Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Hi everybody! I am John Graden for the Martial Arts Teachers' Association and John Graden.com.
How do you fight? Well, that is actually a very interesting question. To me, all fighting
begins with a mindset. My mindset is that no one touches me without my permission. That
is my guiding line. No one touches me without my permission. And, if you touch me without
my permission, I am going to prevent you from doing that. That does not mean I am going
to be able to beat you in a fight. It does not mean I am going to win every fight. But,
I am always going to protect myself. I have a high sense of self worth. That being said,
there is two types of fights. Organized sport fighting where there are rules, a referee,
and a goal. And then, there is street fighting. Self defense where there are no rules, and
there is no referee and it is not a place you want to be. Let me discourage you from
getting into any fight that is not an organized sport fight that you are preparing for with
a coach. Here is the key. When a self defense situation arises, a street fight situation
arises, people talk about technique a lot. All self defense is mental. Ninety percent
mental, ten percent technique. The initial reaction of your body when it is threatened
is fight or flight. That is the subconscious reaction. It is not a conscious reaction.
You will feel probably hard to breathe. You will probably feel as though your arms and
legs are suddenly very heavy and that your body releasing blood to your major muscles
as you prepare to fight or flight. It is an adrenaline dump that, for someone who is not
used to it, can be debilitated. So, regardless of the techniques you know, you will never
get to fire those unless you learn to deal with the adrenal dump that precedes a self
defense situation. You do that first by kind of putting yourself in situations where you
are under some stress in a safe, organized manner, so that you get used to that adrenal
dump. And then, the second thing we do is we control that by breathing. Continuing to
breathe. Typically when you get tense and scared, fight or flight, you stop your breathing
which exasperates the problem. Key is to breathe. A martial arts master thinks about breathing
with the entire diaphragm and the stomach out, pushing air all the way to the bottom
of the lungs, not just this surface panting but strong deep breaths. And, in that scenario,
the martial arts master, while there is chaos everywhere, the martial arts master maintains
the quiet mind. And, that is how a martial arts master fights. So again, street fighting
versus organized fighting. Join a good martial arts school, a Martial Arts Teachers' Association
School and learn organized fighting. It is a lot more fun. It is a lot more safe and
it makes more sense. I am John Graden. I hope that helps. Thanks!