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DEFEND Yourself
YOU RSELF Scientific Personal Defense
Armond H. Seidler
The University of New Mexico
f
ER
o bn HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY BOSTON
Dallas Geneva, Illinois Hopewcll, New Jersey
Palo Alto LondonPhotography by Dick Skrondahl
Copyright © 1978 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. No part of
this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any infor-
mation storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the
publisher.
Printed in the U.S.A.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 77-79405
ISBN: 0-395-25822-7
This book is dedicated to the late
Dr. H. E. “Hek”’ Kenney: scholar,
teacher, coach, leader, fighter and friend.Contents
on
PREFACE xi
INTRODUCTION 1
THE SEIDLER SYSTEM OF PERSONAL DEFENSE 7
Stability 9 Levers 10 Motion 11
THE SKILLS OF PERSONAL DEFENSE 13
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SKILLS 13
CLASSES OF SKILLS 16
RELATED CONCEPTS 18
BASIC TERMS 20
THE ART OF FALLING 21
TYPES OF FALLS 23
Rolling Falls 23 Flat Falls 27
ACTION AFTER THE FALL: THE FIGHTING POSITION 31
THE BODY AS A WEAPON 36
VITAL AREAS OF THE BODY 37
TYPES OF BLOWS 37
COMMON IMPLEMENTS AS WEAPONS 46
FUNDAMENTAL PERSONAL DEFENSE SKILLS 53
BASIC STANCES 55
Standing Stance 55 Ground Fighting Stance 56
WRIST RELEASE 57
vill
DEFENSE AGAINST BEARHUGS 59
THE FRONT KNEE CLIP 71
BREAKING THE SIDE HEADLOCK 71
Momentum Roll 74 Pull in Your Ears 74
THE FLYING MARE 75
THE BACK FLIP §1
THE WRISTBREAKERS 81
The Front Wristbreaker 83 The Rear Wristbreaker 86
TRIPPING AN OPPONENT 92
The Outside Trip 93 Outside Reverse Wristlock 93
The Rear Knee Clip 94 Upside-down Reverse
Wristlock 98
THE REVERSE ARMLOCK 100
ADVANCED PERSONAL DEFENSE SKILLS = 103
THE FRONT HEADLOCK 103
THE HIPLOCK 106
COUNTERHIPLOCK 110
COUNTER AFTER THE HIPLOCK 112
GROUND FIGHTING TECHNIQUES 114
The Knee and Ankle Trip 115 The Double Ankle and
Crotch Trip 117
NECKBREAKERS 117
The Rear Neckbreaker 118 The Front Neckbreaker 119
The Jawbreaker 120
THE REAR CHOKE 123
THE WRISTLOCKS 124
The Pick Up Reverse Wristlock 125 The Reverse
Wristlock from the Bottom 129 The Arm Scissors 129
The Wristlock on the Foot (Outside) 131 The
Wristlock on the Foot (Inside) 131 The Double
Wristlock 132
COUNTER TO A KICK AT THE GROIN 139
THE STEP OVER TOEHOLD 142
COUNTER TO A KICK TO YOUR SIDE 145
COUNTER TO A KICK TO YOUR HEAD 146
THE OVER SCISSORS 146
THE FRONT CHOKE 146
THE CHICKEN WING 151
THE COLLAR AND CROTCH SLAM 152
THE SHOULDER DISLOCATOR 156
DEFENSE AGAINST THE BOXER 160
ContentsPreface
This book was written to meet the express needs of the
many people in this country who are concerned about their safety
and who want protection in their homes, on the streets, and every
place that they go. Defend Yourself is intended to present the best
techniques for self-defense, described in a logical order, from
simple concepts to advanced applications. The photographs show
people of both sexes, with a wide divergence in age, demonstrat-
ing the various skills in a number of natural settings. These
illustrations should make it easy for any reader to identify with the
text. Supporting material is provided that, it is hoped, will help
the student develop an insight into the problems of personal
defense.
The book offers a complete presentation of self-defense tech-
niques. By selecting those techniques best suited to the individ-
ual’s personality and to the time he or she is willing to devote to
practicing, the student can develop a personal system of defense.
It is possible to master all of the skills presented, and a number of
people have done so. But it is also possible to select a lesser
number, concentrate on them, and still become a very proficient
personal defender.
Defend Yourself is intended to be the definitive work about
self-defense. It is different from other works in the field because of
its broader scope, the practicability of its techniques, and the
simplicity of the presentations. The Seidler system of personal
defense is based on the principles of physical education, kinesiol-
ogy, and biomechanics. It is not concerned with tradition, art,
ritual, or foreign terminology
This book is designed for the ordinary man or woman who
9 DEFENSES AGAINST WEAPONS 166
DEFENSES AGAINST KNIVES AND CLUBS 167
The Reverse Wristlock as a Counter 169 The Outside
Reverse Wristlock 169 The Rear Wristbreaker 176
The Front Wristbreaker 177 Use of a Stick to Counter a
Knife 187
DEFENSE AGAINST A CHAIN 190
PISTOL DISARMING 191
Front Pistol Disarm 193 Rear Pistol Disarm (Gun
Low) 196 Rear Pistol Disarm (Gun High) 199
10 PRISONER CONTROL METHODS 206
COME ALONGS 206.
The Lip Leader 206 TheCheekwalker 206 Collar and
Crotch 206 Hammerlock and Hair 207
THE INDIAN DEATH LOCK 211
POSITIONS FOR PRISONER SEARCH 213
11 PERSONAL DEFENSE AND THE LAW 215,
12 FITNESS FOR PERSONAL DEFENSE 219
WARM UP 219
EXERCISES 220
Running and Jogging 220 Skipping Rope 220 Push-
ups 220 Bent-knee Sit-ups 223 Bridging 223
Alternate Toe Touching 225 Body Rotation 225
13. GENERAL ADVICE 227
APPENDIX A: SEIDLER'S LAWS = 231
APPENDIX B: COMMON QUESTIONS ABOUT PERSONAL
DEFENSE 236
APPENDIX C: GUIDELINES FOR DEFENSE 240
Contents ix1. Introduction
The United States Declaration of Independence states: “We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created cqual,
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of
Happiness.”
It is my strong conviction that society should protect these
rights for every man, woman, and child. If it cannot provide such
guarantees to all—and the over one million assaults per year
indicates its inability to do so—individuals are entitled to provide
for their own welfare. If people are concerned about the personal
safety of their families, friends, and themselves, they have the
right to learn and use techniques that allow them the rights to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
My purpose in writing this book is to give teachers and stu-
dents the best knowledge of personal defense that I can contrib-
ute. I hope that no one is ever forced to fight, but I also hope that
anyone who is will be able to defend himself or herself against the
barbarians in our society. As Teddy Roosevelt said, “To be pre-
pared for war is the most effective means to promote peace.”
Throughout history, people have been interested in self-
defense because men, women, and children in most societies
needed protection that the society was frequently unable to pro-
vide. Culturally it has usually been the man’s role to defend
himself and his family. It has often been a boy’s secret dream to
defeat a bully with his bare hands or rescue a fair maiden in
distress.
wishes to learn self-defense but who has little or no background in
that type of activity. It should also be of value to military or police
personnel who wish to learn to fight more effectively. In addition,
the text may be used by a teacher who wants to help a group of
students—of any age level—to learn to defend themselves. The
material is presented in such a way thal the teacher can select
particular skills in any order desired.
It appears that the time has come in America for the provision
of organized public instruction in personal defense through phys-
ical education programs in secondary schools and colleges and
through social agencies or other organizations. Defend Yourself is
intended to provide the necessary information for those who wish
to teach or learn self-defense.
I hope that after reading this book you will be motivated to
take the time and make the effort necessary to acquire the skill,
savvy, and determination to defend yourself. | know that you can
if you will. A great number of my former students are quite
capable of doing so.
I firmly believe that everyone—man, woman, and child—has
the right to live unmolested, unintimidated, and free from fear. If
the information contained in this book helps in some measure to
contribute to this goal, then I will be satisfied.
I wish to express my appreciation to the following people who
reviewed the manuscript: Jerry Wyness, San Francisco State Uni-
versity; Roy Schroeder of Memphis State University; and Frank
Bauer, University of Northern Colorado.
J would also like to thank Mrs. Kay Drummond, Mrs. Sherri
Johnson Galbreth, Miss Zoe Haaland, Miss Cecily McMahan, Mr.
Mike Solomon, Mr. Tony Sandoval, and my children, Kim, Todd
and Toni, who all posed for the illustrations. Kim Seidler con-
tributed greatly by criticizing the manuscript, doing the original
drawings, and making numerous valuable suggestions as the book
developed. My sincere thanks to Mrs. Jean Stebner for her valuable
help in the preparation of the manuscript.
A. H.S.
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: Laws governing the actions people may take
in defending themselves vary from state to state. Readers are
advised to consult their particular state’s laws. Neither the author
nor the publisher intend any of the statements made in Defend
Yourself to be construed as advocating disregard of the law.
Prefaceclasses in personal defense. In the past fifteen years these have
been coeducational, and in recent years considerably more than
half the students have been women. Some of the very best per-
formers were women.
With the growth of public concern about crime, particularly
crime against the individual, 1 have been called on to conduct
personal defense workshops for teachers, many of them over sixty
years old, and a good number of them female. Since personal
defense emphasizes knowledge, precision, and execution, people
don‘t have to be handicapped by their age.
For some reason, people have questioned the propriety of
teaching a method of fighting, even for self-defense, to students in
secondary schools and colleges. Such instruction is justified
because no one is considered educated unless he or she can defend
self, family, and property from an unprovoked attack. Students are
taught to respect the laws and the rights of others. They are taught
to avoid a fight if possible, but to fight successfully in defense of
what they consider important if they cannot avoid fighting.
Students who take such a course are much less likely to be
involved in confrontations. There appear to be two main reasons.
(1) Because they are aware of the risks they face, students who take
personal defense manage to stay out of trouble better than
untrained persons. (2) The abilities they have acquired increase
their self-confidence and appear to make them less attractive
targets for muggers and hoodlums.
One of the intangible benefits that often accrues to the trained
individual is an aura of self-confidence, which distinguishes the
really capable fighter. When men and women become excellent
personal defense performers, opponents can frequently sense that
it would be unwise to tangle with them.
A number of years ago I observed an incident that demon-
strates this point. A gray-haired, middle-aged, relatively small
man became involved in a fight with three lumberjacks, each
larger and younger than he. After attempting to talk his way out of
the fight, the man said to the three, “I’m sorry that you insist on
fighting, but if you want, Ill guess we'll have to. However, | want
to give you a little advice. I’m an expert in street fighting, and you
three will have a better chance to get me if you all rush me
together. I would like to warn you, however, that I'll break the first
leg or arm I put my hands on.” The three tough lumberjacks, who
were often involved in fights, sensed that this was not the right
guy to attack, and they left.
Introduction
Developing the skill to protect oneself and the weak was fre-
quently a steppingstone to social success. Often this skill pro-
duced a noticeable increase in confidence and poise and, as a
result, a significant change in social behavior. Today, women are
called on to defend themselves, as men used to be (and still are).
Many good men and women hope that we can live in a society
in which each person is treated with respect, kindness, and cour-
tesy. The problem is that nowhere in the civilized world have we
been able to build such a society. Until that wonderful day when
we can, all individuals, men and women, adults and children,
must be prepared to protect themselves and their own.
It may seem strange to talk about the individual’s need for self-
defense, but it has never been a more significant concern than it is
today. Although we are at one of the highest levels of civilization
in history, it seems that the individual is more at the mercy of
criminals than ever before. Crime rates are the highest in the
history of this country. Murders, rapes, assaults, robberies, and
burglaries are constantly increasing, and the average man or
woman is the innocent victim
Many people maintain that a person living in civilized society
has no need for any knowledge of or skill in personal defense.
These people cite the large number of police officers and the great
amounts of money spent in taxes for the protection of citizens.
A citizen should be able to rely on the law enforcement agen-
cies for protection, but it is obvious that we simply do not have
enough police to go around. Every day we read of assaults on
innocent people on the streets, in their homes, in their work
places, in their cars, and in parks. Those who say that we don’t
need to know how to defend ourselves are wrong. A glance at any
daily newspaper furnishes adequate proof of this. It is true that
the law of averages is with you; only a small percentage of the
population ever have to defend themselves. But it is small help to
call on the statistical average when you are the one who is being
attacked.
With my experience in working with the combat infantry
soldier, one might think that my expertise would not be useful for
ordinary nonmilitary men and women. I have been teaching
personal defense to soldiers and civilians for more than thirty-five
years, and in that time, I have discovered that the basic skills of
scientific personal defense are helpful to both.
Participation in personal defense activities is not limited to any
group, nor should it be. For many years I have taught college
Defend yourselfpersonal endeavors, and in many other areas of life by saying that
they just don’t have the time. There is no easy way to become
good at anything. Daydreaming will not help, and wishing will
not make it so. Everyone knows that if you really want something,
if it's really important, then you can find the time for it. Your
ability to defend yourself will be directly related to the time and
the effort you invest in learning personal defense.
Ihave often been asked why I teach personal defense. | do it for
three reasons. (1) I think it is very important that people who want
to learn to defend themselves have the opportunity to do so, andT
want to help as much as I can. (2) Maintaining a high skill level
requires regular practice, and teaching classes allows me to keep
my skills honed and polished. (3) It’s great fun, both for the
participants and for me.
Many books and manuals have been written on the subject of
self-defense, a number of them relating to the oricntal arts such as
judo, jujitsu, and karate. Unfortunately, many of these books and
the courses they represent contain a great deal of misleading
information. They show techniques that don’t work or can’t be
learned by the average person, and they are presented in a mysti-
cal fashion. They pretend to encompass mysterious knowledge
that gives the individual supernatural powers. This is simply not
the case. Self-defense ultimately depends on knowledge and skill
that can be used when you are placed in jeopardy.
Knowing how to use the techniques of personal defense is
nothing more than a form of personal life and accident insurance.
Although many people maintain that they have never had a fight
or have never been attacked, many men, women, and children
have been, are being, and will be brutally assaulted. Many per-
sons carry insurance on their automobiles for long periods of time
and never have an accident. The fact that they have never had an
accident does not prevent them from carrying insurance against
the possibility of accident. Some say that it is unladylike to fight,
but it is even more unladylike to be beaten, raped, robbed, or
murdered. You may also have heard someone say that if you are
attacked you will “naturally’” know how to defend yourself. No
one “naturally” knows how to defend himself or herself. In fact, as
you learn the skills of personal defense, you will discover that the
natural reaction is invariably a wrong move. Usually it com-
pounds your problem and strengthens the effect of the assailant’s
attack on you.
Yet another common belief is that strength will decide the
Tutroduction
Skilled performers develop such an aura for several reasons, all
related to constant practice. (1) Because of the constant repetition,
trained individuals lose any fear they may have felt for the activ-
ity. (2) Familiarity with the activity and improvement in perfor-
mance breed confidence which performers feel and opponents
sense. (3) Many athletes find that if their practices are hard, the
game is frequently easier than the practices. Similarly, experts in
personal defense regard a real fight with relative equanimity.
This is not to suggest that the trained individual wants to fight
or would lose an opportunity to avoid a confrontation. The skilled
performer, after making every effort to stay out of trouble, faces
the possibility of defensive action with the confidence acquired
through hours of practice and high levels of skill attained.
Students of personal defense should keep in mind that great
skill is necessary for success. Skill is the result of hours of practice.
We should not be satisfied with merely knowing how to perform a
wristbreaker or a double wristlock. It takes only a few minutes to
learn the mechanics of several offensive skills, so it is casy for the
uninitiated to develop a false security because of this knowledge.
Knowledge of the mechanics of the trigger squeeze does not make
a sharpshooter. This comes only from day after day spent in target
practice. The same is true of self-defense skills. Each skill must be
developed to a fine art before it is of any use.
I want to stress that reading this text will not immediately
qualify anyone in personal defense. A little knowledge is worse
than none at all. Although you may feel after aticmpting these
skills a few times that you have mastered them, this is far from the
case. Successful use of many of these techniques calls for practice
and more practice, until you can instinctively execute any or all of
the skills with top speed and precision.
The skills described in this book are not limited to the situa-
tions illustrated. With a little thought and experimentation, you
can find many positions from which you can use any of these
offenses. For example, you can use the double wristlock as a
counteroffense against several different modes of attack or for
direct assault. It is also valuable as a means of turning the tables
after you have been thrown to the ground. In fact, those who are
Proficient with the double wristlock and use it a great deal in
practice contests contend that it is difficult to imagine a position
from which it cannot be used. The same is true to a greater or
lesser degree for the other offenses described in this text.
Many people rationalize their failure in business, in sports, in
Defend yourselfissue. The weak individual thinks, “Since I am not very strong or
fit, the chances are good that I will not be able to defend myself
anyway.” If you really feel this way and find yourself under attack,
you might just as well submit and hope that you will not suffer
serious bodily harm or injury. With such an attitude, prayer is
your best bet.
If you believe that learning to defend yourself takes more effort
than it is worth, you should realize that your life or well-being, or
the life and well-being of aloved one, may be at stake. It will then
be too late to take out an insurance policy or to acquire the skills
that you may so badly need. If you are an intelligent person who
thinks seriously about the problem of crime and your relationship
to it, you must come to realize that mow is the time for you to
prepare for the emergency that you may face.
I wrote this book because | feel that everyone should have the
opportunity to learn self-defense, and I hope that I can help many
teachers and individuals achieve that goal. Some day it may be
possible for everyone to do anything without interference. Until
that day comes, let’s prepare to defend ourselves.
The ideal motto for a peace-loving citizen might be the one
found on the first American flag, shown in Figure 1-1—a coiled
snake and the legend “Dont Tread On Me”!
DONT TREAD ON ME
FIGURE 1-1 EARLY AMERICAN FLAG (Courtesy of U.S. Navy)
Defend yourself
2. The Seidler System
of Personal Defense
The development of the Seidler system of personal defense
is the result of many years of study, practice, and trial-and-error
testing against strong competition. This system is practically and
scientifically sound. Each offense, defense, or counteroffense is
based on a thorough knowledge of human structure and its limita-
tions. The system guarantees that a skill is effective in a combative
situation if it is properly executed. The skills presented in this text
will work for anyone who performs them correctly and in the
correct situation.
The human machine has areas of strength and of weakness.
Knowledge of these areas allows trained individuals to pit their
strength against their opponent’s weakness. Further, knowing
which areas are weak and vulnerable enables a person to lessen
exposure of his or her own weak areas. A knowledge of the
function and range of motion of each of the joints of the body is
also very important. Many of the skills demonstrated here are
intended to force joints into positions for which they were not
designed. Obviously, applying force in the wrong direction can
damage a joint severely, resulting in dislocation or bone fracture
The Seidler systern of personal defense is the outcome of my
lifetime interest in the combative arts. I have studied jujitsu, judo,
karate, wrestling, alley fighting, commando tactics, and so on. 1
carefully analyzed the skills taught in these disciplines and
actually tried them out on the mat. J also tested them scientifically.
As a professional in physical education, I had to learn much about
human anatomy; kinesiology, the study of movement patterns of
the human body; and biomechanics, the study of the applicationof the laws of physics to human movement and the performance of
skills. By using this knowledge, I was able to determine which
skills were mechanically sound and would be effective tools in
personal defense.
In general, I found that most of the skills taught to me were
unsound. They either violated fundamental principles of human
movement or were unrealistic, in the sense that they really could
not be used in the situations the average person might have to
face. For example, one section in a book on jujitsu instructs the
performer to put a hold on the opponent's arm and raise one foot.
Then it tells the performer to raise the other foot. My reaction to
this was, “If he can stand in midair, he can fly; and if he can fly,
why does he have to learn to defend himself?’ As a matter of fact, 1
tried this move and decided that it would be a nice trick if you
could do it. I found it impossible!
In a popular text on judo, the authors advocate a technique
called the crab claw, in which you attempt to trip your opponent
by launching yourself in the air at your foe. As you fly toward the
antagonist, you should turn on your side, legs spread, groin first.
You hope to scissor your antagonist’s legs and upset him. Skepti-
cal of the effectiveness of disabling an opponent by attacking him
with my crotch, I resolved to examine this technique in actual
performance. When I tested it on the mat, I found that I suffered a
blow to the groin before I could execute the technique. (It took me
three weeks to recover.)
One manual states that the second principle of unarmed
defensc is the use of internal oblique muscles. According to this
manual the power for every defense must come from or be cen-
tered in these muscles. This is an obviously absurd statement.
Any student of close combat fighting knows that many vicious
offenses do not require the use of the internal oblique muscles. I
consider a successful eye gouge an effective offense, and it can be
executed very easily without any cooperation from the muscles
located in the abdomen.
The same manual illustrates as many as ten different pistol
disarms from the same position (for example, with the holdup
man standing behind the victim). Obviously there is little sense in
learning so many ways of defending yourself in a particular situa-
tion. The more ways you know, the more doubt you may have
about which course of action is best. Also, if you spend whatever
practice time you have on anumber of defenses to one attack, you
Defend yourself
cannot become as good at dealing with this situation as you can if
you select the best way and spend all your time practicing that.
Most people wonder whether a small man or woman, or the
typical peaceful, sedentary American, can defend himself or her-
self against a larger, stronger assailant. By properly applying
scientific principles, the small person can have some advantage
over a larger attacker and may be able to use the opponent's size
and dimensions against him. For example, smaller people have
lower centers of gravity, which tend to make them more stable.
Also, their limbs are shorter. So as they apply leverage against one
of the levers of their opponent's body, they have a mechanical
advantage over their opponent's longer and more vulnerable
levers. Generally, the stronger your opponent, the more effective
the leverage applied against his joints, because the joints are
tighter and less flexible.
Those who are smaller and weaker do not necessarily have to
lose. If you know the vulnerable areas of the body and have the
skills to attack them effectively, you may succeed in making
yourself relatively invulnerable to a larger, stronger, but untrained
opponent. Although size and strength are significant in fighting,
they are not as significant as knowledge and leverage applied
skillfully and scientifically. This system of self-defense is based on
a set of principles that can make you a difficult person to attack
successfully.
The mechanical principles most relevant to personal defense
are stability, leverage, and motion.
STABILITY Stability is proportional to the area of the base. The
broader your base, the more stable you are. Spread your feet and
you gain stability.
Stability in a particular direction is proportional to the hori-
zontal distance of the center of gravity from the edge of the base
toward the given directional movement. If you lean forward, you
are harder to tip backward than forward.
Stability is proportional to the weight of the mass. The more
you weigh, the harder it is to move you.
Stability is indirectly proportional to the height of the center of
gravity above the base. The taller you are, the poorer your
equilibrium.
To be in balance, your center of gravity must be aligned ver-
tically above your base. Your center of gravity is the concentration
The Seidler system of personal defense10
of the mass of your body. When you are standing, it is located
at a point just above your navel and halfway between the front and
back of your body. The only factor affecting stability that you
cannot control is your weight. When you are defending yourself,
you should attempt to maintain a wide base, to keep your center of
gravity above the base and toward the edge of the base toward
which you wish to be less stable. For example, if you are prepared
to drive into your opponent, your center of gravity should be at
the front edge of your base.
Since your base is determined by the spread and relative
position of your feet, the base usually provides more stability in
one direction than another. For example, if you stand facing your
opponent squarely, your base gives you stability to the side, but
you don‘t have much stability forward or backward. On the other
hand, if you stand sideways and present your side to your antago-
nist, you have a strong base from front to back, but a very weak
base from side to side (see Figure 7-42, page 94).
At any point, if you feel yourself losing balance, widen your
base, bend your legs, and lean away from the direction you are
falling. Remember that these factors also affect your opponent's
stability. If you want to trip or slam him, manipulate his body so
that he becomes unstable, and he will fall.
LEVERS Most of the bones of the human body act as levers. All
movements of the human body are the result of one or more levers
in action. Skeletal muscles provide the force to move them. The
lever is a mechanical device that provides turning motion around
an axis of rotation. The lever is composed of three parts: a force
arm, a resistance arm, and the fulcrum, which is the axis of
rotation.
Leverage is the application of force through one type of lever or
another to magnify strength, to increase speed, or to overcome
force.
There are three types of levers, shown in Figure 2-1. They are
differentiated by the location of the fulcrum, the relative length of
the force arm, and the relative length of the resistance arm. The
first-class lever is relatively strong, but relatively slow. There are
not many first-class levers in the human body. The two most
important first-class levers are the head and the foot.
The second-class lever is also a strong but slow-acting lever.
There are hardly any second-class levers in the body. The most
important one is the jaw, which is extremely powerful.
Defend yourself
First-class lever
Second-class lever
R ii t
Third-class lever
te St
FIGURE 2-1 THREE TYPES OF LEVER
The third-class lever is relatively weak, but relatively quick.
Since the human body is composed mostly of third-class levers, it
is generally characterized as relatively weak, but relatively quick.
If you can visualize parts of the human body such as the hand,
the arm, the head, the foot, and the leg as levers, you can see that
the skills taught in this book enable you to exert a great deal of
force against a particular joint.
MOTION All motion is based on Newton's laws:
1. Every body continues in a state of rest or uniform motion in a
straight line unless it is affected by an external force In other
words, if you are not moving, you have a tendency to stay put.
If you are moving, you tend to continue to move in the direc-
tion you are going. We all have a tendency to continue moving,
because of our momentum.
2. The acceleration of a body is proportional to the force causing
if The more force you exert against something, the faster it
moves.
3. For every action there is an opposite and equal reaction If you
drive forcefully to the rear with your leg, for instance, you will
be thrust forward forcefully.
The Seidler system of personal defense 14,3. The Skills
of Personal
Defense
Most books concerned with sports or self-defense stress the
word skill. The person who is attacked will quite likely be smaller
and weaker than the attacker. To succeed in defending yourself,
therefore, you must have at your command something other than
the size and strength that you probably lack. The only worthwhile
substitutes for size and strength are knowledge and skill—a
knowledge of the vulnerable parts of the body, and the skill to
incapacitate your attacker.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SKILLS
Although most of us at times allow ourselves to daydream or
fantasize a la Walter Mitty, we all really know that no magic phrase
or power will solve our problems and guarantee instant or lifelong
success. In a moment of crisis when your well-being is threatened,
you must be able to perform a selected skill, or several skills in a
particular sequence, to disable your opponent.
Under great pressure, it is quite difficult for the novice to
calmly select from a number of possible skills the particular one
that is most appropriate for that crisis. Unless you have developed
the selected skill to the point that you can execute it perfectly and
immediately, it is better to turn the other cheek. What usually
happens in such a situation is that victims, who may have a
smattering of knowledge about self-defense, panic and literally
cannot think of anything to do. If they do think of some possible
action, they cannot remember the details of the defense that they
now want to use against their assailants.
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12
The laws of motion always hold, and they affect everyone the
same way. You can use them to effectively avoid an assailant. For
example, if your antagonist is charging at you, his momentum
causes him to continue in a straight line. The more he weighs, and
the faster he is going, the greater the momentum and the easier it
is for you to step out of his way.
The more efficient the leverage you use, and the greater the
acceleration you apply to the lever, the greater the effect of the skill
used. However, it is much more effective to strike a blow from a
stable base than from an unstable one, and it is almost impossible
to exert leverage unless you operate from a stable position.
If you understand the principles of biomechanics that deal
with stability, levers, and motion, you are much more likely to
execute your skills effectively because you will have a greater
insight into what is taking place. With this insight comes an
enhanced ability to fight well. In this instance, knowledge of these
physical laws can become the ‘equalizer’ that we all want to have.
Defend yourselfof performing, a skill slowly. Then when you call on the habit, you
will always perform it at slow speed. Practice makes perfect, and if
you practice a skill slowly, you will get good at doing it stowly.
After learning the mechanics of a skill, you must continue
practicing at high speed to develop and maintain the skill as a
habitual pattern. You must then learn through constant practice
which skill is most suitable for a particular situation. You must
leam when to apply any skill that you want to learn.
You should think of the skills that you develop as tools. Each
skill is a tool that serves a particular function. But no tool is very
valuable unless you can visualize the best way to use it. Using the
wrong, skill can be costly because it will not work, and in the
meantime, you may lose the opportunity to use the correct skill.
You must teach yourself to recognize the situation you are in and
to know which tool fits that particular situation. You must have
not only a number of different tools to fit a variety of situations,
but also the ability to match the appropriate skill to the immediate
problem.
It is important for you to develop a high level of expertise in
each skill group so that you can defend yourself against any type
of attack. You must also learn which of your skills is the best
defense against a particular attack. If you acquire these two capa-
bilities, you will gradually develop a third component of self-
defense—self-confidence. When you know that you can perform
these skills explosively and effectively, and when you know that
you can select the appropriate skill to fit the situation, you gain
self-confidence. You are more likely to keep your cool under stress
and to calmly select and execute the appropriate defense.
When you are learning the skills described in this book, it is
important for you to get someone to practice them with. Your
partner should practice each part of each skill with varying
degrees of resistance from you. Many of these techniques are best
learned part by part, going from slow speed, to medium speed, to
top speed. You and your partner should coach each other as you
practice. [t may scem masochistic at the time, but each of you
should resist the other as much as possible without injuring
yourselves. You have a mutual goal. Each of you wants to be able
to defend yourself effectively, yet your development depends on
your partner's development. Partners usually become equally
skilled, so if your partner is not as good or as aggressive as you
are, find another partner. As a matter of fact, as you acquire some
The skills of personal defense
15
4
If you wish to learn to defend yourself against unprovoked
attack, you have several tasks. (1) You must learn the steps that
you should take to avoid the confrontation, if possible. (2) You
must know the body posture you should take if you cannot avoid a
confrontation. (3) You must recognize the type of threat facing
you, and you must be able to calmly select from a variety of moves
that you can perform well the one that is best designed to elimi-
nate the threat to you.
You must recognize that these skills have to be habits. Per-
forming a skill in personal defense involves considerable knowl-
edge, precise execution, the application of great force, and in some
cases the use of your entire body to magnify the leverage devel-
oped by the skill. All this is beyond your ability if you attempt to
think your way through the mechanics of the skill during the
crisis. You simply cannot do it. All skills must be habits.
The baseball player at bat faces this same problem. He does not
know the precise instant the pitcher will deliver the ball, nor does
he know whether the ball will be in the strike zone, or whether it
will be a fast ball or a curve ball, high or low, inside or outside.
There are many parts to the mechanics of batting a baseball: the
stance, the grip on the bat, the stride toward the pitcher's mound,
the rotation of the hips, the rotation of the shoulders, the exten-
sion of the arms and wrists, and the follow-through.
The batter must do all these in a prescribed manner and
sequence. When the pitcher throws the ball, it may well be mov-
ing over ninety miles per hour, and the batter has approximately
two-fifths of a second in which to make a number of judgments.
During that time, he must be performing all the parts of the
mechanical act of batting a baseball, if he has decided to hit it. He
simply does not have the time to consciously order the various
parts of his body to perform their actions in the right sequence,
with the correct speed, so that the bat meets the ball squarely.
If he is to hit the ball, his eyes must track it. His brain sends a
signal to the parts of the body involved in hitting the ball. These
parts then automatically do the right things, in the right sequence,
with the right amount of force.
Similarly, to become proficient at defending yourself, il is
absolutely essential that you first learn how to perform each skill
efficiently, effectively, and explosively. This requires a great deal
of practice. After you learn the mechanics of the skill, you should
practice at maximum speed. If you don’t, you will develop a habit
Defend yourself16
skill, you should try to practice with other people of all sizes and
levels of skills. Practice makes perfect, and regular practice is
needed to maintain skill levels. Also, to fully appreciate how
effective these skills are, get someone to use them on you. Famil-
iarity with an activity removes much of the fear one holds for that
activity. Most people are afraid of blows, weapons, and falls.
Practicing with a partner will help you realize that you are a lot
tougher than you think you are, both physically and mentally.
At the beginning of a course in personal defense students
frequently ask whether they will be hurt. My response is, “Tt
depends on the way you define the word. If you mean, Will you be
injured, the answer is, Not likely. If you mean, Will you be in
pain, the answer is, Yes—constantly.” It is amazing to see how
the students’ fear patterns change from the beginning to the end of
the course. It is obvious that there is a strong relationship between
their lack of fear, their ability to defend themselves, and their
familiarity with this kind of activity.
To summarize, you must do three things if you are to develop
the ability to defend yourself. First, you must acquire a group of
skills that you can perform well at high speed. Second, you must
be able to recognize which of your skills is your best defense in
that immediate situation. Third, you must develop a willingness
and desire to stop your assailant.
CLASSES OF SKILLS
The skills used in personal defense fall into three broad categories:
offense, defense, and counteroffense. In general, an offense is a
move initiated to damage an opponent. Examples of offensive
skills are kneeing an opponent in the groin, kicking him in the
knee, and jabbing him in the eyes. If executed as an initiative,
each of these is an offense.
A defensive move is one used to prevent an opponent's offense
from injuring the defensive individual. Blocking a blow, ducking
a blow, and stepping out of the way of a weapon thrust are
examples of defensive moves.
The third category of skill is the counteroffense. It is the most
advanced, usually the most complex, and the most difficult to
execute. Because counteroffense is more difficult and complex,
and requires a higher degree of skill, it is more commonly used by
Defend yourself
the expert. It offers greater opportunities for success than simpler
skills. As you become more highly skilled in personal defense, you
will be more willing and able to use counteroffenses. A counterof-
fensive skill is one used as a reaction to a move initiated by the
opponent. Counteroffense involves blocking or avoiding the
opponent's offense, and then immediately using another skill to
take advantage of your opponent's position or the momentum he
has developed as a result of his offense.
Counteroffensive fighting is usually very effective. It requires
quick reactions and high performance levels, but it tends to capi-
talize on one basic advantage—the tendency of all human beings
to persist in the action they have initiated. In most cases, an
attacker attempts to press an offense even after it should be
apparent that the offense has failed, has been blocked, or has
missed its target. This tendency to persist lets you, the counterof-
fensive fighter, take advantage of your opponent's forward
momentum. Even after his offense has failed, the average fighter
tends to continue to move in the direction of the offense, attempt-
ing to complete it.
By devoting much time to the practice of personal defense
skills, you not only increase your skill and confidence, you also
develop the ability to recognize more quickly when an offense has
failed and when to change from defense to offense, from defense
to counteroffense, or from offense to another offense. This ability
to recognize when a skill—yours or your opponent’s—has failed
and the ability to adjust to that recognition are always apparent in
the skilled performer of personal defense.
When you become highly skilled, you can direct an offense at
your opponent, anticipating his reaction. If he does react as you
expected, you can suddenly switch to a different attack to take
advantage of his reaction. In effect, then, this second attack is
really a counteroffense.
When you become highly skilled, you will assume that your
opponent is very good, and as a result, you will have to use a
follow-up skill to your successful offense. You must expect your
antagonist to be able to minimize the effects of whatever tech-
nique you have used against him, and you must then effectively
use a counteroffense to the defensive move that you expect him to
use. In reality, if you recognize the need to continue fighting until
you stop your assailant, you will be prepared to launch an offense,
a defense, or a counteroffense. You may have to follow any one of
The skills of personal defense
7these with one or more skills, offensive, defensive, or counterof-
fensive, depending on what happens.
RELATED CONCEPTS
In learning to defend yourself you face a number of problems:
leaming the vulnerable areas of the body, learning a variety of
fighting skills and concepts, learning to recognize which situation
lends itself to a particular solution, and developing the willingness
and predisposition to fight vigorously and aggressively when you
are forced to do so.
To defend yourself successfully, you need an awareness of all
the vulnerable areas in the body. You must do all in your power to
protect your own vital areas; at the same lime, you must be
looking for opportunities to strike your attacker decisively in one
of his.
Developing a minimum number of effective fighting skills
requires that you understand the basic elements of each skill and
what makes it work, and that you practice each skill again and
again at top speed until you can perform it anytime you want to, at
top speed, against resistance. You must be able to perform a skill
without consciously thinking your way through it, and you must
develop the ability to perform the skill on either side equally well.
Most of us can perform better on one side than the other, but
practicing a skill on the poorer side tends to improve performance
on both sides. You must practice any skill taught here repeatedly,
at top speed, until it becomes a habit, if it is to be an effective tool
in self-defense.
To be a good hand-to-hand fighter, you must understand
several basic concepts.
1. The “natural” reaction to an opponent's move is alieays the
wrong reaction. A natural reaction invariably compounds the
effect of the opponent's attack. You must make a trained reac-
tion, rather than a natural one.
2. Everyone tends to resist an attack. As a skilled fighter, you will
find that your opponent's resistance to your move tends to
magnify the effect of your offense. Conversely, you must learn
not to resist your enemy’s offense once it is no longer possible
to escape its effects. Your best bet at that point is to go with it,
attempt to get ahead of it, and thus destroy the timing of the
Defend yourself
attack. The natural reaction is to resist; the trained reaction is
to go with the offense.
3. Everyone tends to persist in what he is trying to do. You do,
too, and you must learn to recognize when your moye has
missed or failed. In such a case, you must be able to quickly
shift from your unsuccessful move to another while your oppo-
nent is still reacting to your initial move.
4. Even when you are in a position of advantage, parts of your
body are exposed to some type of attack. The only way to
prevent such an attack is to apply the skill you are using so
vigorously that your opponent is incapacitated or in so much
pain that he does not think of attacking you.
5. In spite of your tender sensibilities, once you have determined
that you must fight, you must be aggressive, and you must
fight until your assailant is disabled or unconscious.
6. You must assume that your opponent is very good. This is not
to suggest that you should fear him, but you must respect his
ability to hurt you. This means that you should attempt to
strike blows or perform skills as well and as hard as you can.
Never underestimate your antagonist! It is better to be too
strong, or too skilled, or too ferocious than to be just a little less
effective than you need to be. Behave as though your opponent
is the toughest possible competition. If he is, you find just
what you expected; if he is not, it will be a pleasant surprise.
7. You must know what to do alter you have incapacitated your
opponent. If you have knocked him unconscious, or broken his
arm, or in some other way put him temporarily out of action,
you may be puzzled about the next step. You could bind his
arms by putting them inside his belt behind his back and then
tightening the belt as much as possible. Or you could ask some
passer-by to call the police. Or you could find a brick and
threaten him with it if he got frisky. You might decide that
your best course of action is just to run like hell! You must do
something, but whatever that is, it will be a simpler problem to
solve than the one you just completed.
Finally, regardless of the level and variety of your skills and
your ability to select the right skill at the right time, if you aren‘t
willing to fight wholeheartedly, you had better not attempt to
defend yourself at all. A halfhearted effort is worse than none at
The skills of personal defense
194. The Art
of Falling
In any physical conflict between two individuals involving
force, it is obvious that the success of one of the combatants
inevitably means the downfall of the other. The word downfall has
two possible meanings. It may mean defeat, or it may simply
mean falling down. When you are defending yourself, it could
mean both. It usually means falling down; whether it also means
defeat depends on your ability to control and withstand the force
of the fall. In general, a person skilled in close combat fighting
usually needs only one slam to eliminate an untrained opponent,
but he stands a much smaller chance of succeeding if you can
control the way you fall.
It is obvious that sooner or later, the personal defense fighter
will experience the doubtful pleasure of being slammed to the
ground. We have already decided that the purpose of developing
skill in personal defense is to protect yourself from bodily injury
and from maltreatment at the hands of your enemies. Thus, it is
clear that unless you become proficient at falling and recovering
from falls, you are not adequately prepared to protect yourself,
and the time and effort that you put toward learning self-defense
are not being exploited as fully as possible. In other words, your
lack of skill in falling may prove to be your Achilles’ heel in some
future emergency.
Some authorities in the field of hand-to-hand fighting argue
that learning to fall takes months of practice under the instruction
of a qualified teacher, that being on the ground makes you more
vulnerable to attack, and that there is a great difference between
falling on a mat and falling on rocky ground. So, they say, you
20
all. It tells your opponent that you will resist him, but will not hurt
him. It will probably mean injury or worse to you and little or no
damage to him. If you want to defend yourself, you must fight—
with vigor, with determination, with skill, and with desperation.
BASIC TERMS
In the following pages a number of skills are illustrated and
described. The written description exactly matches what you see
in the photographs. Obviously, if you put some kind of hold on
your opponent's right arm or leg, it is because you happen to have
an opportunity to reach his right arm or leg. But you can perform
each of these skills on either side, and you should practice on both
sides. Simply reverse all instructions to execute a skill on the other
side.
It is imperative that you learn to perform all the skills on both
sides. When you are being attacked, you probably won't have the
option of choosing which side to use. You might find yourself in a
position that forces you to use a specific skill on one side—and it
could be the side you haven’t learned the skill on.
The descriptions of the skills that follow use certain terms
frequently, and you should understand them before you begin.
inside: toward the midline of the body, or closest to your
opponent
outside: away from the midline of the body, or away from
your opponent
near: the arm or leg nearest the opponent's body
far: the arm or leg farthest from the opponent's body
up: toward the head
doion: toward the feet
Defend yourselfthat you are going to hit the ground, your aim is to govern as
much as possible the manner in which your body strikes the
ground. Possibly the best way to control the fall is to stop resisting
as soon as you are sure that you are going to go down, and go with
the hold. You should attempt to hit the ground before your oppo-
nent expects you to, so that you ruin the timing of his attack and
diminish the force of the blow. By getting ahead of the hold, you
lessen your opponent's control over you, which gives you more
freedom to move your body so that you can fall the right way.
Once again: When you are falling, go with the fall. Attempt to
get ahead of the fall or throw, once the success of your opponent's
move is assured. If you do this, and your falling technique is
correct, you have a very good chance of escaping from the attack
ready and able to do some attacking of your own.
TYPES OF FALLS
The two main classes of falls are (1) the rolling fall, which is a
semihorizontal fall, and includes falling forward, backward, or
sideward; and (2) the fiat fall, which is vertical or near vertical.
ROLLING FALLS The rolling fall, or somersault fall, is the kind that
is most likely to occur and is almost always the easiest to compen-
sate for. The principle to follow here is to transfer the force of the
falling body to a new direction, in almost all cases parallel to the
surface of the ground. Rolling falls are second nature to football
players, wrestlers, and tumblers. The many thousands of falls that
these athletes experience without injury attest to the practicability
of this technique.
Figure 4-1 shows how to execute the rolling fall. If you are
falling forward, tuck your head down and attempt to put it back
between your legs. At the same time curl your body into a ball.
Move your hips forward and keep them high. Your momentum
should carry you to your feet. Take several running steps forward,
then turn and face your assailant in the standing defense stance, as
shown in Figure 4-2. The best way to practice this fall is to do
forward rolls using your hands when necessary. After this you
should try a diving roll without using your hands if possible, since
your opponent may very well be holding at least one of your arms
so that you cannot use it.
In falling, it is important for you to concentrate on protecting
The art of falling
23
should concentrate on staying on your feet. They advocate not
learning to fall, but learning to get back on your feet after you fall.
The question that enters one’s mind at this point is, What is the
value of getting up off the ground, if the fall has incapacitated
you? If the fall puts you out of action, and it probably will if you
are untrained in falling, you will never get to use any skill you may
have learned in regaining your fect.
For the skilled personal defense performer, falling is a signifi-
cant part of some of the most effective offensive and counteroffen-
sive skills. You need to learn to use controlled falling to generate
great force against your opponent. In fact, the ability to control
total body movements is an attribute of the expert in personal
defense. If you examine the techniques in this book, you will see
that many of them involve the use of falls and rolls in which you
participate (examples are the double wristlock, the pickup reverse
wristlock, backflip, and others). This system of personal defense is
designed to prepare you for any situation, and your chances of
falling are great enough that you should learn to meet this threat.
If we believe the school of thought that says, “Being on the ground
is a disadvantage, so don’t be on the ground,” we could also say,
“Being choked is a disadvantage, so don’t be choked.” If we
follow this line of reasoning to its logical conclusion, we would
have to dispense with all personal defense. We could say, “Don’t
be slammed, or struck, or held up, or choked, or attacked with a
knife, or kicked,” because each of these makes us more vulnerable
to attack.
Obviously, the intelligent thing to do is to prepare yourself as
fully as possible to control any situation that you may face—and
falling or being slammed to the ground is very definitely a situa-
tion that you may face.
In learning the various techniques of personal defense, you
have to know the proper way to fall so that you can practice holds
ending in slams or throws with a minimum of danger. Incidently,
while your partner is practicing the slam or throw, you may take
advantage of the situation to improve your falling technique.
Most untrained persons, through their lack of knowledge and
experience, tend to increase the effectiveness of their opponent's
attack by continuing to resist long after the success of the maneu-
ver has been assured. By resisting, you play right into your
antagonist’s hands. By concentrating all your effort and attention
on resisting, you have no time to control your fall. If you are sure
Defend yourself