Someone got in my face today and invaded my personal space and I had to be humbled because I didn't know what the other person would do and I don't know how to fight 😊
Glad you managed to walk away safe from that. This is why people need to train not only the physical component but also the psychological aspect of conflict/violence. If you have no experience of this the brain will do it's best for you in that moment which it thinks will give the best outcome. This can be fortunate or not so much . Get yourself to a class so that you can be in control of your options and therefore the outcome.
Of course. Anyone you don't know should be not that close. That's the point of the video. Create and maintain a gap. If they back off great, if they persist then you may have to escalate to preemption.
Is this physical self defence or social status? Seems good, but nobody has the right to cross the line. Should the onus be on you, just because you didn't look at them for long enough?
I'm really not sure what you mean about social status? Effective self defence incorporates physical and non physical skills. Crossing the line - are you referring to the drill at the end of the video?
@@kravmagawest Not the drill, just the rudeness of people. The feeling of being singled out or too easy to mess around. I guess it's probably those rude types who overanalyse, and some very strangely indeed. But it is not always tolerable for people to push it (right to the edge of the limit) with you. That upset and disorientation, and ironic guilt.
I really hope this channel makes it big in the long run. Adding a flexiable structure to a chaotic situation is a huge benefit
Thank you very much!
This is the stuff missing from a lot of Krav Maga classes in my opinion maybe than we think do it lol
@@jasongnrfan7374 completely 💯 agree.
Daaaamn great content!!!! Brilliant video! And Brilliant teacher!!! Proud of you Harj!
Thank you bro.. Thats means a lot!
Great description and teaching of such an important subject thats often not looked into enough 🙏🏻
Thank you.. It's so important!
Instructor: You might need to get loud.
Students: *instantly start yelling curse words at each other*
Uncontrollable sods 😂
Love the content. Valuable info with easy to understand & effective analogies. Cheers 👍🏾
Thank you. Much appreciated!
Great stuff some of my students will not do the role play stuff I love it
Introduce it slowly, use loud music to hide the shouting so people feel less embarrassed . 🙏
@@kravmagawest I will do cheers
Brilliant, as usual.
Thank you 🙏
Great Advice
Thank you 🙏
Someone got in my face today and invaded my personal space and I had to be humbled because I didn't know what the other person would do and I don't know how to fight 😊
Glad you managed to walk away safe from that. This is why people need to train not only the physical component but also the psychological aspect of conflict/violence.
If you have no experience of this the brain will do it's best for you in that moment which it thinks will give the best outcome. This can be fortunate or not so much .
Get yourself to a class so that you can be in control of your options and therefore the outcome.
@@kravmagawestwhere are you based mukka I fancy a go at this
Thankyou steve 👍
@@stesmith7040 we've got classes in Telford, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton. Check out www.kravmagawest.co.uk
Is this framing?
Not sure I've ever heard it called that. Using a fence, maintaining/monitoring the gap, keeping the fxxker at arms length 😄
if someone gets this close in your face, you should have the right to knock em out
Of course. Anyone you don't know should be not that close.
That's the point of the video.
Create and maintain a gap. If they back off great, if they persist then you may have to escalate to preemption.
Is this physical self defence or social status? Seems good, but nobody has the right to cross the line. Should the onus be on you, just because you didn't look at them for long enough?
I'm really not sure what you mean about social status?
Effective self defence incorporates physical and non physical skills.
Crossing the line - are you referring to the drill at the end of the video?
@@kravmagawest Not the drill, just the rudeness of people. The feeling of being singled out or too easy to mess around. I guess it's probably those rude types who overanalyse, and some very strangely indeed. But it is not always tolerable for people to push it (right to the edge of the limit) with you. That upset and disorientation, and ironic guilt.
I just whare a mask and stand 2meter away.
Might work for some 🤷
@@kravmagawest 👍