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Reality Based E-Magazine

Combative EDGE WEAPON SEMINAR

This is the 2010 Combative Edge Weapon Seminar

WWW.DARKGIFTCOMMBAT.COM
Nos es summisse questio pacis tamen instruo pro bellum
We are humbly seeking peace but prepared for war.
Volume 1 WWW.DARKGIFTCOMBAT.COM
Issue 27 October 01, 2010
10/01/10

Houston Premier Reality Based Martial Arts & Combatives, Fitness & Nutrition Facility.
Dark Gift Combat Fighting System Houston's Foremost Authority and premier Reality
Based Martial Arts, Street defense Facility.

Combative Edge Weapon Seminar

Hello all, first let me say I am sorry about not putting out the last two issues. I have
been very busy with filming the DVD‘S Series of our Hand to Hand and Ground
Combatives along with all the rest of our Modules. OK Here is the Edge Weapon
Seminar We had a GREAT turn out. We had folks come from all around the Houston
area, We had some from kemah, Spring, Sugar land.
We covered stalemate solutions, ground knife
fighting, Holds and grips of edge weapon, Kicks and
punches with edge weapon, Mass attacks, WOW just
so much was covered. Please enjoy the pic and IF
you want to see the video go to our youtube channel
check it out. http://www.youtube.com/DGCFS
We all had a blast and made some new friends. I
look forward to our Advance Edge Weapon Seminar
Mr.& Mrs. Traylor Owner & next year which will focus on folders and draw under
Founders of D.G.C.F. System. duress and ground combatives.
Inside D.G.C.F.S.
The Edge Weapon Seminar last about 7 hours per day.
Edge weapon Seminar 1
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2
Coming Events 3
Airsoft Products 4
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5
Armed & Irrelevant 10
Paul Vunak 11
“Hock” 14
Welcome 16
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17
Improvised Weapons 18
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20

Cont page 5
Page 1
Building Muscle on a Raw Vegan Diet
I read this article From this young women Mrs. Swayze‘s so I thought I would share it
with you Guys, I hope you like It.
What is the one thing vegetarians, vegans, and raw vegans are all known for, besides
the obvious absence of meat eating? A lack of muscle tone, which leads many to
believe that anyone toying with the idea of giving up animal flesh is destined to a life of
comments like, "You're too skinny. Here, have some meat." Don't believe the
naysayers. You can totally build lean and healthy muscle on a raw vegan diet. Wanna
know how?

Eat More Fruit?!


No, but good guess! Eating more fruit is my answer to just about everything else. ;) The
correct answer is STRENGTH TRAINING.
Mrs.Traylor Overload and Recover
is Personal Trainer & Owner & If you want to build muscles, you just have to do two things: overload and recover. This
Founder of Dark Gift Combat & is called training and if you don't do both of these, you will not build any muscle at all.
Dark Gift Combat Fighting System You can eat all the fruit smoothies you can stand, but it won't make a lick of difference if
you are not:
Inside D.G.C.F.S.
Edge weapon Seminar 1
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2 1. Overloading the muscle using some form of resistance (e.g. hand weights,
Coming Events 3 machines, resistance bands, or even your own body) and
Airsoft Products 4
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 2. Allowing for adequate recovery time.
Armed & Irrelevant 10
Paul Vunak 11 Super simple! Eat More Fruit Okay, I know I said fruit isn't the answer to building
“Hock” 14
Welcome 16 muscle, but it is part of the equation. You see, when you start strength training, you will
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 start burning more calories; the mere act of working your body burns calories by itself.
Improvised Weapons 18 In addition, muscle has a higher metabolic rate than fat so once you've gained some
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 muscle, you will be burning more fat just sitting around doing nothing. Sweet! :D And
since you'll be using up more fuel, you will need to eat more food. Sure, you can try to
limit your caloric intake in order to lose weight quickly, but I definitely do not recommend
it. Not only will calorie restriction leave you very hungry and craving less optimal foods,
all your muscle gaining efforts will be thwarted as well. Eating enough food is part of the recover process and is necessary if
you want to build healthy lean muscle. So there you have it! Exactly what you need to build some mighty muscle on a
radically raw diet. No disgusting hemp shakes or gagrific protein bars required. :)
Go raw and be fit, Swayze

http://dgc-combative-fitness.ning.com/

Mrs. Traylor is Personal Trainer ,Owner & Founder Dark Gift Combat & Dark Gift Combat Fighting System as well as
Co- Founder of R.E.A.C.T. Rapid Endurance Assertive Combative Training

Page 2
Coming Events

November 14,15 – 2010 –


R.A.T Seminar –
Location D.G.C. Mr.Traylor Ranking

Mr. & Mrs. Traylor are gearing up for the 2011 seminar tour, IF you wish Mr. & Mrs.Traylor to come to your school
for a seminar please contact them. The seminar can cover what ever you want Just pick the module, All modules
have Instructor certification available.

Page 3
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page 4
Continue from page one

Mr.Traylor
Owner & Founders of
D.G.C.F. System.

Inside D.G.C.F.S.
Edge weapon Seminar 1
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2
Coming Events 3
Airsoft Products 4
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5
Armed & Irrelevant 10
Paul Vunak 11
“Hock” 14
Welcome
16
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17
Improvised Weapons 18
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20

Page 5
Page 6
Page 7
Page 8
I would like to acknowledge the following people
Cruc Cordova - Advance Apprentice Instructor Edge Weapon L2,
Ruben Pernia - Advance Apprentice Instructor Edge Weapon L2,
Brian Sauer - Advance Apprentice Instructor Edge Weapon L1,
Juaqin Serrano - Apprentice Instructor edge Weapon,
Ryan Konarik - Apprentice Instructor edge Weapon

Page 9
Armed and Irrelevant: You Can't Shoot Everybody
Today I want to talk with you about something that has been driving me nuts for a long
time. Though due to some of the subject matter i have to be very careful how i write it.
Public safety is not something to be taken lightly. The problems that exist for security in
these fields today are frankly quite scary due to what should be obvious to all of them.
To administrative people the trend i see lately is to arm their security with guns only. No
restraint and control training or any form of a backup weapon. Now this isn't based on
researching the internet or any of that type of stuff. With my jobs that i do i have to go
into these places and i see this stuff firsthand with my own eyes. I don't tend to see this
as much in prisons or sanitariums that i have to visit as much as i see it in... i hope your
Paul Green sitting down......areas with a high civilian interaction.
STONEWAL TACTICAL I was in a local DHR recently doing some work and noticed their security had started
Inside D.G.C.F.S. carrying guns now, but nothing else. Now these security were contract security of
Edge weapon Seminar 1 course. Most of them were past the age of 50 and none of them were in shape. Some
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2 were grossly obese. Now i don't know if you've ever been in a DHR but most of the
Coming Events 3
people there aren't happy to be there. Now of course gun training is great and being
Airsoft Products 4
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 armed with a gun i think is fine i know i love my glock. The beef here is being armed with
Armed & Irrelevant 10 a gun only. Now i can understand if some irate guy comes in with a gun freaking out
Paul Vunak 11 because he just lost his children then that gun will come in handy and we'd be glad they
“Hock” 14 have those guns. However is that the only violent thing that takes place in a DHR?
Welcome 16
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 Ummm...not even close. If two people get in a fight there i suppose they just shoot them
Improvised Weapons 18 too because they don't have the training to do anything else. If so does that make it ok?
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 The state gets sued and the taxpayers get screwed again? These companies get offers
for training all the time. The simple fact is the admins won't approve the money. They
tend to think reactive instead of proactive. What if someone is just yelling and you have
to escort them out? You don't have any restraint or control training. You don't have any
pain compliance weapons. Are you just going to shoot them too? Of course not all your
actually going to do if your gun doesn't work as a deterrent is call the local police and
make a big scene, scare the hell out of onlookers, and look like an unprofessional moron
yourself who can't do their job properly. Because the public expects you to have the
training and believe that you have the training that you actually don't have at all. It's not
just municipal sites either. You think government sites are any different? I hate to break
it to you but they are actually even worse. They have all the money in the world and
spend it on things they'll probably never use. I will say with their gun training if you try to
storm a gate or sneak in your going to be dead very quickly. They will take you out fast
so don't even think about it. But in dealing with daily crap like arguments,fights, escorting
people out, the same problem rings true.
The fact is that if Bin Laden or someone similar storms the door or whatever then yes
guns are the ultimate and they need those guns and training for them is very important so yes we love us some guns. But the
point is that is a very very low percentage of the things that are actually going to happen. The so the truth of the matter is they
have all the training in the world for something they will probably never need and none of the training they need for the things
that will definitely happen on at least a weekly basis. Therefore they are armed..but it's irrelevant.
If you are an admin and your reading this please start listening to the head of your security when they ask for the funding they
need. Stop being reactive and start being proactive. The public is depending on you to do the right thing. If your security and
you never thought about this then start going to your admins and make them aware of it. This situation sucks and something
must be done about it. Any questions feel free to contact us at www.stonewalltactical.com. If you can't find the training then
contact me and I'll find it for you or i'll fly out and train you myself, but it's got to be done. Thanks
Paul Green Is a Professor of Combative Arts with the American Budo Society as well as the International Technical Director, Alabama State Heavyweight
Champion in Sport Jiu-Jitsu in 1999 I hold a 5th dan in Jujutsu a 5th dan in Ninjutsu
a 4th dan in Karate and a 3rd dan in Judo/Yudo respectively
also a certified instructor in The Defender Personal Defense Weapon System A certified instructor in the SABER(Strategic Anit-Blade Engagement
Response) Method An Advanced Instructor in Knife/Counter Knife Combatives under W Hock Hocheim

Page 10
Paul Vunak
teaches the Most Effective Tactic of the Philippine Fighting Arts.

For many martial artists, weapons are the reason they train. The appeal of learning how to
wield a weapon, whether traditional or modern is undeniable. Unfortunately, the lion‘s
share of attention gets lavished on the Japanese and Chinese arts. It‘s unfortunate
because, as any student of self-defense will tell you, the lowly stick holds so much
potential. Perhaps the best source for instruction on stick fighting is the Philippine art of
kali, and one of the best teachers of kali is Paul Vunak. A longtime student of Dan
Sifu Paul Vunak World renowned Inosanto, Vunak has focused on the stick for more than 30 years. Presented here is his
Navy Seal Training & Reality Based interpretation of the most effective tactic in the sticks arts: Defanging the snake.
Combatives Instructor and also my st
instructor
Why should Martial artists in the 21 century incorporate stick fighting into their
training? To answer this properly, I have to go back to Bruce Lee and Dan Inosanto in
Inside D.G.C.F.S. the 1960s. Bruce was obviously an amazing person, an amazing martial artist and an
Edge weapon Seminar 1
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2 amazing athlete. For many years, he was the only person at that level that Dan had ever
Coming Events 3 seen. After meeting Bruce, Dan was introduced to some Filipino masters by Ed Parker.
Airsoft Products 4 He noticed that those masters had the same attributes as Bruce: similar speed, similar
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5
Armed & Irrelevant 10 sensitivity, and similar body mechanics. Dan had been in probably 20 martial arts before,
Paul Vunak 11 but he‘d never seen anyone move like Bruce – and these guys were in their 60s. Those
“Hock” 14
Welcome masters were able to move that way because of the weapons. When you move with
16 weapons in your hand, it expedites the development of your natural attributes. Whether
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 you‘re talking about speed, power, coordination, timing, spatial relationships or footwork,
Improvised Weapons 18
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 you can quadruple it by working with weapons.
How does the weapon training increase your speed? When you swing a stick, the tip
of it moves about 150 miles per hour. No punch moves that fast. So when you‘re used to
seeing a stick swing that fast, punches seem like they‘re coming at you in slow motion.
There are so many different angles and so many different weapons that when you make
the transition to empty hand, it‘s really easy.
What are the practical applications of weapons training?As I said, you can train with
weapons to improve your empty hand, but you can also train with weapons to prepare for
a weapons fight. Seventy percent of encounters involve weapons. You might be the best
empty-hand fighter in the world, but if you don‘t know how to fight with a weapon, you
could be in trouble. If you and your opponent have broken bottles in your hands and you
don‘t know anything about weapons, you‘ll probably make very poor choices. You won‘t
have distancing, you‘ll be overbearing and you won‘t understand what that weapon can
do. You‘ll probably die. We call that ―following the way of the dodo.‖ So knowledge of
weapons can keep you alive no matter how good your empty hand is. Do you like the stick because it‘s readily available in
other forms-like an umbrella or a broom? Actually in the Philippine hierarchy, the most complicated and lethal cocktail is a long
blade and a short blade. But in terms of what weapons will translate to empty hand, you have the first weapon that Filipinos
used: the staff. A staff can be a broomstick or a pool cue; anything long and skinny can work with the same techniques. The
second category is dos manos, which means the weapon is so heavy takes two hands to hold. This would be similar to the
samurai sword, which takes two hands. How could this translate to the street? In an alley, you could pick up a two-by-four.The
next category is the siniwali, which refers to two equal lengths – two sticks or two knives. In a real fight that could be a pool
cue again. If you break a pool cue in half, you have two equal lengths. The next category is double knife. That could be two
broken bottles. There‘s also single stick or single knife. A single knife can be anything edged, such as a broken bottle. A
single stick can represent a tire iron, crowbar, or a flashlight. So any one of the weapons in the Philippine system can
correspond to something you can pick up on the street. The most important thing is to have a skill set that works regardless of
the weapon and the only one that does that is ―defanging the snake.‖
Is that the one technique you’d recommend for the average martial artist? No matter what weapon you have, it would be
defanging the snake. The name means this: The snake is the opponent, and the fang of the snake is his weapon. When you
defang the snake, you take away its weapon. Instead of having a pillow fight – trading head shots or trying to block – you
smash your opponent‘s hands. When he drops the weapon, you‘ve defanged the snake. Now you can walk away or kill the
snake.
Do you hit the fingers, the back of the hand, the wrist, the forearm or just anywhere? You won‘t know. There are certain
drills the Filipinos use to train your brain so that when you see a weapon coming in, you don‘t see it as a weapon to viscerally
block. You see it as a target to hit. And when you do hit, anywhere on the weapon hand is good – all the way up to the elbow.

Page 11
In training, do you just touch the hand as how it comes out? You have any planned responses like, if he does this,
you do that? No just hit the hand. It‘s important to note that you don‘t see a lot of this hand smashing nowadays because
many schools that teach the Philippine martial arts have ―sport-ized‖ it. Anytime you turn a beautiful art into a sport, you dilute
it.
Specifically, what do you mean by turning it into a sport? There are now stick tournaments all over the planet. First of all,
the competitors wear helmets, so they come in with impunity and nobody worries about their head. They also wear hand gear,
so nobody attacks the hands because you can‘t hurt them. And they have rattan sticks. In the Philippines, a rattan stick is
equal to a rubber stick. It‘s a play stick so when you have rattan sticks with gloves and helmets, you end up just clashing and
trading bonks on the head. Then the referee steps in and somehow ascertains a winner. If this were reality, the very first shot
to the head – whether it‘s with a pipe, a flashlight or a crowbar – the person would be down in a pool of blood and the fight
would be over. So it‘s turned into a sport. The old Filipino masters don‘t fight that way. The ones I‘ve trained under all do the
same technique: when anybody comes at them, they defang the snake. You don‘t see kids doing this in the sport nowadays.
They would rather headhunt.
How do you realistically train for real world street usage? Interestingly enough, in a karate tournament, the competitors
are what I call ―under-daring,‖ which means they don‘t really hit each other in the head, and when they do, the very first point
is the one that counts. There‘s no follow-up. So whoever touches the other person in the head first, wins. That‘s not realistic
because in a real fight, you can take punches to the face. It‘s more important to learn how to trade blows and get in and hit in
combinations. In a stick tournament, it‘s the opposite. The competitors are ―over-daring.‖ They get in and trade blows with a
stick over and over. Stick tournaments should be judged more like karate tournaments. After the first shot to the hand, they
should break. If the guy leads with his head, that‘s the target you see first, so you hit the head. Then comes the break. That
would be more realistic.
In defanging the snake, do you have your weapon hand in the lead position, with your lead foot out? Does it even
make a difference?It makes a big difference because you don‘t need any power when you defang the snake. It‘s just a little
flick of the wrist. With a real weapon – a steel pipe, a crowbar, or a blade – one shot on the hand and the game is over. If you
don‘t need any power, you might as well put your weapon in your front hand, where the speed is. It‘s the same in Bruce Lee‘s
Jeet Kune Do.
Is defanging the snake more off a snappy movement or is there a follow-through? It‘s a snapping movement, a quick
jab. Again if you‘re stick fighting with rattan, you could have no protection on your hands and hit each other full contact, and it
hurts the day after, but you can still fight. If you replace that rattan stick with a piece of oak and inch and a half in diameter,
one shot in the hand and you‘re screaming. Every bone in your hand is broken.
If defanging the snake is your primary tactic, should you always try to use it? No. Let‘s say you are in a close-quarters
situation, maybe in a bar. You‘re two feet from the guy and he grabs a bottle, breaks it and comes at you. You have a bottle
and you break it, and as he comes forward, the first thing you see is his face. You don‘t even see his hand- it‘s low and you‘re
close- so you shove the bottle in his face. The moral of the story is, you hit the closest target. Normally, with trained people,
the closes target is the hand, but untrained people sometimes lead with their head. So you hit them in the head first.
How should an unarmed person fight a guy who has a stick? The strategy is to get close. If he‘s swinging the stick at you
and you cover your head and charge him, he‘ll hit you a couple of times on the way in, but you‘ll be able to take it. Probably
seven out of 10 times, if you charge properly and time it, once you‘re in close, you can use trapping techniques, straight
blasts, head butts, knees and elbows. The only way to defeat a stick is to get inside it. On the other hand, with a knife, that
whole strategy is irrelevant. There‘s no way to fight a knife.
So unarmed against a knife is a ludicrous question? Unarmed against a knife is ludicrous. It‘s the same as asking how to
fight a man with a gun. You don‘t fight a man with a gun physically; you fight him verbally. You use psychology - how you deal
with him, how you answer his questions, how you do what he says.
Facing a knife is similar to facing a gun, then? Yes. Say you‘re an unarmed person in a restaurant. Somebody pulls a
knife. The first thing you do is run. Let‘s take it to level two. You‘re in that same restaurant with your mother, so you can‘t run. I
didn‘t say your mother-in-law – with her you leave. (laughs) Now you have to protect your mom, so you can‘t run. You have to
grab an equalizer; your own knife, a bottle, a chair, a table, hot soup. Now the third layer: You can‘t run, and there‘s nothing to
grab as the guy attacks you with a knife. I can‘t imagine this scenario well, I guess I could- maybe you‘re in a handball court.
There‘s nowhere to run because there‘s only one door and the guy guarding it with a butcher knife. So how do you fight
him?Many would say to protect your vital areas and go for his eyes, his groin or his kneecap. We‘ve tried this for 27 years.
We‘ve tried it with ink pens. We‘ve tried it with training knives from Soft-STX. There‘s no way to do it, not when a man is
attacking you wild and crazy. It‘s all in how the attacker attacks you. If he attacks you with a thrust, like some karate fake
pseudo thing, you can do anything. But if he attacks you like a wild, crazy prison escapee, you can‘t go for his eyes or groin
because you‘re going to get cut and bleed out.

Page 12
The only thing you can do is dive six inches off the ground and tackle him. Then you smother the knife and start biting. He‘ll
have multiple opportunities to give you tiny pokes and cuts, but they‘re not death shots. When you dive at his ankles and start
biting, there will probably be only one chance of receiving a death shot, and it‘s on your way in. I would give myself as a
martial artist who‘s trained for 30 years, a 10 percent chance. If anybody tells you differently, they‘re lying. Ten percent is
better than 0 percent.

Biting as a defense… is there any particular way to it? There‘s a whole Philippine are called kino mutai. It teaches 144
uninterrupted bites. By uninterrupted, I mean that you‘re grabbing the opponent while you‘re biting. If you just bite, he‘ll pull
away. While you‘re biting you tear. There are 18 different ways to tear. It‘s a very complicated art. I augment my kino mutai
with Brazilian Jujitsu. People ask me ―Are you worried about getting blood in your mouth?‖ Of course I‘m worried about getting
blood in my mouth, so the only situation that I would ever use kino mutai is in the life or death one that we are referring to.
What are some other realistic ways to train with a stick? All real world training has to be base on defanging the snake. It
has to be based on the honor system because the person who gets hit first has to drop the weapon. You and your partner
have to have that agreement. Once you do, you can defang the snake with a stick or a knife using the same drill. Or you can
grab a baseball bat and do it. Just use a rubber bat and protect your hands. Defanging isn‘t like learning a technique. Martial
artists can learn a technique and say they‘ve got it. Learning how to defang the snake is like flying a plane. A pilot talks about
how much flight time he has. If I have a student who‘s been with me for a year, he might have 10 or 15 hours of flight time with
defanging the snake. Then I might have a student who‘s been with me for 25 years - like Tom Cruse, who‘s probably logged
thousands of hours doing that one move. When he spars with any of my other students, he always goes 10 to 1, not because
he has a better move but because he has more flight time with that one move.
The drills you talked about required a partner. How can a person train solo? Carrenza, which means ―shadowboxing.‖
You get your stick out and work your follow-up. A good drill is to use your stick to make giant letters in the air and go through
the alphabet: A, B, C … Doing the whole alphabet hits every angle.
Should a martial artist practice a specific follow-up after defanging the snake? When you do your follow-ups, there are
stroking drills that you do with the weapon. Stroking drills use various weapons and angles to promote body mechanics.
Somebody who wants to learn boxing starts throwing punches but doesn‘t put his body into his punches; he just punches with
his arms. As the person improves, he learns how to put torque into his punches. When he turns pro, he becomes very lethal
with those same punches. The difference between a pro and a beginner isn‘t the punches; it‘s how much torque he puts into
them. The stick is the same. All the drills we have are stroking drills that enhance body mechanics so that when you hit
something, you can really hurt it. There are names for the follow-ups. One means ―fan,‖ one means ―thrust‖ and one is named
after a fish in the Philippines that swims goofy. The moves all have the same theme of getting the whole body involved.
They‘re like a hook, an uppercut or an overhand; they‘re all good for knocking out the guy after you jab him a few times.
Which one do you want? Man, I don‘t know. They all work. It‘s the same thing with the stick.
- Paul Vunak

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interview with Hock
Hock, what originally influenced your decision to learn unarmed combat?
I have always had an obsessive interest in tactics — hand, stick, knife, gun tactics
— which of course means fighting with each against each in a mixed-weapon matrix.
The unarmed combat is part of that bigger picture.
How long have you been in the martial arts and what styles and systems have you
previously trained in?
Very soon it will be 40 years. [‗ve done] police courses, military courses, karate, jujitsu,
By: Hock Hochheim aiki-jitsu, Kajubenbo and various Filipino martial arts.
A pioneer in Reality Based combatives
field and Military and L.E.O. trainer You have served in both the military and police. Can you tell me a bit about your
also my Instructor. background and experiences in both roles and how it has influenced your skills and
knowledge as an instructor? I first started out in Parker Kenpo but went into the
Inside D.G.C.F.S. Army where I was a military police patrolman and then an investigator; next as a Texas
Edge weapon Seminar 1 patrolman and detective. This was the instruction that was the most important framework
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2
Coming Events 3
for me. These academies and courses try to answer the problem: ‗This is how they are
Airsoft Products 4 going to kill you‘. These courses did not always get their advice right, but it set the stage
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 for my general discontent for many martial arts to follow. But what else was there to
Armed & Irrelevant 10 do? I studied many things and picked up a few Blackbelts as I looked for that ‗next, best
Paul Vunak 11
“Hock” 14
thing‘. Meanwhile I was always looking for that direct intensity and instead was distracted
Welcome 16 by system dogma and ‗grandmaster worship‘. Okay for some; just not for me. Eventually,
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 I started my own study group to stay on this target.
Improvised Weapons 18 When did you offi cially commence the Scientifi c Fighting Congress?
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20
I have been teaching subjects since about 1991. I picked the SFC name in 1996. I
retired from police work in 1997 so I could fi nally concentrate on the subjects full time.
Why did you decide to call it the Scientifi c Fighting Congress?
I choose the word ‗Congress‘ because I liked the idea of various, differing groups and
people banding together. On any given weekend, I can be found teaching in a karate
school, a Muay Thai school, a Krav Maga school, a community centre, a
military base or academy — a congress. And I prefer a scientific approach to the
psychology and performance of fi ghting training. The SFC mission is to bridge
the gap between the police, the military, the martial artist and the aware citizenry. Each
group knows things about fi ghting that the others don‘t.
In what countries do you currently have instructors and where there is a prominent
influence of the SFC?
We have hundreds of basic, advanced and expert instructors in about 10 countries, all
active as I have seen them in training
sessions in the last year and a half. Right now, I‘d say most are located in the USA, UK
and Europe. They are listed on my web page at www.HocksCQC.com
What individuals have had the most infl uence on you as a martial artist?
I would have to say that in general my police and military instructors have had the most consistent influence on me, because
of the evaluation filter they instilled in me. You know, I am not so sure I am a martial artist by true defi nition, or an artist in
anything for that matter. I am just a guy who collects tricks to fight criminals and soldiers.
It is well recorded that you have conducted specialized training for police and military units throughout the world. Which
units/agencies have you conducted training for?
I have been a paid consultant for the four main branches of the US military: Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, working
with the Marines mostly. I have taught at many police academies through the world, like in England and Germany and as far
away as the one main academy in South Africa. How many officers and agencies? Most officers, as with soldiers, attend
my group seminars and I could not even begin to count how many I have seen through the years. I would guess thousands.
Over the past 10 years there has been an explosion in the various types of ‗reality-based‘ systems and defensive tactics
systems that have fl ooded the market. What are your views pertaining to these systems, and why?
I have always disliked the term ‗reality-based self-defence‘. It‘s like saying, ‗I‘d like a pizza

Page 14
with my pizza.‘ But I think it‘s a natural evolution in overall interest and training. What irritates me is the costume
change! That is a martial artist who simply changes his traditional clothing to camos and suddenly he is a practical/
tactical course teacher? Also irritating: many have pretended to be US Navy SEALS or claim to be ‗exclusive SEAL
Team 6‘ instructors for years or ex-Israeli commandos. Lies! Buyer beware when you hear this talk! Rest assured that
99 per cent of the time this is simply not true. Then there are the folks pretending to be former SWAT or super-duper
counter-terrorism agents.There was a guy with a school in Germany who actually pretended and advertised that
he was on the Los Angeles, California SWAT team. What a commute to work that was!
You have been teaching realistic defensive tactics for over 20 years and you are regarded around the world as one of the
pioneers of reality based training. Yet, there have been several instructors who have entered the market in the US over the
past several years saying they were the first ‗reality-based‘ instructor. What are your thoughts about these types of claims and
has it affected your own system?
In a few words: marketing hogwash, sales pitch for fools and the naïve. I don‘t know that it has affected me directly
in any way. Really, I am like the tortoise in the old ‗Tortoise and the Hare‘ fable. These new guys blast on the scene with
crafted ‗I am the greatest‘ marketing campaigns. As I plod along for decades, I pass their burned-out carcasses on the
roadside. And I am not the greatest. Nor the first. I want to help you to be the greatest that you can be. It is all about you, not
me. You come fi rst!
What‘s your opinion on the debate between sportbased or combat-oriented training systems?
Well, I love the current evolution of the UFC: groundand- pound. And it‘s a great laboratory to see techniques in hardcore
action. And combat oriented sports have many benefits, but a true crime and war survivalist must become an expert in all the
things that are illegal in these sport fights. Cheat to win. And by the way, ‗winning‘ is different for everyone. This is an
important point. It exists in a use-of force continuum, a ‗rules of engagement‘ environment. It‘s situational: who, what, where,
when, how and why?
What is your opinion on the grappling craze that has seized the martial arts community in recent years and what type of
grappling is taught in the SFC?
‗Successful grappling‘. But seriously, tactics that work based on your mission. Are you a citizen, a cop or a soldier?
In the recent evolution of martial arts and crazes, standup fighters needed to know ground-fighting. Ground-fighters
needed to know stand-up. In the 1980s I was heavily into the Dan Inosanto systems (he‘s one of the guys who
really invented the term ‗Mixed Martial Arts‘ by the way) and we did shoot fighting, all years before the Gracie/UFC craze.
But as a cop I knew I could not rely on this tap-out, sport approach on my job. All fights are highly situational and very
mission-oriented. I believe in the seamless application of all tactics standing, kneeling, sitting and on the ground with hand,
stick, knife and gun. Equal and seamless. You fight where you fight with what you have.
That‘s why I say ‗successful grappling‘ because it looks like everything else, nothing in particular.
In your experience, what qualities do you need to see in a person before you know they are ready to be qualifi ed as an
instructor in the SFC?
That‘s a many-layered question. I mean, technically you could have a smart guy in a wheelchair be an excellent instructor.
Just because someone is a champion doesn‘t mean he is a good instructor — there are many cases of that. But I look
to see them master the material at each level. Then I look for people with enlightenment. Here‘s the deal. I will never tell
anyone how to fi ght. Those are personal choices for people based on their size, shape, age and condition. It is their job,
through experimentation, to pick and choose these things. But, a good instructor must know many things to present them to
their students. These students build themselves and/or become instructors. An instructor must understand this principle. They
must be freed from dogma. Doctrine, not dogma. We have lives to save. You teach what you learn and I don‘t care about
patents or restrictions. The SFC has no tithings or dues or any franchise fees. (These are the things that usually destroy all
the burned hares I pass on the road.)
What are your current and future plans for the SFC?
Oh, I will continue to teach as long as people ask me to. I‘ve never had any desire to dominate the world and create business
dynasties, that sort of thing. I am obsessed with tactics and training methodologies.
How many years has it been since your last visit to Australia?
I started coming to Oz in the 1990s. I think it‘s been about six or seven years since my last visit.
Why has there been such a long period of time from your last visit to your 2009 seminar?
I do about 40 seminars a year in eight countries, and lots of requests and interest in the UK and Europe. They had me going
East instead of West. I did teach on the Guam Air Force Base and the Honolulu, Hawaii SWAT team in 2007. That‘s as close
as I‘ve come to Australia lately. Back in the 1990s we had some certified instructors in Australia that turned out to be some of
those ‗burned out hares‘ on the roadside, dreaming up their schemes, wheels and deals — none of which I knew of or took
part in. I believe in the precept ‗water seeks its own level‘, and some folks just drown themselves.
During your recent visit to Australia, how did you find the level of skills and knowledge of the participants, compared to the
other parts of the world where you have conducted training?
Oh, just great! Fine. Australia has a lot of tough, smart guys and gals. And it was great to return and see some of my old
friends. Some of them are just truly the finest, greatest people you‘ll meet anywhere. I am thankful I know them, martial
training or not. Hock Hochheim is the author of Knife Fighting Encyclopaedia, Military Knife Combat and Unarmed Versus
the Knife.

Page 15
WELCOME, HAPPY BIRTHDAY AND CONGRATULATIONS.
Mr. & Mrs. Traylor would like to welcome
Carlos G., Ryan L., Morris B.

Mr. & Mrs. Traylor would like to wish a HAPPY BIRTH DAY

KYLE C.

Page 16
Fake Self-Defense Instructors Pt 5
I spoke to several people yesterday about Mike Kanarek. The simple answer to
everyone's question was answered by former Haganah Instructor Chris Ghannam when
I spoke to him at the beginning of all of this. "The outcome is already out there." I agree
with this statement.Mike didn't have to lie. I spoke to one of his oldest students yesterday
that was with him from back in the Tae Kwon Do days. He liked Mike already and trained
with him without all of the hype. He said that it was different after 9-11-2001. The school
/ seemed to change. Randy Proto came in and started running things differently. Black
Robb Hamic
is an IAFEFI member since 2003, former Belts who were already learning, teaching and who had trained under Mike were not
Sheriff‘s Deputy, Detective and Desert
Storm U.S. Army Veteran. He is a recognized Black Belts under the new Haganah FIGHT. Mike said it was because of
Certified Law Enforcement Trainer (CLET)
and is a state and nationally accredited Randy. He was running things. Whatever. All of Mike's studnets and instructors knows
firearms instructor for handgun, shotgun,
rifle, patrol rifle and tactics.
about the hassles with Mike Kanarek and Haganah. Most people that I talk to are just
Also my Instructor worried about how they will be perceived after all of this. They think the system of
Inside D.G.C.F.S.
Edge weapon Seminar 1 Haganah is a good one but nobody seems to agree with Haganah, Kanarek or Proto's
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2
Coming Events 3 tactics in growing the business. If Mike had just stuck to being a good fighter and not told
Airsoft Products 4
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 all of the tall tales and big lies to hype himself and the system he probably would've done
Armed & Irrelevant 10
Paul Vunak 11 just fine. He didn't though. One lie lead to forty more.. People attend Mike's training, still.
“Hock” 14
Welcome 16 They seem to be holding on. That is OK and I understand. I was there too. It is hard
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17
when you bet on the wrong horse and then you feel like you are now riding a horse that
Improvised Weapons 18
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 is shot. Randy Proto has released a press release stating that they are bringing in Garret
Machine into the IPTT Haganah Group. Whatever that is. I hear that Garret is a good
guy and I have no idea how he got mixed up with Mike and Randy. They burn bridges
quickly. Just ask the former "tactical contributors" to Haganah who resigned- first Sgt.
Major Nir Maman and then Chris Ghannam. I understand that Garret was a high level
operator in Israel and it is good that Kanarek and Proto are trying to bring somebody real
into the organization instead of just making it up on their own- AGAIN. I wish all of the good and ethical instructors of Haganah
well and hope the best for them. I know that they have all talked about these issues and are curious about the outcome. So
am I. It will be interesting, that is for sure. I have seen a good many people who I know go out of business, in part because of
Mike, Randy or Michael Griffin's actions. I am sorry for that. Nobody deserves to lose money, students and income in times
like these. Contact me if you need the name of a good attorney that is already dealing with Mike, Randy, Michael and
Haganah.

\http://www.fakeselfdefenseinstructors.com/

Page 17
Improvised Weapons: A Primer

A month after 9/11, when airport security was still being manned by the National Guard, I
had to fly from Boston to Tampa. A young sergeant in fatigues scrutinized my ID and
asked me, ―do you have anything on you that could be used as a weapon?‖ As my mind
went through the list - belt, pen, shoes , water bottle, etc. – I had to stifle a smirk that
would have surely gotten me a body-cavity search. To the trained, almost anything can
be used as a weapon.Ultimately the trained mind is the weapon, with external objects
being extensions of the mind/body. For the purposes of this article, weapons will refer to
external objects. The purpose of this article is to help you think about weapons in a very
fundamental way. When you understand how they work, nearly everything you can put
your hands on will become a weapon.
What is a weapon?
I find it helpful to think of weapons as tools. Tools are merely things we use to help us get
a job done. A carpenter may use a hammer to pound in a nail, a doctor might use a
John Moore scalpel. A weapon is a tool which helps us do a job (win in combat).
has more than three decades of martial Weapons, for the most part are force multipliers. They allow us to transform or
arts study. He has trained in many concentrate energy beyond what we could do with empty hands. Take a knife, for
example. A knife cuts things by concentrating force into a very small area called the
systems including Arnis, Kenpo,
edge. When swung, the end of a stick will travel faster than the hand that‘s holding it.
Kyokushinkai, and Silat. He spent more Since force = mass X acceleration, swinging a stick multiplies the force that we can
than a decade in Boston studying deliver on target. A gun transforms chemical energy into kinetic energy – putting a great
deal of force into a tiny bullet.
Ketsugo Jujutsu under Peter Freedman
Force concentration
Sensei and was awarded a menkyo One of the main concepts to understand that will help you use weapons most effectively
kaiden (teaching license).He has is reduction in area or force concentration. Imagine laying on your back and someone
conducted self defense training for
places a 50 pound barbell weight on your chest. It may be uncomfortable but it‘s not likely
to cause much damage. The weight is spread out over the surface area of your body.
dozens of businesses and organizations, Now imagine I remove that weight and grab a long needle. What would happen if I placed
and helped Freedman Sensei train the point of the needle against your chest and applied 50 pounds of pressure to it? Shish-
federal, local, and state law enforcement kebab. Why? Because I concentrated all of that force into a very tiny area.
If you think about measuring pressure in PSI or pound-force per square inch – it‘s easier
– including the 366th MP det. (the
to break this down. Let‘s say that the surface area of your body supporting the 50 pound
bodyguards for the secretary of defense). weight may have been 100 square inches. Let‘s also say that the area under the needle
th
was 1/100 of an inch. The weight was exerting .5 PSI while the needle was exerting
Inside D.G.C.F.S. 5000 PSI. This is why a doctor can give you an injection with very little force on the
Edge weapon Seminar 1
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2 needle – the pressure multiplication is huge.
Coming Events 3 Types of weapons
Airsoft Products 4 If you think about things people use as weapons, we can categorize weapons into a few
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 basic concept groups. This will also help us think about using things as weapons which
Armed & Irrelevant 10
Paul Vunak 11 may not have been designed to be used that way. This article will cover edged, impact,
“Hock” 14 flexible, field effect, and projectile weapons categories.
Welcome 16 Edged weapons are weapons with an edge or a point which cut or tear. Knives, swords,
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 axes, and spikes are different types of designated edged weapons. Cutting implements
Improvised Weapons 18
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 work by sliding across the cutting surface. If you take a knife and press down on a loaf of
bread you squash it – you have to draw the knife through to cut. This is the same for
flesh. I can‘t tell you how many people I see practicing edged weapons like they are hitting rather than cutting or stabbing.
Impact weapons, as the name implies, are things you hit someone with. Nunchucks, staffs, war hammers, clubs – all impact
weapons. Impact weapons work by increasing the effective speed of the blow because the end will travel faster than your
hand. With increased speed you get increased momentum – allowing blows to penetrate the target further. An important
concept of an impact weapon is that they allow for strikes which might otherwise hurt if delivered by body parts. Punch
someone to the frontal bone and you‘re likely to break your hand. Impact weapons also work by force concentration as
mentioned above.
Flexible weapons are weapons which bind, entangle, and constrict. Garrotes and chains are an example of a flexible
weapons. Sometimes flexible weapons are combined with edged or impact weapons (such as rope darts or flails). Some
flexible weapons can also be used as impact weapons (bullwhips). The main concepts behind flexible weapons depend on
how they are used.

Page 18
However, when used for a choke or an entanglement they are definitely force concentrators.
Projectile weapons are weapons which are propelled to a target, while the method of propulsion may vary. It may be useful to
think of projectile weapons as ―distance weapons‖. Guns, arrows, missiles are all projectile weapons. Projectile weapons are
effective because they allow a person to deliver the energy of the weapon at a distance. Projectiles can be thrown or fired.
Field-effect weapons are weapons which rely on a secondary effect for their use. Some examples include pepper spray,
chemical weapons, acoustical and biological weapons. Field effect weapons tend to affect an area, and the ultimate medium
of delivery may not be solid – could be energetic or chemical. One drawback to field effect weapons is that they tend to be
hard to control and can affect unintended people. Pepper spray, for example, will have some effect on the sprayer and
bystanders in an enclosed space or if the wind carries it away from the intended target.
Improvised weapons
Just like doctors use knives specially designed to be most useful in surgery, tools designed to be weapons are usually
specifically tailored for the job. But, imagine you were a carpenter who didn‘t have a hammer or nail gun – could you still drive
in a nail? Sure, you‘d just look for some other object (perhaps a brick, or a wrench) and improvise. Once you understand how
weapons work, with little thought nearly anything can be a weapon.
Most solid items that can be held can be used as impact weapons. Our ancestors hit each-other with rocks, for example.
Remember the key to an impact weapon is force concentration – try to strike with a corner. If you‘re using a brick – you‘ll
concentrate the force better if you hit with the corner of the brick rather than the face. Strike with the tip of a stick, or the edge
of a rolled-up magazine. Grab a book – hold it from an end and strike with a corner.
Anything with an edge can be used to cut or stab. Pens are great stabbing and ripping tools, but you can also use a credit
card or even a thumbnail to draw blood. Broken glass, rigid plastic, rings with sharp stones, pins … the list goes on.
Obvious flexible weapons include ropes chains and cords, but you can also use towels, clothing, rolled up trash bags,
handkerchiefs, hoses, or a belt. I generally advise against wrapping the ends of a flexible weapon around your own hands as
doing so locks you into the weapon and you can get bound up. Flexible weapons take some training to get skilled, but they
can be used to strike, deflect, entangle or whip. Wet the end of a handkerchief and you can use it like a whip that could
potentially injure an attacker‘s eyes. Headphones and their cords can be used to wrap and entangle an opponent.
Again, the issue with field-effect weapons is the lack of ability to control them. However, in a pinch, nearly any aerosol can be
sprayed into the eyes. A mouth full of liquid can be sprayed into an opponent‘s face.
Anything that can be thrown can become a projectile weapon. Even a cup of water could be thrown at an attackers face to
cause a momentary distraction. You don‘t have to necessarily injure an attacker with a thrown object, a flinch or a distraction
may give you the time needed to escape or attack.
An important concept to grasp with improvised weapons is shielding. If you are attacked, particularly by an armed assailant,
it‘s a good idea to place objects between you and an attacker. Make the attacker attack through an object, climb over
something, or risk being injured by attacking and you can lessen his effectiveness. A backpack might be held in front of you ,
tables and chairs can be knocked over in front of you, even a jacket held out will provide some protecting against a knife.
How to Practice
The first level of practice is to learn the basic use weapons. If you study a specific weapon art (such as iaido) keep right on
going, but you‘ll need some cross-training. I suggest cross-training in a weapons-oriented art that practices angles of attack –
like many styles of arnis, kali, eskrima, or ketsugo jujutsu. Memorizing specific techniques for specific weapons is OK, but will
have limited translation if you‘re not holding that specific weapon. Practice with various edged, impact and flexible weapons.
The next level of training is to practice with improvised weapons in your home. Pick items up in your home and practice
attacking with them. For safety‘s sake I can‘t recommend practicing with live blades without professional supervision. Be
careful with those kitchen knives. Practice in different areas of your home – bedroom, bathroom, kitchen etc. Look at every
object you can pick up as a potential weapon.
Extend your training into different environments with mental exercise. When you‘re out of your home, take a few seconds to
scan your environment for improvised weapons. Do this quickly. For example, when I go out to dinner the first thing I do is
look for the exits at the restaurant, then I scan my immediate area for potential weapons (and there are always many). I try to
do this in about 5 seconds or less and I make it a habit. Now it‘s like a little game. Make it fun, and you‘ll remember to do it
yourself – and you‘ll be safer.

Sensei John Moore


http://mainemartialarts.com/

Page 19
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS
When I was trying to figure out what I wanted to write an article about, all I could think of
was what I‘ve been ―preaching‖ about in the last year or so: Accountability in the martial
arts. I see the world of martial arts moving down a path that tears down and does not
build into. A sports minded group of people more interested in making a dollar or a name
for themselves, than teaching our students the importance of personal accountability and
responsibility.
Coming up in the martial arts from a martial arts family, I have had the privilege of being
around some of the greatest martial arts masters in the world. Their legacy passing from
Monua Cary
2010 Nominee Universal Martial Arts generation to generation a testament to the commitment and pride in what we do as a
Hall of Fame, 2008 United States Martial whole.
Arts Hall of Fame (Female Master of the I am very proud to be called a martial artist because of the philosophy and values it
Year) Coach for the U.S. 7th Dan teaches. Honor, integrity, and truth being the grass root cornerstone to each system;
(Independent Warriors Association)
6th Degree Blackbelt (CJR) with the disciplines and techniques being a bonus to the whole.
Jujitsu Instructor, But as with anything, there are some things that are not worth being proud of, yet crucial
Women's Self Protection Instructor. to address.
Having competed and won numerous Let me ask you this. Do you not agree that the higher in rank we go, the more
JuJitsu and Karate Grand
Championships, in 1995 I became the
accountable we are to our students? Are we not supposed to be an example to our
first American woman to win the World students to follow?
Title in Sport JuJitsu, in Auckland, New Unfortunately I have come across a whole generation of young martial artists who are full
Zealand. of pride, disrespect, and quite honestly, no clue to the virtues of Bushido. Excuse me, but
1994 Competitor of the Year (NCMA)
Co-Author of The Accountability Project
why is this?
MEAT MARKET OR GENERATION CATALYST
Inside D.G.C.F.S. There are some really great schools out there, and they deserve to make a living doing
Edge weapon Seminar 1 what they do best…unless it is at the expense of the moral and philosophical fabric of the
Mrs.Traylor Combat Fitnes 2 student. As martial artists, it is our responsibility to instill into our future instructors and
Coming Events 3
Airsoft Products 4 masters, the cornerstone philosophy why we do what we do. In fact, we are probably one
EdgeWeapon Seminar cont. 5 of the few groups of people who have the ability to change entire generations on a global
Armed & Irrelevant 10 basis. This is an honor, a privilege, yet some instructors feel they are entitled to reap a
Paul Vunak 11 benefit at the expense of the student.
“Hock” 14
Welcome 16
Excuse me, but this kind of action is what I call dishonorable and a true God Complex.
Fake Instructors “Hamic” 17 BACK TO BASICS
Improvised Weapons 18 As an instructor, I go back to basics a lot because it is the foundation of everything we
DISHONOR IN THE RANKS 20 build our system on. If you do not have a handle on the basics, you will never progress to
the level you are aspiring to. The making of a great martial artist is built upon a strong
foundation of principle, discipline, philosophy of mind, body and spirit, and correct
technique.
The higher in rank we go, we need to grasp hold of the basic tenets of the martial arts in order to build into our students the
greatness they need to achieve in their lives as a whole. What we teach them in the beginning will pour into their personal and
professional lives. The wives and husbands we teach will be leading their children by the example give to them. Our young
students will be turning into the adults we have molded. Don‘t believe me, ask the parents why they put their kids in your
class….to teach them discipline and how to be a better person.
Basics is a great way to re-establish why we do what we do, and as long as we have the ability to be flexible and teachable
ourselves, we will continue to advance and progress in the things that matter.
OUR RESPONSIBILITY
If you take a good hard look at the history of martial arts, it is not all about the physical, but the mental and spiritual aspects of
a human being….to help make them whole, to live harmoniously with humanity and with oneself.
True martial arts is selfless. It builds and does not tear down. And the goal is to leave a legacy to future generations.
If you never thought you held the future in your hand, look into the eyes of your students, what do you see? Do they reflect
you or do they reflect the greatness you‘ve helped to bring out of them?
It is a choice we as teachers have to make every time we hold class. Are you up to the challenge?
THE WARRIOR
A true warrior is integrous, honest, trustworthy, selfless, and they will not compromise these things for monetary purpose or
self gain. Our battle is to go against what is cookie cutter in a society clothed in shallowness by teaching the traditions of our
art for the benefit of the future of martial arts.
Are you a warrior?

By Monua L. Cary
contact: monuacary@gmail.com

Page 20
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