Of all the self defense techniques you have ever learned which one have you used the most in your daily life and do you find that you do it without thinking or do you have time to think and choose which one you use
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Daily life?
The one I most use in daily life (taking in to account that my daily life is mostly harmonious) is not to open my mouth and say what I feel. To just evaluate the situation before I speak. I used to speak my mind without thinking, then when I realised it only aggravates and maybe caused certain situations, I learned to stop and think first, sometimes I don't actually comment if I can't find the correct response now.
it's also a good way to wave off flies.
There've been quite a few times that I've thought that some idiot owes the academy driving instructors a thank-you because their training just saved him & me from a crash...Defensive driving, helped me avoid being t-boned once and keeps my insurance rates low.
Lamont
but don't you need the inward parry also most of the time for this?![]()
keeping "stuff" from hitting you is always a good idea and I think it becomes a natural reaction to use the parry once one knows it insted of just wildly swinging the arms
Daily life?
The one I most use in daily life (taking in to account that my daily life is mostly harmonious) is not to open my mouth and say what I feel. To just evaluate the situation before I speak. I used to speak my mind without thinking, then when I realised it only aggravates and maybe caused certain situations, I learned to stop and think first, sometimes I don't actually comment if I can't find the correct response now.
tellner
What has saved my bacon has been the ability to go from normal to full out quickly and without hesitation.
In addition I also believe (IMHO) is that when you have reached a point where you can remain calm, cool and collected most of the time, your ability to go from 0-100mph NOW can be done faster and more efficiently and with less emotional response and more of a wise response to normal daily threats.
A lot of people talk about calmness and de-escalation being the most important self defense techniques they've learned. With all due respect I'll bet that most of you already knew everything you needed to about de-escalation before you started martial arts. Punching, kicking, uniforms and rituals may have given you the permission you needed to do that of which you were already capable.
Calmness? I don't know. I've been calm in sparring, but when someone has really been trying to do me I've been a lot of things. Usually it was surprised, afraid, and intensely focused. Noting concentrates the attention like someone trying to kill you. But even the best in the business has said "In all the fights I was ever in I was in calm, pure "no mind" maybe 5% of the time. The rest of the time I was in 'Oh ****!' mode." If the most decorated officer ever in the NYPD, survivor of thousands of violent encounters with armed criminals, can cop to it I'm not ashamed to say the same.
What has saved my bacon has been the ability to go from normal to full out quickly and without hesitation. Sometimes it meant running. Sometimes it didn't. But it was the ability to do what was needful that was vital. Calm is nice. There for the fight when it becomes a fight is better.
Well, I use more than one.Of all the self defense techniques you have ever learned which one have you used the most in your daily life and do you find that you do it without thinking or do you have time to think and choose which one you use