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Legends: Designated Weapons vs. Improvised WeaponsMay 10, 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 127 the fifth volume in our Combination Man Curriculum.
  2. Today's article is an intro to the madness we use on the soon to be released X-WEAPON DVD set.
  3. We are currently in Germany, crew. By all means you can still place orders and query during that time but be advised I am notoriously slow to respond (if at all) while I'm travelling. Trust that upon my return I'll get back to each of you ASAP. Thanks for your patience.
  4. Just received word that Volume 2 of our Street Material (X-WEAPON) which details armed and unarmed responses to weapons attacks will be released sometime this month. Details to come on a discounted special.
  5. Check out our May Special below to help you get caught up on the Combination Man Curriculum.

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 127: CLINCH FUNDAMENTALS

 

This is volume 5 in the Combination Man Curriculum (CMC).

 

Here we introduce the fundamentals of the all-mighty clinch; hands-down perhaps the most grueling aspect of the game.

 

One of the reasons the clinch can be so grueling (to both parties) is a seeming limited vocabulary of what is possible within the clinch. Beyond the fence-press, a knee or two to the body or legs, and the occasional turn or drop to the legs for a sacrifice single or double-leg you don't see much in the way of intermediate or advanced applications. Much of this may because some initial fundamentals are not always adhered to, and without these fundamentals there can be no build to a broader vocabulary.

 

This volume seeks to seat those fundamentals and start an immediate build towards widening your offensive vocabulary.

 

We start with...

  • Why the dominance of the over-under clinch over all others forms of clinching.
  • We discuss in detail the root drill of all clinch work the tit-for-tat pummel (standard stuff) but...
  • We introduce The Rule of Palms to reduce your energy on the offensive stroke and reduce your opponent's space for his defensive matching retaliation.
  • Then, we demonstrate The Rule of Tipping which will immediately add up-rooting to even your standard pummeling drill. (You'll find adherence to just these 2 Rules alone should improve your clinch game immeasurably).
  • Next we discuss the 3 Primary Goals of the Clinch: The Body-Lock, the Go-Behind, and the Inside Leg-Dive.
  • We'll demo three ways to body-lock, three ways to grip and keep that body-lock, and two ways to never, ever lock your opponent down.
  • Next we'll discuss three ways to take your standard Pummeling Drill and turn it into a real live animal that is combat ready as opposed to something you warm-up with or perform in isolation.
  • We then move on to the easiest and safest class of Go-Behind, the Slide-By.
  • We'll demo the 3 Primary Slide-By Forms and then from there move into how to set-up the slide-by.
  • We'll then dip a toe into intermediate and advanced waters by introducing the Wrist-Control Slide-By along with 2-ways to drill gaining the wrist control and 5 ways to apply the wrist control directly to a drop.
  • We then discuss the 3 drills to run all clinch tools thru before you unveil them in a match. These drills will make sure you are tight, tight, tight.
  • We'll close with a brief bit on Educating the Lift, and how to cheat the back arch since many events have kyboshed this devastating move.

 

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 127: 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. [Of course, it's only $26.50 for the RAW Crew.]

 

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.

The Rule of Palms
The Rule of Palms

 DESIGNATED WEAPONS VS. IMPROVISED WEAPONS

Mark Hatmaker

 

            First, a definition of terms so we're all on the same page (both literally and figuratively). Designated weapons are any tool or applied technology created for the specific purpose of being an instrument of harm. Pretty straight-forward, huh? Some will split hairs, saying a firearm can be used as a means of technical cultivation as in target-shooting or, as an object of aesthetic beauty as with some collectors who acquire firearms while never firing them. These weapons-as-not-weapons examples can move beyond firearms to fighting knives that are used to cut bait and rattan sticks used to adorn dojo walls, et cetera, et cetera. The aforementioned alternate uses are all valid, reasonable uses but it does not diminish the fact that some tools have been created with the primary purpose (whether stated or unstated) to do harm if need be. No value judgment here whatsoever, simply an observable fact.

 

            Improvised weapons, on the other hand, are any tool or technology that while not created specifically for the purpose of inflicting harm can be used for administering harm all the same. A ballpoint pen has been manufactured to jot down notes although it can be used to jab soft tissues. The tire iron was created to assist motorists in tire-changes and yet you can still bludgeon to your heart's content with the instrument. To belabor the point, any object in your environment that can be wielded as a weapon even if that was not the original intent of the objects manufacture is an improvised weapon.

 

            OK, now that we know what we're discussing, back to today's subject: designated weapons versus improvised weapons. To say that one class is "better" than the other is a false dilemma. Any tool whether made for a specific purpose or one used in an ad hoc fashion should be evaluated only on how efficiently the tool performs the given job. For example, let's say you thwart an attacker using a rattan escrima stick (a designated weapon) and, you're having a spectacularly bad day and thwart a second attacker later that same day using the aforementioned tire iron used in the exact same manner as the rattan stick. Which tool is better, the designated or the improvised?

 

            As long as a given weapon (designated or improvised) serves its purpose it passes the test of utility. We're in no-brainer territory to this point but, we've been comparing apples to apples, thus far. A rattan stick and a tire iron are very much alike and it is easy to envision the transfers of technique from the designated weapon to the improved device. As a matter of fact I wager that you are already a fantastic improviser, if I were to ask you to list 10 other items that could be wielded in the same manner as a rattan stick I think you could generate this list rather easily. But, this is where the cognitive phenomenon known as tunneling may start to intrude.

 

            Tunneling (also known as anchoring or priming) is fixing on one solution (or single class of solution) simply because you have been exposed to that class of solution. Tunneling isn't a problem as long as you aren't tunneling at the expense of alternative solutions. How tunneling applies to real-world self protection follows along these lines (and I've conducted this loose survey with clients for more than a few years and it manifests more often than not) let's assume two real-world self protection adherents who wish to up their training by adding improvised weapons, Fighter A has an extensive background in stick training and Fighter B has trained bladework for years. If both are asked to enter a standard environment (a convenience store, let's say) and make a quick inventory of the objects there that could be used as improvised weapons, Fighter A, for the most part, shows a strong disposition to find cudgel or stick-like objects while Fighter B shows a propensity for objects that can slash and/or stab-there is some overlap between the two but, for the most part they see what they tunnel to see.

 

            Both fighters A and B, are correct in the weapons they catalog but at the same time both have limited themselves simply by dint of what they "choose" to see (unconscious limiting). This is not really a problem if there are an equal number of stick-like or blade-like/thrusting type objects in the world but that is not the case. Objects in our environment manifest themselves in myriad forms and not all of them are stick-like or blade-like. We limit our improvised weapons arsenal if we live inside a self-imposed tunnel.

 

Don't read this as an argument against designated weapons training, on the contrary designated weapons training builds strong facility with a single class of weapons that can then be used to expand across different classes of weapons. What I am arguing for here is to dig out of the cognitive tunnel to better MacGyver your environment. To consider the possibility that your own self-protection is better served by learning the 14 Classes of Improvised Weapons (that's right 14, more on that in our X WEAPON DVD set) and to educate yourself to the movement and tactical applications that are in common among these 14 so, that you up your improvised weapons choices exponentially no matter what environment you're in.

 

Some might see the "splitting of attention" across 14 classes as a detriment, a sort of "Jack of all trades, master of none" phenomenon. I understand that concern but by approaching the 14 by what they have in common as opposed to how they differ goes a long way towards mitigating that doubt and, as we well know, in real world self-protection when it hits the fan is never of our choosing and if we have chosen to master the one (knife, stick, what have you) and you find your self where there is no knife, stick, or knife-like, stick-like objects then you may just be the master of none.

 

 

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 on our site at http://www.extremeselfprotection.com

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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. 

May 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.

 

 

Legends Newsletter Archive

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