I’d never seen anyone take out two guys so quickly and clinically. And without thinking I ran after the Japanese guy and caught up with him. At first he was suspicious. Wary at what I wanted.
I think he thought I was going to try and assault him. That I wanted to take him on. Dish out the same treatment he’d given the other two guys. No chance. I wasn’t that stupid.
Only when he realized I was genuinely interested in his martial arts training did he relent and fill me in on the details of what they were.
He told me they were based on an old deadly Japanese fighting system. Long since forgotten. And not taught ANYWHERE anymore. BUT these martial arts training techniques you need in ANY dangerous situation.
Anyway to cut to the chase, when the guy saw how eager I was, he ended up giving me an old manual containing each simple move he’d knew.
And now you can discover these same martial arts training too. You see, these martial arts training program is too good for me to keep to myself. You really need to see this. This martial arts training program is simple to understand and easy to follow. And really quick to memorize.
You see it‘s generally accepted in any fight the stronger person has the advantage over the weaker person. Which is true, to a certain extent.
BUT…the person who knows enough about a lever and a fulcrum to raise a heavier weight is better off than the larger person who doesn’t understand this. The smaller person takes advantage of this knowledge. And the larger person, in his ignorance, fails to use his strength to the best advantage.
The small person who understands this principle always has the advantage over the larger assailant. He zeros in on his larger attacker’s vulnerable points (his vital points)…exploits the lever and fulcrum principle…
…And…any attack is over. Finished. Instantly.
The Japanese know this. And know how to exploit this lever and fulcrum principle. And they’ve used these martial arts training principles for centuries. No where more so than in their lethal application of jiu jitsu.
And I’m talking about a little known and particularly lethal form of jiu jitsu here. One, most jiu jitsu practitioners today don’t even practice. You see as a weapon to inflict punishment Jiu Jitsu is almost without equal.
That’s because Jiu Jitsu concentrates on attacking the most vulnerable points of the human body. Once a person is under attack from someone who knows where to strike it’s almost utterly useless to defend against.
Any knife wielding maniac…any baton carrying hoodie…any doped up hothead mugger can be overcome…and…be putty in your hands…when you use Jiu Jitsu against them. In fact anyone you decide to ‘go after’ is history. You dispatch them. Leaving them sobbing in tortuous pain.
Here’s where it gets interesting. You can get good at these lethal martial arts training fighting moves real FAST!
…Without having to go to classes, or spend years and many hours of study. Or even leaving your own home.
Here’s why;
Yabe Yae Kichi was the first master jiu jitsu practitioner to introduce jiu jitsu to the USA. He was chosen because he was a master in the Japanese National System of Physical Training and Self Defense at Tren Shin Ryu School in Japan.
Why was this particular form of martial arts training important? Well bear with me a moment and I’ll tell you.
You see, this noted Japanese Jiu-Jitsu school was famed for its use of Atemi-Waza, a particularly vicious form of jiu-jitsu because of the striking moves involved, which focus on…
…Attacking The Most Vital Points of The Opponent When You’re Unarmed
The founder of the Tenshin Shinyo-Ryu was Yanagi Sekizai Minamoto-no-Masatari, a fanatical martial arts practitioner, who studied and mastered jiu-jitsu in its many forms from different mentors until he had mastered them all. Eventually he established his own jiu-jitsu school with over 5,000 pupils, and fixed the number of 'te,' or 'moves', at one hundred and twenty-four.
On one notable occasion, assisted by one of his pupils, he encountered more than a mob of a hundred, whom he put to flight after soundly thrashing them.
And noted Jiu-Jitsu author, E.J. Harrison, wrote, "On an Atemi chart given to me by my first Jujutsu teacher of the Tenshin Shinyo-ryu at Yokohama, this spot (Suigetsu-the solar plexus) is described as the most secret of that school. When kicking your opponent in this spot, keep the toes curved and deliver the blow with the ball of the foot.
Also Jiu-Jitsu promoter William Bankier asked Sadakazu Uyenishi of the Tenshin Shindo Ryu to show a way of defending against a punch.
Bankier said: "I made a lunge at his face with my left arm. Like a flash he turned a complete pirouette or circle. As the circle is completed his right leg was in the air. It was then brought back with all his power, and dealt me a crashing blow."
Few people are aware how powerful blows struck this way really are. The knockout blow as we know it is nothing by comparison. You see a downward cut, could…