ARE YOU PREPARED?
By Phillip Starr
For those who
believe that the way they’re practicing gong-fu, karate, or taekwondo is
providing them with real-life self-defense skills, I have a surprise.
You may, and
likely are, very wrong.
Actual self-defense
may well be very different from what you imagine, and hence, train for. The first major consideration is
DISTANCE. Almost all real self-defense
situations occur at very close range; there’s no time (or adequate distance) to
set up in a nice-looking fighting stance.
Stand facing your training partner and stretch out your arm so that you
can touch him. THAT distance (and often
closer than that) is the distance where real self-defense happens. The attack comes out of nowhere…it’s very
often preceded by a push or a grab, and then BANG! You’re hit.
No time to back away or perform any fancy movements. So if you favor using really nifty-looking
kicks, you’re in a very bad place. My
friend, Master Seiyu Oyata (10th dan Okinwan karate, dec.), demonstrated…walking
up to his partner and stopping about 4 ft. away, he smiled and said, “This
(distance) for sport, for fun”… Then walking up quite close to his partner, he
said, “This self-defense!”
So your
self-defense techniques should be practiced at this distance…from a natural
standing position. You will quickly
discover that freestyle sparring is NOT essential for developing genuine
self-defense skills. It helps develop
some things that are useful in self-defense such as tiing, rhythm, and so on –
but overall, it is of little use in real combat. Remember that our current version of sparring
evolved from the culture of Japan, where many people once carried and fought
with swords. There’s a considerable
difference in “fighting distance” when you and your enemy are armed with 3 foot
razor blades…
And when the
attack comes, it comes in multiples. Nobody
is going to throw a single punch and then stand there, looking into your
beautiful eyes. The same is true of
grabs. Punches are thrown in flurries
(unless you break in and stop them). The
head and face are the preferred targets.
There’s no
need to try to land a decisive blow right away.
You need to stop the attack long enough to give you the opportunity to
do that. A solid slap to the tip of the
nose (keeping the fingers loose so they can flop down towards the eyes) works
very well. Not only is it very painful,
but it causes the sinuses to go all off-kilter; the enemy’s eyes tear up
instantly and he can’t see clearly…there’s pain and blood and confusion. And lots of time for you to deliver a
deliberate, powerful strike…and it better be strong! And
remember there are no rounds, no rules at all, no referees, and NO ONE is
coming to help you.
Now, I’m not
saying that things like 1-step, 3-step, and freestyle sparring are
worthless. Far from it! But bear in mind that these are training
EXERCISES. They foster the development
of things you’ll need for real self-defense; a fine sense of distance, timing,
rhythm, how to apply various techniques, and so on.
To become skilled at real self-defense, you have to train for it! And the single biggest consideration that practitioners forget about is DISTANCE. Nobody is going to stand 4-6 feet away from and move in to attack; real attacks begin at arm’s length OR LESS. Now train for it!
No comments:
Post a Comment