the message board for Dubai English speaking community
JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
Violet wrote:HI, I have a friend just arrived in dubai who specailises in this area based in dybai Marina - let me know if you are interested
JMK wrote: all sorts of monsters are talking to me lately in dark parking lots and elevators..
MaaaD wrote:JMK wrote: all sorts of monsters are talking to me lately in dark parking lots and elevators..
then spread the love instead of kicking butt ..
Alyapal wrote:What you are about to read may surprise, enlighten, or possibly help you. But one thing is clear - you'll have a greater understanding of what is really happening in the martial arts and self defense industry. There is so much competition, misinformation and similar styles that today even the most knowledgeable person is confused. I hope this newsletter not only stops the confusion but provides you with the basic knowledge to properly evaluate the best type of self defense method for you. Our first step is to explain the different categories of martial arts.
COMPARING APPLES TO ORANGES TO BANANAS
Martial arts can be divided into 3 separate categories to accommodate every individual's wants, needs, abilities, and interests. The problem lies in that thanks to movies, TV, the internet, and the simple fact that post World War II there is no actual proof of any one method of fighting being completely dominant in all situations that these once common knowledge divisions of martial arts have blurred to the point of non-existence. While all have many overlapping elements, it is important for you to understand that each category is distinctively different and must be treated as such.
CULTURAL FIGHTING ARTS
The first category, cultural fighting arts, contains every style from traditional karate, to Hapkido, to Kenpo, to Escrima, to Aikido, to kung fu, to the countless other cultural...fighting...arts that have been developed throughout history by almost every civilization. All are fun to do, all are very interesting, and all provide a very well rounded education in world culture and martial theory. However, no cultural fighting art has any proof of dominant effectiveness in the modern world. That means that Aikido, Karate, Kung Fu, and even Israel's "Krav Maga" is not proven, effective self defense. Nor does it classify as proven, effective combative sport. Therefore without an abundance of proof, it is only martial theory, not fact. Cultural Fighting Arts are wonderful for exploring a method of self perfection, but has no place in self protection.
COMBATIVE SPORT
Combative Sports include Olympic Judo, Tae Kwon Do, Brazilian Jiu-jitsu, Muay Thai kickboxing, and all forms of wrestling, western boxing, and most recently MMA (mixed martial arts) which has been popularized by events such as the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). In combative sport you are forced to prove the effectiveness of your methods and skill in live combat. There is no guesswork, no debate. It either works or you win, or it doesn't work and you lose. Everybody in the world saw Combat Sport Brazilian Jiu-jitsu stylist Royce Gracie easily pick apart the cultural fighting art practitioners in the first few Ultimate Fighting pay-per-views.
Search the internet for Muay Thai knockouts and you'll see some talented and hard working combative athletes blasting each other until unconsciousness. If you watch Olympic Judo, you'll see the highest caliber athletes in the world competing in a sport that is symbolic of combat in that the entire basis is to establish a dominant position.
And while Combative Sport is a very, very important component of testing the validity and effectiveness of a martial art, it too is not self defense. It is only a training and conditioning method for self defense. Combative sport is what you use to train yourself to make sure that your self defense works under battle stress conditions.
A great example is how the ancient Greeks used wrestling, boxing, and other Olympic events as training for war. NOT as the actual techniques used on the battlefield. But even a more simplistic explanation is simply that that the rules, regulations, and referees that are required in combative sport are NOT going to be there when someone is trying to mug you in a dark alley. So no, even today's most popular training methods: Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Muay Thai, Wrestling, Judo, Boxing, Mixed Martial Arts, etc. are not methods of self defense either. (Training for self defense application yes, self defense no.)
SELF DEFENSE
Self Defense defined is protecting you from attack. Sounds simple right? Well it is. The real issue is that there are a million-and-one different ways you can be attacked. Everything from a mad man tackling you at the local park, to an armed mugging on your way home from work, to a carjacking in the local shopping center. Therefore, Self Defense has one purpose, and one purpose only; to survive.
Therefore, learning to properly defend yourself is much more than just avoiding injury, humiliation, or even possible death. It’s a way of confident living on all levels by harnessing those natural survival instincts to combat our greatest enemy of all: Fear.
Like most things in nature, there in no 100% answer to anything. But when it comes to matters of life and death, the smart thing to do is stack the odds in your favour. Based on that logic, there is only ONE method of self-defense that has been documented and statistically proven effective under any circumstances, for any individual. And that method is the system of WWII Close Combat.
CLOSE COMBAT REVEALED
Many years ago, there was a meeting within the House of Lords in London. In attendance were some of the most powerful men in the world at the time. In preparation for war against the greatest threat the world has ever seen, the Nazis, the British funded an effort to discover what really worked in both armed and unarmed Close Combat in the 1920's and 30's. In other words; was this exotic martial arts stuff really self defense or was it just a lot of smoke and mirrors? William Fairbairn was the man that they trusted with this project.
Fairbairn was not only an expert in the Cultural Fighting Arts of Jujutsu, Savate, and Kung Fu, but also in the Combat Sports of Judo, Boxing, and Wrestling. Applying all Eastern and Western martial arts methods, Fairbairn and his team used the most violent city in recorded history, Opium gang-ridden 1920's Shanghai, as a testing ground to see what actually worked under combat stress and what didn't.
While the Cultural Fighting Arts and Combative Sports certainly had methods and techniques that proved effective, there was not one complete system of "Self Defense" that was simple, easy to use, and effective under all circumstances regardless of age, strength, or physical ability. Thus Close Combat was born, taken back to England, and proven by British Special Forces as they took on and neutralized the Nazi threat.
HERE'S SOLID PROOF THAT CLOSE COMBAT IS YOUR ONLY ANSWER
To understand this statement fully you have to understand what actually happens to your body during a true self defense situation. Depending on your physical fitness level, your heart typically beats at 60-80 beats per minute. This is known as a resting heart rate and everything in your sympathetic nervous system is performing normally. But when frightened to 115 beats per minute, your fine motor skills deteriorate. The ability to put a key in a car door or even tie your shoes becomes increasingly difficult.
Interesting enough this115 until 145 beats per minute is the optimal survival and combat performance level for complex motor skills, visual reaction time, and cognitive thinking. Complex motor skills are multi-muscle involved movements as found in all martial arts. Reverse punch, front kick, wrist lock, arm bar, hip throw, etc. This is the target heart rate of most professional athletes and fighters. They are able to stay at this rate because they know that no one is trying to kill them. If you are able to train your body to respond appropriately to fear induced stress under competitive conditions, you will be better able to survive during battle.
At 145 beats per minute, your complex motor skills immediately begin to deteriorate. And at 175 you can't think straight, you lose peripheral vision, your hearing excludes everything not in that tunnel vision, and vasoconstriction sets in as a natural way to reduce bleeding from any wounds you're about to suffer. Finally, above 175 is where irrational fight or flight sets in, as well as natural submissive behavior, combat freezing, and the emptying of your bladder and bowels.
At this point the ONLY movement ability you have left is gross-motor skills. Running, charging, and the wide arcing of your limbs. And this is exactly where Close Combat techniques operate. At the gross-motor movement level. And therefore can still be performed perfectly and effectively under any level of fear induced combat stress.
What this all means is that; You can be frightened for your very life, faced with a gun, being held at knife point, or being attacked by someone bigger, stronger, and meaner than you, and you will still be able to save the save your life using Close Combat every single time. Plain and simple. No other martial art or self-defense method can say this. (Even a gun can't be used effectively at 175 beats per minute! You'd miss the broad side of a barn at that heart rate!)
HERE'S HOW LEARNING CLOSE COMBAT WILL SAVE YOU TIME
As I mentioned before, Close Combat is simple, easy to use, and effective under all circumstances regardless of age, strength, or physical ability. But this comes at the price of being again, simple, easy to use, and effective under all circumstances. Meaning that it is an extremely unprofitable way to run a martial arts school. After all, why bother spending tens-of-thousands of dirham and decades trying to master something that only takes ten lessons to "know" and about forty days to "master"? And this is why even though Close Combat is the only proven method of self defense, you won't see it on every street corner like Karate, Tae Kwon Do, or Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
More information @ www.uaemartialarts.com
JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
quatroporte wrote:JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
I recommend you to join them for doing an active sport, leaning something new and add some self confidence and keep you always alert... but don't really believe you will be able to physically defend your self.
just my two fils!
JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
quatroporte wrote:JMK wrote:are there any Self-defense classes in Dubai for girls?
In real world... if you want to lean self defense (physically, defend your self) it requires mastering any of the arts and this takes years of practice.
joining any of those classes/courses is simply like taking an aerobics class!
I recommend you to join them for doing an active sport, leaning something new and add some self confidence and keep you always alert... but don't really believe you will be able to physically defend your self.
just my two fils!