Friday, August 17, 2012

A word of caution

If you are taking a reality based self-defense class practicing realistic scenarios, or just you and an equally enthusiastic partner practice together in your back yard, any technique, tactic, or strategy you learn should be used, if possible, with only enough force to stop your opponent. You don't have to even use force equal to your attackers necessarily.
Also, you should never use any move you've learned to bully people or go around looking for trouble. You should only use what you've learned when you have no other option, including the option of running away. Try never to strike a vital spot that can possibly result in death unless you cannot run, and you are in reasonable, absolute, fear for your life. The best self-dense tactic is just avoid bad situations, be aware of your surroundings, including sounds, and walk straight and tall like you are confident of yourself. While being aware of other people in the area, do not stare at them. Merely glance at them to acknowledge that you're aware of them. A stare can be interpreted as a challenge or as a sign of fear. Also, stay away from areas of a city or town if you know they have a bad reputation and crime.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

A List of some of the Body's vulnerable spots with a warning of their potential harm

The body is simultaneously tough and fragile. What follows is a list of the more fragile anatomy of the human body.
You must always be up-to-date on your knowledge of your state's self-defense laws, and do not go beyond them should you need defend yourself. If you have no way to escape and no other option, and all attempts (if time permitted) of defusing the confrontation have failed, then meet force with equal force.
1. The temples. They are relatively flat, which is not as thick and damage resistant as curved bone, such as the curved bone at the place where the forehead rounds at the beginning of the top of the head. Referral shock is transmitted more readily and directly through flat, relatively thin bone like at the temples. The temples are located just above and forward of the ears.
2. The eyes.
3. The ear canals.
4. the tip of the nose.
5. Just upward under the nose.
6. The philtrum (the vertical groove on the surface of the upper lip, below the septum of the nose).
7. The point of the chin.
8. The thyroid cartilage, i.e., the Adam's Apple on the Larynx..
9. The supra-sternal notch (the hollow depression at the base of the throat).
10.The sternocleidomastoid muscles (one of two thick muscles running from the sternum and clavicle to the mastoid and occipital bone. These muscles enable the head to turn while slanting it, or to turn the head and turn it into a slant. They also allow the head to lean from side to side).
11.The vagus and phrenic nerves that run down the inner side of the sternocleidomastoid muscle about an inch above the inner ends of clavicles for the phrenic nerve, a little higher for the vagus nerve.
12.The carotid artery, running vertically up the neck and crossing over the sternocleidomastoid muscle.
13.The brachial plexus.
14.The clavicles.
15.The center of the sternum (breast bone in center of chest).                                                   16.The xiphoid process (the cartilaginous  projection forming the lowermost part of the sternum).
17.The solar plexus ( a deep bundle of nerves between the sternum and the upper abdomen).
This is just a small list. Many more could be found in charts and books or internet searches. As I said at the start, don't use more force than necessary (in fact you don't have to use as much force against an opponent as is used against you, even if it's deadly force. You need only use enough to incapacitate your opponent so you can flee), and know your state's self-defense laws.


Monday, August 6, 2012

The Body's Natural weapons

The human body (not to mention other animal bodies) come equipped with anatomy that can serve as natural defensive and offensive weapons. They are: The teeth (as for biting a nose); The top of the forehead (as for bashing an opponent in the ball of the nose); The elbows for striking vulnerable in - range targets: The heel of the palm of the hand for thrusting and smashing blows (as for smashing the nose with a forceful blow); both outer and inner forearms (the inner forearm is most often used for striking into the area of the brachial plexus on the neck); The outer (pinky) side edge of the closed fist. This is called a hammer fist, and is good for striking most every target; The open cupped palm; The outer side edge of the open hand, below the pinky and above the wrist, this is used for delivering what is commonly called the Karate or Judo chop; The fingers and thumb formed into a claw (as for briskly and forcefully raking down the face or gouging into the eyes and then raking); The knees (as for groin strikes, also face smash tactics); The shins (for soft targets unless your shins are well conditioned as through Muy Tai training); The foot (top, side, heel and bottom, as for kicking and stomping). The next entry will be on the body's vulnerable targets.

Motor Skills in Self-Defense

Motor skills in real life self-defense. Professional MMA fighters and other long trained practitioners of different martial arts are highly skilled at what they do. They are specialists in their fields. But the rest of us are not so. There are three levels of motor skills that we begin to learn in childhood and develop and build upon. The first skill set to develop is gross motor skills. These include the development over time of the ability to use large muscle groups that coordinate body movements such as walking, running, jumping, throwing, clawing, striking, kicking, and maintaining balance.
The next set to develop over time as we grow and learn are fine motor skills, the ability to use precise coordinated movements such as writing, buttoning, cutting, tracing,  visual tracking, or threading a needle.
The last set to develop are complex motor skills, the ability to perform almost any act that involves three independent body parts working in unison.
If you're not a martial arts student who has been practicing for, say, 15 years, you will not be able to use fine or complex motor skills in a fight to defend yourself, and even if you are a 15 year student there is no guarantee that you'll be able to call upon fine or complex motor skills in the urgency of the moment, especially if you're ambushed or sucker punched or faced with more than one opponent who may be yielding weapons of one sort or another. 
The best motor skills the average person can practice to adapt to self-defense situations are gross motor skills. Skills such as kicking in the same way you would a football, poking with the fingers, such as a quick poke to the eyes, delivering elbow strikes, claw rakes with the fingers, grasping body parts and jerking on them, particularly the ears or hair, blocking movements, biting attacks, stomping on downed opponents. If you can get away from a situation before it becomes physical simply use the gross motor skill of running, run to the nearest well populated area, and if necessary, once there call the police. But if you cannot run, and cannot defuse the situation, fight using these gross motor attacks continually, not giving your opponent the chance to mount a defense, Continue to do so until he is incapacitated or runs himself from your onslaught.