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Legends: Women & Combat TrainingApril 19, 2013
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Extreme Self Protection

Mark Hatmaker 
(865) 679-1223
Pick an Adventure Seminar

Some of us are old-enough to remember a series of interactive books where readers were asked to make a decision and then go to a corresponding page to see what sort of mess you got yourself into. You never quite knew where you were going to wind up with these books--pre-video game era, these were a novel idea.

 

Here's where you come in, if you'd like to host a seminar and save yourself some bucks off of the standard fees in the process--if you've got an Adventure Race in your area, a rock you think I'd like to climb, a river you think I want to raft, a hike you think I just need to take, a desert I've not run on, you get the idea--pitch your adventure and school location. If the adventure appeals and the logistics are right we offer greatly reduced fees to come to your school and play with your crew before we go play at your Adventure Pitch.

 

BTW--You and your crew are welcome to attend the adventure, as a matter of fact, we'll knock off even more bucks for this sort of hands-on guiding.

 

So, you got some adrenaline in your neck-of-the-woods and want to train? Feel free to make your pitch and we'll see what happens.

 

Hey Crew,

 

It's Friday and time for this week's Legends newsletter, this week's contents include...
  1. The rundown on ESP RAW 126 the fourth volume in our Combination Man Curriculum.
  2. Today's article-block is my two-cents on women training in MMA or for the street.
  3. In our Video Clip of the Week Super FBI Agent John "G-Man" Mayer helps me demo a snap to a Reverse 1/4 Nelson. Thanks G-Man!
  4. Just got the word from Paladin that the second series of our Street-Defense System "X-Weapon" will be released mighty soon. We'll be offering a special upon its release.
  5. Also, RAW Crew, in addition to 1 instructional DVD per month w/ printed syllabus, weekly inTENS Conditioning and Combat Drills of the Day Templates, the Motivational Quote of the Week, and the weekly newsletter, we will be adding a mini-weekly podcast (5-10 minutes per) of coaching and historical perspective material. Details to come.
  6. I'll be seeing some of you at this weekend's Rugged Maniac in North Carolina--Looking forward to it!
  7. Check out our April Special at the end of this newsletter that allows you to bookend the 2 RAW Volumes that make RAW 126 one big bad mucho effective ground chain no matter your experience level.

And last, but not least, check out the ESP RAW Subscription service info to your left. You can save yourself some money on this volume of RAW ($5.50 to be exact) and pick up 3 more volumes of RAW absolutely free.

 

Thanks everyone and have a great week!
Sincerely,

 

Mark Hatmaker

Extreme Self Protection

ESP RAW 126: Front Headlock to Near-Side Combat Cradles #1

 

This is volume 4 in the Combination Man Curriculum (CMC).

 

This volume continues to build on our Short-Offense foundation. We will take that Head-Snap you developed on RAW 123 and refine your Front Headlock.

  • We'll discuss why a Front Headlock is not static--you must kill that base or you will lose your position.--oh, and no guard-flopping, crew.
  • We will then hit 4 Front Headlock Go-Behinds: The Short-Drag, the False Cross-Face, and the 2 varieties of Shuck.

Go-Behinds won't always cure what ails you as strong canny grapplers will thwart your spin, for these beasts we've got to turn those Front Headlocks into Near-Side Cradles. These cradles are not your standard pinning cradles, these are Combat Cradles (we avoid the pin-position with the combat cradle if at all possible). Combat cradles shift your opponents' contact point and opens up numerous submission opportunities.

 

Combat Cradle Drills on this volume include:

  • Using the Head-Stab to buckle your opponent-Don't chest-thru on this one, crew.
  • Using the Head-Lift for some airborne action.
  • We'll drill how to quick release right into a fast tap.
  • We'll then drill Combat Cradle assistance via the Overleg Ride.
  • We'll use that Overleg to crunch into our next tap.
  • Next (and this is worth the price of admission) we'll show you step-by-painful-step how to do an Overleg Ride Leg Pass that will torque the bottom man's spine all to hell.
  • For those 1 in 20 folks you've got with mondo-flexibility we'll show how a weight transfer and head-lift will still pull that spinal crunching tap.
  • Versus a tri-podding opponent we will use the Head-Lift to kill that base or....and this is mighty fun...
  • A rolling Combat Cradle to Inverted Overleg Ride.
  • Once we've frozen your opponent in this uncomfy position we will hit 2 quick subs dictated by your opponent's captured arm position.
  • Then as a cherry on top we will show how to use this position to plug in every single submission drill we ran in volume 125.

So there we go, 17 drills on this volume, plug in the drills from the preceding  RAW and this chapter for the Combination Man Curriculum goes to 28 links.

 

This volume, as with all of our RAW material, comes with a printed syllabus for inclusion in your training notebook.

 

(Hang on to these syllabi because at some point in the Combination Man Curriculum run we will supplement and key these syllabi to a Master Text for easy Drill & Technique search).

 

ESP RAW 126: can be had this month for only $32 (S & H included--Domestic & International) at the end of the month the price goes to $42 Domestic/$52 International.
 

To order:Buy Now

 

To pay only $26.50 for this DVD + receive 3 other RAW DVDs for free subscribe to our ESP RAW DVD Service.

Overleg Drag
Overleg Drag

 

  Gender vs. Weight Class: Women & Combat Training

 

Mark Hatmaker 

 

I am often asked a question along these lines, "Hey Mark, I have some women in my class, what's the best approach to teach them?"

 

Answer: Like a fully-functioning intelligent human being with an interest in combat sports or street defense.

 

Or, on a related note, many gyms offer female-only classes in what seems to me some curious hearkening back to "separate but equal" days. 

 

Before anyone running or gladly attending a single gender-mandated class gets those hackles up, stand down. I am completely aware that many women (not all) prefer the female-only approach. When it is the individual's call to be separated from others, by all means exercise that preference. 

 

Who I am addressing today are those who may have wondered "why the genders must be separated" (Hint: I see no reason for it), or if the genders are mixed "should there be a difference in treatment?" (Hint #2: Not so much)

 

From what I can tell in conversation with many, these questions are way stickier than they appear at first blush. So, let's see if we can perhaps make things a little less stickier.

 

First, if you are a female and prefer the company of a female only crew, that's your call--I'm not here to talk you out of it. I would like to ask you why you prefer working with your gender alone? In asking this question I've received some of the following answers...

 

"I find working with women-only less threatening."

OK, that's fair, but might I suggest that no matter your gender if you find your current coaches or training partners threatening then maybe that isn't the place to train-- man or woman. The ideal environment to foster learning is one that will challenge you, constantly raise the bar (your personal bar, that is) and be hell-bent on encouraging you and coaching you to get to new levels. Threatening in the fired college basketball coach sense has no place in the equation.

 

I would be completely thick-skulled if I did not acknowledge that some women turn to self-defense in response to an unpleasant incident in their real lives. I have encountered two polarizing attitudes in women who have endured such a thing.

 

Attitude #1 is "Don't candy-coat it, I want the real thing because that is never, ever happening to me again." You ladies, are my heroes.

 

Attitude #2 is of a more withdrawn nature, less likely to accept the interplay and full scope of training that is vital to inculcate real-world skills. I sympathize and empathize with both attitudes but I will say that attitude one is, well, the far more useful. Those who suffer with Attitude Two, I offer the following advice, if you have chosen your coaches and training partners well, then trust your judgment and get to training. These folks are your partners in the game, they are here to help.

 

If you do not trust them enough to give yourself up to the training then, get out of there, move on to where you can feel comfortable. If that place is nowhere at the moment, then might I suggest putting training on the back-burner for a little while? Give it a little time.

 

Another common response to why female-only training is...

 

"I don't want to get hurt."

 

Not getting hurt is a mighty smart stance to take but might I tip you to the following news, I am a possessor of male genitalia and I can testify (note the root of that word) that I don't want to get hurt either. I can't think of a man or woman I have ever trained with who approaches sessions with this attitude "No matter what the lesson plan is today, can we schedule an injury?"

 

With that said, we must accept the fact that combat training is a contact sport and  there will there be a few bumps and bruises down the line? That is, if you're doing it right. All contact will be scaled to skill and weight class (coming to that) but expecting to absorb the full impact of the training (so to speak) in a hands-off method is akin to expecting to become proficient at football or rugby without allowing for any blocking or tackling whatsoever.

 

To be frank, I often find classes where the genders are mixed problematic in the opposite sense, the male partners are often a bit too solicitous of their female counterparts. They are behaving quite the opposite of what some fear, they are being considerate gentlemen. And this, as much as a fan of respect, honor, and manners that I am, I find this over-solicitation a disservice to the women.

 

No, I'm not saying don't be courteous, don't be a gentleman, but I am saying that this over-extension of "taking it easy" actually implies the opposite of respect (unknowingly and un-intentionally, of course). "Taking it easy" with your female cohort is in a sense saying "You can't handle this so I will treat you with kid gloves."

 

This isn't license to knock your female partners out (if you were capable or even of the inclination) it's just a bit of advice to treat each other as the considerate, intelligent, able human beings that each of you are.

  

Rather than the sexes avoiding one another, or tip-toeing around one another might I suggest we regard one another as the athletes, or burgeoning athletes that we are. If we are going to adjust for differences lets let those adjustments be in deference to a distinction we already make--weight class.

  

Contrary to popular myth and in agreement with a particular type of email spam--Size Matters. Size differences are why we have weight classes. Combat classes are often composed of athletes of all sorts of shapes and sizes and we are all perfectly used to the idea of holding back a little when you are much bigger than your partner or pushing a little harder when your partner is bigger than you. What I'm saying, guys and gals, play like your weight class, not your gender.

 

A couple more thoughts on the subject before we sign off here.

 

One--Some grappling positions are a little, um, comical to the rookies in a co-ed crowd. These positions may lead some to think "Oh, how would that look if I did that?"

 

Answer: It would look like you're training.

 

To those who sweat the "compromising" grappling positions, it's not merely a gender-mix hesitation, most same-gender-only participants ponder the same thoughts on their first day. It's fun to tell two beefy Marines to lie down and one get between the others legs. The first time they may cock an eyebrow but then it all quickly turns to business because that's what it is.

 

Two--The tears factor. Men and women possess different ratios of the hormones testosterone and estrogen (and viva la difference!) These hormones can (not in all) in some individuals cause them to involuntarily express stress or frustration differently.

In some women, that stress expression is tears. Are these tears signs of weakness?

These tears are no more signs of weakness in women than they are in the approximate 1/3rd of males who cry upon winning inside the octagon.

 

There's a fine scene in the film Courage Under Fire which concerns a female chopper pilot performing well in a combat situation. One of the crew incredulously observes, "The captain's crying." The pilot (played by Meg Ryan) says plainly, "It's stress, that's all."

 

And that's all there is to it. Some men express stress with false braggadocio and some women tear up. Female UFC phenom Rhonda Rousey is said to cry at some point practically every day in her training. Anyone think she's weak?

 

Nah, me neither.

 

In conclusion, ladies and gentlemen, the two concepts of the day are : Respect & Weight Class.

 

 

 

Places to Go, People to See

  

As some of you know I try to leave the homestead as little as possible, but this year is an anomaly as we have upped our seminar/playtime. Below you will find a listing of some of the most recent additions to the schedule.

 

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We'll be in Germany in May--details to come.

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Of course we'll be at the Annual Karate College in Radford, VA on June 28th & 29th. We'll teach 3 general sessions + 1 certification course.  To register for Karate College http://www.thekaratecollege.com/TheKarateCollege.com/Karate_College.html

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We'll be on the roster at Martial Arts on the Mountain--September 19 (5PM start) thru September 22nd (11AM).

Myself, Boyd Ritchie, Carlos Cummings, and John Miller will be presenting classes in MMA, Boxing, Catch Wrestling, Sambo, (and if time permits) an optional Challenge/Obstacle Run.

Four days of training, feel free to room on the campground (rooms and meals provided, crew--beat that).

Cost: $250

To register or for more details contact Coach John Miller

coach@grapplingsports.com

540-354-9356

http://www.facebook.com/events/126726897501640/

 

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Of course, we'll also offer our Annual Tennessee Boot Camp in November-details to come.

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We hope to see you at one of these events--if you'd like to have us come to you, check out our Pitch An Adventure info in the side bar and if you've got some adrenaline in your neck of the woods that strikes my fancy we'll be there.  

 

 

RAW Subscription Update

 

For our current and considering RAW Subscribers, beginning with volume 123 (January 1st, 2013) we will begin unveiling The Combination Man Home Study Course in which we (finally) present in an ABC/1-2-3 manner the steps from, 0-120 MPH how to become the best Boxer-Pugilist, Shooter-Stuffer, Par Terre Wrester-Submission Technician you can be.

 

Each volume will tied-in to the inTENS PREMIUM CONDITIONING SERVICE (free to subscribers), will be accompanied by a printed syllabi of drills for gym use, and will then be keyed to a foundation text (The Combination Man) that will be released at a later date. In other words, some good methodical let's get better stuff coming your way. 

April Special

The Short-Offense Two-fer

 

This month's ESP RAW volume (126) has some killer work with Combat Cradles, but if you want up to speed with how we got to this position RAW 123 on Short Offense Snap Fundamentals and RAW 125 on Top Arm Isolation Submissions will turn this single volume into one mondo-aggressive study block.

 

Purchased separately they go for $42 each ($52 International).

 

For the month of April you can snag them both for $62 even (Same price for my International Compadres) S&H Included.

 

To snag yours, just hit the button.

 

The Short-Offense Two-fer Deal:Buy Now

 

Of course, you can get these 2 for free + 1 more RAW Volume of your choice. How? Simply subscribe to the RAW service--details in the side-bar.

 

 

  Video Clip of the Week:
Reverse Quarter Nelson
Reverse Quarter Nelson

Legends Newsletter Archive

To view all our past Legends Newsletters and RAW Releases, view our New Legends Newletter Archive.  Just follow the link.