This is truly excellent material. Gratitude is something that I've never seen taught in the martial arts. How can we practice using gratitude to access that 'Beast Mode' which we need in intense situations?
Thank you Kevin. This subject has always been paramount for me. I want to get back into training, but I always fear Fear, Logic and Discomfort about hurting someone, mostly by chokes, is there a way to eliminate that fear with exposure? Thank you for your amazing work. Please tell me if it requires a private class, I need to get back to your teachings. Thank you again Sir. No words can describe the depth and importance of your work.
A lot of people fear harming others. Most just don’t realize it. It’s a question of respecting your limits. If you trained as much as you did without hurting anyone and you are regarded by everyone as having good control which you are, and you have the sensitivity to care fir others which you obviously do then it might be something else at work . Private lessons are not required. Exposure can do it but it’s best to know what you’re really worried about if you want to resolve that or just get back into training somewhere to build your confidence
What can a small weak person with no fight experience do to defeat a murderous ambush attack attempt from a larger determined attacker with alot of fight experience. When there is no time to learn? (But you are determined to survive? By Any Means Necrssary. Whatever it takes. )
Deacon Dave Larrabee the best course of action is to always cultivate awareness and early detection skills to try always to avoid. If it can’t be avoided, emphasis should shift to deescalation. When this is not possible and physical defense is required, the response should be fetal and resolute. Pick up an improvised weapon, or attack the eyes and throat. Try always to surprise , ambush and attack first. That’s the short answer.
Thanks for sharing this new video! At 9m26s, it seems to be what Lee Morrison was referring to when crediting one of your drills ruclips.net/video/vHZY0UyEX3M/видео.htmlm01s
Learnt a lot from this short clip. The whole camp would have been amazing. Kevin has created a wonderful framework.
Thanks for watching. That camp was exceptional.
This is really excellent Kevin. Thank you for making this available here.
My pleasure. Thanks for watching.
This is truly excellent material. Gratitude is something that I've never seen taught in the martial arts. How can we practice using gratitude to access that 'Beast Mode' which we need in intense situations?
Igor Ganapolsky thanks for watching
Very nice piece of work. Lot of information to think about.
Thanks Greg
Thank you Kevin. This subject has always been paramount for me. I want to get back into training, but I always fear Fear, Logic and Discomfort about hurting someone, mostly by chokes, is there a way to eliminate that fear with exposure? Thank you for your amazing work. Please tell me if it requires a private class, I need to get back to your teachings. Thank you again Sir. No words can describe the depth and importance of your work.
A lot of people fear harming others. Most just don’t realize it. It’s a question of respecting your limits. If you trained as much as you did without hurting anyone and you are regarded by everyone as having good control which you are, and you have the sensitivity to care fir others which you obviously do then it might be something else at work . Private lessons are not required. Exposure can do it but it’s best to know what you’re really worried about if you want to resolve that or just get back into training somewhere to build your confidence
More gold, KS.
Thanks. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
What can a small weak person with no fight experience do to defeat a murderous ambush attack attempt from a larger determined attacker with alot of fight experience. When there is no time to learn? (But you are determined to survive? By Any Means Necrssary. Whatever it takes. )
Deacon Dave Larrabee the best course of action is to always cultivate awareness and early detection skills to try always to avoid. If it can’t be avoided, emphasis should shift to deescalation. When this is not possible and physical defense is required, the response should be fetal and resolute. Pick up an improvised weapon, or attack the eyes and throat. Try always to surprise , ambush and attack first. That’s the short answer.
@@systemacanada Thank you so much for answering! And thanks for great advice,. And great videos.
Thanks for sharing this new video!
At 9m26s, it seems to be what Lee Morrison was referring to when crediting one of your drills ruclips.net/video/vHZY0UyEX3M/видео.htmlm01s