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Real World Self Defense
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Добавлен 12 янв 2020
Learn Real World Self Defense from Professor Mark Bryans - 9th Degree Black Belt, and highest ranking student in the world in American Combato - Self Defense tactics, strategies, and techniques for Street Survival. (NOT A SPORT)
Видео
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #7 - Use A Weapon
Просмотров 1262 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #7 - Use A Weapon
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #6 - Believe In Your Cause
Просмотров 3032 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #6 - Believe In Your Cause
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #5 - Study The Enemy
Просмотров 5572 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #5 - Study The Enemy
Guerrllia Warfare Tactic #4 - There Are no Rules
Просмотров 1512 месяца назад
Guerrllia Warfare Tactic #4 - There Are no Rules
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #3 - Don't Identify Yourself
Просмотров 6152 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #3 - Don't Identify Yourself
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #2 - Feign Weakness When Strong, Feign Strength When Weak
Просмотров 5222 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #2 - Feign Weakness When Strong, Feign Strength When Weak
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #1 - You Pick The Time and Place
Просмотров 5473 месяца назад
Guerrilla Warfare Tactic #1 - You Pick The Time and Place
How To Use The Folding Knife For Combat
Просмотров 9523 месяца назад
How To Use The Folding Knife For Combat
Dealing With Weapon Threats and Attacks
Просмотров 207Год назад
Dealing With Weapon Threats and Attacks
Consider Attacks From the Rear to be Deadly
Просмотров 163Год назад
Consider Attacks From the Rear to be Deadly
American Combato | Real World Self Defense with Professor Mark Bryans
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 года назад
American Combato | Real World Self Defense with Professor Mark Bryans
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat: Tactic #12
Просмотров 7332 года назад
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat: Tactic #12
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat: Tactic #11
Просмотров 4432 года назад
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat: Tactic #11
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat | Tactic #10
Просмотров 5312 года назад
The Tactical Skills of Hand to Hand Combat | Tactic #10
This isn't a good video... In order to fight a boxer and have a chance, you would quite literally need to know another practical martial arts. Muay Thai, BJJ, Wrestling... Otherwise, you're screwed...
I don't know man, in real life it might not be a predator but what if some angry dude tackles me because he doesn't know how to fight but he's way bigger and heavier than me
Neato
Excellebt
Outstanding, thanks, Mark.
why is every self defense guy bald?
Ok so I'm not a fan of the step behind or the alternating chops and elbows but try I guess. I just don't think you'll achieve a great deal against a powerful man. That being said, I really do like the bracing of your forehead (very good) and I think you could probably kick down at his inner front tibia bone. It's fraqile on the inside diagonal and has a lot of nerves too. Full Nelson is a really tough thing to escape and the instructor is realistic in his depiction of that. They used to teach alternating knuckle strikes to the hands and prying fingers loose, you can try that too but it's a low probability I think.
Great! A great reminder of what You taught me a ways back. Thanks for the reminder of a dangerous situation counter.
Great to see Chris again, give him my best- Paul🙂
Also if he has you pressed back where you are stuck he’s throwing his weight back you just take your own hands and press it on your own forehead resisting his pressure it’s impossible for him to press your neck forward if you are bracing your own head and pressing backwards. You were using back of your hands it only takes the palms and it is far less stressful and energy used on your part .
You want to slip around first , forget the thumb in the eye your rolling the dice assuming it catches his eyes and also someone shorter woukd have more difficulty. You don’t fight 5he lock stay low in the position of the slip around the aggressor you want grasp his right leg with your right arm and the left arm scooping his left leg up simultaneously……this should automatically break the lock and you want to stand straight up he should be in mid air at this point holding him in mid air this doesn’t require strength it’s a lever I’ve , I was taugh5 this decades ago and tested it numerous times even when I was 150 pounds on someone 6”3 300 pounds and he couldn’t believe I completely up ended hiim What your showing might work but your making it way more complicated and only a season martial artist should do your demonstration, when you you grab the attackers legs always go as low near the ankles to scoop up you want to use the actual weight of the other guy to hoist him up .
You want to slip around first , forget the thumb in the eye your rolling the dice assuming it catches his eyes and also someone shorter woukd have more difficulty. You don’t fight 5he lock stay low in the position of the slip around the aggressor you want grasp his right leg with your right arm and the left arm scooping his left leg up simultaneously……this should automatically break the lock and you want to stand straight up he should be in mid air at this point holding him in mid air this doesn’t require strength it’s a lever I’ve , I was taugh5 this decades ago and tested it numerous times even when I was 150 pounds on someone 6”3 300 pounds and he couldn’t believe I completely up ended hiim What your showing might work but your making it way more complicated and only a season martial artist should do your demonstration, when you you grab the attackers legs always go as low near the ankles to scoop up you want to use the actual weight of the other guy to hoist him up .
Weird stuff here I’m a boxer and martial artist and this is exactly what I told my son not to do against any fighter . I’m not sure if this is a parody or not because you shouldn’t be teaching anyone if this is your advice against anyone particular a boxer who can fight .
The best way ro defend against a boxer is to learn how to box.
Excellent Sensi. Keep it simple, and go for the eyes, nuts etc.!
I have my own self defense (SD) system. It is based on what I have learnt by closely studying more than 17,000 video clips of SD situations and fights. This has enabled me to develop a solid viewpoint both theoretical and practical. Everything I train is based on what I have seen time and again in those videos. So let me tell you, 1. I have never seen anyone try a side snap kick to the knee or any place else. 2. On a theoretical level, it makes no sense. It immobilizes you. If you miss or it fails, you are in a bad position. No simple follow up. SD fighters are best served to keep both feet on the ground and remember, Movement is King.
Psycpaths are still people but we can take precaution
Excellent advice as always, training your mindset to think like this, creates instinctive muscle memory - you are able to see vital targets as they present themselves- eyes, throat, groin ect.
The gray man.
I don’t know if you can do anything about it but your audio is extremely low and hard to hear.
not hard to do at 70! LOL
Humility over advertising too much about yourself. Excellent warning.
As a kid, I loved Zorro movies. That appears to the way Don Diego was weak and "El Zorro" was the opposite, but the same person.
Good advice as always- Be well, Paul
Blink if you need help
Are you guys still running the online classes? Thanks.
I like Paul's appear weak. Make them over confined, then attack!
“Appear weak when you are strong, and strong when you are weak” -Sun Tzu; - Paul
Yes, make it your terms... Good info!
I like to practice in busy stores. Carts coming at you right and left. Use your footwork to evade shopping carts and out of control kids.. Like in Costco!
You have a right to life, if someone wants to infringe on that, you are allowed to respond with enough force to end the threat. Most people here live in a civilized society, so force is rarely needed, which is nice, but that civilized society is build on the threat of violence against anyone, who wants to challenge the law / consensus. Being a pacifist is in itself immoral, because you are thereby mandating others to use force to defend you, as it is the duty of an upstanding citizen to prevent crime.
yep-good show Mark.
Try a boxer sometime!!
“Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet.”- Gen. James Mattis USMC; I remember when that journalist asked about "telling children to lie!"...LOL!- Be well -Paul
Parents and teachers do not teach concepts of appropriate violence cause life for them is more comfortable if they only teach obedience.The older I get the more I am concerned that children do not learn anything useful for life in public schools. Beeing nonviolent encourages attackers, I never looked at it that way, very true!
I thought all this nonsense died in the 80’s…clearly not 😬
These are proven methods. You should do some research before you open your yap.
If they are proven methods, there should be real life video of it. Don't mean to be rude, but these are facts.
@@stmartinhk There is. Facts
🤣🤣🤣
As usual great video. I could see using this information with everyday items. Glad to see you posting again!
Interesting take.I can see the possible drawbacks you noted. I like Paul's suggestion as well.
Check out the CRKT Redemption. It’s got a big enough blade and you could definitely use it to strike like you’re describing in your video. It’s also shaped like a coffin.
Good evening, sir. When I was a teen, I had a couple of Dr. Steiner's Paladin books. I would like to have another copy of them but, Paladin went the way of the dinosaurs. I would appreciate knowing where to find them for an affordable price. PM me if you can, and I will give you the titles. I guess Paladin quit publishing them after some lawsuit. Again, I would be thankful for your help.
If you want to be good / great in any walk of life you MUST practice consistently, especially the fundamentals which provide the base of your craft.
Very astute Sensei. I have simplified accidentally to what feels natural and what is the quickest reaction to an attack. Thanks to you and practice-practice and more practice.
Hey Mark, great video. I started boxing when I was 17. I had no formal training of any kind and didn't know what to expect. My trainer started me out with fists to either cheek and my chin tucked to my chest. All I did for the first 6 weeks was learn how to stay on the balls of my feet and step side to side, forward and rearward. Every time I stepped I had to make a sound. (At the time, I didn't realize this was actually a boxers version of "kiai "). I was not allowed to throw any punches at all. Next I learned to pivot, bob and weave. Finally he taught me how to jab and I spent at least a month jabbing. Next was the right cross, then the left hook, right hook and uppercut. Each new technique was added to a prior technique. I trained 5 days per week, 1 1/2 hours with him in the ring each day. It was almost a year before I was putting it all together and shadow boxing and another year before he ever let me spa with another boxer. When I started training with Prof. Steiner, I explained all this to him. I was a white belt for almost 2 years but he knew I wasn't in a rush and in that time I became ambidextrous, including boxing. But not just in the techniques I was learning, it carried over to everything in my life; bowling, throwing darts, shooting pool, throwing a ball and even writing. So practice, practice and more practice can't be emphasized enough!
Hello, May I ask you, as a fellow boxer, why you felt a need or desire to study under Bradley Steiner when you were already training as a western boxer? Secondly, may I ask, was Bradley Steiner athletic and able to apply American Combato methods at full speed with explosive power generation? Thank you brother. 🥋🥊
@@SoldierDrew Hi Drew, I trained under Matthew Ray Drayton, "Poppa Ray" in Dorchester, MA from 1986 through 1990 or 91. I moved out to WA state and I had no idea where to go or who to talk to about boxing. I worked at Fed Ex and made friends with one of Prof. Steiner's students, Eric Herzog. He got me in touch with Prof. Steiner and after observing one class I was hooked. Though I loved boxing, I never had any ambition to do it professionally or even as an amateur. I just loved learning and working with "Poppa Ray". And my initial interest in boxing only developed due to hanging around another friend of mine who had been doing it for years. As for a "need or desire", I was just looking to stay in shape so it was a great opportunity to learn something different while doing so. As for your second question, I believe Prof. Steiner was roughly 43 when I started training with him. He never failed to surprise me in various ways. In a formal classroom setting he would demonstrate movements half speed, (probably quarter speed actually). There were a few times I questioned him about techniques during a private lesson and he went full speed, to which I was surprised at how fast he was for "an old guy", considering I was in my early 20's. He was also REALLY friggin strong. I remember one time, after I started cross training in Hapkido, I tried putting a hold on him and he just pulled away and through the hold, leaving me feeling a bit silly. So yeah, he was "athletic" and knew how to apply power. :)
Glad you made these vids, hopefully the right people watch and listen, grate lessons your showing us.
This was my first look at your channel. I enjoyed your comfortable presentation style and info. You have a new subscriber here.
Sorry , not buying this , have a nice day 😂
Paul's post: I 2nd it!
You have to consider that pendulum exists, a simple low kick or oblique kick or calf kick won't do it, maybe against a very well grounded boxer you will have success in doing that, but if he keeps bouncing back and forth, it's gonna be hard, similar to TKD.
first of all people who seriously train combat sports - are not bullies. secondly you are crazy if you do not take into the table high level of training, physical and mental preparation, hundreds of rounds of sparring and against all of that you put some trick from the systema. it is absurd.
spot on.