Ronin74
Brown Belt
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2008
- Messages
- 434
- Reaction score
- 13
I wasn't sure where to post this, since it had to do with a personal fear.
Has anyone hear ever had the experience of dealing with a "martial bully"? I'm talking about someone who's actually got training experience, and has threatened to use it on others.
A few years ago, a former member of the group I trained with began sneding out what might best be described as "thinly-veiled threats". He was emailing challenges to a former friend of his (as well as a friend of mine), as well as trying to goad me into inviting him to my school. The emails were rather threatening and included talk of "no quarter/no mercy" and other such melodrama. Out out of respect for my friend's wishes, we let him work it out on his own. It was maybe less than a year later that he emailed me, trying to bait me with really childish name-calling and requesting an invitation to my school. I don't know what happened to him and my friend, and luckily he never pursued a visit to my school. However, it did play a role in how I viewed my training after that.
Now, before I go on, I should mention that I was ready to call the police, and even spoke to an old friend in the local sheriff's dept, and what it basically came down to was A) my friend was the one who was directly threatened, and so it would have to be his choice to pursue any course of action; and B) I was in the right mindset to not entertain his emails, and not to extend an invitation, and to be ready to call the police if he come to my school, even on the grounds of it being a concern of safety (he never openly threatened me). So in a nutshell, I was ready to call the police if something were to go down.
Here's how it affected me though. In reading my friend's email, the bully made comments that can be summed up as him looking to start a fight the next time he saw my friend. Having emailed me, I had to consider the possiblity that he would threaten me in a similar manner. The idea of him trying to start a fight with me scared me. I've been in my share of fights protecting myself from bullies, but this guy was sort of a "bully's bully". His experience in martial arts dwarfed mine (he'd been training as long as I was probably alive). His reputation as a guy who could handle himself in a street fight was established before I was even in high school, and by the time he got out of the pen, I had just started training seriously. In a nutshell, this guy sort of became the "boogie man" in my life in the martial arts.
Despite all the preparations I made to involve the authorities if I had to, I felt like my training was not enough, and I was already an instructor at the time he began his "terrorizing" of former training partners. So I decided that I had to be ready myself- not as a martial artist- but as a guy who had every right to protect himself. I re-dedicated myself to my training, and when it felt like that wasn't enough, I tried taking up other arts to help fill in where I felt I was lacking.
Is it wrong that I should feel even a little paranoid, and want to train with the intent that this guy might actually come after me? Obviously I'd call the cops if I knew a confrontation were to happen, but is it wrong that I would worry over what could happen between that time and the time it would take for them to arrive?
Has anyone hear ever had the experience of dealing with a "martial bully"? I'm talking about someone who's actually got training experience, and has threatened to use it on others.
A few years ago, a former member of the group I trained with began sneding out what might best be described as "thinly-veiled threats". He was emailing challenges to a former friend of his (as well as a friend of mine), as well as trying to goad me into inviting him to my school. The emails were rather threatening and included talk of "no quarter/no mercy" and other such melodrama. Out out of respect for my friend's wishes, we let him work it out on his own. It was maybe less than a year later that he emailed me, trying to bait me with really childish name-calling and requesting an invitation to my school. I don't know what happened to him and my friend, and luckily he never pursued a visit to my school. However, it did play a role in how I viewed my training after that.
Now, before I go on, I should mention that I was ready to call the police, and even spoke to an old friend in the local sheriff's dept, and what it basically came down to was A) my friend was the one who was directly threatened, and so it would have to be his choice to pursue any course of action; and B) I was in the right mindset to not entertain his emails, and not to extend an invitation, and to be ready to call the police if he come to my school, even on the grounds of it being a concern of safety (he never openly threatened me). So in a nutshell, I was ready to call the police if something were to go down.
Here's how it affected me though. In reading my friend's email, the bully made comments that can be summed up as him looking to start a fight the next time he saw my friend. Having emailed me, I had to consider the possiblity that he would threaten me in a similar manner. The idea of him trying to start a fight with me scared me. I've been in my share of fights protecting myself from bullies, but this guy was sort of a "bully's bully". His experience in martial arts dwarfed mine (he'd been training as long as I was probably alive). His reputation as a guy who could handle himself in a street fight was established before I was even in high school, and by the time he got out of the pen, I had just started training seriously. In a nutshell, this guy sort of became the "boogie man" in my life in the martial arts.
Despite all the preparations I made to involve the authorities if I had to, I felt like my training was not enough, and I was already an instructor at the time he began his "terrorizing" of former training partners. So I decided that I had to be ready myself- not as a martial artist- but as a guy who had every right to protect himself. I re-dedicated myself to my training, and when it felt like that wasn't enough, I tried taking up other arts to help fill in where I felt I was lacking.
Is it wrong that I should feel even a little paranoid, and want to train with the intent that this guy might actually come after me? Obviously I'd call the cops if I knew a confrontation were to happen, but is it wrong that I would worry over what could happen between that time and the time it would take for them to arrive?