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“Stay ‘unreasonable.’  If you
don’t like the solutions [available to you], come up with your
own.” 
Dan Webre

The Martialist does not
constitute legal advice.  It is for ENTERTAINMENT
PURPOSES ONLY
.

Copyright © 2003-2004 Phil Elmore, all rights
reserved.

Delivery Systems

By Rich Dimitri


There’s much talk about delivery systems. A delivery
system is a base from which one applies his tools.  For example, without
an adequate understanding of the mechanics of boxing as a delivery system,
tools such as a palm strike or horizontal elbow strike have no
foundational base from which to be delivered. Boxing offers the proper
bio-mechanical applications in terms of torque, proximity sense, and angles
of attack for tools such as punches, elbow strikes, and palm strikes.

A proper delivery system is therefore critical. In order to develop this,
one must train with resistance and energy. This we
all know. However, there are two distinct delivery systems. One is physical,
while the other – the one most often neglected and misunderstood – is behavioral.

In a sporting type situation like an NHB/MMA fight, as well as in sparring, the
predominant delivery system is physical. One absolutely needs a striking
arsenal, a clinching arsenal, and a grappling arsenal. The sporting event also has
three elements a real, violent
confrontation lacks.  These are awareness, consent, and preparation. These
three elements eliminate several factors present in a self-defense
scenario, such as fear (for one’s life –
not a fear of losing or looking bad), emotional inertia, the fight or
flight response, the triggering of adrenal stress (although an NHB fight
will trigger adrenaline, the context in which the mind perceives the
threat is very different), and the rage with which the attack is
delivered.

In a sporting event, your opponent – although he is
trying to knock you out or submit you – isn’t trying to maim, cripple, or
kill you.  This alone creates a completely different state of mind
compared to a situation in which a complete stranger is hell-bent on
finishing you off. The very fact that you can tap out whenever you feel
you’ve had too much, or that the referee can stop the fight, or that your
corner can throw in the towel, also creates a different state of mind that
is incongruous to that of a real, violent confrontation.



Rich Dimitri, the man behind
Senshido.

 

The real threats are the rapists, the muggers,
the gang bangers, the random bullies and ego jocks, the road ragers, the
potential murderers, and the spousal & parental abusers.

There is a particular certainty that comes with sports training that doesn’t
exist outside of that venue.  It’s been said
ad nauseam, but weapons, multiple assailants, dangerous physical environments,
the presence of people accompanying you, and so forth all ad the the stress of the
unknown to a real encounter, eliminating the certainty of sports
training.  The unknown changes things.  It dictates different
strategic implementations and tactical responses. The arena is different;
therefore the tools need to differ – and so does the delivery system.

What is
reality? Go to your nearest “hard reputed” club, pub, or bar on a Friday or
Saturday night and simply observe the behavior, the initiation, the escalation,
and the treacherous development of a few fights. See if any of the
participants “spar.” Notice whether they stand at 4 or 5 feet from each other
and
square off first. Check it out and compare it to the training that you do.

With that in mind, a real attack on your person deals primarily with an attack
on the mind, which triggers a very different physiological response. Let’s
examine this very hypothetical scenario for a moment: A top NHB fighter goes
bad and decides to rape a woman. How will he approach her? Will he be gloved
up, wearing a mouthpiece after warming up for the last 20 minutes, or will he
most probably be dressed in his everyday clothes and approach her with
dialogue as a set up?

Is he in any way, shape, or form expecting her to fight
back and, if so, how easily does he believe he can submit her and keep her
under control to have his way with her? Is his guard up or down? Is his ego
up or down? Will his primary attack be a jab/cross combo followed by a clinch
to takedown, a mount and a ground and pound, or will he most likely grab her
by her hair, threatening her, anticipating and receiving a victim’s response of
passive/submissive behavior? Does she not have the element of surprise as an
advantage if she decides to fight back? If she did fight back, would her
primary attack be a clinch followed by an HKE combo, or would she not attack
vitals first, considering the position and mindset of both predator and prey
in such a situation?

When Mike Tyson allegedly raped Desiree Washington, did it look anything like
his match against Donovan Roddock that same year? Did he knock her out with a
hook prior to forcing himself on her?

In every successful rape escape incident about which I’ve heard in the last
20 years on the news, in every case in which a woman successfully defended herself against a
violent rapist, never – not once – did the report mention the
woman
using a rear naked choke, a clinch, a boxing combination, or any sort of
“martial arts technique.” As a matter of fact, every time it was mentioned
that a woman had some form of martial training, the result ended in rape.

Consider this example, in which a woman attempted a martial arts technique. Her
attacker threatened to kill her.  She only survived when she went primal
and instinctively fought back.

“After going to sleep, I was in the dead of sleep, I woke up with a man on top
of me,” Mira said on Good Morning America. “I immediately just had the reaction
to get him off of me.  At that point he told me he had a gun and I felt it
against my left chest. He was restraining me with both of his hands and the
gun was across my chest and I just took my left hand and I started just
pushing it away from me.”

Mira started trying to push him off with her hands and feet, using some
martial arts and self-defense techniques that she had learned years before.

“Do you want to die?” he asked. At that point, something snapped and she
sprung into action, Mira said. In what she described as something like “a
dream state,” she wrestled the .38-caliber revolver away from her 170-pound
attacker and rolled him onto the floor. She fired three shots at the man,
striking him twice in the upper torso. “Mira” is a single mom and bookkeeper
in her early 30s who said she acted only on instinct and was driven by the
desire to survive.”

– ABC News Online

Every successful rape defense includes primal
defensive tactics such as gouging, ripping, and biting.  For example:

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – A woman bit off the lower lip of a fugitive man she
said attacked her outside her house in the South African town of Tzaneen,
police said on Friday. They said the man – who was already wanted on charges
of burglary and rape – waited outside the woman’s house for her to return
from an errand and then tried to drag her inside.

“This woman managed to grab the lower lip of the man with her teeth and bit it
off,” police Captain Moatshe Ngoepe told Reuters. The man was arrested
when he sought treatment at a nearby hospital. He is due to appear at
magistrates’ court on Friday.

Another example:

A rapist was left speechless when his intended victim bit off his tongue as
he tried to force it into her mouth. The 30-year-old woman from Harry squatter
camp in Wadeville on the East Rand then ran off, tongue in mouth, to the
nearest police station a kilometer away. Police were shocked when she produced
the bitten-off tongue. Moments later, the suspect also arrived in agony, with
blood pouring from his mouth, hoping to get medical help. He was immediately
arrested.

The woman was in a state of shock and had clearly been in a struggle with the
suspect, said Superintendent Sam Maredi of the Actonville police station.

“She displayed all the emotional signs of a rape victim and was given
counseling,” he said. The woman had, however, managed to turn the tables on
her attacker.

Maredi added that the woman had been attacked as she made her way home at
about 6pm on Saturday.

“The culprit attacked her and then tried to put his tongue in her mouth. When
he did this the fast-thinking woman bit it off,” said Maredi. The suspect
appeared briefly in the Benoni magistrate’s court on Sunday.

– The Star online

Or how about this one:

“My friend Lynn was walking in the park one afternoon and saw a woman in the
initial stages of an assault. Lynn (maybe 5’5″) went into rampage mode and
attacked the assailant. The two women were able to drive the attacker away
while drawing attention to the situation by yelling the whole time. Lynn’s
action was selfless and unrestrained. The intended victim later told police
that Lynn’s direct and physical intervention broke the assailant’s
concentration and his resolve to do her harm.  

– Assault Prevention Information Network, September 1, 1996

Outside of the ring, the delivery system is
behavioral. The attacker isn’t
squaring off with you unless your response is ego-based (e.g., shoves, face-offs, mouthing off).  Your attacker perceives you as being his victim,
which is why he chose you. Use this to your advantage. Since your
attacker sees you as being weak and compliant, sticking with that in mind
prior to retaliation enhances your retaliation. This will lower his guard and
raise his ego, making him the perfect candidate for a brutal and completely
unexpected physical retaliation. That is the ideal time to strike if necessary,
and that preemptive strike most likely won’t be a jab, hook ,or Thai kick – or
at least, it shouldn’t be, considering the objective is to maim and not just hurt.
The shot you don’t see coming is the one that hurts the most because your mind
and body were not prepared for the assault. In a sporting event, the mind and
body are fully prepared and aware of the retaliation. Therefore, the nature of
that attack process and response time is completely and critically different.

Stating that root skills in a sporting delivery system are an absolute
necessity and that without them you are doomed is a fallacy. Although these
skills can do nothing but improve and enhance your survivability (and health,
for that matter), they are not necessarily the end-all, and be-all.  Far more
people have successfully defended themselves against certain odds with
absolutely no training whatsoever than have martial artists who
have used what they learned.



Rich Dimitri applies his brutal
“Shredder” method.

A behavioral delivery system is critical – much
more so than a physical one in terms of personal protection. This is what
loads the dice in the favor of the intended victim, because seldom will an
attacker pick someone he thinks or believes will hurt or maim him in response. The attacker will predominantly and primarily make an attack on the
mind prior to an attack on the body – through posturing, instigation through
intimidation, cursing, threats, explicit anger, etc. The range will also be
close-quarter, but the aggression will not be sport-related at all.  It will be
very different and include such things as lapel grabs, strangulations, weapon deployments,
tackles, shoves, hair pulls, and sucker punches from natural / non-sport
combative stances, incorporating aggressive dialogue and threats.

If the attacker doesn’t suspect a violent retaliation targeting vitals such as
eyes, throat, and facial features (not using the standard punching or JKD
finger jabs, either), his reaction will be very different than if he was
squaring off with an opponent who was trying to do the same… In the case of
real self-defense, it comes seemingly from nowhere.  In the case of
sports, there is awareness, consent, and
preparation. It is the state of mind and behavioral delivery system that make
real attacks successful, not the “technique” or tool itself. The problem is in
fixating on the tool (the eye gouge, for example) and claiming “anyone can do
that.”  Yes, that is true; anyone can do that.  However, how many real fights that
you’ve seen or of which you’ve heard ended with one of the opponent’s having
his eyes
gouged out? The point is, although anyone can do it, most people don’t
– and
they don’t even consider it or train for it.  So, yes, anyone can
do it, but rarely does anyone do it. Just because you played badminton
all your life doesn’t mean you’re a good tennis player.

This, of course, doesn’t mean you don’t need a good physical delivery system.
We always have and will continue to advocate the necessity of both a behavioral and
physical delivery system. If anything, we highly recommend actively training
in an alive combative discipline. However, some people don’t
have the time, energy, or desire for to train three or four times per
week to enhance their combative skills. Does this mean they cannot learn to
effectively defend themselves? Does this mean that they don’t have the right
to defend themselves? Absolutely not.

If that were the case, we wouldn’t be
alive as a species today.  People have been effectively defending
themselves since the dawn of humanity and before MMA arts or NHB bouts ever existed. So
how did they do it? How does a woman defeat a crazed rapist without any prior
training at all? Luck? I think not. There’s much to be said about attitude,
mindset, and belief systems. The behavioral and psychological arsenals fine
tune our already existing survival instincts. The key is in getting people
back in touch with it.  We already posses the tools and instinct.  We just need
to re-awaken them and stay true to the physiological rules that govern our
minds and bodies.

Let the sparks fly.

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