[yt]9e8xNmi77PM[/yt]
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
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I tend to agree with a lot of what he says.
I'd train under him for a while...
That said, I don't believe he can teach something others can't teach. I'm sure there are many that teach similar to what he teaches, I've seen it, and kinda teach in that manner myself...
[yt]9e8xNmi77PM[/yt]
Thoughts?
Wow... how to write this ... diplomatically.
Ok, first impression this man speaks from experience of being out there in the streets and (possibly) being on BOTH sides of the fence. Defender... and attacker (likely in his younger days). Very likely I'm horribly wrong about the man... just speaking from first...
Well... I really think that the he has a lot of great concept to teach. Yes, I've seen curriculums like this before, especially through the filipino martial arts. I noticed that he used a lot of lock flows, wrist locks, yelling, and passive aggressive tactics. Generally speaking, the content is very practical and ideal in self defense.
However, I do find that he does lack what most self defense instructors lack to teach. Proper disengagement. Many self defense instructors, including myself, love to teach the intricacies and order events during the attack. However, we often forget to teach how to properly disengage the attacker.
Consider this scenario," You're attacked, you responded correctly and are in a dominant position, what do you then?" The aftermath of the attack is critical, because you are still in a life or death scenario.
My advice is to get your attacker to face the floor either through compliance or force with a joint lock. Ask your attacker to spread his legs and arms and keep your knee on his back. After that, run like hell in the direction of your attackers legs, NOT his head. Call the proper authorities and give an accurate discription.
Well... I really think that the he has a lot of great concept to teach. Yes, I've seen curriculums like this before, especially through the filipino martial arts. I noticed that he used a lot of lock flows, wrist locks, yelling, and passive aggressive tactics. Generally speaking, the content is very practical and ideal in self defense.
However, I do find that he does lack what most self defense instructors lack to teach. Proper disengagement. Many self defense instructors, including myself, love to teach the intricacies and order events during the attack. However, we often forget to teach how to properly disengage the attacker.
Consider this scenario," You're attacked, you responded correctly and are in a dominant position, what do you then?" The aftermath of the attack is critical, because you are still in a life or death scenario.
My advice is to get your attacker to face the floor either through compliance or force with a joint lock. Ask your attacker to spread his legs and arms and keep your knee on his back. After that, run like hell in the direction of your attackers legs, NOT his head. Call the proper authorities and give an accurate discription.