Monday, April 2, 2012

Fighters Make the Worst Instructors, Damian Ross, The Self Defense Company

"If all you hammer everything in the world would look like a nail."

If all you knew was MMA, BJJ, TKD, JKD, NHB or any other initial than everything you do is based off of your training and experience. Someone who is a professional boxer is going to adapt their skills to self defense. It's typical and most people can't help it. If all you knew was Brazilian Jujitsu than everything you teach will be based or derived from that skills set. Which has some success when teaching other BJJ experts but it fails miserably when teaching people with little or no experience.

In fact the vast majority of self defense systems offered are a tangent or a variation of a sport art. They use the primary art as a delivery system for the lethal or "illegal" techniques. And in theory and practice this works, provided you have the same base skill set to enable you to deliver the lethal or illegal methods.

This is nothing new people have always attempted to adapt ring fighting methods to the street. There are literally dozens if not hundreds of texts on how to adapt whatever fighting style to the street. Most have good ideas but one of the many places they break down is the "assumption of skill."

The problem is obvious, professional fighters have a lot more time and effort invested in their primary method and take critical and fundamental things like hip position, physical conditioning, scrambling ability, striking or strangling ability for granted. They can make their self defense work because they have years and even decades of hardcore training and sacrifice (along with the genetic disposition) that enables them to move, understand leverage and body positions as well as distancing. Trying to learn a sport based self defense from a professional fighter is worse than learning how to parkour from a gymnast(Wow, I think that analogy hurt my head). But while they're flipping over a fence, you're trying to lift your leg over it.

Personally, the hardest thing for me to do was to take myself out of the equation. when you start teaching the general public you're quick to realize that most people have never participated in ANY contact or combative activity in their lives so having to break the SDTS content down and deliver it in a way that yielded timely results was both rewarding and challenging. It was one thing to teach motivated, former athletes or determined law enforcement and military personnel but a completely new set of challenges for those people who know that they have a need for self defense but were prohibited because of the perceived time invested or the physical requirements.

There is no doubt that more athletic people took to the training faster, but I have to tell you after a handful of months they all could perform the SDTS and you couldn't tell the athletes from the non-athletes.

Self defense is a formula of Distance, Position, momentum and balance coupled with techniques while under stress and on any terrain will inflict more injury to your opponent than to yourself while simultaneously taking into consideration weapons and multiple attackers.

Technicality any method of self defense can be adapted to this and The Self Defense Company has it's fair share of instructors from many styles of martial arts, but when you're teaching to the general public or people with no working knowledge of a particular art, you need to abandon the "assumption of skill."

Train Honestly,
Damian Ross
The Self Defense Company









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Damian Ross is CEO of the Self Defense Company and developer of The Self Defense Training System, the most lethal and effective self defense system in the world, The Guardian Defensive Tactics Police Combatives Program, 60 minute Self Defense and the Family Safe Program. Mr. Ross also founded the Self Defense Instructor Program that helps people develop their self defense careers from the ground up. Mr. Ross is originally from Ridgewood, NJ where he was a High School Hall of Fame Athlete in football and wrestling as well as a varsity wrestling coach. He then went on to Lehigh University where he was a varsity wrestler and football player. Mr. Ross has 3 black belts, 4th Degree in Tekkenryu Jujutsu, 2nd Degree in Judo, 2nd Degree in Tae Kwon Do. In addition to his martial arts experience, Mr. Ross spent 8 years in the professional security and personal protection business. He is internationally recognized as one of the foremost authorities in reality based self defense.

7 comments:

Tony Hubble said...

Most excellent! I had this conversation with a "self defense instructor" a little over a year ago. My response, although similar, was not as concisely and plainly put.

Alex said...

hi mr. ross, first of all let me thank you for all the blog post and videos, they have been very helpful, but if you don't mind, i just want to say this about this particular post that you are absolutely correct, except the JKD part, JKD is exactly opposite of mma or any other martial art, JKD is a philosophy in which you have the freedom to train in any style, system, street fighting or in anything that's effective for an individual, it is absolutely not mma or a martial art or a system. i do include many of your techniques in my JKD and they are the most direct and effective techniques of all time, not to mention the simplest. Thankyou.

Patrick, Australia said...

I suspect that any SDC instructor, and most beginner level SDTS practitioners, could concisely and plainly put that "self defense instructor" out for the count.

Keysi Fighting Method Manchester said...

A good debate here and gives you something to think about! Self defence instructors need to have acquired and gained experience in a range of skills to give the best possible teaching.

Damian Ross said...

You don't need to know how to tile to lay carpet. You have been fed a line that you need all the periphery skill sets to be good at one specific thing. This is BS. To learn a specific skill you primarily focus on one single skill, occasionally cross training so you don;t get bored.

Anonymous said...

Even Bruce Lee stated it wasn't the man who practiced 1000 kicks 1 time it was the man who practiced 1 kick 1000 times that made that person hard to deal with. Why? Understanding the in's and out's of what you do is what helps you react with it. Simple and effective moves are easier to teach for self-defense than complicated ones from sport martial arts. IMHO I have to quote a friend of mine (actually a couple of friends of mine) "It's not what you train, its how you train."

Nicole said...

Really intersting article! We run self-defense seminars at Sykesville Tae Kwon Do in Maryland and we've been reading your blog! Great info. Thanks!