I once had a BJJ (Brazillian Jui Jitsu) Apologist suggest to me that I should be grateful that I have had a year of BJJ training, because the rest of my several years of mostly full contact martial arts training had been a huge waste of my life. Considering BJJ's extremely hostile attitude towards other martial arts over the years, I would like to address this extremely misguided notion here and now.
In the course of my security-related professional responsibilities from 2007 to 2017 I was attacked several times on the job and never injured, primarily due to my martial arts training I received in the late 80's through mid 90's. Let's look at what happened, and how using BJJ instead would have changed the outcome.
Veteran
A woman was trying to get into a car while a man who she did not appear to know was yelling sexual insults at her. I approached him asking "do you know her" and he proceeded to throw punches at me for a half of a city block on the side walk before he decided to walk away. I used footwork and head movement from Kickboxing and Aikido to avoid his strikes while staying close enough to him so he would focus on me, so the woman could drive away. I later found out that this attacker was a veteran who was having side effects from back pain medication mixed with alcohol. There were other miscreants observing the situation, but they did not get involved.
Let's look at what BJJ would have had me do instead:
- When he threw punches at me, I would have dove for his legs and taken him to the ground.
- I would have held him in a dominant position in mount, or gone for a submission.
- Either way this would have injured him knowing what we found out later about his health problems.
- I would have had to spend a lot more time explaining to the police what happened, and I would have been at risk legally, with possible assault charges.
- I would have been let go from my job.
- When the other miscreants saw me holding him down, they would have most likely moved in to help him. In that area miscreants usually carry improvised weapons for self defense.
- I would have ran straight directly into the Shoe Ninja for the fastest possible takedown.
- I would have held the Shoe Ninja in a dominant position or gone for a submission.
- The person for whom I had a professional responsibility to protect during a mental health episode would have kept on running beyond my line of sight while I was trying to grapple the Shoe Ninja.
- Again I would have been out witnessed, I was not popular in that neighborhood and there were other people watching, so the legal outcome for me could have had severe consequences.
- I would have lost my job.
- Possible risk for needle exposure was a known-known at that specific location.
I once asked a pedestrian to stop loitering in bushes on a length of sidewalk I was responsible for. He was a tall, blonde muscular young man, who's response (probably because of his simultaneous stimulant intake) was to march straight at me trying to grab or hit me. I used Kickboxing and weapon sparring footwork to keep a tree between the two of us as I continued to explain the neighborhood rules and expectations to him. He eventually got distracted and I was able to run away without getting manhandled by this guy (or having to go Mike Tyson on him and/or shut him down with leg kicks.)
Let's look at what BJJ would have had me do instead:
- When he came at me, I would have changed levels for a take down.
- He was a superior physical specimen to myself, so what kind of dominant position or submission I might have gotten with my two stripe white belt (1 year of casual BJJ training) is highly questionable.
- Hopefully I would have gotten a dominant position, but this guy had been to the gym before. The odds are that me being on the ground with this guy would have been really bad for my physical safety.
- Again the witnesses in this area were hostile towards me, and in this case there were many witnesses. If I had hurt him bad enough to actually stop him from being a threat to me, assault charges would have been likely.
- I would have lost my job.
- When his back was exposed, I would have used a sacrifice take down.
- I would have nailed side control with this take down.
- I would have been fired before I before I passed to mount.
In this situation BJJ would have taken a situation where I got a stern verbal warning, into a situation where I would have been instead unemployed all together.
Xanax Aficionado
One time I was assigned to a neighborhood near numerous medical institutions where anti-anxiety medications were constantly traded illicitly outside, causing various public health problems. Word on the street was some were not pleased by the reduction in trade I had caused with my enthusiastic presence and optimism for the future of the community.
One day a guy walked up to me and pulled out a knife. He more stumbled towards me than walked, and I could see he might not be able to stumble his way down the street least bit make a serious attack at me with the knife, because he was just too benzo-impaired. Using the distancing I learned in Filipino Martial Arts and other weapon sparring, I stayed close enough to retain his attention but too far for him to hit me with a single lunge.
As he looked down at his knife and back up at me, I decided to use a Jedi mind trick, O' Sensei style. I commanded him that "you have to put that thing away right now, or else you are going to get into a whole lot of trouble!" I pointed my finger directing him to put his knife back into his pocket, and used full body language to demonstrate that I actually expected him to do this. He did, he put the knife back in his pocket and stumbled away.
Let's look at what BJJ would have had me do instead:
- Impale my jugular vein on his knife as I try to get a take down.
- Intercept this guy in the middle of the street, attempting a take down.
- I would have been at risk of getting hit with the bat, but I think I could have dove in and grabbed an ankle and put him on the ground with my shoulder before he got me with the bat, but it would have been risky.
- Diving in on the pavement like that would have been risky also, because asphalt is not a mat.
- Holding up traffic on a busy street before the sun comes up is dangerous also, we could have easily been hit by a large vehicle while we tussled.
- There are legal consequences for getting in avoidable fights that hold up traffic.
- I would have been fired.
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