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Self Defense Tip #13
Two approaches to learning self-defense skills

by Thomas Kurz, co-author of Basic Instincts of Self-Defense and author of Stretching Scientifically, Secrets of Stretching, and Science of Sports Training.

To read the previous installment click here.

There are two approaches to learning self-defense skills.

One approach starts with students practicing predetermined defenses, each against a known attack, for example, a left block against a right punch. With considerable practice, students eventually learn to anticipate the form of attack correctly and may respond instinctively with the most appropriate technique.

This first approach leads to spectacular results but requires many thousands of repetitions of defenses to learn it properly. Students who practice with partners who have considerable ring- or street-fighting experience will learn (consciously or subconsciously) the subtle moves that precede each type of attack. Eventually, thanks to picking up on those clues, the students may anticipate the attacks and instinctively defend with the appropriate move. The drawback of this approach is that it takes those thousands of repetitions to learn to respond to each different type of attack. It also requires that the training partner be intimately familiar with the technique of the attack—otherwise the student will learn wrong clues.

The other approach starts with students practicing one type of defense against a whole variety of similar attacks, for example, entry into a clinch against all fist strikes. In this “instant” approach the student is taught what attacks can be made at a given distance, what their common weak spots are, and how to neutralize a whole class of attacks with one and the same move. For example, at a distance greater than one length of your attacker's leg, you are not likely to be unexpectedly grabbed or hit with a fist, knee, elbow, or headbutt. To hurt you, the attacker must either reduce the distance or do a full extension kick which could reach you because of the rotation of the attacker's body. In such a kick, from this distance, the attacker has to aim for your midsection. (He or she would have to be closer to kick your knees or head.) Knowing this you do not have to anticipate where the kick is going and since all kicks at full extension can be defeated with the same move, you don't have to anticipate the type of kick either. In the case of hand strikes, this approach relies on jamming an attacker's arms, because at an arm's distance you can lay your hands on your attacker's hands and then either enter into a clinch or throw your own punch or kick. (This is a simplification. To see how these defenses work, see the Stadion video Basic Instincts of Self-Defense.)

In the second, instant approach, because it does not rely on correct anticipation of a specific form of attack, the partner's skill is not so critical. The number of repetitions needed to learn the universal defenses is much smaller—intelligent and fit people master them in a course of at most a few workouts. Those who keep practicing these techniques against skilled partners will develop the ability to anticipate correctly too, and eventually will be able to use specific defenses against various attacks.

To learn more techniques, see Basic Instincts of Self-Defense.

To read the next tip click here.

This article is based on the video Basic Instincts of Self-Defense.
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