CQC Module 1 Close Combat

2016-12-29

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Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
2
Take just a moment and imagine this possible
scenario happening to you:
It’s the middle of the night and you wake up,
startled by strange noises somewhere in your house.
Your heart pounds as you quietly move to your
bedroom door and slowly open it... to see two large
men quickly scouring your house for anything they can
find. Just then, in the darkness of the hallway, you
hear the faint, sleepy voice of your small daughter.
“Daddy? I hear a noise.”
You glance back at the two men and realize that
they've also heard her…and are headed your way. Now
comes the single most important question you need to
ask yourself: Would you trust the close quarters
combat skills you now possess to handle this situation?
You are the only thing standing between these two
predators and your precious family.
If you hesitated for even a second in considering
this troubling scenario, don’t worry. You’re not alone.
Unless you live in a gang infested neighborhood with
crack dealers on every corner, you've probably never
even had to confront the possibility of real violence. If
you continue to lead a clean life in a decent
neighborhood, the chances are you won’t have to deal
with such a scenario and you’d be wasting your time
learning how to defend against it... right?
Well, don’t be too quick to take comfort in the fact
that you don’t live in the “hood,” that you don’t go
looking for trouble in biker bars, or that you live in a
nice, cozy little picket-fenced house in the suburbs,
where the worst crimes are vandalism perpetrated by
high school kids.
Even those who don’t live in “troubled”
neighborhoods, where cars sit on cement blocks, are at
risk to become victims of home invasions or violent
street attacks. In fact, we could argue that you’re even
more at risk in a nice neighborhood, because you’ve let
your guard down, thinking you live in the “safety
zone.”
Catching you unaware and unprepared is what the
average street criminal, the typical societal predator,
hopes to do as he plies his trade.” He’s practiced at
looking for victims who will give him little or no
trouble... and when you’re ripe to become a victim, he
can spot you from a mile away.
Forget the worst-case nightmare scenario we’ve
previously painted. Ask yourself: Do you ever go
shopping at the mall? Do you ever go the movies? Do
you stop at convenience stores late at night or early in
the morning, to get gas or cigarettes or simply a pack
of gum? Do you ever park your car in public parking
lots or garages?
Violent crime occurs in all these places. Crimes
aren’t limited to random muggings, assaults, and rapes,
either. In recent months there have been several high-
profile public shootings in places like shopping malls
and community centers. In each case, a gunman
opened fire on innocent men, women, and even
children, because of whatever personal demons he may
have been fighting.
Rape, child molestation, gang fights, kidnappings,
and, yes, even murder happen in every conceivable
venue, in good neighborhoods and bad. Crimes have
happened in many of the places you frequent. Simple
probability is with you, in these cases; in most
instances you aren’t there when the crimes occur. But
the law of averages says that sooner or later, you will
be in the wrong places at the wrong time, and violent
crime could touch your life. It can happen even in the
most remote, rural, peaceful areas... places you would
never expect to see a crime of any kind.
The sooner you realize the fact that violent crime
can reach you, without warning, in any walk of life, the
sooner you can begin to prepare for it... and thus the
better your chances of survival will be. This isn’t just
about your own survival, either: In some cases, the
stakes are the lives of your family. If taking the time to
prepare for your own survival isn’t compelling enough,
consider the need to protect your spouse and your
loved ones.
In this Close Quarters Combat module, we’ll share
with you hard-won and hardcore lessons in the realities
of physical combat. These lessons are gleaned from
work in the security profession, from military
experience, and even from barroom brawling.
Regardless of the source, however, each lesson of
reality-based combat starts with an important subject,
one with which you must familiarize yourself and one
with which you likely have never had to deal before.
CLOSE QUARTERS COMBAT
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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This subject is the first, crucial step in being able to
quickly and efficiently destroy a hardened street
criminal or loudmouth jerk who is twice your size, and
understanding it will enable you to do this without
even breaking a sweat. We’re talking about a down
and dirty lesson in violence, pure and simple.
We will assume the worst-case scenario in physical
combat, and by this we mean that the person you face
is likely bigger and stronger than you. It’s simply a
fact that people pick fights with those they believe they
can beat. Someone who is bigger and stronger is much
more likely to give you trouble than someone who is
smaller.
In order for you to be fully prepared to defend
yourself against a larger, stronger attacker, you must
first have a deep, deep understanding of the nature of
violence.
You need to stop and think hard about this...and
whatever you do, do not skip past this section thinking
you “already know that bad things happen.” When we
use the word “violence,” we’re not talking about high-
school shoving matches over who was out at second
base. The reality of violence is not even close to the
most violent act you’ve ever seen in even the most
horrifying movie you’ve watched in a theater.
Real street violence is something that can only be
experienced first-hand. It requires your overactive
imagination to think of the most horrible thing possible
occurring... perhaps to yourself, perhaps to a spouse or
child. It’s the kind of violence that, hopefully, you will
never truly have to experience lurking out there. The
reality, however, is that it is out there, and it could find
you. In such a situation, there really are no rules.
There’s no way for the average, law-abiding person to
relate to the sight of massive amounts of blood gushing
from a wound, or to the sight of missing body parts, or
to the realization that you may never see your children
ever again as a bullet burns past your left ear.
It’s extremely important that you understand, when
you are face to face with the reality of having to defend
your family and yourself, that anything goes. No
matter what you have to do, no matter whom you have
to harm to keep your loved ones safe, when real
violence is offered you, you have no choice. There are
no limits, there are no rules of “polite” or “civilized”
conduct, and there is no goal save for protecting your
family and (if you can) getting out alive.
All of us, from a very young age, learned the “rules
of fighting” from our parents and our friends. In this
case our “self-defense training” started when we were
just young children. That was when we were taught...
or, perhaps more accurately, programmed to believe
that there are certain rules, certain guidelines, for how
we treat other people. Should we be forced to fight
someone, we were taught that there were certain places
a “real man” wouldn’t strike, certain people a real
man” wouldn’t hit, and certain strategies a “real man”
wouldn’t employ. Let’s review some of these rules
now, in the words of your parents:
“Don't bite your sister!”
“Quit pinching your brother!”
“Never let me see you hit Bobby with a stick
again!”
“Now son...you want to make a strong fist and
punch. NEVER slap like a girl.
“You just don't hit another boy in the
testicles...EVER.”
“Pulling hair is for sissies!”
“You never hit a guy with glasses.”
You probably get the picture. The thug on the
street first tried to fight by the same rules you and I
grew up with. His mother and father told him it
“wasn't nice” to poke someone in the eyes or to crash a
chair over his brother's head. He set out in life with the
same misconceptions about violence that you have
been taught.
Then that thug fought someone who was more
experienced than he was...and felt a chair come
crashing down on his head right before he lost
consciousness.
Well, guess what this guy did the next time he
found himself in a fight with someone? Do you think
he grabbed a chair, a bottle, a brick, or the person's hair
to make sure that he didn't end up back in the
emergency room? You bet he did.
THE RULESOF THE STREET
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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He realized that it's better to leave the other guy
bloody and unable to get up off the floor, by any means
necessary, than it is to be passed out on the pavement
while the opponent stands over your body pissing on
you as his buddies laugh hysterically.
The unfortunate problem for you is that the
common Joe-Schmoe with whom you may get into a
scrap at a restaurant...even 95% of the low-life gang
bangers walking the hoods...don't know just how
fragile the human body actually is.
This is “your problem” because. while you may
think that the average guy will show you mercy once
he's clearly beaten you, hormones don't switch off that
easily. Even when you're down and your attacker has
no need to continue his assault, that DOESN'T mean
he's going to stop.
To make matters worse, his brain isn't in control to
the degree that he will even care WHERE he's
attacking. When you're on the ground, he's just going
to stomp all over your body, crushing your vulnerable
bits and maiming, crippling, or blinding you.
During some real gang fights, participants have
been so hyped up during the scuffle that they began
stomping on the victim’s head after they had already
left that person dazed and defenseless on the ground.
This is a potentially lethal move and one that will leave
some child without a father... and someone spending
the rest of his life in a cell with a big guy named Sue.
Craziness like this happens due to the extreme
“adrenaline dump” that takes place in our bodies when
faced with the “fight or flight” situation. Hormones
take over and bring out the “animal” in us that's kept us
alive since we were roasting wooly mammoth steaks
over the fire pits inside our caves. The hormone that's
kept us alive for thousands of years could easily be the
mistaken cause of the one extra kick your skull
couldn't withstand.
Given this, let's go over the only rule you need to
know if you should find yourself facing a larger,
stronger attacker in an inevitable physical showdown:
THERE ARE NO RULES ON THE STREET!
Yes...”real men” DO pull hair, grab another guy's
testicles, kick, pinch, bite, and slap when they fight.
They do absolutely whatever they have to do, no
matter how vicious or brutal or gratuitous it might
seem, if this is necessary to win the fight during a life-
or-death altercation.
There’s a very good reason your father told you
never to kick another boy in the groin. It hurts. It
hurts bad.
Now, if you're at your family reunion and crazy
Uncle Mortie has a few too many drinks and tells you
you're a dumbass for bringing the bean dip when you
know he's allergic to beans, you're not going to
pulverize his manhood with your shin.
In a REAL fight, with a larger attacker, driving his
balls up into his throat could be the one move that can
make the difference between you being home in time
to watch the late news...and you being the lead story
ON the late news, as they film you being wheeled
away on a gurney.
.
No one is ever going to fault you for grabbing a
bottle and breaking it over a guy's head when he
outweighs you by 200 lbs. Nobody is going to say you
“fought like a girl” when you grabbed the hair of the
knife-wielding thug you threatened you, or when you
scratched out the eyes of the man who tried to grab
your wife. No one is going to claim you “didn’t really
win” because you stuck your thumb in a guy’s eye
socket to the first knuckle, while he had his hands
around your throat and was choking the last bit of air
from your lungs.
Even if somebody did say something like that,
what do you care? This is the reality of street violence,
not a pissing contest and not some contest. It doesn’t
matter what anybody thinks, as long as your family is
safe and you go home alive and intact at the end of the
day in that order of priority.
Street criminals, by definition, choose
circumstances that favor them. They choose the time,
the place, and the odds they think will best afford them
success with a minimum amount of effort. This means
that in every real-life self-defense scenario, you start
out at a disadvantage. To bring the odds back under
control and give yourself a chance of defeating even
the most bad-assed criminal predators, you’ll need to
employ the dirtiest, sneakiest, nastiest tricks you can
learn. That may be hard for some people, who simply
aren’t naturally wired to be vicious or brutal. But in
dealing with real-life violence, it is necessary.
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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At any given time during the day, you fall into one
of 4 “states of preparedness” in terms of surviving a
street attack.
We use a color code within what we call a
“Survival Pyramid” to better illustrate how to avoid
confrontation in the first place, but also how to know
without a doubt whether you need to be ready to
defend yourself or look for other solutions.
To truly be
able to defend
yourself, you must
absolutely master
your awareness of
your own position
within the follow-
ing “Survival
Pyramid” and be
able to quickly,
deliberately, and
definitively move
from one “zone” to
the next at a
moment's notice.
Let's take each
of these sections
and break down
exactly what they
mean to you
and how to use
them in your
defense.
The white zone is where most people spend their
lives…until they become victims. It’s the zone where
dwells the shopper with his arms full of groceries,
heading to his car, oblivious of who is around him...
the woman jogging down the back road with
headphones on, unaware of the car following behind
her... and any other citizens who wander through life
without a clue as to their environments or the dangers
with in them.
There is only one thing to do: GET OUT OF THE
WHITE ZONE!
This is the zone of unawareness. It is a dangerous
way to live your life, as you move along oblivious,
vulnerable, and simply waiting to be come a victim.
Oblivious, vulnerable, and waiting to be a victim!
The yellow zone is the “foundation” state of
awareness. It is your first step in avoiding becoming a
victim.
Living in the
yellow zone is like
having your personal
antenna on at all
times, waiting to alert
you of danger when it
may be near.
It’s very simple to
reach this state of
being. All you have
to do is PAY
ATTENTION. At
home, you’re aware
of strange noises in
the house or whether
you left the lights on
when you left home
earlier.
In public, you’re
aware of who is
around you, if the
party at the other table is intoxicated and rowdy, if the
vehicle in your rear-view mirror has been there for the
past 30 minutes, and so on.
The yellow zone is NOT a state of paranoia. It is
simply being watchful and aware of your surroundings,
looking for things that are out of the ordinary. With
practice, living in the yellow zone becomes a habit...
and it’s a habit that could save your life someday.
As you live in Condition Yellow, take inventory of
your environment, wherever you are. When you enter
a restaurant, look at the patrons. Look for anyone
suspicious or rowdy, and keep track of their
movements.
THE YELLOW ZONE
THE WHITE ZONE
THE SURVIVAL PYRAMID
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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If you’re walking down the street, remember who
is walking behind you and notice if they’re still there
when you make a few turns. Do they stop when you
stop? Are they watching you? Are they paralleling
you?
The orange zone is where you go when your
antenna sends you a signal that there’s something “not
quite right.”
You’re walking down the street and notice that
someone is following you.
You and your family are heading to the car from
the restaurant and there are three men drinking beer
while leaning on your car.
You hear a noise in the night. Was it breaking
glass, or just the furnace kicking on?
Danger may not be imminent, but you’re ready for
it should it quickly decide to slap you in the face.
What you do, in condition orange, is start planning
your actions should the situation become a true
physical confrontation:
Where is your best exit? Can you retreat and get
help? Where is your best position to confront the
danger? Can you keep the car between you and the
threat? What weapons are available? The list goes on.
The point is that you’re ready for action. Should you
have to use force, you will, and you will be the victor...
period.
That adrenaline rush you’re now experiencing in
condition orange? That’s a good thing. Use it to your
advantage. It will give you the strength, the fight-or-
flight energy, that you need to do what must be done,
no matter how brutal, no matter how vicious.
In the red zone, danger is inevitable. You
investigate that noise in the night... and discover that
it’s an intruder. The suspicious man near your car
throws his beer to the ground and starts straight for
you. The person you think may be following you
suddenly starts running, and he’s looking right at you...
and so on.
What do you do? When you enter the red zone,
that’s your call to action. It’s time to ram the other
guy’s bad intentions back down his throat and leave
him in a crumpled mess on the pavement, because the
alternative is to allow your family to become victims.
You can’t afford to be nice. Nice guys really do finish
last. You must adopt the mindset that you are not nice,
that you are going to take the fight to the attacker and
leave him choking on his own evil. No retreat, no
surrender. You have to take him down and take him
out.
We’re going to make an assumption here. We’re
going to guess that you’re a “nice” person. You love
your family and your friends. You pay your taxes.
You open doors for people. You live by the motto that
you give what you hope to get, and you lead your life
as a law-abiding, polite, “nice” person. Right? You
were taught to have proper manners and you use these
as you conduct your daily life, trying not to be rude to
those around you and generally expecting similar
treatment in return.
These same positive attributes could be your
downfall if the reality of violence comes reaching up to
slap its cold, hard knuckles across your face. Self-
defense requires you to be, well NOT NICE. You’re
going to do more than just be rude to someone; you’re
going to do more than just hurt their feelings. Real
street violence requires you to be... well, really violent,
and that means being anything but nice.
Let's say you and your wife or girlfriend are finally
getting seated at the packed restaurant one evening
and, on your way through the crowded bar, you
accidentally bump into some guy who is sitting with
his date. He ends up spilling his drink all over her
dress.
The guy has now lost face in front of his new
conquest and has to find some way of making her
realize that he's not the sort of “wuss” who would let
other guys “harm” her and get away with it.
Now, 99% of the time you (depending on which
type of establishment you're frequenting) will be
NICE GUY SYNDROME
THE RED ZONE
THE ORANGE ZONE
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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fortunate enough to bump into another “nice guy,” who
realizes that it truly was a mistake and, while he may
be disturbed by your clumsiness, won't cross the lines
drawn by polite conduct in civil society.
But what if he’s not a nice guy?
Any time the human body receives outside stimuli,
it sends a signal to the brain to make an immediate and
subconscious “survival assessment.” This was encoded
in our DNA since the spawn of man to allow us to be
alert to potential danger. It allows us to react quickly
enough to escape or destroy the “threat.”
Even the little bump in the bar is enough to send a
quick signal to the brain and start the whole “survival
assessment” process in motion. Let’s turn the tables in
the previous scenario. Now it’s you who gets bumped
in the bar, and it’s you who spills his drink on your
date.
YOUR brain will also make an immediate
“survival assessment” and, as you turn around, let’s
say that you find yourself staring into the bellybutton
of a seven-foot mammoth who looks like he just broke
out of prison.
Most of us would feel our testicles shrivel up to the
size of raisins. The signal to the brain would be to try
and play it down and hope the guy doesn't get angry.
Most of us would just say, “Excuse me,” and hope the
other fellow will keep walking. We’d also hope our
dates would understand.
The other guy has his own “survival assessment”
process. He may well perceive that there’s no way you
can beat him. He feels social pressure to prove that
he’s the tough guy, and his status as a not-so-nice guy,
as a societal predator, will push him onward to prove
that. He’ll be thinking that everyone’s watching him,
and he must save face by making you pay for his
mistake. He may just insult you... but this could every
easily escalate into a shoving match and then to a
physical altercation.
Let’s return to our original scenario. As soon as
you realize you've bumped into someone and it
resulted in a wet female lap, you're IMMEDIATELY
in the orange zone. You assess the threat, make your
emphatic apology, and pay close attention to everyone
around you, especially the guy you just bumped.
What does the look on his face tell you?
Is he simply “inconvenienced.”..or is he downright
pissed off? Did he set his drink on the bar or table and
turn to face you? Is he breathing harder? Do you see
his fists, arms, neck, and shoulders getting tense? Is he
gritting his teeth?
These are all “signs” of a potential attack and you
MUST NOT assume that he's going to back down.
You have no idea whether this guy and his
companion were just having an argument. You have no
idea what his mental state might be. Maybe he just
found out she was cheating on him with his best
friend... and you've just had the worst timing in the
world.
You have to quickly start working on an “attack
plan” and be ready to use it. Does he have a chair
behind him that you could push him over? Do YOU
have a chair behind you that you'll trip over if you try
to back up? Is YOUR companion in harm’s way?
Where are the exits? Are there potential weapons to
hand?
You get the picture, right?
Ok, so we're at the point of potential “survival..”
Now what?
The following is a true story.
At a nightclub, a young fellow was dancing and
having a few drinks with his girlfriend. There was
another fellow there who’d had a few too many and
started making suggestive comments to the woman.
Full of pride and the feeling of obligation to
protect his girlfriend’s reputation, the young man got
into a fight in the bar area. There was no damage to
either guy, just a few bumps and some torn clothing.
The bouncers were able to break it up and escort both
YOUR WORST ENEMY IN A
PHYSICAL CONFRONTATION
ALWAYS BE PREPARED FOR THE
WORST... AND BE READY TO FIGHT!
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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men and the girlfriend out of the club and to their
respective cars.
Once the young man and his girlfriend were seated
in their car, and security was back in the club, the
drunk guy started yelling at them from about seven
cars away, calling them every name in the book and
telling them both in graphic detail what he’d like to do
to the girlfriend.
The young man was so enraged that he stopped his
car, jumped out of the driver’s seat even though his girl
was begging him not to, and started toward his
tormentor, chest puffed up with eagerness to throw
down once more.
What our young hero didn’t realize was that the
guy he’d fought actually had friends inside the club.
They were waiting on the sides of the other cards,
armed with baseball bats and tire irons.
It was too late for the young man to get back to his
car. He was beaten to the ground in seconds. The
beating didn’t stop there. When his girlfriend tried to
stop it from happening, she was thrown against one of
the cars.
In the end, security returned and broke up the
beating before it turned fatal. The girlfriend wasn’t
terribly brutalized, though she very well could have
been. The young man spent a few days in the hospital,
but all in all, it could have been much worse. The
young man could have died. His girl could have been
raped.
It all happened because of the young man’s worst
enemy. That enemy was his own EGO.
Whether they’re mild-mannered office monkeys or
young punks walking the streets with their gangs, all
men have one thing in common. They hate to be made
to feel that they are lower than someone else. This
applies to women too, sure, but it’s particularly and
issue for every red-blooded, testosterone-fueled man
who walks the planet or ever did walk the planet.
Every man has an ego with which he must contend.
Each man has a different ego threshold, a different
number of shots to his ego that he can withstand before
his manhood demands that he do something about the
line in the sand that has just been crossed. Once it has
you in its grip, however, the male ego is a dangerous
thing.
DON'T fall victim to your pride!
Even if you think that you're stronger or more
skilled at fighting someone, there's always the
unknown. The weapon concealed in the hand, the
lucky punch, the friends waiting unseen to help beat
you down, the innocent bystander who gets involved
because he thinks you’re the assailant and therefore the
bad guy... anything can happen in a real fight, and none
of it is good. You must account for the unexpected.
Don’t let your pride go before your fall.
Let’s once more go back to our bar scenario.
You’ve mistakenly bumped into another fellow who
fancies himself a societal predator. He must come to
terms with the facts that...
1. He has a girlfriend with a wet lap because of
you
2. He doesn't want to “lose face” in front of
bystanders
3. He wants to prove that he wouldn't let another
man “harm” his companion and get away with it
4. He's afraid that other people are watching him
and judging him as “less of a man” if he doesn't stick
up for his companion.
Hopefully, you’ve gone from the yellow zone of
preparedness to orange zone, as this threat presents
itself. Your next step in defeating this fellow is to try
and defuse the situation before it gets ugly.
You might have thought the next step was to
employ some deadly killer move and leave the other
guy bleeding on the floor of the bar... but no reasonable
person gets physical if a few well-chosen words can
defuse the fight before it begins. We’re getting closer
to physical violence, but we’re not there yet. It’s not
quite time to employ the Secret Navy SEAL Five
Finger Death Touch.
Whatever anyone may tell you, size and strength
DO play an important role in who comes out the
winner in a fight, so your first move is to do everything
you can on the front end to stop the fight from
happening in the first place. These same moves are
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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ALSO what's going to save your ass on the legal end if
it does come to blows and you end up seriously hurting
this guy. Witnesses will report that you did everything
possible to try and stop things from getting physical,
and that will work in your favor. It will make any
physical actions you are forced to take that much more
legitimate in the eyes of those who will judge you after
the fact.
First, as soon as the assailant begins making hostile
gestures (which can be as simple as a stern look of
disgust), you want to put your hands up in a non-
threatening manner. This instantly connects with his
brain by providing visual cues for his subconscious
“survival assessment.” In other words, in most people,
it will tell his hormonal “fight-or-flight” triggers to
slow down and take it easy... there’s no threat here.
For some guys with just too much testosterone
floating through their blood streams, this could also
send them in the other direction. “No threat” could
trigger THEIR brains to puff up their chests and make
them more aggressive, because you're obviously a
“safe target.” He can do what he wants without fear of
you being a problem. It's a GREAT opportunity to
make him feel better about himself (ego-booster) as
well as show everyone around him that he's a “big
man.”
Once you've shown that you're no threat and
you've given him the opportunity to gracefully exit the
situation with his pride intact, if he continues to show
aggression, you know that you're now in the red zone.
You must act accordingly.
Your next move is one that will not only protect
you from a legal perspective, but will also take
advantage of the “Achilles Heel” of every larger
attacker...their overconfidence. You must state VERY
loudly, so EVERYONE around you hears:
“I DON'T want to fight you!”
This calls attention to the situation and, once the
predator in front of you realizes that all eyes are on him
as the “hostile” party in the situation, it may be enough
to back him down. Most people hate to be the center
of that kind of attention and have a very strong “flight”
response to being a public spectacle.
This also accomplishes another crucial component
of your defense plan. If the assailant does continue to
be aggressive and makes a move toward you, after
you've left him writhing in pain 5 seconds later YOU
will be the one spectators say was attacked. They’ll say
that you “did everything possible to try to get the other
guy to back down.”
This compares very favorably to a situation in
which you cripple a guy in seconds only to be seen, by
the spectators, as the aggressor. Even if they’re not
sure, you’ll be hauled down to the police station.
You’re much better off convincing everyone before the
fact that you’re the victim. It fits the templates through
which the bystanders will view the altercation, and
their memories will replay the incident accordingly.
All right: You’ve publicly stated you don’t want to
fight. Your assailant still has a decision to make. Does
he attack you, or does he back down? He’s left himself
open to a debilitating attack if you know the right
tactics. His overconfidence has opened the door;
you’ve opened him up even more with your
reassurance that you aren’t really a threat.
As you’ll notice, there’s a hormonal shift that has
been building in your body as you crossed the zones of
the Survival Pyramid. The adrenaline surge that’s
taking over is your natural response to the fear of the
altercation looming. You’ll need to harness the power
that lies deep within you, the power made accessible
by that adrenaline dump, if you’re to beat this predator
at his own game.
It’s time to become someone who’s not nice.
All of us have experienced the adrenaline surge.
It’s the chemical change that happens whenever we’re
made to feel afraid or anxious.
There are certain signs of the adrenaline dump:
REMAINING CALM IN THE FACE OF
DANGER... AND EXPLODING WITH
SUPER-HUMAN POWER AT WILL
DIFFUSING THE PHYSICAL
CONFRONTATION
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
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Shortness of breath
Tense muscles
Sweating
Tunnel vision
Dry mouth
The sensation of your testicles crawling into
your abdomen
The kind of adrenaline “dump” you'll be dealing
with when facing an assailant in a physical altercation
is more powerful than any you’ve felt before. It will
leave you a trembling mess if you let it. This is why
grown men sometimes wet themselves during the stress
of a terrifying encounter.
Approached correctly, however, the adrenaline
dump can be your greatest ally in any physical
encounter. Adrenaline is the hormone that lets a
middle-aged woman lift a car off her child. It’s also
the antidote that soldiers used to get their hearts
pumping again if they’re exposed to nerve agents. In
harnessing the adrenaline dump, you must learn two
things:
1. How to NOT show fear in the face of your
attacker
2. How to “trigger” the super human strength this
powerful chemical has the potential of providing
Let's start with how to avoid showing all of the
signs of fear that come with fear and adrenaline,
because there's nothing better than besting someone in
an altercation... unless it’s doing so while looking like
you never broke a sweat.
“Combat Breathing” is essentially controlled
breathing to reverse, as much as possible, the physical
effects of adrenaline surge. It's used extensively by
law enforcement personnel, who find themselves in
situations where they have to deal with fear and
danger.
Here's how it's done:
Basically, you'll be using your diaphragm to
breath, rather than your upper chest/shoulder area
(which ends up being utilized due to the natural
shortness of breath and limited oxygen you'll be
experiencing).
Under stress, we tend to hold our breath, which
causes fixation and tunnel vision or quick, short
breaths that lead to even greater anxiety and loss of
control (possibly leading to panic).
Combat breathing is simply breathing OUT for a
slow 4-count...staying empty of air for a 2-count...
smoothly breathing in for a 4-count... and holding the
air in for another 2-count.
Remember, use your diaphragm to breathe deeply
in and out. You want the oxygen to reach the very
depths of your lungs, but don't make it obvious to your
attacker that you're doing it.
The best way to make it a habit is to use it the next
time you feel nervous about something...anything.
When you practice, use an internal mental cue by
saying to yourself, “Breathe,” so that when you get into
the mess at the bar we're using as an example, saying
“breathe” to yourself will automatically trigger your
conscious use of this fear-fighting tactic.
This cycle goes on and really only requires about
4-5 repetitions to help you calm down and get your
head in the game. Remember...adrenaline can also be a
GOOD thing, right? Here, then, is how to take
advantage of its powerful attributes.
Adrenaline lies in wait at all times, to be
immediately called on when you're in danger. There’s
not much need to call it up for use when it's time to
launch your attack, but here’s a trick you can use. It’s
a quick trigger-reversal of combat breathing.
Just when you've decided that it's time to launch
your attack, simultaneously take a quick, short, super-
powerful breath through your nose (with your mouth
closed and lips tensed into a mean “sneer”) as your
force your muscles to tense up with your first strike.
With that one breath and muscle tension, you send
the hotline dispatch to your adrenal glands that it's
“action time” and you need a flood of backup NOW.
TRIGGERING SUPER-HUMAN
STRENGTH
COMBAT BREATHING
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It's also very easy to practice this technique.
Simply stand in a room (where you have lots of space
to maneuver) and close your eyes. Use your combat
breathing to bring yourself to a state of complete
calmness. When you're ready, crank up the adrenaline
by taking your powerful breath through your nose and
then quickly breathe in and out in very short powerful
breaths with as much intensity as you can.
At the same time, imagine that you're staring up
into the eyes of a giant gang-banger surrounded by his
“homies.” Punch repeatedly into the air as you run
forward, as if you were running right down his throat.
Bring yourself back down to complete calmness
with your combat breathing again, then repeat the
process. By bringing yourself in and out of states of
calmness and adrenaline dump, you’ll quickly learn
how to use both of these techniques to give you an
unfair advantage over the next predator who crosses
your path.
So when do you actually launch your physical
attack? Do you take the first strike? How do you know
when to throw it? This can all be answered in a single
sentence:
Hesitation will get you killed!
Let's go back to our bar scene, in which you were
about to get “taught a lesson” by the angry boyfriend.
He makes his way toward you, enraged at your
“stupidity” and shouting and cussing all the way.
You've tried to calm him down and even offered to
pay for the dry cleaning for his girlfriends studded
leather mini-skirt. You’ve told him you don’t want to
fight him. You’ve made it clear you’re not a threat.
He doesn’t care. He tells you that maybe he should
show YOU what it feels like to get bumped, and he
does so with his muscles tense and his fists clenched.
You don’t have time for a lot of what-ifs in this
scenario. You don’t have the luxury of asking, “Well,
what if he’s just upset? What if he’s just trying to scare
me? What if he doesn’t really mean it?”
You don’t know him and you don’t have the time
to get to know him. He’s offering you the credible
threat of physical violence. Don’t hesitate. STRIKE
FIRST. Do it preemptively. Is it a tough call? Sure it
is, but the bottom line is that if you’re not sure if he’s
going to hit you but he’s acting like he will, once he’s
close enough to take that shot, you take it!
This is hard for some people to grasp. The concept
of preemptive self-defense feels contradictory to some,
who don’t realize that taking the first shot is not the
same thing as starting a fight. He started the fight, and
he made it clear he was bringing violence to you. It’s
not your problem if you then had to take him down
before he could make good on the threats he was
making. When the cops ask you what happened, you
tell them you were genuinely in fear for your life and
that he was initiating an assault on you. That’s the
reality of it. That’s why you take the first strike and
you put him down.
Consider the many real fights you may have seen
in bars and other public places, which always seem to
start with two people in each other’s faces. This sort of
standoff almost always ends in a fight... and the person
who gets in the first shot almost always wins.
That first strike is usually thrown by the person
who instigated the standoff in the first place, because
it’s harder to back down if you started the altercation.
What you need to do, as the defender, is make sure it’s
you who gets in that first strike. He started the fight.
All you have to do is begin and end the physical
portion of it.
Provided you can show, legally, that the other
party communicated a real and credible threat to you
and that he was advancing on you, that’s sufficient to
demonstrate that you felt you were being physically
attacked. In other words, you were justified in taking
the fight to the assailant... and if you’ve done your job
properly as we’ve described it here, bystanders will
back you up and say that you were the victim.
Don’t forget, you made your apologies for all to
hear. You did your best to prevent the fight. You
didn’t want to fight, and you said so. The rest was up
to him. The old adage, Better safe than sorry” has
never been more true. People have died from taking a
single lucky punch; you can’t afford to give your
attacker the advantage of that first blow. Don’t make
the mistake of playing it safe when your life may be in
danger.
WHEN
TO LAUNCH YOUR ATTACK
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The news is filled with “victims” who mistakenly
asked someone else's girl to dance, mistakenly took
someone's parking space, mistakenly rear-ended
someone's car on the highway, mistakenly cut someone
off in traffic, mistakenly bumped into someone in the
mall, etc....and ended up shot, stabbed, or beaten as a
result. There is an old saying in law enforcement, “I'd
rather be judged by 12 (a jury), than be carried by 6
(pallbearers)!”
All right, you’ve done everything in your power to
avoid a physical altercation, and to defuse an incident
before it can begin. Once you’ve reached the point of
no return and it’s time to start, well, hitting someone,
we must ask ourselves: Where do we hit them?
Especially if we are facing a bigger, stronger
attacker, we tend to engage in subconscious over-
analysis of the threat we face. The subconscious
thought process immediately sees that the larger and
stronger an attacker is, the more likely you are to suffer
pain and injury. You see size, muscle, and brute
strength and immediately compare it to your own
physical attributes and... well, they just don't compare,
right?
This is the same thought process that we spoke
about earlier that your attacker goes through also. He
assesses (on a conscious and subconscious level) your
own stature and determines whether you are a threat or
not.
As we’ve discussed, this is where you start to gain
an advantage over attacker. In fact, the bigger he is,
the greater your advantage! You’re not really
perceived as a threat, which means your attacker is
overconfident. He couldn’t be more wrong, and you’re
going to strike him and teach him a very important
lesson about his error.
You see, WHERE you strike your attacker has a lot
to do with the CONSCIOUS analysis in which we’re
about to engage. In your mind, you may feel fear
because, in the movie that plays in your head, you just
can't see overpowering your assailant by slugging
away at his head or stomach with your fists.
Especially if he’s a much bigger guy, it just doesn’t
seem like something you can visualize. But you do
have an advantage. Your attacker’s presumably
greater size and strength, coupled with your submissive
attempt to avoid the fight and communicate that you
are not a threat, leave him wide open to the crippling
blows you’re about to learn.
It’s really not a matter of how you strike the
attacker. It’s a question of where. You see, your
assailant is thinking the way everyone else thinks.
Even if he has street fighting experience, his immediate
response reduces his choices to wildly thrown punches
to the head, plain and simple. Check out any “street
fight” video online and you’ll see just this sort of
behavior. You can’t afford to trade blows of this kind,
and if you can’t end the fight in seconds, you’re going
to have to deal with any friends this guy might have
lurking around.
What you must do, therefore, is take the opponent
out in a way that he will never expect, quickly enough
and overwhelmingly enough so that he never has the
chance to counter. On every attacker, no matter how
big or how strong, there are certain vulnerable points,
and these points do not change.
Even a man who can bench press hundreds of
pounds cannot work out his testicles, his eyes, or his
kneecaps. He can’t make these parts of his body any
stronger no matter how hard he tries.
The entire time your assailant has been feeling his
ego swell, feeling his pride grow at being able to back
you down from the fight and show everyone what a
man he is, you have been reducing him to the small
targets of opportunity that will give you an advantage
in any altercation. You’ll be able to spot several of
these targets in just a split second, given practice.
That’s all there is to reducing him to the victim he
wants you to become.
When facing ANY fight, but especially one against
a larger attacker, “efficiency” is the name of the game.
As we've said, you want to be able to take out an
attacker in under, say, 15 seconds...at the MOST! Now,
doing the math, that really only amounts to about 10
strikes at best. That's it...just 10 STRIKES!
TARGETING ANY ATTACKER
WHERE
TO STRIKE ANY ATTACKER
TO QUICKLY END A FIGHT
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13
Trachea
Instant choking response
Hands will go to throat and body
will arch backward while stepping
back a full step
Potentially lethal (especially if
Adams Apple is struck)
Radial/Median Nerve
Instant loss of function of entire
arm and hand
Loss of balance if he was in act of
striking
Solar Plexus
Loss of breath
Head and body will bend forward
and he will go to knees
Scrotum
Body will squat and bend to ~ 90
degree angle with legs slightly
bent
Chin goes up, exposing throat
Hands go to groin
NOT a “finishing” move! Use as
set for next strike
Knee Cap
W/leg bent- strike to side to
dislocate; w/leg straight- strike
forward, locking out leg and
breaking
Immediate loss of function of
leg
Bladder
Same response as scrotum only
chin does NOT go up
Eyes
Immediate watering and loss of
vision
He will grab eyes, turn in direction
of injured eye and step back one
full step
Pneumogastric Nerves
Instant stun or knockout
Weight goes in direction of strike
Body goes limp and falls straight
down if hard enough
Temporal Lobe
Instant knockout response
Potentially lethal
Sternum
Loss of breath
Body will arch backward while
stepping back a full step
Chin (Upper-Cut)
Potential knockout response
Head will snap back and weight
will shift up and back
“Floating” Ribs
Body will wince and bend toward
strike
If broken, will cause increased loss
of breathing
Heart
Loss of breath
Body will twist back, and in
direction of strike
Potential knockout or lethal
response if hit hard enough
Sup. Cervical Ganglion Nerve
Potential instant knockout response
Potentially lethal
Tarsus Bones
Small bones, easy to break
Immediate loss of function to
stand on foot
Hands will go to foot and either
pick foot up or fall down
Ankle Bone
Easy break when stomped while
attacker is on ground
Immediate loss of function to stand
on foot
Kidney
Chin goes up and back
Back will arch away from strike
and hands will grasp area
External Cutaneous Nerve
Intense charlie-horse like pain
Hands will go to area and body
will bend down in direction of
struck area
Jaw
Will break if mouth is open
Weight will shift and head will turn
in direction of strike
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Now, if you were to take your attacker head on, with
him swinging away as well, about 8 of those blows
would either completely miss the mark and do no
damage at all, or they would be so wimpy that they
would just bounce off the person's body without any
harm done.
This means you have 2 of your 10 blows left,
right? And you know that striking away at the head
isn't the best choice even though it's the most popular.
Well the reality is that you could have ended the fight
by starting off with just those 2 strikes by targeting the
areas that your opponent never even knew he should
have been protecting. You see, he'd NEVER think he
needed to defend his KNEE CAP of all places, would
he?
Would you?
Yet it only takes a SPLIT SECOND to take the
instep of your foot and smash it into the inside of one
of his knees, completely ripping apart the tendons and
ligaments around the knee cap, potentially even
breaking his leg and seeing bone come through the
skin.
Now, keep in mind that we’re not talking about
pain. Different attackers may or may not feel pain,
especially if they’re on various substances. It doesn’t
matter if the man can’t feel pain, if he can’t walk on
that damaged leg.
Your attacker, and even YOU for that matter, won't
be feeling a lot of pain due to the flood of adrenaline
that's pumping through your veins, so DON'T count on
this guy giving in because of pain.
If you strike his windpipe or Adam's Apple, his
throat will start to close up and he WON'T be able to
get enough oxygen to supply his energy needs to fight
you. It won’t matter if it’s painful or not; he simply
won’t be able to breathe.
We’re talking about taking away his bodily
functions and FORCING his nervous system to take
away any ability he has to be a threat any longer. To
help you with figuring out some of those valuable
“targets of opportunity” that can have a devastating
effect on even the LARGEST of attackers, we’ve
included a diagram on the previous page. Examine it
and remember it. These targets could save your life.
This is going to upset a lot of people who read this,
but we absolutely have to say it. All over the world,
there are men and women discovering the cold, hard
truth about learning how to protect themselves. That
cold, hard truth is that...
Karate and other traditional martial arts don’t
work when it comes to a real street attack.
Not only don’t they work, they simply can’t.
They’re too complex. Their techniques are too
complicated to be workable in the adrenaline dump and
split-second reality of a violent street encounter.
That’s not a crack at anybody’s martial art; it’s simply
the facts of reality.
By now you already know that when you're
faced with a REAL fight “in the street,” your
body's hormonal system goes haywire and, as it was
programmed to respond since we were living in caves
sharpening our spears, dumps a load of adrenaline into
your system. This allows you either to run away faster
than a monkey on waffles, or kill the “threat” bearing
down on you.
Remember...when your body is charged up and the
adrenaline is flowing, your mouth gets dry, your
muscles twitch nervously, your breathing becomes
quicker and more shallow, you don't feel pain,
your hearing and vision sensitivity decrease, and most
of all for this discussion...
You lose ALL “fine motor skill movements”!
Basically, that means that you can no longer
perform actions that require precise aim.
The fact is that since 90% of the techniques
being learned in local martial “art” schools require
precise movements and weeks, months, or even
YEARS of hard practice to perfect, they all crumble to
pieces under the adrenaline-charged stress of a real
attack.
The other problem is that Karate and other
traditional systems are highly contextual.
In a traditional setting, techniques and “routines”
are taught in a very structured way, with total
THE MARTIAL ARTS MYTH
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
15
compliance from your “friend-enemy training
partner. This is done so that you can easily learn the
proper movements.
The problem is that real bad guys don’t move in
slow motion. They don’t just go along with the
techniques offered. They are very unpredictable.
If the “bad guy” doesn’t approach you in a certain
way, the technique won’t work. It becomes a virtual
game of, “You attacked me wrong!” Countless times
in martial arts schools, you will see partners stop
halfway through a technique because the attacker
didn’t respond or initiate the way he or she was
supposed to do.
There are no time-outs or do-overs
in real street violence!
In fact, even one wasted move that appeared
effective against a compliant training partner could be
enough to give your attacker the tactical advantage that
could lead to your injury… or worse… your death.
To survive a violent street attack, you need to
know what the hardened criminal knows…that
traditional martial arts are for sports and movies, not
for reality.
While YOU are busy practicing with friends in the
relaxed atmosphere of the local martial arts school (if
you're practicing at all), violent criminals are
bloodying their knuckles in real street combat, gaining
the real-world experience of victimizing other human
beings. They’re desensitizing themselves and they’re
becoming very accustomed to actually hurting other
human beings. This is what separates them from you
in most cases. This is what you must learn to deal with
if you are to survive real violence.
When your life is on the line, you learn REAL
QUICK that at the end of the fight, it doesn't matter
how you looked or what you did to win it. All that
matters is that the other guy is lying on the ground and
YOU are the one walking away.
So now that you know what NOT to do, let's take a
look at some lessons from the street that WILL help
you protect yourself and your family.
You see, there's a new revolution in the self
defense world that focuses on hardcore street-based
tactics that will truly work when your only option is to
defend yourself.
You may know this type of training as “reality-
based self-defense,” “close quarters combat,” or even
by the term “street fighting.”
The lessons learned in this type of training are
based on lessons learned on the battlefields, in the
roughest bars, in gang fights, in back alley bare-fisted
“title fights,” in prisons, as law enforcement...you
name it.
The dark side of this trend is that, more and more,
there are “experts” coming out of the woodwork to
claim they have the very latest super secret system that
was banned by the U.S. Government because it was
just TOO DEADLY to be put into the hands of clueless
civilians.
This is the unfortunate part of our industry, which
has succumbed to hyped up marketing to try and re-
package what amounts to basic Karate 101 in combat
boots.
The fact is, there are SEVERAL instructors who
stand out as the most respected men on the planet in an
area that few men have ever ventured...survivalists
who truly understand what it is like to face death in a
real street fight, and to walk away the victor because
they held the knowledge to defeat attackers who were
bigger, stronger, and maybe even more experienced
than they were. You can learn to cope with violence as
these men have.
First, however, you must understand that learning
how to defend yourself and your loved ones in a true
violent encounter is much MORE than learning a few
targets and “how to punch.”
In fact, if you look at this entire report you'll find
that really, what we’re dealing with is not so much
technique as it is KNOWLEDGE.
Because most guys are walking around clueless
about what it REALLY takes to survive a violent
attack, just exposing you to the scenarios we've
discussed and forcing you to think outside your
snuggly warm couch and “safe” existence is one step
closer to preparing you for real violence.
Close Quarters Combat Practitioner Certification Series Module 1: Hand-To-Hand Combat
16
If you're truly committed to NEVER becoming a
victim when you're slapped in the face with reality at a
club, restaurant, parking lot, convenience store, ATM,
or wherever...then it's time for you to make a choice.
If you've made it this far, it means you have more
than just a passing interest in being a survivor.
Congratulations!
But if you just skimmed through the info and
ended up just looking for “super moves” you could
learn for killing a grown man, then I'm sorry to say that
all the techniques in the world won't do you a damn bit
of good. Your mind is nowhere even CLOSE to
comprehending the unfortunate lesson you're going to
find yourself learning some day.
You see, “street fighting” is about survival... and to
survive, you must begin looking at the world in a new
way, a way that isn't so rosy and filled with puppy dogs
and rainbows.
The hard truth is that there ARE bad people out
there. No matter how you live your life, EVERYONE
can find themselves on the wrong end of a baseball bat
at any given time, even as the result of something as
simple as a “stolen” parking spot or a fender-bender.
Tomorrow could be the day that you accidentally bump
your car into some 250 lb guy's old lady because you
were talking on your cell phone as you were backing
out of a parking spot at the local department store.
We tell you this not to scare you (although you
may need it). No, we tell you this because we’d rather
you understand NOW what you're dealing with in
hopes that at least SOME of what we’ve shared with
you will stick.
It could be the thing that helps YOU protect
yourself and a loved one from becoming victims.
Whatever you do, whatever you take from this
training module, TRAIN. It doesn’t matter where...
just train. Get your mind out of the white zone and int
the yellow zone, prepared for the danger zones that
come after.
Training will make the difference between being a
victim... and being a victor. In a life-or-death situation,
with your family on the line, you have no choice. It’s
truly all or nothing, and you are all that stands between
the predators and your loved ones. Choose now, and
choose well.
Coming Up In Module 2: How To Survive A KNIFE FIGHT!
The most common weapon you’ll face on the street is a knife! They’re easy to get…easy to
carry…and easy to use. In the next training module, we’ll show you not only how to defend
against an attacker armed with an edged weapon…
…we’ll show you how to use your own blade to slice and dice your way to survival!
Ø How to spot a “knife fighter”BEFORE he attacks you!
Ø Your FIRST MOVE when you find yourself UNARMED against a blade!
Ø Carrying a knife for self-protection on the street! (What’s legal…and what’s PRACTICAL?)
Ø Becoming a “Blade Master”: Cutting edge tactics for using a knife in a real fight!
Ø How to safely test your knifeAND your skills!
And Much, Much More!

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