooth and unbroken is the goal.

How long does it take to stop making these mistakes? Awareness helps immediately, and most beginners smooth out these habits over a few weeks to a few months of consistent, mindful practice.

Can I fix bad Tai Chi habits on my own? Some, yes, especially with awareness and by filming yourself. But guidance from an instructor or a structured program dramatically speeds up the process and catches subtle errors you may not notice.

The Fastest Way to Skip the Mistakes: Tai Chi Mastery

The surest way to avoid these common pitfalls is to learn correctly from the very beginning, under the eye of an expert. Tai Chi Mastery is SOHMA’s online membership that guides you step by step through the fundamentals and the complete Yang-style form, with Chief Instructor Dr. Daniel Hoover breaking down exactly how to move slowly, stay relaxed, align your posture, and breathe naturally.

Instead of guessing whether you’re “doing it right,” you’ll build clean, confident habits from day one, at your own pace, anytime.

Explore the Tai Chi Mastery membership and learn it right the first time.

About Dr. Daniel Hoover

Dr. Daniel Hoover, DC, LAc, MH, CCSP®, integrates a rare fusion of clinical expertise and martial mastery to elevate the health of his patients and students. As a Doctor of Chiropractic, Licensed Acupuncturist, and 5th degree black belt in Shaolin Kempo, Dr. Hoover serves as the Chief Tai Chi Chuan instructor at the School of Healing Martial Arts™. His journey as an Ironman and Master Herbalist informs his unique understanding of how the body thrives under disciplined practice. To expand his impact beyond the local clinic, Dr. Hoover developed online Tai Chi courses, making these traditional healing arts accessible for any wellness journey. If you are ready to begin, we invite you to explore Tai Chi Mastery under the expert guidance of Dr. Daniel Hoover.

Filed Under: Tai Chi

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