How many techniques are enough?
Maybe the title for this article should be "How
many techniques are too much." Here is the point: Can the average
person who is being attacked and under a full adrenal rush recall
his self defense techniques? Are most systems too complicated,
involved, or requiring way too much fine motor skills to pull
off in a real attack?
Let's look at an attack scenario. Suppose our
intended victim is going to his car late one night in a several
story parking garage which has a number of cars parked in it
and there is no one around.
Suddenly he notices movement out of the corner
of his left eye. He turns to see someone approaching him quickly
between two parked cars. The guy asks him a question as he approaches.
"Have you seen a black BMW on this level?" The question is designed
to distract the victim as the attacker closes the gap. In another
second the guy is within three feet of our friend and a half
second later is all over him, grabbing him around the waist
and arms and lifting him from the ground.
Fear strikes hard and our victim freezes in his
tracks. His heart beat is approaching 150 in a matter of seconds
as he is under a heavy adrenaline dump.
He has had about two years of formal martial arts
training but somehow everything is happening so fast he can't
recall the specific technique he has practiced many times in
class.
Panic insues. Another second goes by and he realizes
he is being throw to the ground. He hits hard shocking his body
and dulling his senses. He barely feels the punches now raining
on his face as he goes into a state of shock and disbelief that
this is really happening to him.
Within a few more fleeting seconds his wallet
is taken and his attacker is running down the exit ramp.
So what went wrong? Two years of training two
or three times a week and he gets his butt whipped in a couple
of shocking seconds without landing a blow. Worse, he never
even attemps a single technique. Why?
For one thing, he was totally unaccustomed to
this strong fear induced adrenal dump. He didn't know how to
react because he had so many self defense techniques in his
head and with his cognitive thinking blurred (one major effect
of adrenaline) he was not able to pull up a single one to use
in the few split seconds he had to react.
We see this all the time in our adrenal stress
response training classes (F.A.S.T.
Defense). We have even had very experienced black belt instructors
freeze up or flail inefectively the first few times they were
subjected to a good dose of adrenaline.
This why we try to limit the techniques we use
to a handful or so. Additionally we "stack" these techniques
so that they are used in similar attacks. I call this a "build
on factor". This simply means that one technique builds upon
another and that a few simple sequences are able to be used
for a number of different attacks.
We use these principles and techniques in Street
Self Defense 101.