Tag: pressure point fighting
Gaining Control: Voice box Hold
by on Jul.03, 2009, under Hand to Hand Scenarios, Self Defense for Women
This technique is used regular by police officers and is a great way to pacify an attacker and gain control over them. Basically it just involves using your thumb and forefinger to grab and apply pressure to either side of the voice box. This is easier to do on men, because it is so easy to find the right place just by going either side of the adam’s apple, but it does also work on women. You can find the correct place on yourself by running your thumb one side of your voice box and your finger the other side, then gently pushing inwards and then squeezing your fingers lightly together so that the tips of your thumb and forefinger push in behind it. You really don’t need to push hard when doing this to cause pain, and more importantly to make it very clear to them that you can cause serious injury by applying more force. The psychological effect of this technique is perhaps even stronger than the physical effect, as it is a very unpleasant and scary feeling. The only weakness of this technique is that your opponent can get out of it by pulling backwards, so you need to either have a firm grip on them with your other hand, or have them backed aginst something so that they can’t back away further.
Multiple Opponents and Pressure Point Fighting
by on May.03, 2009, under uncategorized
I recently signed up to a website called HubPages that lets you create your own pages on any subject you like and I have been getting quite into it, so here are a couple of the pages that I created which I though readers of this blog might be interested to take a look at: How To win A Fight Againnst Multiple Opponents and Pressure Point Fighting
Finger Strikes
by on Mar.27, 2009, under General Principles, Hand to Hand Scenarios
Finger strikes can be amongst the most devastatingly effective dirty fighting techniques, suitable to use only for the most dangerous street fighting situations, but you need to know what your doing or you will only end up hurting yourself more than them.
To perform a finger strike you should hold your hand flat with the fingers pressed tightly together. The classic technique that everyone would think of is a jab to the eye. It is worth stating again that this should only be used in real emergencies. If someone is just pushing you around and intimidating you and hasn’t got really violent, and you react out of fear with a technique like this and end up blinding them, you could seriously regret it. With martial arts knowledge comes a greater responsibility for your actions than might otherwise be expected of you. This jab to the eye is fairly simple to do but you should remember two things - firstly if you miss the eye and strike the forehead or cheek bone you won’t hurt them at all and could well break your fingers, and secondly it doesn’t require much force to do a greeat deal of damage. For these reasons it is best not to jab out quickly, but to reach out in a very controlled manner and only speed it up and add power at the last moment, when your fingers are already just in front of the target.
Another good target is the juggular notch, which is the small indentation at the base of the throut, underneath the adam’s apple and between the two sides of the collar bone. Again accuracy is very important and unless yo are highly trained with this kind of technique it is actually best to place the middle finger into this notch and then push hard with as much of an explosive movement as you can. rather than actually striking. This is one of the best techniques to use if your attacker is very close and you need to push them away to get the space to escape or to stop them from doing something (like if they are strangling you, for example).
A lesser known but equally effective finger strike is the the armpit. You do have to be sure that it is accessible because using it against an opponent with a thick heavy coat or something on would be ineffective, but a quick jab to the lymph glands and soft flesh of the armpit, with all the force focussed into the small area of a finger tip, can be excruciatingly painful, will temporarily reduce the effective strength and range of movement of the arm, and if done well is quite capable of stunning an opponent into complete innaction for a couple of seconds. Although it is less likely with this technique that you will miss and strike against a bone or other solid area it is still important to recognise that if your fingers are bent back violently in doing this then you will get hurt. Most people are capable of an effective strike without much danger of hurting themselves simply because you a strike doesn’t need to be full strength to be effective, but you should be aware that a full strength strike would be quite likely to at least strain a tendon or ligament in the finger, which can be very painful. If you are willing to put in a little bit of training them finger tip press ups can quite easily build strength in both the tendons and ligaments so that you can perform more powerful finger strikes. If you can build it up so that you can do 50 finger-tip push ups in one go, then you will have the finnger strength to be able to strike against anything other than the solid bone of somewhere like the forehead without worrying about hurting yourself. If you are in reasonably good shape then 3 training sessions per week for a few months should be enough to build up to this level.





