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Oh yes, choking. I introduced that purely to note that choking is not a good option in a street fight in Australia as it can attract an attempted murder charge and a long period of incarceration. Better not to choke or punch at all in most cases.
There is no disconnect. The smallest part of self defence requires the most training to become proficient. The most important part of SD training is what you posted earlier, common sense.
To me, we need to keep drilling the simple aspects of SD while we are training our martial art.
I don't do background checks but I do interview and I have knocked people back. I can say categorically that this guy would not have ever become a student of mine whether he needed that sort of training or not.Do you do background checks on potential students? We do not. And it could be argued that some of those most in need of the self control and self discipline we at least try to teach are those who would fail a background check.
Agreed.What is taught, what is absorbed, what is retained, and what is applied in a crisis are four different things. Most schools are primarily about teaching people to defend themselves in a fight. This is self-evident. I don't think I've ever known anyone promoted for their mastery of Run-Fu, although it's certainly something we encourage.
I didn't grade anyone for their self defence skills because I don't run formal self defence classes unless by request. These guys might though as they are all wearing coloured belts ...Do you test and promote based on avoidance techniques, or on combat techniques?
This was not a consensual fight. This was a bystander who was assaulted.
No it's not. It was 9pm at night in one of Australia's most popular night spots. There is nothing to suggest that the victim, or anyone other than the perpetrator, had been drinking. The big problem here, and in many other places, is 'ice'. The kids offering drugs were probably selling some form of amphetamine.This is one of those "well DUH" statements. A significant portion of those who are out for a good time include drugs as part of that good time. Alcohol, it should be remembered, is a drug.
What Mr MMA intended is a mute point now. He has pleaded not guilty to murder and guilty of manslaughter.This is a sad case, and I admit that from my point of view, the correct charge would be manslaughter (since I really doubt Mr MMA intended to kill anyone), but that's a matter of local law. Not my opinion.
I think this guys record and his posts on Facebook prove he is stupid, full stop.People on drugs do stupid things.
Innocent people can be hurt by those stupid things.
Laws are not intended to protect those innocent bystanders, nor are they capable of doing so. They're only intended to punish the person who did the stupid thing.
That's pretty much all I can get from this scenario.
I don't do background checks but I do interview and I have knocked people back. I can say categorically that this guy would not have ever become a student of mine whether he needed that sort of training or not.
Forgive me I was not aware there was a straight KO (I can not have access to most links from here and was going by what I read of others)..
Agree with you my point is not valid. Though anecdotally I have seen KO blow concluded with soft back breakfall I do not know how this happen and but I do recall an elbow strike -accidental- where uke was KO but some how or other deployed the old mat slap.. Interestingly for me this was a colleague who -like me- had long prior stopped mat slapping because we were told in no uncertain terms of its unnecessary inefficiency.. so what happen was either old muscle memory, pure coincidence or maybe I am just day dreaming? Jx
For me, the tats. Nah, just kidding.What do you think would have been the red flags that prevented him from training with you?
Self defense championship - a bit of an oxymoron.I didn't grade anyone for their self defence skills because I don't run formal self defence classes unless by request. These guys might though as they are all wearing coloured belts ...
Not that they are demonstrating self defence.
My question of you DB would be if there are situations like you say where trained falling / trained awareness and de-escalation make no difference then 1. presumably the same potential situation exists also that negates your ability to fight - there will ALWAYS be some one bigger and badder than you? and 2. what is the point in training any of this when there are circumstances out there that negate it all? Are all of us just playing odds and stats games? Interested in your thoughts JxLearning to fall is only going to help. And is good advice. I mean we can find all sorts of references to occasions where trained falling would have made no difference.
And on that topic circumstances where trained awareness and de-escalation makes no difference.
And some times where the difference does hinge on your ability to fight.
My question of you DB would be if there are situations like you say where trained falling / trained awareness and de-escalation make no difference then 1. presumably the same potential situation exists also that negates your ability to fight - there will ALWAYS be some one bigger and badder than you? and 2. what is the point in training any of this when there are circumstances out there that negate it all? Are all of us just playing odds and stats games? Interested in your thoughts Jx
See, this is a disconnect. Have you guys ever heard of the 80/20 rule? It's not scientific... more of a philosophy that speaks to general truths. Your post reminds me of it, and that's not necessarily a good thing. If most of your training is spent learning the thing that you are really expecting to do the least, then IMO, you're focusing on the wrong thing. Particularly when the stakes are as high as personal safety and self defense.There is no disconnect. The smallest part of self defence requires the most training to become proficient. The most important part of SD training is what you posted earlier, common sense.
To me, we need to keep drilling the simple aspects of SD while we are training our martial art.
Brian, I really appreciate your thoughtful comments. I think we might disagree on a few important points here, which are relevant to how we're approaching the issue. I believe that most people think they have more common sense than they actually have. I believe that soft skills, including written and verbal skills, are practical skills and not intellectual ones. Learning how to assess a situation, read body language, and influence people is not an abstract. It is concrete, if subtle. Further, the subtleties of soft skills require far more considered, deliberate, and thoughtful practice than a sprawl, a scissor sweep or a strike.Hey Steve, not quite sure on that. I think you also have to account what people can learn intellectually whether from a written or verbal presentation in a period of time. In comparison to what someone can also learn physically and use in a period of time. It is actually and this is from experience easy to build on general common sense and cover basic legal considerations regarding personal protection than it is to impart a physical skill set. In my basic Scenario Based Training Intensives I spend a good 45 minutes to an hour going through Awareness, Avoidance, self defense legal implications, etc. People tend to pick this up quickly and leave with handouts and rough knowledge that will serve them well. They pick up things so quickly that they can apply them in "real time" and adrenalized during the scenarios. (verbal de-escalation, avoidance, etc.) Then I spend roughly two hours imparting generally gross motor movements in the air and then on thai pads like the jab, cross, hook, elbows, knees, ground work like the sprawl, scissor sweep with strikes and getting up, bump and roll when mounted to getting up, etc. All of the above are taught with the idea of getting out of there immediately when possible. You will not see kicks there because I personally feel it is a much harder skill set to develop and cannot be done quickly. Then an hour working with the Predator Armour where the trainees can apply what they have learned against an aggressive or crazy, or dating friend, etc. in a Scenario Based Training simulation where we work to get their adrenaline going. Which could require them to use awareness, avoidance, verbal skills, de-escalation techniques, physical action, etc. The key thing in regards to your observation is that in order to just do simple gross motor movements someone has to invest a serious amount of time and effort into learning them and of course continued training in order to maintain those skill sets. On the intellectual side it is easy to teach, train and maintain awareness, avoidance skills and build on common sense. Once you have a base it is more about looking at what new legal issues might arise from a new court case, new law, etc. Yet, the intellectual side, common sense, etc. I feel is easier to maintain and a lot easier to learn. ( for most people)
See, this is a disconnect. Have you guys ever heard of the 80/20 rule? It's not scientific... more of a philosophy that speaks to general truths. Your post reminds me of it, and that's not necessarily a good thing. If most of your training is spent learning the thing that you are really expecting to do the least, then IMO, you're focusing on the wrong thing. Particularly when the stakes are as high as personal safety and self defense.
In the pillars of self defense thread, many people, including you, point to a lot of things that are unrelated to fighting. And even the fighting skills are of dubious use, because as I learned reading Andrastea's excellent post on women's safety, the fighting aspects of ALL training rely upon presumptions about the context. So, it may be you're spending a lot of time learning the WRONG kind of fighting. We see this articulated around here all the time when it comes to competition vs self defense discussions. But, having read the matter of fact, common sense that Andrasea posted, it's clear that even programs sincerely intended to deliver quality self defense training may be teaching the wrong kind of fighting.
But most (and I believe all, but didn't re-read the entire thread) acknolwedge that fighting is the last resort, and that so much more goes in to self defense. Soft skills like deescalation, communication, situational awareness. Other things like making good choices, having a wing man. A lot of non-fighting related things go into avoiding self defense situations in the first place. I think you even said that fighting is what happens when your self defense skills have all failed. Something like that.
It would seem to me that if you're really, seriously about training for self defense, most of the time you spend in training should be on the things that you will really need day to day. And a small amount of time should be spent on the things you are likely never to need. Or said plainly, if you do everything else well, you will likely never need to fight.
Now, this odesn't mean you shouldn't learn to fight if you want to, or that it has no value. Rather, it puts it into context, where it belongs relative to the REALLY important self defense skills that actually matter, according to you guys as stated in the thread on the pillars of self defense.
So, really, there is a disconnect. 80% of self defense training focuses on something that is only useful 20% of the time. That's what the 80/20 rule would say. But, really, that's being very generous. Particularly in a country that is as safe as you allege, where you are enacting severe punishments based upon an average of 6 unintentional (if avoidable) deaths per year, nationally.
Just have a minute. I always enjoy reading your posts, but want to respond just to this part for now.I think we would have to agree to disagree here or we are talking around each other. I have also like you managed and trained hundreds of people work related including entry and supervisory level. Intellectual based skills whether written, verbal de-escalation, common sense, etc. are in general easier to teach, quicker to retain and do not require the number of hours upon hours upon hours of training to maintain.