The problem with philosophy in self-defense is that it’s the
wrong philosophy. I do not mean that the
opinions are wrong, I mean that the subject matter is not really self-defense
philosophy. In armed self-defense—which few
people actually teach, but I am considering weapons instructors broadly—the primary
focus of the training is on safety. In
my state, most of the people carrying guns around for “self-defense” have gone
through an 8 hour class on firearms safety.
The main purpose of this class is to teach people how to safely operate
a firearm on a shooting range. It really
instills a healthy respect for the capability of a firearm to do damage. This on many occasions scares people into not
carrying the gun. This is not
self-defense philosophy, it is sports mentality. Shooting is a sport, and you take your
equipment to the field in a bag, you load your ammo, and then you consciously
engage your brain to switch to the task of shooting. As I have written many times, the biggest
threat in an ambush is the confusion.
Training to shoot when your brain is actively engaged only in shooting,
not distracted by anything from the target, is not really training for
self-defense. It is good training for
marksmanship, but marksmanship is only the very basic first step in
self-defense shooting. Sports and
self-defense have nothing to do with each other; many people understand this in
unarmed self-defense, but don’t recognize the same thing is happening in armed
self-defense.
This is because they start over-focusing on the tool (the
firearm) and forget the fundamental lesson of weapons training: I am the
weapon! The gun, the knife, the sword,
the car, the aircraft carrier are not the weapon, the people operating these
things have to be the weapon. When
people go from the martial arts mat to the shooting range, they lose a certain aggressiveness. People believe the tool will make it easier
to protect themselves. That is only half
true. A gun makes killing an enemy
physically easier than doing it with your bare hands, but it is still mentally
as difficult. Training in what the Army
calls an “Admin” attitude—as opposed to a “Tactical” attitude—gets people
complacent. They are not complacent to
range safety; my point is that range safety makes people complacent to the very
unsafe experience of a gun fight. It is
a very confusing, chaotic and frightening experience. Training to calmly stand on a range, take a
deep breath, let it out, and slowly squeeze the trigger of a pistol to where it
surprises you will allow you to hit bulls eye targets, but has nothing to do
with training you how to defend yourself with a firearm. In fact, it may actually make you less capable
of defending yourself than somebody who does not go practice just marksmanship.
Weapons-based martial art systems usually teach the wrong
philosophy as well. A great example is
teaching stick fighting to fight the opponent’s sticks instead of attacking the
opponent. Now, there are exceptional
teachers out there who teach to use batons to break through the opponent’s
guard and bash his scull in with a baton, but much of stick fighting is putting
sticks in a ring to fight each other.
That’s not self-defense. Or,
training people to use a knife as a defensive—as opposed to offensive—weapon;
cutting hands and arms to keep distance, trying to fence with it in
essence. Knives are good for stabbing
people or slitting the throats of sentries; they are not a dueling weapon. But, we start (I used to do this too),
teaching hand to hand combat concepts with a blade instead of just stabbing the
enemy until he’s dead. Again, dueling is
a sport mentality. It was one hell of a
sport back in its day, but it was still a sport. That is not the right philosophy either.
Of course, traditional martial arts, by definition, totally
teach the wrong philosophies for people who want to learn self-defense. One, they teach a sport philosophy for
fitness rather than self-defense. Two,
they teach to always walk away (“never throw the first punch”), the mindset of The Karate Kid’s Mr. Miagi. Three, they teach eastern religions as a part
of their martial arts. None of these
things is necessarily bad, and as I have said in the past, the study of
traditional martial arts makes a more complete person. But, these are passed off as “self-defense”
and they are the exact opposite. They
are monastic tenets that come from the religious institutions involved in the founding of traditional martial
arts. These are not the concepts you
need to master if you want to survive a deadly-force encounter or a real—not sport—self-defense
situation. These are pacifist
philosophies, or at least mild-mannered-monk philosophies, that do not fully
appreciate how to survive an ambush.
Ultimately, they are designed for self-mastery and not personal
protection in the physical realm. They
teach some excellent conditioning skills, regarding how to use the different
parts of the body as tools, but they don’t really train people to be the
weapon.
Ironically—proving my point—I have said these things to people
who are very good martial artists and they challenge me to a match in the
ring. I have always accepted on one condition: I would
accept the challenge if they let me enter the ring with the things I carry every day
for self-defense. No really great
martial artist has yet accepted my counter proposal. That is exactly what I mean when I say that, in combat, winning is cheating.
If you are unprepared to kill somebody to protect yourself
or somebody you care about, you are nothing but a victim waiting to happen, and you should stop reading this blog now. If you are still reading, I will attempt to
explain what the philosophy of self-defense really is. It is combat.
Essentially it is doing whatever is necessary to get home to your
family. Combat is not a sport. There is no such thing as a fair self-defense
engagement. Self-defense is
violence. You have to be the most
violent in order to seize the Initiative, and remember that whoever has the
Initiative at the end of a fight is the winner.
A real self-defense situation is one where the outcomes are
life or death. So, the real philosophy
of self-defense is the same philosophy we teach soldiers facing life or death
situations in combat. You are either the
winner or you are dead. Beating the shit
out of somebody is not self-defense.
Getting the shit beat out of you is also not self-defense. Self-defense is when you stab the guy beating
the shit out of you, kicking you in ribs on the pavement, ten times in the femoral
artery until the blood stops spurting.
That is self-defense. The
philosophy behind it is the deeply held belief, in one’s core, that I am going
home no matter what. When you start from
that belief system, then—and only then—all of the skills and all of the tools you
learn how to employ in the physical realm of violence are useful. The tools are added to a solid foundation in
the actual philosophy of self-defense.
Self-defense is combat. It may be
interpersonal combat, but it is still combat, and the only way you survive in
combat is getting the Initiative and keeping it.
Now, does that mean that the only option you have is
killing? No, that is not what I am
saying; what I am saying is that the person who is willing to kill to save his
life has a better chance of surviving combat, regardless of how much violence
he had to apply, than the person who is willing to get into some martial arts
tournament. You can use whatever amount
of violence it takes to seize and maintain the Initiative. But, if you are not willing to use lethal
violence, then you are giving a violent criminal—who is perfectly willing to be lethal—an advantage over you; you have a weakness that can be exploited. Now, we all have physical weaknesses; some
people are stronger than others, some people have physical disabilities and
limitations, that’s not what I’m talking about.
I personally have had way too many orthopedic surgeries in my life to
want to get into a jiu-jitsu match on pavement. What I am is a combat
veteran who is perfectly willing to cheat my ass off to get home. I am perfectly willing to kill a violent
criminal who tries to hurt me or somebody I care about. My physical condition might mean I lose, but
I will not lose because of mental weakness.
If I die, I will die trying to kill the bastard and take him with
me. If you don’t have that mental
fortitude, the willingness to be the most violent, then you will lose to those who are willing to be the most violent.
What frustrates me a great deal about modern America is that even
people learning how to fight, are not learning about combat. I firmly believe that the rise in terrorism
in America since the 1980s is directly attributable to the pacification of our
society. In the 1950s, American men
understood far less about fighting than MMA teaches today, but they understood
far more about combat than the average martial artist is taught today. Or what the average CCW holder is taught in an 8 hour safety lecture; the purpose of a gun fight is to be really dangerous, not safe. So, we as instructors need to start training people in the
philosophy of self-defense, the mentality of kill or be killed, instead of training them to be really athletic victims in life or
death encounters.
No comments:
Post a Comment