Self Defense - The First Thing to Know When a Predator Attacks
Author: Stephen Spivey
Date Posted: April 23, 2009
As a predator attacks, your body will go into an adrenal state.
You are flooded with adrenaline (epinephrine), noradrenalin and
cortisol. The good news is these chemicals perform several positive
actions in the body that make them very effective. They dilate the
pupils to increase the amount of light that enters the eyes, they
cause sweating to help dissipate heat, they increase the heart rate
and force contraction, which will increase blood flow to the muscles
so they are ready to move, and they make glucose available in the
blood for use by other organs. All these hormones work together
in conjunction to assure that we can both engage in a physical altercation
(Fight) or escape and avoid (Flight). Despite our bodies' best efforts,
however, without proper training a surge of these chemicals can
cause the body to freeze.
The Danger of the Freeze
When hormones and emotions spin out of control, we freeze, making
it impossible to perform complicated and detailed movements. As
our mind recognizes stimuli from an aggressor, it starts to evaluate
potential outcomes and will execute the response most needed to
ensure survival, whether that is fight of flight. All of this occurs
within a fraction of a second. But if we are not prepared for this
situation, we may experience the Freeze. Most violent attacks
are over within seconds and you have to act quickly with instinctive
principles and techniques. You cannot afford to freeze when your
most valuable asset, your life, is at stake.
What the F.B.I. Says: The Need to Fight through the Freeze
"It is extremely difficult to control one's biological, psychological,
and emotional reactions to life and death circumstances. But it
is even more difficult to do so without adequate, realistic, and
prior training--along with proper mental and physical preparation.
Training often determines which persons survive and which ones suffer
injury or death. Training that is realistic, repetitive, understandable,
and believable potentially reduces the non-adaptive effects of [human
behavior]. In preparing for a highly-charged emotional event, effective
and realistic training can reduce its intensity (levels of arousal),
allowing higher cognitive functioning to prevail." - Violent Encounters
(U.S. Dept. of Justice; 2006)
The Answer to fighting through the Freeze
Until fairly recently, students of self defense were not trained
under mental or emotional duress, nor were they taught to deal with
verbal confrontation. Let's use common sense - usually what proceeds'
a physical attack are biological giveaways that can and often do
include verbal aggression and body posturing. So the obvious step
in training is to cover those scenarios, right? Unfortunately, stories
abound of black belts and others who were engaged by aggressors
and would freeze because they could just not process the information
before them.
So first things first; once we learn the critical aspect of verbal
engagement and body posturing, then we can move on to physical engagement.
In order to physically defend ourselves, we need to be prepared
to utilize gross motor skills and simple techniques under duress.
Finally, from that basis, we can build on more detailed techniques
that ensure a complete arsenal of self defense tools. Techniques
added along the way must be instinctive, natural movements as these
are always efficient and effective and can be parlayed into devastating
strikes that decimate the aggressor(s).
We know this: self-defense is not a complicated mathematical equation.
Virtually anyone can learn to defend himself, but we must be taught
in a logical manner that considers the body's natural reactions
- fight, flight, or freeze - to aggressive confrontation. This type
of self defense is street relevant and practical because it considers
the mental, emotional, and physical challenges we face when dealing
with a threat.
About The Author
In 1993 Stephen Spivey developed the innovative reality based self
defense system, American Combat System and the highly requested
seminar series, MaxDefense. Both of these systems are touted as
cutting edge in the self defense community. People travel from great
distances to participate in his unique training and he has traveled
far and wide to meet the request for his seminars.
http://www.maxdefense.net
Seminar website
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Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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