FightingArts Estore
Pressure Points
From a medical professional, straight facts on where and how to hit that can save your life.
Stretching
Limber or not, anyone can add height and speed to their kicks with this method.
Calligraphy
For yourself or as a gift, calligraphy is special, unique and lasting.
Karate Uniforms
Look your best. Max snap. low cost & superior crafted: “Peak Performance Gold” 16 oz uniforms.

MOTOBU
Classic book translation. Hard to find. Not in stores.
Who's Online
0 registered (), 23 Guests and 2 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Newest Members
knocktown1, knocktown, Harrysin, gunder, carrycash
22750 Registered Users
Top Posters (30 Days)
cxt 21
iaibear 13
aplant 12
jabber 10
Dobbersky 9
June
Su M Tu W Th F Sa
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30
New Topics
If You Could Teach One Person
by jabber
06/13/13 10:13 AM
Newbies: Ask ANY question about martial arts
by Zombie Zero
06/12/13 11:25 AM
Pressure point training in 2013
by aplant
06/12/13 09:48 AM
Children best Age to begin?
by Dobbersky
06/11/13 08:38 AM
The Respect of your Instructor.
by jabber
06/10/13 04:57 PM
What Can We Do?????
by cxt
06/06/13 11:36 AM
Where Are They Now?
by Dobbersky
05/30/13 08:08 AM
Interview with Aikido Shihan Shigenobu Okumura, Pa
by Chris_Li
05/27/13 12:39 AM
Just curious
by iaibear
04/28/13 11:35 PM
I'm thinking of practising by myself.
by TaekwonDoFan
03/12/13 01:13 AM
Recent Posts
Children best Age to begin?
by cxt
Yesterday at 07:16 PM
Striking/punching bag technique.
by MAGon
Yesterday at 02:16 PM
Pressure point training in 2013
by aplant
Yesterday at 04:46 AM
If You Could Teach One Person
by iaibear
06/13/13 10:33 PM
The Respect of your Instructor.
by Dobbersky
06/13/13 04:58 AM
Value for Money
by jabber
06/12/13 02:30 PM
Newbies: Ask ANY question about martial arts
by Zombie Zero
06/12/13 11:25 AM
Derren Brown One Inch Punch
by aplant
06/12/13 08:53 AM
Karate and ''contact''
by Dobbersky
05/30/13 07:55 AM
Interview with Aikido Shihan Shigenobu Okumura, Pa
by Prizewriter
05/27/13 07:02 AM
Forum Stats
22750 Members
36 Forums
35481 Topics
432057 Posts

Max Online: 307 @ 02/21/13 09:36 AM
Page 6 of 10 < 1 2 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >
Topic Options
#432764 - 06/12/11 04:48 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Shusha]
hope Offline
Member

Registered: 07/12/09
Posts: 149
Loc: Vancouver, B.C.
I'm in the interesting position of agreeing with both Cord and Shusha.

Re Shusha, true that "women are often confronting opponents who are larger and stronger than they are, they are often attacked in isolation from others, they are often attacked by predators whose intent is to punish them, they are usually less experienced than men, they are usually less likely to want to hurt someone, they are more likely to use verbal and emotional strategies"...

Re Cord, "Any social hierarchy is based on a balance of dominance and submission. That is not a gender based balance, its social conditioning and personal psychological make up. "

Combining the two, "That is not NECESSARILY a gender based balance, it's social conditioning and personal psychological make up, combined with the physiological differences in size and strength which make women much more convenient victims, as are smaller and less aggressive men in prison."

Similar to comparing male and female eating habits -- both eat, but social conditioning helps determine food choice, table manners, belching etc., and physiology determines the amount consumed. Eating is eating; to me the differences are more trivial than the similarities in method and function.


Edited by hope (06/12/11 04:53 PM)
_________________________
God grant me a good sword and no use for it. -- Polish proverb

Top
#432766 - 06/12/11 05:30 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Shusha]
Cord Offline
Prolific

Registered: 01/13/05
Posts: 11399
Loc: Cambridge UK.
Originally Posted By: Shusha
Cord, I vehemently disagree with you that there are just as many female perpetrators of domestic violence as there are male


That is not what I said. Physical domestic violence is one possible symptom, or tactic, used within a relationship, by an individual to assert control over their partner as an expression of their psychological issues.

An 'abusive' woman may use jealousy, rage, manipulation, and prey on the percieved insecurities of her male partner in order to gain psychological control and dominance in the relationship. In short, its a form of bullying that seeks to create a situation where the male 'treads on egshells' is not allowed female friends, not allowed to spend extended social periods away from the partnership, and is 'programmed' to behave in a way that every action he takes is in an effort to appease his partner.

Many, many men end up in this situation, and many men have been attacked by partners wielding weapons of opportunity in a rage when such behaviour reaches critical mass.

The pyschological 'breaking' and undermining of a person in an abusive relationship follows a smilar psychological pattern, and timeframe, be the victim the man, or the woman - any unequal relationship defined by fear is abusive.

Quote:
Cord, where did someone say that women are scared and useless?


Its the general held 'wisdom' that a woman will, by default, be inferior to any given random male in a physical confrontation. What interests me is the contradictory mysoginy on Martial arts logic. Run a straw man argument on any given forum in which a big strong man fights a skilled trained smaller man, and due mention of physical advantage will be made, but inevitably, the wisdom 'training will out' will prevail.
Then run the same scenario with a bigger stronger man against a comaparative physicaly weaker female, and suddenly she is helpless, and requires weapons, help, an act of god and a rabbits foot to survive.

My point was not about the lack of ability of women, it was the lack of ability, and taste for violence in the vast majority of 'ordinary' men.

The idea that by virtue of being a male alone, you will be able to deal with violence better than a female, is utterly, utterly ridiculous. Most men live in fear of violence just as much as women. A guy walking home alone in the dead of night on a dark street is every bit as wary as a woman in the same situation. Some may use bravado and body language to try and convince otherwise, but you see it every weekend - the guy on his own, walking in the street (not on the pavement), with imaginary water bottles under both arms, swaggering up the street to his home. He is not 'owning' the road, he is avoiding hedges and blind spots. He is not posturing out of hubris, he is trying to make himself look bigger/stronger to warn off atack.

At the end of the day, any reasonable human being of any gender, is terrified of conflict.
_________________________
Don't let the door hit ya' where the good lord split ya'
http://cord.mybrute.com

Top
#432767 - 06/12/11 05:34 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Shusha]
trevek Offline
Professional Poster

Registered: 05/15/05
Posts: 3331
Loc: Poland
Originally Posted By: Shusha
The motivation of the perpetrators is different with female targets than male targets. So the ideal response in a given encounter might be very different.


Does this not assume that any attack against a woman is automatically sexually/gender based? If an attack is robbery based, is it necessarily different for a man or a woman? Likewise, as domestic violence also takes place against males (with both male and female perpetrators) may not the defence tactics be simlar?

I imagine that for many women the idea that an attack will automatically result in a sexually based attack is perhaps the basis of much SD. Assume any attack is sexually motivated and use this as your defence motivation.
_________________________
See how well I block your punches with my jaw!!

Supporting everyone saying "nuts to cancer"

Top
#432768 - 06/12/11 05:48 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: trevek]
Zach_Zinn Offline
Veteran

Registered: 12/09/07
Posts: 1031
Loc: Olympia, WA
Quote:
The idea that by virtue of being a male alone, you will be able to deal with violence better than a female, is utterly, utterly ridiculous


No one said anything like that.

In fact, I would argue the opposite is true.

The few women i've known who get involved with the "self defense" aspect of MA have a much easier time with it because they already are operating from a mindset of survival rather than confrontation or dominance.

Whereas many men I have known (including probably 80% of male martial artists i've met) literally have trouble understanding the clear difference between an escalated pissing match in front of a bar, trying to teach someone a lesson, and trying to get away from or having to subdue someone who is trying to really do harm to you. that's not to say the pissing match can't turn into one of those..

Self defense with men often becomes about a 'game'where you beat the other guy, whereas it seems like women, by virtue of having to view violence from a different point are easily able to just think about survival and safety.

I don't think that a sexist statement at all, if anything it just points out how stupid and boneheaded most 'self defense' is in martial arts culture, where people have a hard tiome distinguishing between the grown up equivalent of a schoolyard brawl, and an actual assault.

So no one said males can deal with violence better, in fact if you read was written you could easily extrapolate it in the opposite direction - Men can have a tendency to make it worse because they like to get involved in the dominance game.


Edited by Zach_Zinn (06/12/11 05:53 PM)

Top
#432769 - 06/12/11 05:51 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Cord]
trevek Offline
Professional Poster

Registered: 05/15/05
Posts: 3331
Loc: Poland
Originally Posted By: Cord

The idea that by virtue of being a male alone, you will be able to deal with violence better than a female, is utterly, utterly ridiculous. Most men live in fear of violence just as much as women. A guy walking home alone in the dead of night on a dark street is every bit as wary as a woman in the same situation.


A good point. I remember when I was living in Belfast, I had visited a female friend and was heading home. She suggested that my friend and I cut across a pitch black park area. I commented that there was no way in hell i was going across the park... it was dark and I couldn't see who was there (and I have a lovely british accent). She, being an ardent feminist, asked, "So you're scared? Ha! Now you know how every woman feels!" Then she asked, a little incredulous... "Really, are you scared to go across there?" I pointed out that there were many reasons, good and bad, for someone to decide to attack a person walking in a dark place at night 9especially in that town) and to me, it wasn't just a matter of being 'scared', it was a matter of common sense and I'd be practically 'asking for it' if i walked somewhere like that at midnight, whether I was male or female.
_________________________
See how well I block your punches with my jaw!!

Supporting everyone saying "nuts to cancer"

Top
#432771 - 06/12/11 06:04 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: trevek]
Cord Offline
Prolific

Registered: 01/13/05
Posts: 11399
Loc: Cambridge UK.
Originally Posted By: trevek
Does this not assume that any attack against a woman is automatically sexually/gender based?


Precisely. And many 'self defence' classes rely on propogating that fear.

Quote:
If an attack is robbery based, is it necessarily different for a man or a woman?


Not at all. I would go further though, and say that the core tenets of self defence run across not only genders, but also motivation of the attacker.

As an example, a victim's primary goals in their situation are:

1. Avoidance (ideal) through sound personal choices in regards to travel arrangements and environments frequented.
2. To prevent/limit physical contact and injury with/from their attacker.
3. To maintain an escape path, remain on their feet, and to flee as soon as possible
4. To do everything possible to alert others to their plight.
5. To maintain awareness and take in details of the attacker to pass on to law enforcement.

Now, as a basic framework, is that any more, or less relevant to a male being stalked on a footpath and attacked for his new 'smart phone', or a woman accosted by a sexual predator?

Quote:
Likewise, as domestic violence also takes place against males (with both male and female perpetrators) may not the defence tactics be simlar?


In both cases, the only answer is the cessation of the relationship, and distance between victim and abuser, with intervention by authorities where necessary.

Quote:
I imagine that for many women the idea that an attack will automatically result in a sexually based attack is perhaps the basis of much SD.


Yep, and for men, it is never factored into their scenarios, yet it happens. I had to deal with a guy who had been beaten and gang-raped in the toilet of the pub I was working in at the time. He needed hospital treatment, the men responsible were held at the scene, but released when the victim refused to press charges due to the stigma of the event. He just went ahead with not sexual assault charges. Women are not the only victims of abuse and sexual assault.
_________________________
Don't let the door hit ya' where the good lord split ya'
http://cord.mybrute.com

Top
#432772 - 06/12/11 06:04 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Zach_Zinn]
choonbee Offline
Member

Registered: 02/26/11
Posts: 195
Originally Posted By: Zach_Zinn
[quote]The few women i've known who get involved with the "self defense" aspect of MA have a much easier time with it because they already are operating from a mindset of survival rather than confrontation or dominance.

Self defense with men often becomes about a 'game'where you beat the other guy, whereas it seems like women, by virtue of having to view violence from a different point are easily able to just think about survival and safety.

I don't think that a sexist statement at all, if anything it just points out how stupid and boneheaded most 'self defense' is in martial arts culture, where people have a hard tiome distinguishing between the grown up equivalent of a schoolyard brawl, and an actual assault.

So no one said males can deal with violence better, in fact if you read was written you could easily extrapolate it in the opposite direction - Men can have a tendency to make it worse because they like to get involved in the dominance game.


Agreed.
My girlfriend holds a second degree black belt in Isshinryu, and even though she has the skills to dominate, her mentality is to get away from confrontation if at all possible.
Guys tend to let their egos get in the way, especially when there's women around.
_________________________
Insert profound martial arts quotes or tough guy phrases here.

Top
#432775 - 06/12/11 10:08 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Cord]
Shusha Offline
Member

Registered: 04/30/11
Posts: 37
Cord, you said:

"Jealousy, the undermining of self confidence, and control through behaviour and violence are just as common with women being the perpetrators and their male partners the victims."

I know of no statistical information which supports this statement. I do acknowledge that men also experience relationship abuse. I acknowledge that it is vastly under-reported, significantly more so than for women who experience abuse which is also under-reported. I acknowledge that services for male targets of abuse are very difficult to find. I acknowledge that abuse is abuse and that emotional, social and economic abuse is just as significant as physical violence.

However, you seem to be arguing that female perpetrators\male targets happen with the same frequency as male perpetrators\female targets and I do not believe there is statistical evidence to support this. Also, I believe that male targets experience relationship abuse differently than female targets do. Not that it is less painful, but that there are differences.

Top
#432776 - 06/12/11 10:14 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Shusha]
Shusha Offline
Member

Registered: 04/30/11
Posts: 37
Zach: I totally agree with this statement. Exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about.

"The few women i've known who get involved with the "self defense" aspect of MA have a much easier time with it because they already are operating from a mindset of survival rather than confrontation or dominance."

Top
#432777 - 06/12/11 10:28 PM Re: Female fighting [Re: Shusha]
Shusha Offline
Member

Registered: 04/30/11
Posts: 37
"Does this not assume that any attack against a woman is automatically sexually/gender based? If an attack is robbery based, is it necessarily different for a man or a woman?"

~80% of physical assaults perpetrated on women are by someone she knows, most often her boyfriend, husband, ex-boyfriend or ex-husband, father or other male relative (in roughly that order). Are these based on sex or gender? I think it would be more correct to say they are based on societal and cultural expectations of male and female roles, but yeah, they are. So, do I automatically assume that any attack against a woman is based on sex or gender? No. But a large majority clearly are.

If we were to take a more gender-neutral situation, such as robbery, I still believe you would find differences in the both the most likely response of male vs. female targets and the best responses of male vs. female targets.

Top
Page 6 of 10 < 1 2 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >




Untitled Document
Martial Arts Supplies
Padded Striking Target
Padded Striking Target $12.95 And see the rest of our focus targets



Action Ads
1.5 Million Plus Page Views
Monthly
Only $89
Details

Stun Guns
Variety of stun gun devices for your protection

Buy Pepper Spray
Worry about your family when you’re not around? Visit us today to protect everything you value.

Koryu.com
Accurate information on the ancient martial traditions of the Japanese samurai

C2 Taser
Protect yourself and loved ones from CRIME with the latest C2 Taser citizen model. Very effective.

 

 



Unbreakable Unbrella

krav maga