3 THINGS to do when PEOPLE STARE at YOU with BAD INTENTIONS

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
  • Eye contact is a major display of intimidation. It provokes fights and enforces dominance. This week we discuss how to defend yourself against this form of social aggression when people are looking for a fight. It's all very simple psychology. Try this simple trick it works.
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @tbone9912
    @tbone9912 Год назад +2462

    I was bartender/bouncer at a pretty rough dive bar for 22 years. This video has some good advice. The looking back at them with the " dead soulless eyes" trick worked for me many times, because when one of these weak men stare at you with "bad intentions", the last thing they want is to have mistakenly picked a victim that is WAY crazier than they are.

    • @hobowithawaterpistol9070
      @hobowithawaterpistol9070 Год назад +91

      Agreed! In my case I would add, that at some point in my life I decided I’m not afraid to die! This has helped me to be afraid of confrontations, but not give in to my fear!
      Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want be tortured or brain damaged!

    • @daniellekkerbelangrijk3958
      @daniellekkerbelangrijk3958 Год назад +60

      that comes with experience. I'm a bouncer and I do that to. I don't talk much I look deep into your eyes and make you scream and when you run out of words what are you going to do? you wanted to be tough your words are finished and now? That person is going to think I'm screaming but this bouncer just looks right through me. Trust me trust me you broke them and they walk away

    • @mikemccourt6225
      @mikemccourt6225 Год назад +113

      I was told the stare at the eyebrows trick from an older bouncer where I worked as a much younger man - he told me it gives them the impression that they're staring at a shark or a leopard seal (he was Polynesian), something that wouldn't think twice about eating them. After all these years, I can say it works pretty well.

    • @GeorgeousGeorgeousGeorge
      @GeorgeousGeorgeousGeorge Год назад +50

      Yep. Bartender here. 5'7" so I really had to figure this out quickly

    • @CoopyKat
      @CoopyKat Год назад +22

      @T Bone Thankfully some states are cracking down on "rough bars" -- by taking away their liquor license when there is fighting in or around their bar.

  • @steveclarke1857
    @steveclarke1857 10 месяцев назад +697

    When I was a kid, I never realised what my dad was doing when he would ask me, without looking, to describe a room we'd walked into and the people in it. He never actually did explain it to me, but, as I've gotten older, I reckon he was teaching me to develop my situational awareness.
    It's been an invaluable tool to me over the years and I hope to play the same game with my son as he grows up.

    • @brawnydasco
      @brawnydasco 10 месяцев назад +68

      Excellent parenting. Making a game of serious things is the best way to easily ingrain useful skills like that. Smart man.

    • @johnpastore7685
      @johnpastore7685 10 месяцев назад +19

      It happened to me. The guy had a knife. I never took my eyes off of him. He was very dangerous. But, he also realized that, I did not back down. Believe me, I was very scared, but I did not show it. I grabbed his arm.

    • @islandgirl7769
      @islandgirl7769 10 месяцев назад +46

      If you ever have daughters, teach them this as well.

    • @drd1924
      @drd1924 10 месяцев назад +8

      Best thing you can teach them...

    • @mceithdavis3462
      @mceithdavis3462 10 месяцев назад +12

      I live in NW DC i grew up always watching surroundings car that drive by if window up kool if window down stay on sidewalk opposite of window always checking folks facial expressions, watching there hands if I can’t see them and I know there atension is on me em ready DTA DONT TRUST ANYBODY

  • @BDAILY365
    @BDAILY365 6 месяцев назад +166

    My dad was a war vet, and he's been a child through various wars as well. He always told my brothers and I not to fight. He also told us to avoid bad people, places, and things.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад +18

      Makes sense. Don't invite trouble and it won't follow you.

    • @Sargath666
      @Sargath666 4 месяца назад

      yeah right @@JustChill-zd4ib

    • @ciarancosgrave
      @ciarancosgrave 3 месяца назад +4

      Wise advice.

    • @scandisamurai8899
      @scandisamurai8899 3 месяца назад +7

      Mine also fought in a horrific war, and also told me never to fight. However, when I asked him why not, he simply responded: "Because nothing is worth taking someone's life." Unfortunately, it took me over a decade to realize that he was so traumatized by the war that fighting and killing were one and the same to him.

    • @user-dd7dz3uo2m
      @user-dd7dz3uo2m 2 месяца назад +6

      Interesting. My grandfather was in WW2. He taught his sons and I his grandson to fight. He also taught me to never get flanked. He taught me to always wear a belt as a tool against weapons. He also said don't hangout when the sun goes down. He taught me to shoot guns. Throw spears and knives. He also taught me build shelter from the elements. Also taught me how to read and do math.

  • @TheLegion78
    @TheLegion78 8 месяцев назад +29

    The Marines say it is not retreating, it is moving to a temporary defensive position.😂

  • @CaptainRon1913
    @CaptainRon1913 Год назад +508

    Rule #1. Nothing good happens after midnight

    • @kimeli
      @kimeli 11 месяцев назад +2

      where?

    • @ahocka
      @ahocka 11 месяцев назад +31

      ... and with alcohol in poor neighborhoods.

    • @jenningscunningham642
      @jenningscunningham642 11 месяцев назад +24

      Yeah. I don’t drink alcohol or go to clubs or stay out after dark. But shit can happen in broad day light. Generally I just don’t go around the slums. Sucks for people that live in those places and large cities

    • @columbusohio72
      @columbusohio72 11 месяцев назад

      Sexxx

    • @remshot1998
      @remshot1998 10 месяцев назад +5

      Gremlins happen after midnight and nothing wrong with that

  • @bigdogpr
    @bigdogpr Год назад +1046

    I’ve been training for 40 years. And EVERYTHING you said here is spot on. One night my wife accidentally bumped into a pregnant women in a bar. They got hot immediately. There were 15 of them, and just me. I jumped in, apologized and offered to buy a round for our mistake. I got everyone’s order and told my wife to wait by the door, I walked to the bar pretending I was ordering drinks. I told the bartender what happened. I waved to the group, gave them a thumbs up, then we left quickly before they had a chance to figure out what was going on. We were probably 5 miles out of town in our car before they realized what happened.

    • @nothuman1683
      @nothuman1683 Год назад +296

      Why was a pregnant woman at a bar

    • @f.dmcintyre4666
      @f.dmcintyre4666 Год назад +118

      @@nothuman1683 Hey you're picking holes in the plot..................🤣🤣🤣

    • @Captain_Crayzay
      @Captain_Crayzay 11 месяцев назад +151

      Yeah we all saw Dumb and Dumber

    • @jacqueskelly768
      @jacqueskelly768 11 месяцев назад +20

      🤣🤣🤣
      💯 FUCKING GENUIS 💯

    • @tannhauser5399
      @tannhauser5399 11 месяцев назад +25

      @Joe Public - spot on? No.
      And I'm basing that on living and working in over 20 countries (whole EU, including UK now, Singapore, Hong Kong, LA, NY, Alaska, Hawaii, Canada, Australia, Japan... bla, bla, bla).
      More often that not - all of this will get you killed with a lot of people, and I'm more than happy to write more based on my experience with people (as a former military man with also a psychology degree, and computer science one, and quite good with combat skills including tools - but even I would not advise that as a "general advice"; it is not the training as such, but people who you fighting with and their mental approach and attitude as some of them will simply try to kill you just because or even bite part of your face off: nose, lips, cheek, take your eyes out, crush your throat... usual crap, or will be under influence of heavy drugs, some psychopats, or even average looking members of organized crime organization: some eastern europeans, mexicans, or even specific cities like Caracas or Naples (hell even LA and NY), or people who simply don't care at all if you live or die, and so on) - I just don't want to repeat all of that writing with each post like that, or youtube videos.
      But in the current world, I would have to disagree with you on that (that the advice is somehow "spot on" - as in a lot of cases some of them will simply get you killed, or just escalate the issue. Like some people mentioned: eye contact, souless one? Really? In this age... there will be a lot of people that will simply try to destroy you just for that, without any reason, or in best case put you in a hospital, and they wont care at all if you live or die, or if they go to prison or not).
      Edit: grammar, formatting of text, spelling...

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK 9 месяцев назад +20

    In my experience, avoiding town centres at weekends is a great form of defense.

  • @brucephillps6786
    @brucephillps6786 9 месяцев назад +71

    In Australia we have changed the term “sucker punch” to “cowards punch”

    • @georgezimmerman3334
      @georgezimmerman3334 27 дней назад +4

      You could just call it an aussie punch.

    • @nathanlawson313
      @nathanlawson313 24 дня назад

      I like that. Technically, both are accurate - Cowards throw em, Suckers receive em.
      🤝

    • @ponypalpaula
      @ponypalpaula 17 дней назад

      Yes and now they’re correctly named, COWARDS, a bit like those keyboard warriors who attempt to insult with an ignorant post.
      😉😊

    • @KienDLuu
      @KienDLuu 15 дней назад +1

      Or "king hit" - which is the dumbest term

    • @sammyshoes3433
      @sammyshoes3433 5 часов назад

      In Hawaii it’s called a “false Crack” brah

  • @BaoNguyen-bh2rk
    @BaoNguyen-bh2rk Год назад +301

    Also, if the guy leaves whatever place you are, be wary when you also leave the place.

    • @nocturnaljoe9543
      @nocturnaljoe9543 Год назад +15

      I know of a guy who almost died, because he called somebody names, who waited over 4 hours to attack him from behind, when that guy was alone.
      Don't call people names, but do expect them to do everything to stab you in the back.

    • @reddiver7293
      @reddiver7293 Год назад +5

      Parking lots at night: The perfect place for really bad things to happen.

    • @thecelt4807
      @thecelt4807 Год назад +16

      heres a trick i used many times leaving motorcycle club houses bars etc ...for 5 or 10 min before you actually leave close one of your eyes so no light gets in ..then when you leave and go outside where usually its dark open that eye and you can see with it like a fkn wolf as the pupil has dilated large to let in the light and you can see better with that eye in the dark if worried about such

    • @tonybarfridge4369
      @tonybarfridge4369 11 месяцев назад +1

      or if he leaves after you and follows you

    • @thomasmatthew7759
      @thomasmatthew7759 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@thecelt4807 that trick is a good idea, get one eye acclimated to the dark. it's worth a try

  • @paulmakinson1965
    @paulmakinson1965 11 месяцев назад +365

    I got bullied a lot at school and then got into martial arts: judo, karate, boxing. The confidence and calmness it gives you means that you don't even need to use it. And the physical conditioning gave me so many health benefits. Especially the boxing. And the friendships I made on the way were great, they were based on mutual respect.

    • @K162KingPin
      @K162KingPin 10 месяцев назад +20

      I kicked the school bully in the nuts and made him cry. That solved my bullying problems for all of high school. Sadly I became a bit of a bully myself, regrets.

    • @ZenEndurance
      @ZenEndurance 10 месяцев назад +17

      Exactly. I was a boxer and a bouncer and also had my share of street fights. You can tell immediately if somebody is a trained fighter first by the calm way they stand and look at you like "oh, this will be fun". And then if things escalate, the pose they take before the first punch is thrown. If one guy is all beating his chest and gesturing and the other puts one foot in front of the other, shoulder width apart, hands up in front of his face in fists, the first guy is doomed.

    • @jamesdanton9033
      @jamesdanton9033 9 месяцев назад +5

      Joints go crunch at 40-ish. Enjoy.

    • @dmystify1381
      @dmystify1381 8 месяцев назад +1

      the scary thing is,knowing,the amount of damage you can do to another person,that,picked the wrong person.

    • @mkdy218
      @mkdy218 8 месяцев назад +1

      Proper job mate.

  • @richardsorge-
    @richardsorge- 7 месяцев назад +19

    Wise words. A friend of mine, a trauma surgeon, once said: "if people knew how difficult is to repair one's bones, they wouldn't go along breaking them" . Anyway, knowing how to easily break the offender bones, usually gets You out of these situations.

  • @BigA40k
    @BigA40k 10 месяцев назад +91

    This is such important information, my Dad always taught me to flat out ignore people like this and like you said it can actually infuriate them. I have personally noticed the difference from when I avoid eye contact compared to when I give them a good solid look (but not a long stare) is usually enough to make them feel like you're no pushover. It's a tricky balance, because you don't want to start fights but at the same time don't give off the message you're an easy target.

    • @JJFX-
      @JJFX- 10 месяцев назад

      There's a 3rd option to play in the city. The wildcard. Look around aimlessly with eyes wide open and visibly mumbling to yourself until you work your way out the area. Assholes tend to avoid unpredictable wildcards and move on unless you engage. You're probably not a threat to their ego and you might be insane.

    • @dmystify1381
      @dmystify1381 8 месяцев назад

      Like they say,you have to know,your mark.

    • @hariako
      @hariako 7 месяцев назад +4

      Be very careful taking advice from people like this guy.. If your not ready to fight or die avoid eye contact. Some bad people just needs an excuse to hurt someone, it could be simple as making an eye contact. If you want to avoid trouble the best way is to leave.. and if you cant leave .. always hit first.. most of the time it will mess up the other persons confidents and you have a better chance of surviving. Always avoid getting hit first , because one punch can change everything , meaning life or death.. If your k.oed they can do what ever they want to u and you are Fck.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад +3

      What situations you guys go to to need all this defence knowledge lmao I never had any such issues just always ignored people I was not interested in and never had trouble. Why would you look some crazy in the eye? Makes no sense to me.

    • @stefanmattock7994
      @stefanmattock7994 5 месяцев назад +5

      You are extremely lucky to have never encountered these kinds of situations throughout your life. - or you come from a place where there isn’t a lot of violent crime etc. - all assumptions aside, the world is a cruel and callous place, kids get bullied and beaten up at school for being soft and quiet, people get mugged, stabbed, beaten, and murdered everyday, many at random and people that look like “an easy target”…
      It is of the upmost importance for anyone to learn how to physically defend themselves. It is a vital skill, which might just save your life one day as it has mine and many others on more than one occasion.

  • @heroesytumbas
    @heroesytumbas Год назад +627

    My brother's friend was suckerpunched once at a party by a dude trying to impress some losers. He was k.o.'d and the dude left. But the next day he started to look for the dude until he found him and beat him up, he repeated that a couple of times when he saw the dude on the street and told him he was gonna keep doing it whenever he saw him. The dude ended avoiding going out anymore for months before asking for forgiveness.

  • @billysweeney9994
    @billysweeney9994 Год назад +594

    I was bullied a lot as a youngster, then later began boxing and karate
    And something I learned is that someone coming close to you and staring you down is actually a rather simple situation to deal with (I don't mean it's easy in reality, because there are emotions involved, adrenaline dumps to deal with, etc.) but in general the situation isn't complicated.
    My general rule for these situations in this:
    1. If I can leave, I leave.
    2. If they've invaded my personal space and are so close to me that I can hit them, I hit them.
    3. If they're outside of my range but are still close to me, I throw up "the fence" (putting my arms out in front of me, telling them to stay back and that I don't want any trouble or problems), and if they come closer or touch my hands/arms at all, I hit them.

    • @Probabilityislife
      @Probabilityislife Год назад +39

      Problem is the average person hasn't thought and planned for such a situation.
      I grew up in care and jail. Raise your voice and be aggressive in my face and you're going to sleep. Simple rules for fools 😂

    • @snoo333
      @snoo333 Год назад +21

      Would you recommend a teenager learn boxing or martial arts? or both? my 15 year old nephew needs to learn some form of self defense.

    • @mrod556
      @mrod556 Год назад +18

      ​@@snoo333 I've been bullied until I learned boxing. And I always practiced karate. So the answer for me is boxing. Even better: MMA. Which consoder kicks and ground fighting

    • @sword-and-shield
      @sword-and-shield Год назад +10

      The only thing wrong is letting them close enough to touch your hands before action, they have already broke distance and your action is to late, unless you get lucky and it is some mutt.

    • @Mysticdan54
      @Mysticdan54 Год назад +19

      ​@snoo333
      I was bullied since I was 6 years old. I was doing self-defense judo and flip anyone over my hip or shoulder, since I was around 11 years old. Then I became very efficient at wrestling around 15 years old. In 1974 I joined Beaver Boxing Club, Harry Villeneuve's Karate and Kickboxing Studio and the Ottawa Athletic Club. I was doing 2 to 4 hours exercise daily. I gained more and more confidence. To the point where several bullies avoided me. I also was learning Shaolin Kung Fu, Muay Tai Kickboxing, Jeet Kun Do, etc.
      I am 65 years old and can still withstand full body punches and kicks. Unless I get struck in the liver. Most people can't take a hard liver strike which can be very dangerous.
      I recommend him learning Judo, Jiu Jitsu, wrestling, weight training and doing skipping to develop a strong core and back. Also developing an internal force through Iron Wire Breathing and doing Zen Meditation to develop a one pointed concentration.
      Muay Thai is a combat sport. Known as 'the art of eight limbs', it's a discipline that uses knees, elbows, fists, and shins, alongside clinching and sweeping techniques. Muay Thai has a broader range of movements and attacks than other close combat sports.
      I developed the confidence and I also usually rely on my intuition and innate wisdom to avoid confrontations.
      I did full contact boxing and Karate. There is an increase in chances of being injured. I broke my nose twice. If he trains smart and learns how to move well, fast, using feints, bobbing and weaving, using angles and incorporating many techniques and styles to avoid being hit in the head or weaker areas like the liver, solar plexus, kidneys, throat, eyes, groin, etc.

  • @shaynesabala
    @shaynesabala 7 месяцев назад +7

    Great advice. You win every fight you avoid…..

  • @joelhughes7439
    @joelhughes7439 7 месяцев назад

    Really well articulated breakdown as always. 😊

  • @jetman1968
    @jetman1968 Год назад +143

    As a taxi driver back in my twenties (nights) this sort of thing was VERY important. This guy knows what he’s talking about. The real deal.

    • @josephkelly6681
      @josephkelly6681 Год назад +7

      Yep. Me too. I would look right in the mirror and say "So you're talking about jumping me?" Pull over and tell them to get out. Worked 100%.

    • @jetman1968
      @jetman1968 Год назад +7

      @@josephkelly6681 and leave the meter runnin while they decided… good times

    • @devilsoffspring5519
      @devilsoffspring5519 3 месяца назад

      Not a taxi driver, but even as a Canadian I wouldn't want to do that unless I was carrying a pistol even if I worked day shifts! People are porked! Seriously, being a cab driver has to be one of the more dangerous jobs, especially when your fare is high on heavy drugs like meth and somehow magically forgot to bring any money.

  • @theimprovementsguy8871
    @theimprovementsguy8871 11 месяцев назад +287

    This is valuable and very true. Spent most of my 20s doing mma. Never got in to a street fight. No harm in walking away.... for me personally i have nothing to prove. I have found most people who start street fights have no clue on how to fight anyway

    • @pheasant1361
      @pheasant1361 11 месяцев назад +7

      Damn truth

    • @HailWoden18
      @HailWoden18 11 месяцев назад

      You don't need to know how to fight or be fighting a trained MMA fighter for your ticket to be punched. More likely to die from TBI from an Untrained fighter as opposed to a trained one. So, your last point is of zero comfort or relevance to people who may find themselves in confrontation. All it takes is your brain to jiggle in the right way.

    • @MartinLoronzo
      @MartinLoronzo 11 месяцев назад +7

      True. However, I'd like to poin out "most".
      Some, maybe a few combine martial arts with a street practice. In my 20s I met a leader of the gang who appeared to be a karete kid too. We were 4 guys and one lady, they were 4 guys. The first in our comaoney who was ignoring him got an immediate punch in the face - the easiest victim. A friend of mine threw some kicks on him but it was a draw. A gas pistol did not work. We were being thrown with stones, they luckily landed smashing and scratching cars. They were about 7. At the end we ran into a casino and called a taxi, but in that hood more than 10, 40 year olds showed up. Luckilly, we escaped. But they I sensed that they had no fear and it could have ended with somebody walking up in the intense care if at all.
      To sum it up, it is unethical to coach somebody in martial arts who can't control his impulses, but the master cannot always be aware how dark the soul is.

    • @kevinchamberlain7928
      @kevinchamberlain7928 11 месяцев назад +1

      I feel fairly confident I could beat you. Just saying...

    • @theimprovementsguy8871
      @theimprovementsguy8871 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@kevinchamberlain7928 cool.

  • @sheikhsubeh1003
    @sheikhsubeh1003 8 месяцев назад

    The last line was really on point

  • @tomobrien2628
    @tomobrien2628 Год назад +162

    I'm currently a security guard, overnight in DTLA, near skid row. I have to say this is all perfectly perfectly precisely spot on. Your verbal skills are tremendously useful for de-escalation as well. Be cool, speak casually.

    • @jaylucas8352
      @jaylucas8352 Год назад +11

      You must deal with a lot , I live in LA near downtown

    • @MaloneysDigest
      @MaloneysDigest 11 месяцев назад +9

      An Irish man in LA. Nothing you can’t handle. 🇮🇪

    • @captaincapitalism264
      @captaincapitalism264 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@MaloneysDigest Haha, nice! As my late brother would say, "As an Irishman I'm allergic to whiskey; it makes my knuckles bloody." 😏 That said, let me tell you an Irish joke:
      There's this Irishman, and he walks past a bar -- hey, it can happen! 😜

    • @wa1ufo
      @wa1ufo 11 месяцев назад +4

      I hope you keep a rocket in your pocket just in case. Some maggots won't respond to an attempt at deescalation. That is when you need your pocket rocket.

    • @MaloneysDigest
      @MaloneysDigest 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@captaincapitalism264 hahaha. Was that joke about me? 🥴

  • @waynegroves6922
    @waynegroves6922 Год назад +308

    I'm 70yo now, and have been a martial artist ever since I was 11yo (Judo, Okinawa-te, Shudokan, and dabbled a little in Aikido), and I was a close-combat instructor in the Marine Corps. I went on to teach self-defense classes after the military for some years. One thing I now grudgingly have to admit to, since I'm getting old, is that even though I'm still confident in my abilities to defend myself, I'm also aware of the fact that I do not have the stamina, strength, or resilience to absorb blows that I once had; so, I now carry a .45 and a tactical knife . . . and I am just as skilled with those tools as I once was with my hands and feet. However, I have come to the resolution that if I'm attacked, and I can't utilize my weapons - for whatever reason - and I just have to defend myself, I'm going for their eyes first . . . I will blind them as aggressively as possible. I refuse to be a willing victim.
    On a side note, relative to the staring issue, is that I learned many decades ago from my Sempai that you never, ever fixate your gaze on your opponent's face or stare into their eyes - because their face will be used as an intimidation tool, and you will get sucked into a sort of tunnel-vision effect and lose your peripheral vision to the point that you will be forced to react to their sudden sucker punch, rather than see it being initiated beforehand. The technique I always taught my students was to place your relaxed gaze upon their chest. This benefits you in several ways. First, you will be able to see their hands and feet move ever so slightly before they launch their attack, thus giving you an advantage in reaction time - and with practice, be able to predict and time the attack. Second, by not playing into their staring contest, you eliminate the intimidation effect they are hoping to instill. With practice, you will become more confident in your ability to counterattack with precision and focus. Cheers all, and be safe out there.

    • @thomastoups3451
      @thomastoups3451 Год назад

      A .45 cures many ills.

    • @billr2375
      @billr2375 Год назад +20

      Mr Myogi say "always watch eye Daniel-son", you say watch chest. The narrator says watch eyebrows. I'll go with chest and your reasons to do so.

    • @hobowithawaterpistol9070
      @hobowithawaterpistol9070 Год назад +10

      Your about as real as one can get! I’ll be you were a great instructor over the years!

    • @rafaelcuevas3209
      @rafaelcuevas3209 Год назад +12

      ​@@billr2375It depends. If the fight is inminent, chest or chin could be a good option "cause a better peripherial view, but you have to stand eye contact first to show him, you are ready to fight.
      On the other hand, that"a not enough if you don't get a good situational awareness. You nees to know if he is on his own or more people will get involved. You have to be aware of obstacles, your way out, if he is armed or if fight can be avoided. If you are not trained to fight, It is better to avoid It.

    • @andyb6866
      @andyb6866 Год назад +13

      All good points. My wish would be to fix his gaze with one eye and the other eye swivelling up, down and around him. Now THAT would freak him out and make him back off!

  • @leidersammlung6955
    @leidersammlung6955 9 месяцев назад

    👏 excellent advice.
    (I provided security in a variety of environments for quite a few years.)
    Thank you for this great video!

  • @stevboo
    @stevboo 7 месяцев назад

    Great video. You, and your channel, are awesome!

  • @thomasnorton5387
    @thomasnorton5387 10 месяцев назад +259

    A good way to avoid trouble is don't do "stupid". Don't go to stupid places at stupid times with stupid people or do stupid stuff.

    • @karlscher5170
      @karlscher5170 3 месяца назад

      But the stupid tends to comes to you. To your countries, in your neighbourhoods, in your himes

    • @devilsoffspring5519
      @devilsoffspring5519 3 месяца назад +6

      Maybe at one time in specific places, but that's not possible today because of the widespread prevalence of the belligerence-as-virtue movement, a.k.a. ASPD.

    • @Vindsvelle
      @Vindsvelle 2 месяца назад

      ​@@devilsoffspring5519"Belligerence-as-virtue". Solid line, especially with the tie-in to Anti-Social psychopathology. Lasch's _Culture Of Narcissism_ has more than come to pass; it's at its fullest flower, and Caligula's circus is alive and well in the cognitive plague vectors that are social media. As the line goes, "Humans are chimps with car keys."

    • @Feooooooooooooooooon
      @Feooooooooooooooooon 2 месяца назад

      The tip to look at bad people is so stupid. It triggers many of them. Ignoring can be better

    • @RagDraggo
      @RagDraggo 2 месяца назад +2

      Yesss,,, you got THAT right about how one should "NOT do stupid",, or "go to Stupid places at Stupid times" or "do Stupid stuff" (if U care about staying OUT of danger). Example of personal lesson learned almost the hard way as all this happened (geeesh) almost 13 years ago. Anyway,, a Friday evening, 1st week of May,,, 2011. I was living and working just outside Barstow, Calif. For the hell of it, I decided to (blindly) drop into a bar,, I had never visited before and knew nothing about. Me being a naive youngster, I strolled on in (and ALONE). Almost immediately,, one of the local patrons (realizing I was a newcomer) took a bar seat right next to me and started more or less intimidating me. He was a husky,, stocky (biker-type) looking Hispanic guy. He asked me "what in the hell I was doing inside a bar like that,, not knowing anyone and all by myself". I sort of brushed him off with my response. At that moment,, he put his hand on my shoulder and said: "OK bud,, listen up. You know,, and I know,, that you do not belong in here. NO one in here knows you. Good question as to why you would drop in here anyway. I will give you about 20 minutes to finish your beer,, then you need to get your butt OUT of here. You really SHOULD do that if you don't want to end up getting hurt by someone in here." That said,, I TOOK his advice, finished my beer,, i paid the bartender,, then I hightailed it OUT of there.

  • @danielmcgillis270
    @danielmcgillis270 11 месяцев назад +258

    As an Iraq/Afghanistan war vet I can still when needed affect the 1000-yard stare, this blank, heartless look has helped me avoid having to cause harm to people who have singled me out for bad intent. Another key to avoiding violence is maintaining calm, a bully is looking for fear and panic. If he does not elicit the response he seeks he will more likely walk away rather than risk attacking somebody with superior skill and/or experience. This may not work if the person is crazy, blackout drunk, or on drugs as they are not using their brain anyway. Then your best bet becomes the doctrine of rapid dominance.
    Overwhelming force to the weakest point of the body you can reach. The eyes, the throat, the testicles, and the knee are always the best points of attack to rapidly eliminate a threat. It is not a gun that kills, it is a hard heart that kills. The same goes for the use of violence in personal defense.
    If a person is willing to use overwhelming force to defend themselves, that person becomes far less likely to become a target.

    • @jimmystrickland1034
      @jimmystrickland1034 11 месяцев назад

      No you act strange around people ,almost God like ego because you served in military. Sense of dominance. I think you war vets are nutters, and don't like that kinda people anywhere near me.

    • @g.o.b.2558
      @g.o.b.2558 11 месяцев назад +11

      Thank you for your service.

    • @DNukinFutz
      @DNukinFutz 11 месяцев назад +4

      Have used some of what you outlined before. Very effective.

    • @jackburton9331
      @jackburton9331 11 месяцев назад +11

      You were a motor pool mechanic weren't you 😂

    • @jimmystrickland1034
      @jimmystrickland1034 11 месяцев назад

      Hey Daniel, just because you were duped into fighting in 2 bogus wars, doesn't me you can whoop anybody who talks smack to you. The ego you military vets have is ridiculous. Get over yourself and stop acting strange towards people. I'm the guy that could take your ego down a peg or 3. And I'm not stupid enough to join the military. I'm a militia man, not a "get some" war mongrel like you.

  • @wsgeo
    @wsgeo 10 месяцев назад +6

    In two instances, situational awareness has saved my life and in others its probably saved me from injury. That said, it is very important to learn body language, because attackers will always telegraph their disposition and intentions. It can be a fine line, but keep your distance and use what's in your environment as an advantage to block an attack or a way to escape. When all else fails, though, and you know your going into a fight be the first to strike with no holds barred.

  • @RonALampman
    @RonALampman 9 месяцев назад +3

    Yup! My go to is to give a moment glance (usually at their forehead) nod with a grin, and maintain in one form or another my situational awareness. If approached I will likely think of a random name with a inquisitive look on my face grin and call it out "Fred??" with a non threatening hand gesture in their direction. This tends to take them off guard thinking I have mistaken them for someone else, many times it's the other way around. This situation is so dynamic and really depends on your surroundings, you direction of travel, and many other factors to truly address properly.

  • @honkiavelli8044
    @honkiavelli8044 11 месяцев назад +77

    Great advice. In these situations I prefer to calmly ask 2 questions while staring back. 1) "Are you OK bro?" 2) "What exactly are we doing here"? This has saved me multiple times from sucker punches, escalation and helped the other person understand that I was in control. It rarely came to fists after that (only with drunk people).

    • @itsrtvbaby
      @itsrtvbaby 11 месяцев назад +10

      Number one is my absolute favorite and seriously has worked everytime, just like you said. By doing this you shift the ENTIRE energy from being on you to being on them. Now everyone's staring at your aggressor like 'yeah, what is wrong with this guy?' . Suddenly it feels like 20 against 1 to them. You achieve dominance quick like this, because it implies that they have something wrong with them, and that can be embarrassing.

    • @honkiavelli8044
      @honkiavelli8044 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@itsrtvbaby for me, the second question enforces the lunacy of the situation based upon the first question. Fighting today is not like 20 years ago- the variables have changed a lot.

    • @bojangles2492
      @bojangles2492 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, exactly this. Has helped many times for me, it puts you in control.

  • @Antipodean33
    @Antipodean33 Год назад +98

    I was down at a local pub the day after a local footy team (Aussie rules football AFL) played an interstate team. There was a group of out of towners drinking near me and my missus. One was a Maori fella with the face tats and looked mean enough. He's staring over at me for a while I was wearing sunnies and looked slightly away from his stare but was watching him. I told the missus that bother may be on the way then he got up and walked over, I said to my missus, here we go, he comes up introduced himself and just wanted to talk about and meet my 5 kg Jack Russell bitch i have sitting on my lap. He's got 3 of them and said mine was a beauty and he can't wait to get back home to his dogs. Ya gotta be careful and not assume, if it was some other dude I probably wouldn't have worried about the situation

    • @sm1tty031
      @sm1tty031 Год назад +10

      This sounds so Australian.. I met an Aussie in Munich at Octoberfest and he was travelling alone...He sat with us at our table in the Hofbrau Haus and he was the funniest most coolest guy...I hope he is well wherever he may be

    • @garydownes1594
      @garydownes1594 Год назад +1

      He doesn't need to stare anyway. Just wave smile and walk over to you.

    • @thecelt4807
      @thecelt4807 Год назад +1

      we are all the same Ive lived and experienced this my whole life what you described is my full time reality ... i limit contact the older i get thats been the only remedy of sorts or a good bottle of jacks lmao ...perth side out

    • @MikeHodgkinson
      @MikeHodgkinson Месяц назад

      Best comment! 😊

  • @willthomas9244
    @willthomas9244 9 месяцев назад

    This Dr Phillips guy knows his shit. He also practices it. Good channel.

  • @nWo_remiix
    @nWo_remiix 27 дней назад

    you have no idea how effective this is, i witness crazy things all the time I live in nyc & its great to always be aware of your surroundings, to be able to read the room

  • @IronSharpensIron510
    @IronSharpensIron510 Год назад +84

    When I was 13, my dad told me, “if someone stares at you or mean mugs you, look away. What? You think lasers are going to shoot out of your eyes if you stare back? It’s not about what people say or how hard they stare at you, it’s about what people do that matters. Then, you fight.” My father taught me how to box, him being a boxer himself. 15 years later, I’m now training my son.

    • @NeillWylie
      @NeillWylie Год назад +4

      This is my take on it too.

    • @cody1648
      @cody1648 Год назад +2

      solid advice

    • @FH-cn3mg
      @FH-cn3mg Год назад +2

      I always look away from a stare, but it's like I commented somewhere else, I want to be ready for the violence I know is coming. If you're in a staring contest with someone you can get tunnel vision and not see a punch or kick coming. Best to look down slightly, at the chin or chest, and open up your awareness, and get yourself balanced and ready to fight.

    • @jaylucas8352
      @jaylucas8352 Год назад +1

      Yea , people looking for a fight, avoid if possible works

    • @IronSharpensIron510
      @IronSharpensIron510 Год назад +1

      @@FH-cn3mg agreed, as well as when you’re in your stance.

  • @creftlodollar8531
    @creftlodollar8531 10 месяцев назад +70

    Someone whom I know that worked in special forces told me - just walk away but acknowledge their presence. 100% of the time if it not worth it. This video confirms his advice to me! Thanks for sharing!

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Месяц назад +3

      It's been my belief for decades that if you've got the opportunity to back out, then take it. Just never turn a back to them and if you can't back out, then fight dirty, and I mean dirty. That's the time when a sucker punch to the balls is fair game, same for any bit of sand you can get into their eyes. If you've got a flashlight, and it's dark, definitely use it to blind them as well. Because believe me that the other side cannot be trusted to not cheat as bad, or worse.
      This is also why I tend to be fake drunk at bars on the rare case where I go. The moment I straighten myself up and it becomes clear that only one of us is drunk, it tends to open up opportunites for just letting it go.
      If any of that seems unreasonable in light of the current situation, then you don't really have to fight it's a choice that you're making. One of the issues that comes from these situations is that the courts are never actually there and evaluating things based on the information that's available to the people at the time.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib Месяц назад +1

      Ofc its not worth it. its not like they are there to give you something or help you. Makes complete sense.

    • @rbz1
      @rbz1 Месяц назад +2

      @@SmallSpoonBrigade my philosophy exactly. I'll do whatever I can (within reason) to avoid a physical confrontation just for the reason you stated, as in I have no idea what they will do or how far they will go and there are zero rules, regulations, or referees to stop them....with that in mind if they are utterly determined to incite violence then i can, with a clear conscience, go no holds barred and I will use any tactic within my means to disable them.
      To me, there is no such thing as fighting dirty when you have no knowledge of the other person and literally anything, even by accident, can end your life. It's all or nothing when "backed into a corner".

  • @bloodyknockout553
    @bloodyknockout553 8 дней назад

    Thank you for what are you doing! Very helpful channel and information in it!

  • @PorscheAmbassadorATX
    @PorscheAmbassadorATX Месяц назад +1

    Great advice actually. For those who watched the whole video and actually listened. Stay present and aware, deescalate, strategically retreat.
    No one wins if you end up fighting.

  • @normlang1994
    @normlang1994 11 месяцев назад +67

    It all boils down to situational awareness. It's key to managing any situation.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад

      You can't be always aware of situation you are in. Most of the time I am just in my head thinking my own thoughts don't give 2 shits about what is around me.

    • @myeyesaredrymylove
      @myeyesaredrymylove 2 месяца назад

      ​@@JustChill-zd4ibLike with anything, you can train it. Practice it until it becomes instinct.

  • @ZenEndurance
    @ZenEndurance 10 месяцев назад +54

    Good advice. From lots of street fighting experience, I can promise you that there are people out there that are literally looking for any excuse to fight. That's their goal for the night - to beat somebody up. Doesn't matter who it is. Naive people think just because they aren't doing anything aggressive, they are safe in a crowd or out on the street. So when somebody gets in your face for no reason, don't think you can argue your way out of it. There is no reason and you've just been "chosen". So stand tall, say things like "hey man, I don't have any beef with you. I'm cool. No problem. Just want to get home and get out of your way." And then also do everything this guy ^^^ said. Maintain eye contact so they can't surprise you, slowly walk away, and keep an eye on him and especially all his buddies. They'll hit you too. If they are mean enough to start a fight in the street with a rando, they are dangerous as heck, have tons of fighting experience (they do this nightly or weekly) and you will. not. win. You'll wake up in the hospital if you're lucky.

    • @jasonprostatham
      @jasonprostatham Месяц назад

      please tell us more about your lots of street fighting experience

    • @e.normascock1297
      @e.normascock1297 Месяц назад +1

      @@jasonprostathamhe’s saying that they do

  • @lindajesse8250
    @lindajesse8250 8 месяцев назад +1

    You are a good man.

  • @allan4800
    @allan4800 7 месяцев назад

    Truly excellent counsel. Listen to what this man has to say - and heed his advice.

  • @thomasmusarra9486
    @thomasmusarra9486 11 месяцев назад +453

    I've been a student of mixed martial arts for probably 25 years or so so I'm pretty confident in my skill set to protect myself and my family. I think all you need is a strong mind. And be able to actually speak to people in a de-escalating manner. But people do have a tendency to stare. I just smile back when they stare me a little too long and then they smile. A little smile goes a long way lol.

    • @kevinmalone3210
      @kevinmalone3210 11 месяцев назад +17

      Good advice.

    • @didamnesia3575
      @didamnesia3575 11 месяцев назад +12

      Yeah I'm sure that classroom experience and lack of real world experience makes your opinion worthwhile

    • @sphinx186
      @sphinx186 11 месяцев назад +25

      I had the same experience too. I was taking photos in a street in a foreign country. There was a guy across the road staring sharply at me. I just smiled and lifted my head as if to say 'hi', his sharp look instantly eased, he smiled back and lifted up the cup of tea he was drinking too great me back.

    • @redpilljesus
      @redpilljesus 11 месяцев назад +15

      ​@@didamnesia3575wow, you must have a lot in order to speak up. Where can I buy your course?

    • @Steppenwolf27
      @Steppenwolf27 11 месяцев назад +25

      This is the most important thing you said: "be able to actually speak to people in a de-escalating manner."
      I'm not into MMA, but I am naturally strong. It's genetics. I'm not tall, but I am heavy. In high school, I could climb the rope hand over hand without using my feet. I'm also a nerd. There were bullies at my high school, but they left me alone.
      There was one incident when a girl in the disabled class asked me to the Sadie Hawkins dance on our walk to P.E. A fat guy saw it and ran ahead to tell everyone so they could laugh at me. He wasn't a bad person, he was just trying to fit in. Anyway, when I got to class all of the boys were laughing at me. I went straight to the fat guy who started it and grabbed his throat and pushed him. He got amped up and said I had angered him and he wouldn't stop.
      The boys wanted a fight, but they didn't get it. I said, "She's a human being. I'm sorry that you don't understand that."
      He immediately melted. All he could say was, "I'm sorry." I was angry, but I didn't want to fight. I wanted him to understand that he was wrong and I wanted him to feel it.

  • @johnjones393
    @johnjones393 11 месяцев назад +90

    Situational awareness, as mentioned in the video, is crucial. I always scan my environment and look for any potential threats and watch them. If appropriate, I'll acknowledge them with a smile and downward nod. And by all means don't be afraid to retreat from the situation if you feel it's getting too hot. For me, if the other guy tries to escalate into a staring war then that's my cue to look for ways to retreat. As I got older I have learned that there is no shame in retreat if it means being spared from getting into an ego fight.

    • @Liberallez
      @Liberallez 10 месяцев назад

      Right on the money!!! "Ego" is the nemesis of all humanity!!!

    • @BGTuyau
      @BGTuyau 10 месяцев назад +3

      Just good advice for those situations that are best avoided in the first place.

    • @johnnytorres3149
      @johnnytorres3149 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same bro

  • @mh9967a
    @mh9967a 8 месяцев назад +10

    I think it’s hard to have rules that are set in stone for these situations as so many things vary. Exhibiting calmness when someone tries to intimidate you is invaluable and this can be learned through practicing a practical martial art (it’s nice to realise that most guys who don’t train can’t fight for shit). I think a lot of the skills and judgment calls are learnt as we grow up, if you happen to grow up in a rough area with a regular threat of violence then you tend to get pretty good at reading situations. Twice in my adult life I have opted to NOT make eye contact with an aggressor and both times the result has been good. Both situation’s were in the street in the middle of the day and although very much aware of their intense stare and posturing I felt the best option was to remain aware of them but not make eye contact. Because they were walking I think they were looking for a victim and eye contact would be the green light for them. Everything else in the video about eye contact I agree with but I do think there are exceptions.

    • @fuzzylogics139
      @fuzzylogics139 8 месяцев назад +2

      In those cases you were probably able to act as if you truly had not seen them. Perhaps saying something to somebody else in an either jovial or very serious manner. The point is not to make it obvious you’re ignoring them by walking faster or any other sign that signals fear, but appear naturally relaxed and you ‘re just going about your life.

  • @MG-wp4gl
    @MG-wp4gl 7 месяцев назад

    Very good advice.

  • @sigaries4062
    @sigaries4062 11 месяцев назад +176

    I got bullied ruthlessly when I was a kid. I had to fight. Eventually started winning. I hate fighting, I just happen to be really damn good at it. I have zero tolerance for bullies. Of course my head is a lot cooler nowadays. Cheers

    • @kubikiribasara3499
      @kubikiribasara3499 11 месяцев назад +11

      You know I believe that we wouldn't see nearly as much bullying if anti-bullying classroom material were emphasized as much as useless bullshit like the rote memorization of trigonometric formulas or the intricacies of the Sumarian culture. If anti-bullying was actually taught as a class, society wouldn't be as fucked up as it is. what do you think?

    • @Anarchy-Is-Liberty
      @Anarchy-Is-Liberty 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@kubikiribasara3499 Nah, it would still be the same! Narcissists, psychopaths, and sociopaths are real, no amount of "training" is going to stop who they are on the inside! Train to protect yourself and your family, because one day you will have to!!

    • @bobbobert9473
      @bobbobert9473 10 месяцев назад

      i farted the other day, and it was infinitely more meaningful than a bunch of insecure "men" exchanging stories about what "works" on other "men" what is everyone, FIVE YEARS OLD???!?!?!?!?!?!

    • @bobbobert9473
      @bobbobert9473 10 месяцев назад +2

      Most dudes who fight a lot are terrible athletes.

    • @nightlightabcd
      @nightlightabcd 10 месяцев назад +3

      I was bullied to, I beat the hell out of them and their friends to, they left me alone!

  • @StinkingBishop
    @StinkingBishop 7 месяцев назад +1

    Spot on. I have found that about 3 seconds eye contact is the right amount: long enough to acknowledge their presence and "assess" them as a potential threat. Then I look away, always sideways. Never down; that is a sign of submission/weakness.
    Ignoring them (but still being aware of their movements) at this point sends the message that you have assessed their potential and deemed it not worthy of concern - this gives them pause for thought.
    Only once has someone taken it a step further after such an exchange; I'd just finished strapping my kid in the car.
    He approached and said "alright mate, there a problem?".
    I stared at him and with a calm, even but direct tone told him that there wasn't - but given that I had my child in my care, there would be a very severe problem if he decided there was. He persisted evidently so as not to lose face so I made it quite clear: my child is in the car, back off or you'll discover the savagery a father protecting his child is capable of. At that point it became clear I had to assert full dominance - it worked. Still got mouthy but he did back up several steps, at which point I got on with my business. Fact is, most gobshites nowadays dont have the stomach for a fight with someone who is clearly not intimidated - unless they are packing a blade etc. Which of course, in the above situation, makes it all the more important to gain control of the situation. A small Co-op carpark, cameras everywhere, people moving in and out on a bright sunny day, thw likelihood of him drawing a hidden weapon is slim. Had it been dark, isolated etc, my approach would have been quite different.
    Of course, it does also help knowing you are physically equipped to deal with the situation should it get that far.

  • @BangMaster96
    @BangMaster96 7 месяцев назад +2

    So many People with fragile egos in the modern world. This is why we have to watch videos like this to ensure that we learn to protect ourselves when we are in trouble.

  • @marcjohnson4385
    @marcjohnson4385 Год назад +34

    When I left the military situational awareness was automatic my head was always on a swivel accessing threat level and exits . Now as an old man I have changed like I thought I would but the exit is my preferred option, never argue about anything with strangers.

    • @Chunda8
      @Chunda8 Год назад +6

      It's taken me a while to realize that this is the best strategy, escape and evasion are legitimate military tactics. It's considerate too- they don't want to go to the hospital, I don't want to go to court or prison. Both of us win.

    • @marcjohnson4385
      @marcjohnson4385 11 месяцев назад

      @@Chunda8 True there is nothing to prove to anyone, besides I want to be able to watch my Grandchildren grow up.

    • @jeffreyharmon1617
      @jeffreyharmon1617 11 месяцев назад

      I will always be infantry!! Approach me suddenly in an aggressive manner, and you will get something that you will never forget 😮

    • @SurfinScientist
      @SurfinScientist 11 месяцев назад +2

      Good advice! A couple of decades ago I rode a bus in SF with my wife and baby son, and an angry guy complained to me that I should speak English (though my wife and I speak English very well, we like to converse in Japanese and Dutch, our respective native languages). We got off at the next stop. It is just not worth the risk of injury or worse to my family.

    • @lolo-yx5nn
      @lolo-yx5nn 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@SurfinScientist in El Paso, Texas, some people will demand we (non-Spanish speakers) speak Spanish. And when I try, they don't hesitate to laugh in my face.
      Go figure.

  • @avagrego3195
    @avagrego3195 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent advise esp in today's crazy world.

  • @hecateswolf6007
    @hecateswolf6007 8 месяцев назад

    This is very good advice thanks

  • @mashleyred2180
    @mashleyred2180 Год назад +17

    I have came across guys that are confident with there mates but not confident alone, to a degree there just posers but still make space and look civil but confident, never portray a victim.

  • @G-ForceLogic
    @G-ForceLogic 7 месяцев назад +1

    Good advise

  • @qemuel
    @qemuel 10 месяцев назад +117

    Hear, hear. Solid video. I thankfully deescalated several potentially bad situations back in my 20s-30s by controlling both myself and the situation as best able (considering the individual circumstances). The correct amount/type of eye contact, body language, and humor (aka creation of empathy by humanization) can work wonders in most situations. As silly as it sounds, some of the strongest advice about conflict I've learned is from the movie Roadhouse (1989); be nice. Be nice until it's time not to be nice. The key is learning to recognize (and hopefully avoid) that moment.

    • @PolishGator
      @PolishGator 7 месяцев назад +3

      Roadhouse is a fantastic movie. I miss good movies. All garbage now

    • @josephsmith961
      @josephsmith961 5 месяцев назад +3

      I was a bouncer in a jiggle bar and at a big nightclub/bar back in my 20's. I avoided more conflict with the being "nice" and using humor. In my 8 or so years of working those gigs, I only had to hit about 3 people.

  • @monsterrbeast
    @monsterrbeast Год назад +56

    One thing I would add when using situational awareness when dealing with someone that means to sucker punch you is to make sure use all your senses. Use your hearing to listen for quick movements, especially if they're moving quickly up behind you to throw the punch. Same with feeling the ground. Running comes with heavier footfalls. Using vision is absolutely important and I agree completely with this video so train with an wholistic approach which will make your proprioception even greater.

    • @discordye4825
      @discordye4825 Год назад +1

      He literally said this...

    • @ohokcool
      @ohokcool 11 месяцев назад

      Holistic*

    • @thomasmatthew7759
      @thomasmatthew7759 11 месяцев назад

      @@ohokcool nah wholelistic works because he's being holistic and taking the "whole" situation into account!

  • @pmac5934
    @pmac5934 7 месяцев назад

    Stare at their eyebrows has got to be one of the most intriguing suggestions I've gained from any youtube vid on any subject - whether its baking bread or how to relieve an L5-S1 herniated disk or what render to use . I tend to look at other peoples' mouths when just in an ordinary conversation almost as much as I also tend to look at them directly ,, that is to say, into their eyes. That is because I am genuinely interested ( or trying to be ) in what they have to say and it helps me to ascertain the words they are using ( I'm lip-reading ; not sure if thats because I am a bit deaf or just don't attend to speech on its own very well ) . If I were to look at someone's eyebrows instead then I would necessarily , to some extent, be disengaging from their speech, what they are saying. If you are in a confrontation with an aggressor and you have decided talking too them will not help you, you very much need to keep your gaze in their direction whilst disengaging ( i.e. neither reacting to their attempt to force nor being prompted by them ) . Also , just going from a situation where you are talking to someone to where you are looking at someone whilst staying quiet is often disconcerting for the aggressor - although this works best at distance. Either way it gives you maybe 2 seconds to not be directed by the other person, gather your thoughts and then fcuk them up .

  • @angelovillone947
    @angelovillone947 10 месяцев назад

    Good info. Knowing some dialogue to supplement aggressive situations may help as well.

  • @bludgeont1567
    @bludgeont1567 10 месяцев назад +23

    Situational awareness combined with quick instinct will keep you alive for another day. I've avoided so many bad situations by making that eye contact and a quick head nod down and up and just continuing on my way. My dad use to tell me "if you get in a ifght, you're going to get hit." and "there's no such thing as a fair fight.". I particularly like not getting hit or stabbed and so in the few seconds you have to react to a stare, go with your instinct but always be prepared for anything. The reflections in the environment is a priceless tool. 36t0 degree view with a few glances while pumping gas, ATM, etc.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Месяц назад +1

      I haven't been a fight in many years at this point. Part of it is because I'm about the size of Mike Tyson and I can put most adults down with one blow. But, a large part of it is avoiding being places where I can't just back down or avoid the problem to begin with.
      Your Dad would probably like my Dad. He spent several years in the USMC and advised me to leave a brick at the backdoor of a bar in case I needed it and then be the last one out the door if there was going to be a fight. It took me a while to understand that he was saying to be prepared ahead of time if I was going to have a barroom scrap and that the other side couldn't be counted on to fight fair, I just needed to be prepared to end it before they could.
      Personally, I haven't needed to use the advice, but I do make every effort to have the situational awareness to avoid being in that spot, but if I do get in a scrape, I will fight as dirty as I can because if it's not important enough to cheat at, then it's not a fight that I have to be in/win in the first place.

  • @reymc55
    @reymc55 Год назад +35

    Good video, as always. I work at a Sheriff's Office County Jail and a CPI instructor. What I do when someone is staring at me is mostly the head nod downward, and that tends to work. When it's a very serious stare, I stare back then stare at their feet for 5-10 seconds, and that throws them off completely!

    • @EasyEight3674
      @EasyEight3674 Год назад +2

      Great stuff! I also have experienced that if you don't look back and make some acknowledgement, they can also take it as being disrespected, which can also set things off.

    • @hobowithawaterpistol9070
      @hobowithawaterpistol9070 Год назад +3

      The problem usually is that men don’t just stare, they impose their will upon you, I.E. force you to move with their body wether they are real or trying to act tough! I don’t accept that and I put my arm up or both arms to go ahead and force them to either take a step back or put up or shut up, because at any moment they can attack and once your on the ground it can be very hard to get back up! I’m no Superman, but after being jumped twice in my life, I vowed their would never be a third!

    • @hunterironside9969
      @hunterironside9969 Год назад +2

      Staring at the feet. That's a good one. It makes them think wtf is he looking at?

    • @denisewildfortune4058
      @denisewildfortune4058 Год назад +2

      Interesting. It gives the impression that you are formulating a plan forcing him to momentarily change his thinking and plan. If he tries something while you are looking down, he will telegraph his intentions by shifting his hips first and then his feet. Keep his hands in your field of view for possible weapons.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад

      Staring is weird. They must be a bit gay or something. I would feel like one if I stared at dudes like that.

  • @vinniebarbarino-1
    @vinniebarbarino-1 9 месяцев назад

    Great Advice. Learn to fight so you don't have to fight.

  • @CapitanFantasma1776
    @CapitanFantasma1776 7 месяцев назад

    OK. I'm subscribed. Thanks!

  • @superbri007
    @superbri007 10 месяцев назад +41

    Instant subscribe. I went down the RUclips rabbit hole and ended up with a bunch of recommendations on self defense. I can say, that the best fight you'll ever have is the one you were able to avoid because you read all the signs for posturing and you took active steps to "inform" how things were going to go.
    Also, in my honest opinion...anxiety and hypervigiliance, which are typically both a nuisance to have, actually serve as a helper and not a hinderer of survival.

    • @creativemetalworker
      @creativemetalworker 10 месяцев назад +2

      You are right, anxiety motivates actions for self defense, and hypervigilance can be a habit that runs in the background when in sketchy circumstances so one can focus on other things but still have a part of you looking out for shit:)

  • @ltroy_sw
    @ltroy_sw Год назад +42

    What I just realized, is that in many of the situations, in which I ended up fighting, I was just staring at the person for some time. Maybe it could have not escalated the situation, if I didn't stare, but at least I am still alive and intact, so it worked fine. And on the other hand, I had many situations, in which people, from whom I've sensed closet aggression, stepped away, because I was staring at them. Usually, my go-to in the stare-kind-of-situations is look in the eyes for 5-8 seconds, slowly look down at the shoes and go back. Sometimes I move on, if I decide, that this person likely doesn't pose a threat, but sometimes I come back at the head level with my eyes and continue the eye contact, waiting for his next move. This way I, intentionally or not, show a person, that I acknowledge him and especially him in the environment and actually evaluate the situation via understanding, what he is, where his arms are, if he is carrying something, or his arms are in his pockets, checking the stance, if he is in the position to sprint to me, or he has his legs behind one another and so on. Never ever had I been sucker punched or experienced a surprise attack. Even though my knuckles are scarred because of the amount of fights, my nose has a scar, my arm is cut, all that happened, happed to me in a non-surprising manner. Russia is sometimes a cruel place, so some awareness can go a long way.

    • @fightscience
      @fightscience  Год назад +13

      Russia is tough environment.

    • @sword-and-shield
      @sword-and-shield Год назад

      It will work on the mutts sure.

    • @Rustsamurai1
      @Rustsamurai1 Год назад

      Your overt situational awareness likely invited the conflict that you may (or may not ) be seeking to avoid, yet was interpreted as an invitation or a threat by the other person. Gunslingers attract gunslingers. There's always someone looking for a fight, for many-a reason. Others understand it, and identified you as a willing 'Saturday-night-sport' combatant or a genuine threat. Go to a monkey park and see what happens when you stare-down a male primate. No...don't do that.

  • @e4d578
    @e4d578 2 месяца назад

    This worked. I can't thank you enough for this advice to save me from a sticky situation I was in.
    My wife and I are back on better terms.

  • @ArghVirt899
    @ArghVirt899 Месяц назад

    Thanks for keeping it 100.

  • @WreckedRover
    @WreckedRover 11 месяцев назад +150

    I usually win the stare down. I learned a trick a long time ago and I'll share it with you. If someone is trying to intimidate you and getting violent smile at them like they just made you the happiest person in the world for giving you a target to unload your decades of rage on. Usually at that point I'm not talking to the person trying to intimidate me anymore. I'm thinking about where I'm going to hit them and what moves I'm going to try. Something about KNOWING that I'm already thinking about the fight and not the intimidation at all and that I look like I'm gonna enjoy it. My antagonist has always sensed it. It has always made people walk away. Often looking pale and like they have seen death himself.

    • @tristancreed
      @tristancreed 11 месяцев назад +13

      That smile works. Always make sure he knows you're ready to lunge and that you yourself are ready to do it. That and you keep your eye contact to them at all times. And yes, you have to committ to it to the point that you get at opportunity to pop up behind them the second the turn their back. I don't know why people hate it when I do that.

    • @tarasbolotov2486
      @tarasbolotov2486 11 месяцев назад +27

      Had an encounter with the hardest guy in the area “ He eventually told me he was gonna kill me” my reply “ I,m gonna kill you back” he burst out laughing 😂😂

    • @jpnphom5470
      @jpnphom5470 11 месяцев назад +19

      Just make sure you got proper training before you smile... especially Judo, wrestling, and Muay Thai are deadly self-defense. other than that just walk away...

    • @tristancreed
      @tristancreed 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@jpnphom5470 Kick boxing and shito ryu Karate. I picked up some grappling from some friends I train with. :)

    • @jpnphom5470
      @jpnphom5470 11 месяцев назад +3

      Good that beats 90% of the people...

  • @parjau4554
    @parjau4554 Год назад +47

    One thing after being caught unintentionally in a staring match, is not to get out of it by looking down (which is submissive but also acknowledges that you recognise the conflict) but by looking up and to the side with a bored/blank look on your face. And then just act normal like the staring never happened.

    • @Probabilityislife
      @Probabilityislife Год назад +4

      Only weak people think like this. Say Hi or just go about your day. I don't care if you stare at me or not. Start walking towards me and staring then that's a different matter. It's called situational awareness.
      Most people aren't comfortable with violence. It's moulded me so I don't think like the average folk.

    • @actionman9357
      @actionman9357 Год назад +13

      I break off the 'stare' with a big GRIN! Not a 'smart-ass", but a nice, respectful smile! Works for me!

    • @chancepaladin
      @chancepaladin Год назад +9

      I look at them for a second, and if a down-nod, or an up-nod don't work, or a raised eyebrow, I act like something more interesting gets my attention and make an interested face at whatever it is. usually they want to look too. gold-fish attention spans.

    • @garyrae5413
      @garyrae5413 Год назад +5

      @@Probabilityislife I don’t think so,smart people think like that..if you can avoid a fight you should,by looking away bored,uninterested and unconcerned will put some doubt in the aggressors mind and that can usually do the trick of moving him on to a weaker target as most of these guys want an easy target…generally I think they know when someone can or cannot handle themselves..what do you think?

    • @jk1735able
      @jk1735able Год назад

      Yes Garry l think they can sense it like animals

  • @frizzlefry5904
    @frizzlefry5904 День назад

    spot on, eye contact smile and nod down, then move on with awareness.

  • @dcjohnson2208
    @dcjohnson2208 10 месяцев назад +9

    I’m an octogenarian. Bullied in grades 1-9. Learned judo by myself from a ten cent booklet poorly written and illustrated. I tried it out on my friend RJ with great success to his and my amazement. Began learning Karate as a teenager before anyone even knew it existed. Got so good at it that I became captain of the university Karate club. Had the first time real life use when a 22yo was staring me down in the cafeteria. I instinctively tried your suggestions. As I rose from the lunch table he tried to bash my skull in with a steel cafeteria tray swung edgewise! I blocked and punched with my right hand into his nose so hard with full body weight going into punch that his nose started spurting blood like a butchered pigs jugular vein. Luckily my chemistry professor and his mates saw the incident. I never saw the kid again. Prof said he was taken to ER and expelled. I went on for many more years in universities to become a scientist. At 49yo, around Christmas time, I noticed a van parked unusually close to the driver side of my car in a large empty parking lot ( situational awareness). It was after 10pm. I wondered if I should approach my car. After thinking and observing I decided I had to get home, so I went for it… as I squeezed to my door from the rear of my car, a short thirtish year old man stepped in front of me at the front of my car and gave me the “I’m going to kill u look”. I’m 6’3” 240 lbs (30lbsfat). At that time a monster of a man at least 6’8” tall and 350lbs stepped behind me trapping me between them and the vehicles…. A VERY TENSE FEW SECONDS OCCURRED when big said to little “Leroy, come around here!” Motioning to the rear of the van, to which Leroy moved so quickly to the rear of the van I was astonished. Big then clops Leroy on the side of the head he almost fell to the ground. Big then said “You dumb m**ther F@#ker, I told you NOT to pick someone that big before! He could have hurt me!” Now in my eighties I only get good looking women giving me the stare, wondering if I can still do it. Sigh! Age has its advantages I guess.

    • @maximusextreme3725
      @maximusextreme3725 10 месяцев назад +3

      What's great about the internet is that you can practice your fiction writing for many to see. Good luck bro, I am sure a few suckas believed every word 😂

    • @ginahill503
      @ginahill503 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@maximusextreme3725 How dare you?

    • @maximusextreme3725
      @maximusextreme3725 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@ginahill503 Yes, how dare I tell the truth 😂

    • @bossman1905
      @bossman1905 7 месяцев назад +1

      Nice story

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад

      So much violence for what? I don't understand... It never achieves any result why do some people do it?

  • @jaeboston9228
    @jaeboston9228 Год назад +74

    For years, I avoid eye contact as if I am in my own world. Whenever its necessary, I will give a potential aggressor that psychotic look. The deranged look normally deescalates the potential confrontation. Sometimes the threat is much bigger and stronger. It has worked for me because that crazy look makes those bad guys for some reason think twice. I have been using that look for 68 years and count my blessings.

    • @metsrus
      @metsrus Год назад +3

      what's the deranged look, the cross eyed look?

    • @Suve35967
      @Suve35967 Год назад

      Hard for me,when they're all built like Rambo.😢

    • @jaeboston9228
      @jaeboston9228 Год назад +1

      @@metsrus no, not cross eyed. the psychotic look says
      "I will kill you mother fuc$#r if you touch me and you put your hands on me your life will never be the same." That look has saved me a countless number of times.

    • @jaeboston9228
      @jaeboston9228 Год назад +7

      @@Suve35967 it is a mind set and a feeling that you are deranged. deranged to the point that you will grab the closest thing around you and practically destroy the aggressor. as I said, it has worked for me on a number of tense situations.

    • @BottleBri
      @BottleBri Год назад +8

      It’s called the thousand yard stare!👍

  • @MrMZaccone
    @MrMZaccone 11 месяцев назад +18

    There is a technique for breaking a stare that I learned from a primatologist. I call it the slow blink break. As long as you have a safe cushion of distance, break the stare by slowly, deliberately blinking once, and breaking the stare as your eyes close. Between many primates, this expresses confidence and a slight air of dismissal. I've made it work many, many, times to defuse the situation.

    • @emmaearnshaw3282
      @emmaearnshaw3282 7 месяцев назад +2

      I use the same technique to make cats come over to me.

    • @alexstarovereem
      @alexstarovereem 7 месяцев назад

      What I do that works every single time9so far), is when I catch someone staring, I look directly at them and meet their gaze for 1-2 seconds and look away as if it doesn't bother me(this is almost like saying here, you can win your little staring contest I don't care), if I can tell they are still be looking at me, and then I look back at them quickly as if to communicate "are you seriously staring at me?" they look away right away almost in shame everytime so far. Not only do you diffuse the sitaution, but you actually win the staring contest (that they started).

    • @claytonberg721
      @claytonberg721 6 месяцев назад

      @@emmaearnshaw3282 That's cat language for 'I trust you'.

  • @michaelmills4455
    @michaelmills4455 9 месяцев назад +1

    You learn to fight so you don't have to fight. ❤

  • @jwf9716
    @jwf9716 9 месяцев назад

    These videos are very valuable. I deal with this all day every day wherever I go.

  • @doctordemento965
    @doctordemento965 Год назад +45

    You don't mess with people you don't know unless you're prepared for a trip six feet under. Words of wisdom boys.

    • @sword-and-shield
      @sword-and-shield Год назад +7

      Right, problem is reality can make things happen and the last thing I give a F about is if I know them.

    • @michaellarocca4879
      @michaellarocca4879 11 месяцев назад

      I dont mess with people i dont know. But i have had them mess with me. And almost every time i e done far more damage than i took. The ones i didnt come out on top were ones where i was outnumbered and/or suckerpunched.

    • @billmich123
      @billmich123 11 месяцев назад +2

      Especially in today's world.

    • @sword-and-shield
      @sword-and-shield 11 месяцев назад

      @@jonc3214 No, YOU don't mess with the mentally ill, and its good when you know your limitations, and even better when you follow them. Most people wont mess with them either, unless they have too, or worse didn't have a choice, and when you do, the last thing you do is worry about knowing them, or some other doubt bs, you focus on getting it done. I am not speaking from bs, I dealt with it inside my family, and later in life on the job working doors. So it absolutely does matter how tough you are, and or, more aptly put, how experienced you are, and that will clearly vary among individuals, even the tweakin batshit crazy people you don't know.

  • @anthonyboyles2700
    @anthonyboyles2700 Год назад +25

    This does work most of the time. Before I had ever been in a fight I was terrified of getting into one. Just not backing down and displaying confidence even when I didn't have any saved me so many times. Bullys want an easy target. As I got older I learned how to take care of myself somewhat and it even boosted my confidence more for situations like this. It won't work every time though so def learn some self defense. Some people are just out to cause damage and damage themselves

  • @mxpmw
    @mxpmw 6 месяцев назад

    Great video, very professional and good advice.

  • @robsimpson6537
    @robsimpson6537 6 месяцев назад

    Great sound advice. I think this is why old bars have mirrors on the back bar walls.

  • @sernani99
    @sernani99 11 месяцев назад +20

    Good info here, I grew up in a rough neighborhood on the outskirts of Buenos Aires and we were on situational awareness before it was a thing, first rule I always follow is if possible don't put yourself in a situation where you may need to defend yourself, second always walk like you belong there even if isn't your neck of the woods but here's the fence line, don't walm like you are a big shot or own the street that will attract challenges, don't go to stupid places at stupid hours and there's nothing wrong with evasion, remember you don't have to accept all fight invitations l, the best way to win a fight is to not be in it.

    • @hmq9052
      @hmq9052 10 месяцев назад

      He played polo and learnt perfect English in his slum

  • @noweare1
    @noweare1 Год назад +12

    I'm 65 years old. Went to the grocery store and walked by a guy who "mad dogged" me. I noticed coming in the the store he also "mad dogged" a car that didn't stop to let him pass. He was waiting to check out and I was still shopping and I just walked by him. The guy looked like a bully. I looked at him long enough to let him know if he did start a fight, he would be in one. One of the fears I have of growing old is not being able to defend myself.

    • @davidgiles5030
      @davidgiles5030 11 месяцев назад +1

      Me too. I'm 71.

    • @kevinmalone3210
      @kevinmalone3210 11 месяцев назад

      There's always, pepper spray, stun guns, even a device, called a pulse wave myotron that will scramble the electrical circuits in a person's body and cause them to go down. Having a guard dog, that will attack on command is another good one. I once ran into a woman, at night, in a wilderness preserve by herself as I was going for a walk through this place. As a man, I would never attack a woman, but some predators will in her situation. As soon as I approached her, she smiled and I smiled back at her and kept walking, but as soon as I cross this bridge, over a creek, I heard this thrashing sound of water sloshing around, and as I kept walking towards my home, this large Rottweiler comes running at me, ready to attack, but the woman I walked by earlier, commanded the dog to stop. She had it trained to a T.

    • @mikemichaels2914
      @mikemichaels2914 11 месяцев назад

      A 65yr old using the Vocab of Mad Dog 😂😂😂

  • @PistolPoet
    @PistolPoet 9 месяцев назад

    Great vid & explination. Working in the hospitality business, I have learned these kills by nature. I see faces, way too many

  • @user-js3cr6wu7g
    @user-js3cr6wu7g 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm 45 now, and I feel really grateful that from a very young age I've had no problem making eye contact with people, and even smiling at women in the street I don't even know, and it's because I've played in bands in clubs and even done busking on my own in the street, and so I've always felt that having strong eye contact with my audience is imperative to get a real connection. It's funny, how sometimes it takes aging to really look back on something you started very young to fully appreciate it! ;)

  • @adriandavies5133
    @adriandavies5133 9 месяцев назад

    Mirko CroCop Vs Wanderlei Silva | Best Staredown #shorts / Master Dicas
    ruclips.net/video/MErPqeRJ59U/видео.html

  • @donloughrey1615
    @donloughrey1615 Год назад +11

    Always good !
    I always wear rear view sunglasses. I walk through some 'ugly' parts of town and they remove the surprise sneak attack from the 'back biters' .

    • @SupportTechQ
      @SupportTechQ Год назад +3

      Interesting 🤔 recently I actually started thinking about something similar to that

    • @garyelder-hx5vs
      @garyelder-hx5vs Год назад +5

      Good tip, anyone who's ever been jumped from behind ,wishes they'd had this.

  • @fabiosplendido9536
    @fabiosplendido9536 Год назад +18

    Firstly, I agree with everything you've said. Yes. All true. You have a very good understanding of the psychology of violence.
    However, I think it's important to remember that there is no magic formula for dealing with a situation. Every one is different and you have to get a feel for it.
    I grew up in Merseyside, and the Birkenhead of the 80's and early 90's was a very violent place.
    "What are you looking at!?" Smack! was a daily occurrence. If some helmet has decided he's going to smack some innocent character who's just walking past,....that's what he'll do.
    The best strategy is not to be there in the first place. Unhelpful I know, but true.

    • @godsire6217
      @godsire6217 Год назад +3

      The best thing is to be pro-abortion, we have enough losers in this world.

    • @JustChill-zd4ib
      @JustChill-zd4ib 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah... those places sound like bad idea to be at.

  • @rammstein7204
    @rammstein7204 Месяц назад +1

    Simply explained in elegant British manner. 👏

  • @DanTriggerhappyGames
    @DanTriggerhappyGames Месяц назад

    The reflective surfaces trick is one I use all the time. Really helps with keeping track of your environment

  • @LanceEads
    @LanceEads 11 месяцев назад +11

    Sometimes you can diffuse the situation with friendliness and/or humor, though not always of course.

    • @devilsoffspring5519
      @devilsoffspring5519 3 месяца назад

      Friendliness/humor is a sign that you're on the defensive to a person who's belligerent. To them, it's an opportunity to step up and escalate. So, you're just doing exactly what they want you to do.

  • @tonybradbury7984
    @tonybradbury7984 11 месяцев назад +18

    Always carry a gumb shield in your pocket. When you've got no chance of getting out of a bad situation with an obnoxious bully who wants to fight you, simply smile at them and put your gum shield in your mouth and say, "Come on then." One of two things will happen: they'll either be so shocked, perplexed, and fearful that they'll reconsider their actions (the gum shield is the symbol of a fighter); or they'll attack you anyway, but at least you've got your gum shield in which will give your teeth and jaw a bit of protection 😉.

    • @Neur0nauT
      @Neur0nauT 8 месяцев назад +7

      This invites crazy egos if they are trying to instigate. Don't do this unless you know you have an upper hand. You pull out a gum-shield...they pull out a blade, Brass Knuckles, or a collapsible Baton. Silly advice really. I've witnessed this.

    • @tonybradbury7984
      @tonybradbury7984 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Neur0nauT 'When you've got no chance of getting out of a bad situation." It's not a casual option that you would use in any basic situation or if someone stares at you the wrong way, lol 😆.

    • @dennishassler605
      @dennishassler605 7 месяцев назад +2

      I'm 80 already, so where do I buy the gumb shield?

    • @tonybradbury7984
      @tonybradbury7984 6 месяцев назад

      @@dennishassler605 Sports shops or Amazon.

  • @Colinking2127
    @Colinking2127 10 дней назад +1

    I was bullied all through school. When i left i vowed never to be bullied again. I worked hard in a very physical job, built muscle and learnt that it is fear that makes you able to be brave. I worked with dangerous dogs and used kindness to calm them, but also developed a look that worked where kindness did not. In a situation knowing and being aware of what and who is around you is of paramount importance.

  • @georgearroyo6511
    @georgearroyo6511 8 месяцев назад

    Also snapshot spot on….

  • @searlearnold2867
    @searlearnold2867 Год назад +24

    Good advice. I got sucker punched by a small town biker wannabe when I was 16 because I scoffed at him rather then nodding. Unfortunately for him, I had been working in a lumber mill since 15, played football (American, not soccer) and had grown up moving appliances with my Dad and working livestock on friends farms. It didn't end well for him. Didn't start it, but did finish it.

    • @Probabilityislife
      @Probabilityislife Год назад +1

      American football and football are 2 different things.
      Football is football
      American football is not football.

    • @tombristowe846
      @tombristowe846 Год назад +9

      @@Probabilityislife He made it pretty clear which football he played and that he knows the difference .

    • @hisss
      @hisss Год назад +5

      @@Probabilityislife Are you trolling or just ignorant about how big the football family really is? Any idea what the word actually means? Not that the ball must be played with the feet, but that the sport is played on foot - as opposed to on horseback.

    • @natalyawoop4263
      @natalyawoop4263 Год назад +6

      @@Probabilityislife It is when you're on an American website, chief.

    • @spiralinglight
      @spiralinglight Год назад

      Wannabe bikers are the worst

  • @Bighandsdown
    @Bighandsdown Год назад +15

    4:46 this is great advice. I have been in many situations and can handle them comfortably. But leaving a bad situation is sometimes the best method, definitely so if you are alone. We don’t leave friends 👊🏻

  • @tsb7911
    @tsb7911 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent advice. I was always told to look away. Instead I look at them and nod as if to say "Hey man." Worked every time so far.

  • @johnanderson6946
    @johnanderson6946 Год назад +1419

    Normally i stare back with concealed carry

    • @NaitsirhcCheck
      @NaitsirhcCheck Год назад +85

      Conceal carry activated

    • @bshadrick
      @bshadrick Год назад +42

      ​@@NaitsirhcCheck me too partner!!

    • @nomisunrider5940
      @nomisunrider5940 Год назад +21

      Same

    • @tombillard5264
      @tombillard5264 Год назад

      awesome i lived in a gun rights shit hole or id join ya

    • @justindececco5836
      @justindececco5836 Год назад

      Yeah but that's just escalating & when shtf you mite find yourself LEGALLY fukd

  • @ones_flow5652
    @ones_flow5652 8 месяцев назад

    What a great channel. Didn't know it before. Damn it. I had lots of stupid people trying to stress around.

  • @db5202
    @db5202 11 месяцев назад +6

    Years ago I loved to pick on bullies, loved it. Then I realized I was being a bully to them. Peace is a better option. But knowing how to fight is essential.

  • @gordonmacdowell8117
    @gordonmacdowell8117 11 месяцев назад +9

    Pretty much spot on. I don't have any problem breaking contact with a potential threat, but it can all go out the window when you're in a position where you're protecting someone, personally or professionally. At that point you can be put into more danger by the people you're protecting than the threat. The trick of looking someone between the eyes wouldn't work if they're right in your face, but otherwise it can cause a person to be disorientated or uncertain because you're giving the illusion of individually focusing into both of their eyes at the same time with both of your eyes.

  • @sloughpacman
    @sloughpacman Год назад +32

    Now that was a well thought out video. The quick downward nod is perceived by trained men as a sign that you are one of them, they know from that moment that the pain and claret will be a two-way thing. In fact, the nod coupled with some beef is often enough to see big fellas into old age without ever learning to scrap. 😀

    • @garycates9911
      @garycates9911 Год назад +3

      I am 63 and have not "hit " anyone in "40" yr.s.

    • @garycates9911
      @garycates9911 Год назад +1

      Ed Parker was a very wise , kind , and generuse man.

  • @dermotthompson2115
    @dermotthompson2115 10 месяцев назад

    Well said!

  • @josephshaff5194
    @josephshaff5194 10 месяцев назад +2

    That is pretty great advice. I ended up in a shelter a couple times. At first the bs starts. So I did some simple things to appear larger or more massive. That backed almost all off. Note: It will not work on trained boxers. Most can kinda tell I'm somewhat trained. A bit of BB is sometimes all that is needed for some. I'm in my 50's and I can gain fast 25 lbs in 6 mo. but I also have muscle memory. (oh I have a busted hip so it's all upper). You muscles will be warmer but it will change your moves a tad. The important thing is it backs people off when someone is larger. But it's not the best body type for being in a lab. Or working 8-16+ hrs. Which is what really matters money. Unless you are a Soldier. Or contractor or some variant Police Fed. It's just not realistic to be huge. lol. I also entered the last place with a cloak and a Coyote pelt on it - wanting to see how well it worked for Midevil people. And yes they are very warm! One guy started calling me Baron.

  • @tenaciousandresilient9687
    @tenaciousandresilient9687 Год назад +5

    It's refreshing to understand the psychology behind these types as you present it, Doctor.

  • @Andy152R
    @Andy152R Год назад +3

    I appreciate every bit of info you give. You are one of the best online fight advice givers out there. Thank you for providing these tips.