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Watch their center.Always heard always look your enemy in the eyes when fighting, I have found this very hard to do!! Always looked at a persons hip right side, of course when anything is thrown at me take my eyes off of the hip and block what is thrown at me. It has always served me well!!
Exactly. Focusing on the head is a setup to be head faked. The extremities can move without the center. That is the core concept of the feint.waaaaay back in my jujitsu days I learned form my Jujitsu sensei, we looked at the mid chest and that way we could see the arms and legs, we also did a lot of peripheral vision training as well. Looking at the eyes could be distracting, IMO, and not looking at the eyes has worked for e pretty well so far
The Eagles said it best, "You can't hide your lyin' eyes." And watch out for those "Bette Davis Eyes."The eyes lie.
Good advice. If you're in a one-step range, you'd better be doing something. Controlling/changing the range can get the opponent off their game.Stand far enough back that they have to step to get in to range.
Agree! Leg is longer than the arm. Your first line defense should be your leg.Stand far enough back that they have to step to get in to range. Then you can predictably determine a pre cursor to attack.
In my 50+ years of MA, this is one tactic I have never taught or practiced. I suppose it could work if you had the time to unzip and squirt the opponent in the eyes. Can't try that out now at my age - I'm lucky if I don't dribble on my shoes.- Pee in your pants if you have to.
Marines call it the "thousand yard stare." Defocused techniques can work, but it also requires development, it's not instinctive to respond to the stimulus you get in the periphery.In Japanese swordmanship, it is suggest one should use ‘enzan no metsuke’, (as if looking at distant mountains) when looking at a potential enemy, thus encompassing the whole. This is because the peripheral retina is very good at detecting movement and once that movement has been registered, it’s connections to the superior colliculus (in the tectum of the midbrain) will reflexly swing the eyes around to foveate the are that is moving for full-resolution vision!
Have you ever been lying on you sofa, in the cooling autumn and almost subconsciously, noticed scuttling in the periphery of ones vision, then directly seen it to be a spider, leap up at lightning speed and scream like a little girl? That is ones superior colliculus in action and it’s very quick!
I’ve…ahem…never done that![]()
The autumn spider has never made you scream like a little girl, Bill?Marines call it the "thousand yard stare." Defocused techniques can work, but it also requires development, it's not instinctive to respond to the stimulus you get in the periphery.
I made the spider scream.The autumn spider has never made you scream like a little girl, Bill?![]()
The Eagles said it best, "You can't hide your lyin' eyes."