Knife Expert: The Truth About Knife Defense Will Shock You!

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,3 тис.

  • @KARATEbyJesse
    @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +704

    Subscribe if you want more videos like this! :)

    • @bangkay8890
      @bangkay8890 19 днів тому +9

      Okay

    • @rivera_
      @rivera_ 19 днів тому +6

      ❤❤

    • @DarkLight-Ascending
      @DarkLight-Ascending 19 днів тому +8

      You are livin the life bro

    • @Archangel-pd1rn
      @Archangel-pd1rn 19 днів тому +4

      Awesome! If you want to go deep with this kind of self defense content, check out Fight SCIENCE channel with Dr. Mark Phillips. I really like his content.

    • @mikevaldez7684
      @mikevaldez7684 19 днів тому +4

      Wow 😮

  • @Nooneathome-1
    @Nooneathome-1 15 днів тому +6010

    I was a street cop for 20 years and the tell-tale behaviours demonstrated here are 💯% accurate especially the checking and scanning. I would add one more to watch out for, when the opponent switches off and ignores your verbal commands it’s often because they have disengaged and have made the decision to strike. Great video Sir 👏

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому +117

      Right on sir

    • @papaspaulding
      @papaspaulding 14 днів тому +164

      I think in general when you see someone 'switch off' you know the rage has taken control and now they are in attack mode and a second or two away from making a planned strike

    • @francocorbelli3941
      @francocorbelli3941 14 днів тому +214

      Maybe in the USA. In Europe, no one with the intent to kill-someone familiar with knife use, not an amateur with a steak knife-would ever do what’s shown in the video, extending the armed arm. The goal is to PREVENT it from being grabbed. Like with a gun, it’s kept as covered as possible, not waved around where it could be taken. The knife stays close to the body, around the chest area or, at most, the hip (if it’s being concealed after being drawn from the belt), while the left hand strikes the face or, if possible, grabs the opponent’s collar and pulls hard to reduce distance. Essentially, it brings the body toward the knife, not the knife toward the body.

    • @Arrogan28
      @Arrogan28 14 днів тому

      ​@@francocorbelli3941 In nearly all the most common cases it won't be a trained person, the person doing the attacking will be just an average person with mental health issues, or mental health issues and an political message, or rage issue, and the most they did was read about how to attack someone with a blade, and likely watched the wrong teacher on youtube giving bad advice.
      But you are correct in your description of someone who knows how to use a knife against someone. They say to grab your opponent and do repeated attacks each time returning the knife to a protected close area to the core, so that you hold all the power if someone attempts to disarm you etc. But again, most people who do something as stupid as attack someone with a weapon, usually are not the brightest of people, and are in a state as well that isn't very rational.
      I knew two people who survived a knife attack, one was in a bar, and the other was during a mugging. And both survived. But then you have that case in the US, where that white supremacists was harassing a woman on a bus, a couple guys stepped in to tell him to stop, and things got violent quickly, and I believe the fatal mistake those guys made, besides picking the wrong guy to get violent with as he was a psychopath with no remorse killing someone, was attempting to disarm the guy. That seems like a bad choice, same as the protestors who tried to disarm Rittenhouse in the US as well, they all died and I think that seems pretty obvious, but sadly in the moment people sometimes want to 'deal with the situation quickly and get it over with' and that is a bad decisions, what you really want to do is keep the distance, defend yourself, and delay as much as possible until they end the attack and run, or time enough for someone to have called the cops and they arrive to do the take down of the attacker. The longer you ward off an attack the better...
      regardless if the person is experienced with a knife or not, it's just not that easy to disarm someone who has all the advantages already having a solid grip on the knife, and you have to expose yourself to an attack to even get close. Even the biggest fool can get lucky, especially with a very sharp knife that is extremely unforgiving..

    • @Michael-r7e8w
      @Michael-r7e8w 14 днів тому

      you are not and you never were. fuck your trolling

  • @brabhamfreaman166
    @brabhamfreaman166 14 днів тому +2553

    This guy is, first and foremost, a phenomenal communicator. Now he’s obviously very knowledgeable, experienced and extremely well-prepared. But he’s so good because he’s engaging and can get it all across so well. Amazing.

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 13 днів тому +43

      Thank so much

    • @TheMegaAsh
      @TheMegaAsh 13 днів тому +7

      He has had the luxury of filming and training with some of the top instructors for Kali/Arnis/Escrima in the world so I'd hope he'd be very knowledgeable!

    • @ididitmyway72
      @ididitmyway72 12 днів тому +3

      I agree absolutely. @funkertactical you just found yourself a new sub 👍

    • @mve9924
      @mve9924 12 днів тому

      1000%

    • @metube2315
      @metube2315 11 днів тому

      This guy is súper smart.

  • @Kinos141
    @Kinos141 14 днів тому +926

    I love that this guy is saying anticipate the attack is better than defense.
    Vigilance and awareness is something I've always promoted over actual defense techniques and fighting prowess.
    If you don't put yourself in the space to be attacked, you win.

    • @TheRealSykx
      @TheRealSykx 14 днів тому +70

      Goes back to good ol' Sun Tzu: "The greatest victory is that which requires no battle"

    • @idiottv6499
      @idiottv6499 13 днів тому +37

      I had an, ahem, interaction earlier this year and what de-escalated the situation is that I saw the guy approach me from far away and backed up into a restaurant.
      He was bold enough to follow me inside and take a seat at the same table, but whatever plan he had failed as we just had a short conversation after which he left. I watched his hands and to my knowledge he wasn't armed, but I didn't want to test that theory.

    • @thevoteman
      @thevoteman 13 днів тому +10

      real. but also that extra level of preparation when u just happen to have shit luck and there's no avoiding the engagement is still important tho, cause if u need the training and don't got it, u won't have the chance to kick urself about it later.

    • @northernsupernova1
      @northernsupernova1 13 днів тому +7

      "Best way to avoid knife... No Be There!"

    • @marikothecheetah9342
      @marikothecheetah9342 13 днів тому +25

      This is crucial for women. No matter how much women will cry over it - we are weaker and our best defense is running like hell. Or kicking the sensitive parts and run. Either way - if you have a chance - run.
      I am a bit paranoid over this, scanning the environment constantly, especially at night, if I have to even go out at night. Scan as much of the area Il can, if I spot a group of people far enough I can casually cross the street, enter the night shop whatever, to minimise the threat. I use shadow to check if someone is following me, not wearing headphones at night, whatever. I might be paranoid, but I am safe.

  • @sirronmitt
    @sirronmitt 11 днів тому +200

    Mr. Paulo Rubio is one of the most articulate instructors I have witnessed. His ability to give instruction alone would save time. Excellent instruction.

    • @Monogrammaton
      @Monogrammaton 3 дні тому +1

      I was reading too fast and thought this said attractive

    • @Viroh
      @Viroh День тому

      Well, standards are low.

  • @darkchild130
    @darkchild130 15 днів тому +1095

    Knife attack survivor.
    I have lots of boxing/muay thai experience, got stabbed in the head in a bar fight. Was punching one guy and another hit me from the side.
    I didn't even see it, didn't know I'd been stabbed until blood started pouring from my head.
    Pure luck it hit boney parts and not my neck.
    Edit: having now watched the entire video, this is basically identical to UK gutter fighting, which evolved into the commando techniques used in ww2. Literally no differences. This guy is a very good instructor!

    • @jameslopez5652
      @jameslopez5652 13 днів тому +93

      Yeah Trench warfare back then was about surviving 1 to 2 hand to hands and then using that experience to build on and hope to survive with those honed instincts. I could only imagine the absolute adrenaline spike of jumping into a cold, sub-zero, muddy trench and going hand to hand with axes, shovels, knives, etc., all while gun fights are happening around you, and you are being shelled into oblivion with air burst rounds.

    • @zera2314
      @zera2314 13 днів тому +23

      Jesus dude! Glad you're alive to talk about it!
      Just curious: The stab didn't penetrate your skull at all??

    • @rocker8692
      @rocker8692 13 днів тому +9

      Carry a gat

    • @PlasticCogLiquid
      @PlasticCogLiquid 13 днів тому +26

      I hate those people that attack from behind, I saw a guy hit another guy with a beer bottle from behind and run away while the guy was fighting someone else. The bottle didn't break and gave him a decent headache later on.

    • @cykeok3525
      @cykeok3525 13 днів тому +35

      @@jameslopez5652 WW1 trench warfare must have been insane, just judging by exhibitions showing the wide variety of makeshift (but effective looking) close quarter weapons the soldiers made for trench raiding.
      Soldiers slashing, stabbing and bludgeoning each other in the tight confines of an invaded trench, while artillery shells and machine gun fire are roaring all around, it's probably a horror that never happened before or since.

  • @eskurian8565
    @eskurian8565 12 днів тому +989

    This guy is an amazing teacher. The way he gives positive feedback and keeps Jesse comfortable is chef's kiss.

    • @rubyruby7573
      @rubyruby7573 7 днів тому

      No He Isn't Because He Doesn't Teach How To Fight For Higher Ground When Your At A Disadvantage That's Why You Run From A Knife But You Run Towards A Gun Because You Can Outrun A Knife But You Can't Outrun A Bullet

    • @xianprincedayuta5755
      @xianprincedayuta5755 6 днів тому +7

      ​@@rubyruby7573
      Well, you are have a point there, but the instructor did explain that you also have to take into account you surroundings, and they just happened to fight in an even terrain.
      Also, while you are right that you can indeed run from a knife, the instructor added a crucial reminder that it is "awareness" that comes first before a person could apply any defensive mechanism. It even showed various pre-indication patterns before any potential attacks, and it doesn't matter how great your reflexes or how fast you are, once you are in range of the knife and has no clue of what's going on then it's all for nothing.
      Same goes for the bullet and the gun, even if you say that you are literally in front of the culprit, if you are oblivious to your surroundings, you get killed in point blank range.

    • @Lizzy-u9d
      @Lizzy-u9d 3 дні тому

      @@rubyruby7573 only 22 minutes. He couldn't cover everything. Neither could you

    • @UmbralVQ35HR
      @UmbralVQ35HR 2 дні тому +3

      ​@@rubyruby7573 whoever told you to run towards a gun is trying to kill you.

    • @wilhelmhause3510
      @wilhelmhause3510 20 годин тому

      @@rubyruby7573 yeah, not built for that kind of running. its not in the cards for everyone.

  • @RebuildingSaad
    @RebuildingSaad 18 днів тому +1936

    These 22 minutes felt like 5 minutes. I literally had to double check the timestamp at the end of the video. Fantastic stuff.

    • @hansvonpetersen5011
      @hansvonpetersen5011 17 днів тому +29

      only your comment made me realize it too :D

    • @Bzrkr_73
      @Bzrkr_73 16 днів тому +4

      I couldn't get past 5 minutes 😂

    • @RebuildingSaad
      @RebuildingSaad 16 днів тому +2

      @@Bzrkr_73 lol different strokes, I guess =P

    • @brokapotato5066
      @brokapotato5066 16 днів тому +3

      wwait i legit just did the same thing lmao

    • @Traumglanz
      @Traumglanz 15 днів тому +4

      Odd, the first 5 minutes felt like 22 already.
      Nothing wrong said though, just nothing that does not feel like common knowledge either. Maybe it's not that common, maybe it's just my hema instructors or the knife sparring we did on the side, but certainly, it feels like the same old, same old, heard a 100 times from 10 different instructors already.

  • @Birodalom1
    @Birodalom1 8 днів тому +392

    As a survivor of three knife attacks in three different countries, I say: this guy knows what he's talking about! The signs of an attack are always the same: fidgeting, touching his face, looking around, etc. Pay close attention to these signs!

    • @Hello.NateAdams
      @Hello.NateAdams 4 дні тому +30

      3 countries? I'm actually a survivor of 4. 4 attacks in 4 different countries. 🥱

    • @user-ic1fb5me2r
      @user-ic1fb5me2r 4 дні тому +4

      U guys are cool 😎

    • @thegorn
      @thegorn 4 дні тому +65

      I didn’t survive, I’m actually dead rn 💀

    • @Ethan_24754
      @Ethan_24754 4 дні тому +3

      What three? Are you okay

    • @pinkpuffy2988
      @pinkpuffy2988 4 дні тому +6

      let me know the countries my intuition will tell me not to go lol

  • @Heffsta02
    @Heffsta02 16 днів тому +584

    I love that Paul specified hugging/ dapping after doing a drill to reset emotions.

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому +53

      Super important.

    • @zapntoo4316
      @zapntoo4316 13 днів тому +28

      Consider the pre fight interview/glove touch. When the acknowledgment of your opponent is removed we instinctively understand that the consequences of the encounter will be dire.

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 6 днів тому

      @@11235butExactly

    • @icktzar
      @icktzar 5 днів тому +6

      I had a friend who was trained as bodyguard for the president of my country, and I tried to convince him to train with me. No way, he told me it would be wildly dangerous. They are trained to react by instinct, and perfectly may happen that he would cause me a great deal of damage.

  • @amcconnell6730
    @amcconnell6730 18 днів тому +918

    I love that Jesse is so willing to put himself into the "student" role. No ego of "I'm a blackbelt instructor." Willing to be tested, so show the learning cycle. And Paulo is a great instructor. Great concepts. Great drills. Loved this episode.

    • @Hedron-Design
      @Hedron-Design 17 днів тому +46

      Good martial artists know there is ALWAYS something to learn. you never know it all and you never run out of things to learn. Sometimes a seasoned martial artist will even learn something super basic that they had never been taught or come across before.

    • @TheWarmotor
      @TheWarmotor 16 днів тому +17

      Every really talented black belt I've trained with is like this. As soon as you start thinking you're the baddest guy in the room and there is nothing left to learn, you plateau and stagnate, you become George Dillman and start believing your own legend. Both of these gentlemen put the 'art' in 'martial artist'.

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому +8

      He is the best at this. And a stellar content creator as well. Killer combination. _Paulo

    • @TheWarmotor
      @TheWarmotor 15 днів тому +2

      @@FunkerTactical Bro, you made me completely rethink my approach to the concept of unarmed defense. In a YT video. That is friggin epic and you should be proud. Read all of these comments saying the same thing! Next level.

    • @ch1nawhyte
      @ch1nawhyte 15 днів тому +4

      our sensei always taught that 'black belt is when you begin learning karate again' so we are always on the path of learning, no matter what dan

  • @escueladeartesemocionales
    @escueladeartesemocionales 19 днів тому +2597

    This was BY FAR the best class abour knife defense I've seen in many years. Thank yu so much for this awesome interview. I just wish it was longer or at least that he will come back to the channel.

    • @williamsisk2897
      @williamsisk2897 19 днів тому +67

      I think a part 2 would be great.

    • @georgezener9527
      @georgezener9527 19 днів тому +36

      I was lucky enough to take a 2 day seminar with Paulo. He is a gifted teacher.

    • @tenpennygrim5884
      @tenpennygrim5884 19 днів тому +9

      Couldn't agree more. Great stuff!

    • @escueladeartesemocionales
      @escueladeartesemocionales 19 днів тому +17

      @@georgezener9527 really seems that way. Being capable to synthetized a LOT of knowledge in simple "game scenarios" takes YEARS of dedication, trial and error. And this are the first ones that seem to prepare you somewhat to a real scenario. Amazing stuff

    • @SUP3RM4N_73
      @SUP3RM4N_73 19 днів тому +6

      Yeah, this is FANTASTIC.

  • @-dennis3755
    @-dennis3755 11 днів тому +56

    Idk why YT suddenly started reccomending me fighting stuff again but Jesse you have singlehandedly revived my faith in Martial Arts. For whatever that's worth.

  • @remyvermunt8623
    @remyvermunt8623 12 днів тому +634

    i am a sales trainer for 25 years and i learned a lot about how to design short cut learning paths,
    "what is intuition? subconscious pattern recognition." brilliant.

    • @hayrigulle1730
      @hayrigulle1730 9 днів тому +16

      pattern recognition = racist bro

    • @carlitosway5204
      @carlitosway5204 9 днів тому +9

      subconscious pattern recognition is sth else but intuition often times comes from 0 and I mean 0 like potential when there is no pattern yet and you act on your first thought creativity really exposes that

    • @KiemPlant
      @KiemPlant 5 днів тому

      @@hayrigulle1730 well well well 🤫

    • @AS-kc4mg
      @AS-kc4mg 3 дні тому +1

      @@hayrigulle1730 shut up cornball

    • @Hashbrown2169
      @Hashbrown2169 2 дні тому +1

      Pattern recognition is a function of Fi, introverted feeling. Ni, introverted intuition, is explained above my comment

  • @Antonio_Leyva
    @Antonio_Leyva 19 днів тому +637

    Great, a really "realistic" video about knife defense. A "probability and mentality question", rather than a "technical" question

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +45

      This is the way ✊

    • @FuryoTokkosho
      @FuryoTokkosho 18 днів тому +4

      you saw realism in the self defense championship, the other guy wanted jesse to come close to whisper something in his ear by that time the knife was already at his throat while he was distracted by the other hand

    • @allboutthemojo
      @allboutthemojo 13 днів тому +3

      ​@KARATEbyJesse great video. Thanks. Can't say that I learned this but brought a lot of awareness to many things I didn't know. Are there classes that I can search for to learn and practice defense techniques? I felt that since both of you are trained, the demonstration had a lot of moves that the average attacker and subject would just not have due to no training and building anxiety/ stress preventing them from thinking clearly

  • @TheElbowMerchant
    @TheElbowMerchant 19 днів тому +1227

    Working in corrections, I've been attacked many times, with and without a shiv, and half the battle is trusting your instincts and recognizing that a weapon is in play before the fight even starts. I've been stabbed twice, but probably should have been injured many more times considering the attempts made against me. Listen to your intuition, surround yourself with competent people, train to hone your skills, and hope that lady luck will smile favorably upon you, but understand that sometimes she won't. Absolutely awesome video, Sensei Enkamp!

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +121

      Glad you made it! Thanks for sharing 🙏

    • @TheElbowMerchant
      @TheElbowMerchant 19 днів тому +22

      @KARATEbyJesse Thank you for the continued excellence in your content!

    • @mclovinthewalrus2375
      @mclovinthewalrus2375 19 днів тому +6

      Have you been attacked by someone with a razor sharp arrow tip dagger?

    • @TheElbowMerchant
      @TheElbowMerchant 19 днів тому +89

      @mclovinthewalrus2375 Can't say that I have. I've been slashed at with a safety razor melted into a ballpoint pen, and stabbed with modified plastic cutlery and a filed down wheelchair brake handle (that was a close call). The worst injury I suffered was from a tube sock full of AA batteries. Prisoners get points for creativity when it comes to turning (relatively) safe objects into potentially deadly implements.

    • @segundacuenta726
      @segundacuenta726 19 днів тому +13

      Hey, thanks for the feedback. What do you think about wearing stab proof clothing for those working in such environments? I can think of 2 things: inconvenience and heat. Yet to me it seems like a necessary thing since there would be no need for ballistic protection, yet you never know when someone could have a improvised weapon.

  • @MuhammadNafisJamil
    @MuhammadNafisJamil 8 днів тому +34

    The back and forth accurate answers to the right questions is peak. Its so apparent that both of you are incredibly experienced at self defense.

  • @raccoonmyroom6861
    @raccoonmyroom6861 19 днів тому +412

    I like that his teaching style is super respectful. You can tell he's trained people from a bunch of different backrounds!

    • @pathfinder7614
      @pathfinder7614 16 днів тому +8

      If I am not mistaken, isn't this the guy that use to run funker tactical? Went by gun noob? I miss the heck out if that channel. If that's not the same guy, then damn do they look very similar and have the same great insights! Jessie, you should see if you can do a colab with Doug Marcaida!

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому +19

      Thank you. I have travelled the world consulting with the best mentors. -Paulo

    • @عبدالرحمنعبدالله-ز4م
      @عبدالرحمنعبدالله-ز4م 5 днів тому +1

      Yeah, he's an Asian with a Latino name and he talks Black.

    • @tadeob_
      @tadeob_ 2 дні тому

      @@عبدالرحمنعبدالله-ز4مthat’s not talking black bruh… sounds like a normal American

  • @gotmel843
    @gotmel843 19 днів тому +1044

    Have this Guro back! One of my favorite videos in a long time.

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +86

      Awesome!!

    • @mumakin1
      @mumakin1 19 днів тому +27

      For sure more content from this guy!

    • @bitkarek
      @bitkarek 19 днів тому +5

      this one and the silat guy.

    • @phillmor1405
      @phillmor1405 19 днів тому +7

      I want to train with that guy 😂

    • @matt_v2305
      @matt_v2305 18 днів тому +1

      @@bitkarek Maul Mornie.

  • @Hardcaslte
    @Hardcaslte 19 днів тому +216

    Honestly one of the best instructors I've seen so far. Extremely concise, not aggressive, at the same time teaching aggressive techniques. The best demonstration I've seen so far in the psychological aspects to look for, going to a point where you feel the tension during training. Showing techniques without randomly contacting you when you're not expecting it like so many of these instructors do and the person learning doesn't know if they should react or not react and it looks awkward.
    Definitely would love to see more from Paulo, you two were awesome together too and how you interact.

  • @selbie
    @selbie 11 днів тому +25

    This video hits an important point - building intuition. Any juvenile in the animal kingdom typically play fights in some way which forms their intuition for survival. So 19:40 our human monkey brains also need the same kinds of play scenarios to build our intuition. Drilling with different opponents gives your brain more scenarios to compute!

  • @EgoCZ
    @EgoCZ 19 днів тому +249

    This guy is so great. You rarely see such a good teacher in fighting.

  • @kang_ghany
    @kang_ghany 19 днів тому +111

    His take on this is just so realistic, unlike other people that usually overclaim what they can do in real life. This one has a nice balance of reality, solution, and expectation. Hope you have more content with him in the future. For me, this 22 minutes, although I learned a lot, it's definitely not enough. Kudos for you Jesse, of getting such an expert to talk in your video, and also on how you carry this interview/lesson.

  • @MisterPeckingOrder
    @MisterPeckingOrder 19 днів тому +587

    Not going to lie. His demonstration of body language before an attack brought back a lot of memories.

    • @Fabianorocknwood
      @Fabianorocknwood 18 днів тому +9

      Right!?

    • @2gunzup07
      @2gunzup07 17 днів тому +4

      You been attack alot?

    • @2gunzup07
      @2gunzup07 17 днів тому +6

      Are you a racist? Why are you using a racist character

    • @zen8704
      @zen8704 17 днів тому +24

      @@2gunzup07 some people have believe it or not. most people have never experienced anything close

    • @MisterPeckingOrder
      @MisterPeckingOrder 17 днів тому +63

      @@2gunzup07 At one point yeah, but this is also reminding me distinctly of a lot of sus conversations I’ve had that just didn’t feel right. Now I know why. That’s the scary thing.

  • @xMadMazx
    @xMadMazx 13 годин тому +1

    This guy isn't just a great knife defence teacher. He's a great teacher point blank. He's methods of teaching can apply to anything. Well spoken, not harsh but professional. Knows how to keep the student engaged and making them feel good about themselves. After all how can you really learn something if you lose the interest.

  • @MaadReapeR
    @MaadReapeR 19 днів тому +270

    At a young age when I was searching for myself and a martial art that I would like, I stumbled upon many different people training many different things. Once I was doing a "knife defense" scenario with my friend, who have been training Krav Maga and he was quite sure about his skills. I took a marker, pretending it's a knife and not following the scenarios they have trained, just attacking I painted his whole with that marker. Other time I was trying to train with my friend who was part of "medieval bratherhood". In addition to sword fighting, axe fighting, or medieval wrestling, they also trained intensively in knife fighting. Encouraged by my previous experiences with the marker, I decided to try my hand at it. But I was very surprised when they completely destroyed me. Then I thought - it's not about defending yourself against a knife that you need to learn, but about fighting with a knife, it allows you to think and predict the way your opponent will use it. Now I'm not the youngest anymore and I certainly wouldn't want to defend myself against an attacker with a knife, and certainly not without something "bigger" at hand...

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +35

      Thanks for sharing

    • @prometheus9096
      @prometheus9096 19 днів тому +47

      Absolutely, to defend against any kind of weapon, you have to know the weapon. You only start to know a weapon if you train to use it. So actually training to use a knife is half the training to defend yourself against a knife.

    • @jpoupon66
      @jpoupon66 18 днів тому +4

      Excellent point !

    • @cjanquart
      @cjanquart 18 днів тому +19

      Been training krav maga for years and the training methodology has shifted and isn't about a defense for this/that/the other, mainly about situational awareness and the aforementioned pre-attack indicators. We also train more ground/jiu jitsu where it wasn't a thing before.

    • @16m49x3
      @16m49x3 17 днів тому +22

      If everyone carried sideswords it would make everyone much safer

  • @desbrown-writer5511
    @desbrown-writer5511 19 днів тому +344

    In 20 years of training and teaching Krav Maga, I have to say that this is one of the most incredible knife defense explanations I’ve ever seen.
    Absolutely brilliant!!

    • @iidentifyasskinny
      @iidentifyasskinny 17 днів тому

      I think most of it is good, but what about at 17:10? He first suggests the Russian tie, which is a good idea, putting his weak attacking side close to your body. His next suggestion seems dangerous. The "inside two on one control" which puts his strong attacking side close to your body. Seems that control is the opposite of where you want to be, as it takes very little for him to create enough separation for a strong stabbing movement toward your body. The 'knife switch" there is nonsense as well, as he could have stabbed to the stomach or thigh much easier than switching the knife from that position.

    • @strammerdetlef
      @strammerdetlef 17 днів тому +9

      lol doesnt surprise me when all u did is KVM

    • @desbrown-writer5511
      @desbrown-writer5511 17 днів тому +10

      @@strammerdetlef it’s not the only thing I’ve done 😎 but yeah, I understand what you’re saying.

    • @anttihuttula6547
      @anttihuttula6547 15 днів тому +2

      20years and havent figured this out😂

    • @mmchayek
      @mmchayek 14 днів тому

      @@anttihuttula6547 lmao.

  • @francoistourigny3006
    @francoistourigny3006 18 днів тому +71

    He include all the subconscious and instinctive counterpart , this is probably the best of all the teachings on self défense that I have saw! This guy is great❤

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому +2

      Thank you so much. There's more to this. -Paulo

  • @facekickr
    @facekickr 8 днів тому +20

    The tell tale signs of a fight were all there. That intent felt real even just sitting here. Great video! Amazing teacher! Thank you both!

  • @Renzuru21
    @Renzuru21 19 днів тому +279

    More than knife defense, I learned how to "teach" with this... Great video!!

    • @maddscientist82
      @maddscientist82 15 днів тому +14

      I thought the same. When he mentioned that he is sometimes tasked with teaching officers and only a short window to do so, I thought that this method of teaching is also born out of this method. Idk if that made sense but it does to me lol

    • @angusmatheson8906
      @angusmatheson8906 11 днів тому +3

      THIS also how to LEARN better

    • @Renzuru21
      @Renzuru21 11 днів тому +2

      @@maddscientist82 It does, it made me also re-think the ways I teach FMA in classes.
      It's really a great video

    • @Renzuru21
      @Renzuru21 11 днів тому

      @@angusmatheson8906 I agree with this as well

  • @objectiveirony
    @objectiveirony 17 днів тому +44

    This is the densest and most comprehensive self-defense lesson I've ever seen. Paulo is a fantastic teacher.

  • @FrankJosephBorces
    @FrankJosephBorces 14 днів тому +73

    I barely comment on youtube videos but I just have to share that I learned so much more with this 22 min video with knife self defense than my 10 year experience traditionally learning hand-to-hand combat with eskrima here in the Philippines. This video can save lives.

  • @slashetcy
    @slashetcy 4 дні тому +6

    Situational awareness is what is sadly missing in most martial arts programs. This video is top notch.

  • @mikedawe692
    @mikedawe692 13 днів тому +59

    Oooooh This guy is good. Smooth, intelligent, respectful, honest. Discussion and explanation of the why, display and example of the how then engage and practice with mutual trust, repeat. Excellent training of mind and body in a balanced way. A good Sensei.

    • @lancerevo9747
      @lancerevo9747 12 днів тому +2

      He was Doug Marcaida's training dummy and student for years. Check out the OG later.

  • @craigsj25
    @craigsj25 19 днів тому +89

    This video is Gold! It has drills for all levels that are easy to follow. The biggest problem I have with knife defense seminars is that although the instructor is quite skilled he has a hard time translating that skill into workable drills for the rest of us. You walk away thinking , ' He was great! I have no idea how to do any of that stuff at the end...' In THIS video he gives someone like me 3 or 4 drills that I could use right away. Excellent video!!

  • @tobiasgunny
    @tobiasgunny 16 днів тому +317

    Multiple knife encounter survivor here. All of this is gold. I had martial arts training long before my first fight, but it didnt matter. Adversaries were all unskilled, training meant nothing unless it was muscle memory. Important note, neither of us reacted to slashes or stabs until distance was gained. I didnt feel two 12 inch slashes (commercial kitchen bread knife) on my leading arm until the medics started stripping my shirt off, 5 mins after encounter. Best advice i have is control their elbows and wrists, the rest follows when they are trying to stab. Be careful out there.

    • @TheRealSykx
      @TheRealSykx 14 днів тому +32

      adrenaline is a helluva drug

    • @prezlamen7906
      @prezlamen7906 13 днів тому +19

      You mist be from UK or Germany

    • @malcolmt7883
      @malcolmt7883 13 днів тому +10

      Why'd they attack you?

    • @Juidodin
      @Juidodin 13 днів тому +19

      you might be rethinking your live choices...

    • @Zeithri
      @Zeithri 13 днів тому +4

      #doubt

  • @TheRisky9
    @TheRisky9 7 днів тому +45

    I'm so relieved to see these honest, intelligent conversations about martial arts. These are things I have tried to say, but was always mocked and called stupid.

    • @Monogrammaton
      @Monogrammaton 3 дні тому

      communication is so hard and some personalities are naturals at it

  • @Lumpyrox1412
    @Lumpyrox1412 19 днів тому +57

    What a fantastic teacher! His instruction is all meat with no fat. So glad you connected with this guy, Jesse!

  • @MVNYer
    @MVNYer 12 днів тому +34

    Filipino Martial Arts is a different animal!
    Great interview and training.
    Paulo Rubio is solid!

  • @andrewanastasovski1609
    @andrewanastasovski1609 19 днів тому +171

    The reverse blink thing was genius. That .04 seconds or whatever is exactly what you'd see if someone was surprise attacking. Training to take all the information you can and formulate a reaction that you get from that is a great idea.

    • @williamsisk2897
      @williamsisk2897 19 днів тому +5

      Yes it is. I had to give it a try. In the corner I have an old golf set that I don't use. So I closed my eyes looked in its direction and reversed blink. Once my eyes were shut I tried to count the clubs from memory of the blink.

    • @BWater-yq3jx
      @BWater-yq3jx 19 днів тому

      I remember doing this exercise at a Tony Blauer seminar in the late 90's.

    • @dark6.6E-34
      @dark6.6E-34 16 днів тому

      @@williamsisk2897 you need a repeatable experiment. Some website with visual rng would work.

    • @kevinspencer7340
      @kevinspencer7340 16 днів тому +3

      I think that reverse blink would be good with different types of training.

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 15 днів тому

      Exactly.

  • @kingtorra6955
    @kingtorra6955 5 днів тому +3

    I have to say he’s incredible at communicating his knowledge in a learning process. Constantly asking questions and making sure they’re on the same page through it. Awesome teacher!

  • @MartialArtsGamer
    @MartialArtsGamer 19 днів тому +1363

    The UK should be experts at this. Very interesting video.

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +240

      No doubt they have experience

    • @llengsuch3426
      @llengsuch3426 19 днів тому +105

      Oh yeah! But we're not allowed to talk about it.

    • @larsstougaard7097
      @larsstougaard7097 19 днів тому +153

      UK 🇬🇧 - United Knifes 🔪

    • @jacobharris954
      @jacobharris954 19 днів тому +19

      @@KARATEbyJesse Yeahy will it very scary situations in the UK

    • @DarkLight-Ascending
      @DarkLight-Ascending 19 днів тому +73

      But.... making guns illegal stops murders... right? 😂😂😂

  • @lelwil2
    @lelwil2 12 днів тому +55

    He is a great instructor and communicator. He has an air of peacefulness and restrained aggression. Awesome Dude.

  • @yewknight
    @yewknight 18 днів тому +40

    That statement about the value of being a bro between training reps at 10:50 is so true. There is one guy I train with who refuses to engage with the fist pumps, handshakes, hugs, or whatever and I HATE rolling with him because even though he is great at what he does, I feel in danger when I work with him.

  • @Brisingr2207
    @Brisingr2207 19 днів тому +188

    The collab I never knew I dreamt of.

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +16

      Glad to hear 🙏

    • @Brisingr2207
      @Brisingr2207 19 днів тому +3

      ​@@KARATEbyJesseas always Paulo never ceases to disappoint. The funniest is that he was reluctant to teach at first.

    • @shiaominglee
      @shiaominglee 19 днів тому

      yeah

    • @Pjrfreitas
      @Pjrfreitas 19 днів тому +1

      This was probably the best self defense video I have seen! The method and the intelligence shown by Paulo is just practical, smart and I can see being an amazing way to address how to protect yourself in a menacing environment. He is so right that factors outside training are infinite. Hoped other “self-defense gurus” actually saw this! They would learn! Thank you Jesse for this! You have an amazing channel!

    • @pedroantoniorinconcinca9944
      @pedroantoniorinconcinca9944 18 днів тому

      This was absolutely amazing! Solid wisdom on both knife defense and teaching/training methodology. Thank you!

  • @1683clifton
    @1683clifton 14 днів тому +190

    In our kali training, we used to chalk the "knife" so you knew for sure where you failed to stop it. White chalk all over a black shirt was a bad day.

    • @joelhall3820
      @joelhall3820 13 днів тому +40

      We used a “taser” knife with an electric blade. It was not enjoyable to be shocked by it. Our instructor would let us be in a grappling situation and just toss it in with us and man your heart rate jumps up.

    • @concernedcitizen8231
      @concernedcitizen8231 13 днів тому +23

      We trained with a marker pen in our dojo only one guy didn't get marked.
      He immediately turned and dropped to the ground and into sprint position and went!

    • @curtisnixon5313
      @curtisnixon5313 12 днів тому +18

      Red lipstick on the training knife edge over a white t-shirt makes it real-looking

    • @Gege547
      @Gege547 12 днів тому +3

      We use delica trainers. If you got stabbed or cut you would feel it. When I started I eas cowered with stab and cut marks for weeks (just from one training).

    • @GiarcraiGO
      @GiarcraiGO 10 днів тому

      @@curtisnixon5313 Did this in Krav Maga.

  • @tennisjiujitsu
    @tennisjiujitsu 12 днів тому +64

    BJJ black belt & ex pro tennis player here. The best advice is recognizing the behavior patterns. Anticipation is easy when you can clearly read the physical signs. People will show you what they want to do before they do it. You have to have the ability and attentiveness to read those signs and react accordingly. This is a life saving video!

    • @FunkerTactical
      @FunkerTactical 12 днів тому +4

      Most folks won’t understand how incredible an asset it is to be training in BJJ with a tennis background 🙏🏼

  • @Daniel-qy9mb
    @Daniel-qy9mb 2 дні тому +2

    The kindness from the knife instructor some how comes through his teachings. Seems like a really good dude.

  • @SavageAllSeven
    @SavageAllSeven 17 днів тому +33

    That reverse blink is an epiphany and is gold. Gonna practice myself and teach it to my fiance as well

  • @AlexGSalvador-cv9ln
    @AlexGSalvador-cv9ln 19 днів тому +21

    Two excellent self-defense teachers - realistic and eloquent. It seems it's best to get rid of all emotions and focus mainly on distancing, techniques, and tacticss - including creating space for running away to safety. Great video. (I, too learned how to swim the hard way: my uncles threw me out of the boat in Laguna Bay and told me to "swim". Another uncle taught me a few karate techniques and told me to fight. What the hell ?!?).

  • @llengsuch3426
    @llengsuch3426 19 днів тому +69

    The bit I found most fascinating was when you were discussing mental attitude. I've known several people - practising martial artists with at least several years of training - who had never been in a street fight. And when someone went for them with real malicious intent, they froze and didn't fight back.

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +16

      Common!

    • @epics306
      @epics306 19 днів тому +3

      What" martial arts" do you mean exactly,

    • @ssths
      @ssths 19 днів тому +18

      @@epics306 doesnt matter what martial art it is. if you arent trained to deal with antisocial violence, there is a chance youll freeze, for at least a moment. ive seen MMA guys do it, karate guys, tkd, even boxers and wrestlers (though they both seem to freeze less often in my experience).

    • @gbormann71
      @gbormann71 19 днів тому +4

      ​@@ssthsThe Fight-or-Flight response is very strong and very basic!

    • @epics306
      @epics306 19 днів тому +1

      @@ssths also, cam you share the situations you saw , and describe how they looked?

  • @MB11183
    @MB11183 2 дні тому +3

    This guy is an excellent trainer. He has high communication skills, kept me watching till the end

  • @1massboy
    @1massboy 19 днів тому +21

    I love that word, concentrating a lot on the psychology of your opponent in this video and the pre-fight signs.

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +3

      @@1massboy Yes! It’s essential 👍

  • @genieb
    @genieb 15 днів тому +34

    Holy smoke, this guy is brilliant! Not that I know anything about knife defence, just that the way he explains things and does the drills is just so good at taking one step by step.

    • @avatarion
      @avatarion 13 днів тому +2

      He stays brilliant for as long as it's not taking place on the streets. Knife fight experts don't exist on the streets they only exist in gyms.

    • @EdBender
      @EdBender 13 днів тому +1

      @@avatarion He's brilliant in the way he teaches and conducts himself. Obviously a very high IQ individual, and lots of emotional intelligence as well. If you were to fight against a knife, I'd rather have his training than none. And yes, you can be a knife expert, that doesn't mean you're going to survive or prevail, just like an accomplished F1 pilot can still die in a crash. Life is about odds. But all things being equal, the trained person has the odds in his favor. That's not even a debate if your IQ is in triple digits. Here is ONE example:
      ua-cam.com/video/L0t-9YRnNMs/v-deo.html
      If this was a regular couch potato, he'd be dead.

    • @ButteredPecan17
      @ButteredPecan17 13 днів тому +3

      @@avatarion But it's live training, I'd wager someone training these scenarios and doing live "sparring" would have a better chance of survival if put into a situation where they can't run or who have been spontaneously attacked and have to act instinctually (this is why repetitions matter)

    • @avatarion
      @avatarion 13 днів тому

      @@ButteredPecan17 You would have 10% better chances, that's why there are no knife fight veterans on the streets.

    • @ButteredPecan17
      @ButteredPecan17 13 днів тому

      @@avatarion Or because being attacked by a knife-wielding foe is rare in and of itself, even rarer the incredibly small group of knife-trained people being attacked with a knife, but keep thinking you're some bearer of wisdom lil bro.

  • @terrysartinCancerWarrior6290
    @terrysartinCancerWarrior6290 19 днів тому +21

    As semi Retired Law Enforcement I found this video extremely informative. This is an approach to training that I can identify with and work into my current training.
    Thank you for sharing.

  • @naderanwer7481
    @naderanwer7481 10 днів тому +6

    I keep scrolling all over youtube everytime with a maximum 5 minutes on each video until I land on one of your videos, I don't know how I complete them end to end! Keep it up bro

  • @NourArt02
    @NourArt02 12 днів тому +7

    I like how Jesse's answers are always on point and Paulo is such a great teacher

  • @_.Dave._
    @_.Dave._ 13 днів тому +14

    11:42 Bruce Lee said to completely master a martial art is to forget it. To study the movements so thoroughly you are no longer confined by them, rather that they are a part of you. This way they become instinctive/reflex,.. not reactions.

  • @spiritualtaurus7942
    @spiritualtaurus7942 10 днів тому +3

    I trained with Paulo Rubio on a weekend seminar during the summer. He's a cool dude, funny and a great teacher of knowledge but he's humble with it. Learned alot from 12 Hours of this stuff.🇬🇧🙏🏻 Great video Jesse!😂🤣💪🏻

  • @ryanaitken10P
    @ryanaitken10P 2 дні тому +1

    What a great instructor! He categorized the fundamentals so well. He is showing concepts and not just sequences. He's legit!

  • @augustoa
    @augustoa 13 днів тому +5

    One of the best videos I saw on self defense, ever. This speech can be used in business and work life too, not only to self defense. Congrats, beautiful class

  • @bon212
    @bon212 19 днів тому +18

    HAHA jesse's gonna have tricks up his sleeve the next time he gets into a shank tank.
    Awesome vid! Knife defense is def one of the hardest topics to properly get into, and this vid really showed us alot in such a short amount of time! Would love to see more of this guy

  • @laurenceperkins7468
    @laurenceperkins7468 15 днів тому +8

    I can always tell when the person you're working with is a really good instructor because, even over video, they'll demonstrate something and I'll find my hands trying to twitch in response to it. Mr. Rubio would definitely be an interesting person to train with.

  • @cattyhatty7574
    @cattyhatty7574 2 дні тому +2

    Love the "we gotta do hugs & handshakes after" this guy really dials in on energy.

  • @delicrux
    @delicrux 14 днів тому +18

    dude this guy knows his shit i literally called someone out as he was about to aproach me as soon as he started scanning the room and then checked his pockets, he started walking at me and i told him out loud hey i dont know who you think i am but i dont know you and we dont have beef he nodded and then changed directions, i left out the other door and went home quick.

    • @alexyo2440
      @alexyo2440 13 днів тому +6

      Something the instructor didn't cover, the psychological aspect of it when you can guilt them or scare them

  • @scalpel6096
    @scalpel6096 12 днів тому +70

    Bro at 10:30 just described purging the "satsui no hado" or "intention to kill" described in street fighter's universe. In that universe, after each training session, practioners had to meditate to purge that energy and not let themselves be consumed by hate and lust for power! It's incredible how much realstic those concepts can be.
    Great video my guy.

    • @nobodyknowsforsure
      @nobodyknowsforsure 11 днів тому +8

      Akuma running around stabbing random ppl lol

    • @geraltplisken1316
      @geraltplisken1316 11 днів тому +12

      Satsui no hado is the “surge of murderous intent”. It is not necessary the intent but the emotional build up related to surge of negative emotions.

  • @mtcad
    @mtcad 16 днів тому +6

    Jesse, I'm your subscriber on all my Google accounts, I've been following you for years. I've watched many Filipino knife experts but this guy just connected with my fight instincts right away. Thank you very much PAULO! MABUHAY! I like your style of teaching.

  • @DefconLives
    @DefconLives 10 днів тому +2

    Real refreshing to see an actual instruction without all of the terminology, bloated tidbits of information and of course the fantastical scenarios in many self defense sources. All of it was practical and applicable without diminishing the danger of such a situation by telling you "know this and you're good".

  • @mouaragon2774
    @mouaragon2774 19 днів тому +9

    This dude knows his stuff. Great way of teaching.

  • @BMO_Creative
    @BMO_Creative 19 днів тому +26

    YES!!! After BJJ, I was hoping Jesse would tackle this topic! Let's Go!!!

    • @KARATEbyJesse
      @KARATEbyJesse  19 днів тому +8

      🔥🔥🔥 Much more coming!!

    • @BMO_Creative
      @BMO_Creative 19 днів тому

      Icy Mike would strike first! LOL Wonderboy or Seth would get out of there first, but if you followed them, they would kick the crap out of you! LOL

  • @NourArt02
    @NourArt02 12 днів тому +6

    Bro those last (completely unscripted) drills have better choreography than most modern Hollywood movies

  • @kvvickie84
    @kvvickie84 19 годин тому +1

    Awesome trainer this Paulo Rubio 👏🏼 You also did well Jesse

  • @himeshsinghshishodiya
    @himeshsinghshishodiya 18 днів тому +18

    Out of so many knife defense videos I've seen, this was THE BEST.

  • @robertovasquez6279
    @robertovasquez6279 14 днів тому +62

    As being a former inmate and have been involved in a lot of knife fights, attackers are way faster than that. A whole lot of repetitive double and triple thrusts. All that blocking and then trying to divert doesn't work. You try to block, they just pull their arm back and thrust again behind your arm before you can even process it. The body language in the beginning was on point though.

    • @avatarion
      @avatarion 13 днів тому +10

      Yep this sht makes you maybe 10% better but that's about it.

    • @robertovasquez6279
      @robertovasquez6279 13 днів тому +1

      @ facts

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 11 днів тому

      Afaik in krav maga the defence against thrusts is a two arm X block that turns into a lock (so the opponent's arm is trapped) and can become a disarm if the conditions are right.
      This obviously relies heavily on the beginning part of the video about the defender predicting the attack and being ready to meet it with the technique, and luck and being close enough in strength and all the usual caveats for hand-to-hand.

    • @ethanhampl1520
      @ethanhampl1520 2 дні тому +4

      @@avatarion 10% can be the difference between a deep stab wound, and having your guts pierced

    • @sgtjoe2008
      @sgtjoe2008 День тому

      you seen only few minutes of years even decades of training, if you had the real FMA skill you'd still be an inmate, kali practitioners already know your typical triple fast stabbing motion. like they always say...if you engage expect to get cut.

  • @Martialartvlogs
    @Martialartvlogs 19 днів тому +26

    This is the video we waited for ❤

  • @robertlyndon9510
    @robertlyndon9510 День тому +1

    Very accurate breakdown- observational awareness, body dynamics and preemptive intuition. The mindset in fluid. Great video guys.

  • @bollockjohnson6156
    @bollockjohnson6156 16 днів тому +7

    04:45 the speed in which he pulled that knife out is heinous

  • @CatDaddySteve
    @CatDaddySteve 16 днів тому +50

    Bruce Lee spoke on film about the subconscious mind will act / react for You in an instant. He suddenly tossed his car keys at the interviewers face the interviewer caught them. Bruce said See you acted instantaneously without thought, combined with training makes You exactly what the teacher here a was also teaching. Bruce Galloway in his Inner Tennis book said I was being chased down a Boulder strewn hill jump & running from Boulder to Boulder so quickly i had no time to think and i was amazingly fast 😊 22:00

  • @kez_the_reaper2657
    @kez_the_reaper2657 17 днів тому +10

    I dismissed that video the first time it came up because it was about knife defence and I more a combat sports guy but omg that was an absolute hidden Gem 💎 just in training methodology
    I completely understand what was being explained the way he made that drill flow was incredible there's bjj coaches and boxing coaches I've met that could use that methodology
    I'm going to try to use that to make a drill to work on head movement and just see how it works out

  • @codywilliams3073
    @codywilliams3073 2 дні тому +1

    I love this guys professional yet laid back way of teaching, id love to be able to take a random crash course with this dude just for the knowledge and POV

  • @mjbartending
    @mjbartending 14 днів тому +8

    Love it! I've been training SD from different positions too (lying, sitting, confined spaces) but I can tell you, running may actually be an option given two parameters :
    1 The mobility of the (possible) attacker (big but waddling? mostly body fat or more muscular? x or bow-legged? ; drunk? etc.)
    2 Your own explosiveness / sprinting capability (do you know you can sprint well? ; are you wearing the right shoes? full or empty stomach? etc.)
    A bouncer I knew (small but stocky guy with great stamina and lean muscle) once found himself attacked by three big burly dudes in the Amsterdam redlight district. Having already gauged their sprinting potential, he decided to bolt. The three sasquatches were all much slower than him PLUS they had very different speeds and stamina. When the bouncer saw the growing distances between them, he waited around the next corner and clocked the nearest one as soon as he appeared. He then literally rinsed and repeated the exact same thing twice and ended up sucker punching all three of them. Shout out to Baba for staying humble while telling me this anecdote about him running for his life. I've incorporated sprinting into my training regime since.

    • @theupson
      @theupson 14 днів тому

      i guess im unclear what your acquaintance had to gain by reinitiating the combat. avoidance is the gold standard of good outcomes.

    • @SmithMaximus
      @SmithMaximus 12 днів тому

      @@theupson "I don't want to just win this fight. I want to win all future fights."

    • @mjbartending
      @mjbartending 11 днів тому +1

      @@theupson I can't look into his mind and I'm not a bouncer who had to return to this door where the same guys would go back to, but I know I would've just keep on running. My job is to get home safe.

  • @angusmatheson8906
    @angusmatheson8906 11 днів тому +4

    Thus is an excellent primer on the basics of self defense. Fantastic.

  • @muttleythedog8935
    @muttleythedog8935 14 днів тому +14

    The AK guy cutout in the background keept catching me off guard.

  • @danielfinney6071
    @danielfinney6071 День тому

    Man, this guys ability to not only flow info in a presentation, but articulate it so well is incredible.

  • @hellomoney333
    @hellomoney333 19 днів тому +17

    I was so skeptical, I was borderline getting annoyed.
    I often forget to set aside my ego and just watch, learn, and study the video.
    This was lovely. I learned a lot. Thank you.

  • @drummerdan709
    @drummerdan709 14 днів тому +5

    That's the best demonstration I've ever seen .

  • @WaveyDaveyStacey
    @WaveyDaveyStacey 14 днів тому +10

    06:32 Intuition is subconscious pattern recognition ❤

  • @warnerbrotherproductions2112
    @warnerbrotherproductions2112 2 дні тому +1

    Ngl I clicked this for background noise while I was brushing my teeth and hair and did not expect to finish it. But this was amazing information that was well worth the watch!

  • @RevWarGuy
    @RevWarGuy 17 днів тому +7

    20:32 - Two guys relate. Two guys become bros.

  • @blackmessi204
    @blackmessi204 2 дні тому +5

    2:36 such a crispy click

  • @joshbeambjj
    @joshbeambjj 19 днів тому +14

    Guy said ecological dynamics, and I was hooked. Super interesting video, thanks guys. (Also side note, I see the 82nd Airborne flag on the wall! That was my unit back in the day...)

  • @deangreen381
    @deangreen381 12 днів тому +4

    thank you very much for sharing this fantastic session!

  • @bkhan777
    @bkhan777 День тому

    He is the absolute definition of the most unassuming deadliest person in the room. Everything about his instructions resonated and made sense. As a trainer of trainers I would be honored to learn from this dude.

  • @ilmarimujunen9180
    @ilmarimujunen9180 19 днів тому +16

    Have seen that. Have felt that. Have dealt with that.
    Never seen the knife but I've seen people get anxious and start indexing their weapons and taking a stance or what he calls blading. Didn't need training to understand what was going on.
    Started talking and talked my self out of it. I think I did fine.

  • @TallGuyProds
    @TallGuyProds 19 днів тому +36

    As a game designer, an educator, and a martial artist I am so happy to have watched this.

    • @Druid_Ignacy
      @Druid_Ignacy 19 днів тому +5

      Hehe same here, this was eye opening

    • @TallGuyProds
      @TallGuyProds 18 днів тому

      @Druid_Ignacy oh cool running into you, what are your poisons? For me it's been indie dev (PC mostly), teaching programming / bit of design, and practicing jujutsu (mostly self defense) alongside bit of karate and aikido 😁

    • @jax3845
      @jax3845 16 днів тому

      Remove the educator part and I would be all the things mentioned in the comment

  • @mb2776
    @mb2776 19 днів тому +24

    In my pencak silat class, even in basic training without knives, we always train right/left and then let our partner decide which side without telling us. That way, we learn to read body signs and train our reaction.

  • @jcblanco4247
    @jcblanco4247 17 годин тому

    One of the best videos on knife defence I've ever seen. This instructor is a true master. Lots of things were learned today. - Very glad to have come across this video

  • @soconapleura
    @soconapleura 19 днів тому +6

    The knife and defense techniques were awesome, but the camarederie overflowing in this video is amazing! I hope they keep in contact, they make a great duo

  • @Miggy367
    @Miggy367 18 днів тому +16

    4:47 that knife draw was lightspeed

    • @Rashomon69
      @Rashomon69 18 днів тому +3

      Bro. I was going to post the same thing. I had never seen that before. It was both amazing and terrifying. It shows just how fast you can lose your life.

  • @SuchNoodle
    @SuchNoodle 12 днів тому +11

    6:10 that's beardism, you guys are just beardists

    • @kevinomahoney
      @kevinomahoney 7 днів тому

      And you are an obvious anti-beardite! SHAME!