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The psychology of self
defense and the force continuum
How
to Win the Battle and Win the War
By Syd
Weedon
You have made the
decision to legally carry a self defense firearm. You have selected a
pistol, acquired a CCW license and hopefully learned the basics of using all
of this exciting new firepower. You have spent a lot of energy learning
about pistols, cartridges, holsters, and the laws and rules concerning the
carry of deadly weapons. That is all good and necessary, but it is woefully
incomplete. Hopefully, a moment will come when you will step back from it
all for a minute to consider what you are doing.
"If your only tool
is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." I don't know who said
that but it was brilliant. Nowhere is this more true than in the real world
use of defensive firearms. The point I'm going to make and make again, is
that we need to insure that the gun isn't our only tool.
The use of a defensive
firearm is not an appropriate response to the vast majority of threats,
hurts and insults we receive. For normal people who don’t work in law
enforcement or the military, situations in which armed self defense is
justified are actually quite rare. The odds are good that you may live your
whole life without ever needing to draw a gun and fire it at another human
being. I hope you do.
When you strap on a
gun, you are introducing into your life the possibility that you may shoot
and kill another person. This is extremely serious business. No right
thinking person wants to shoot someone. It is a tragic and horrible thing.
It is expensive in every way and creates a profound legal liability. It may
create an emotional and spiritual trauma. People respond to this in
different ways, some having a great deal of "post traumatic
stress" while others seem able to shrug it off pretty easily. One way
or the other, it leaves a mark on your soul. You don’t want to shoot
someone if you don’t have to.
While the presence of
the gun may resolve the problem without it ever being fired or even drawn,
it may not, and you need to be mentally prepared to use it. By the same
token, you must be perfectly clear about the correct and legal use of deadly
force, and you must be emotionally capable of controlling yourself so as not
to use the gun when its use is inappropriate. Your mind is the true weapon.
Everything else is just a tool. If your mind is not prepared, the hardware
will be useless. If the mind is not prepared, the hardware is more likely to
get you into trouble than out of it. If your mind and body are prepared, you
will not need to use the gun except in the gravest extreme.
The Spiritual Dimension
All of the world’s
great religions contain prohibitions against the wanton destruction of
fellow human beings. This is good. We don’t want to be killing each other
over parking spaces. My own tradition is Judeo-Christian, so I will tend to
speak from that background. One of my own struggles revolved around the fact
that on the surface, arming myself seemed to run contrary to the religious
tradition with which I was raised: "Thou shall not kill,"
"Turn the other cheek," and "Blessed are the
peacemakers." How do you resolve this with a .45 auto strapped to your
hip?
First of all, we
recognize that these ancient rules are still good ones. They still make
sense. They are the rules I want to live by. I don’t want to kill anybody.
I don’t want to get into fights just because someone says something
obnoxious me. I want to see peace in the world. I would love to see a world
so peaceful and good that the assertion of my right to keep and bear arms
would be nothing more than an exercise in constitutional law. Choosing to
take responsibility for the safety and security of yourself and your family
is not a repudiation of the basic injunctions not to murder and to seek
peace and human decency for all.
There are evils greater
than death. History is full of examples which show that it is the moral
choice to oppose evil. We don’t have to look very far: Hitler, Saddam
Hussein, the Khmer Rouge, the domestic terrorists who have attacked our
schools and work places, the psychopathic predators who have roamed our
streets. Soldiers, law enforcement, and citizens who have opposed this sort
of evil with deadly force are making a moral choice, and if they kill in the
course of fighting this sort of evil, they have committed no
"sin."
The demand by the
radical pacifists and gun grabbers that we should accept brutalization and
death at the hands of criminals and psychopaths for the sake of their notion
of "safety" is irrational to the point of being demonic. If being
raped and murdered by a crack head is someone’s idea of spiritual
development, then count me out.
You have the right to
live without the threat of abuse, torture and murder. You have the right to
defend yourself. You have the right to freedom and self-determination, and
you have the right to defend these things with deadly force if necessary. If
anyone tries to tell you otherwise, simply remind them that the very right
to discuss these things and pursue those religious and political beliefs
freely was won by force of arms, not by rolling over and playing dead.
But "turn the
other cheek"? Not only is it a good idea, it's absolutely mandatory in
the legal environment in which we operate. When you begin to carry a
personal defense weapon, you will immediately notice an increased reticence
to get involved in the macho matches in which you may have engaged
previously. Generally, you can only use lethal force for self defense or the
defense of another in response to an imminent threat of bodily harm, sexual
assault or kidnap. If you initiate a pissing match with someone which
escalates into a shooting, your self defense justification is negated. You
will go to jail. Consequently, civility, forbearance, and patience are
absolutely mandatory for the armed civilian (and that includes law
enforcement personnel). So "Turn the other cheek," "Blessed
are the peacemakers," and "Thou shall not murder" will serve
you well. Avoidance of conflict is always the best policy. This is the
paradox of the concealed personal defense weapon: we equip, train and
prepare ourselves and then we must make every effort to avoid employing it.
If you think that your
gun makes you ten feet tall and enables you to be rude, confrontational, and
gives you god-like power over the people around you, think again because
you're on your way to jail. You just don't know it yet.
Bushido
So how do we make sure
that we have more tools than just a hammer? The short answer is to prepare
mind and body so that the situations in which the gun would need to be
deployed will be reduced to an absolute minimum. This means the development
of "empty hand" and non-lethal techniques of self defense, and
improved situational awareness.
With the disclaimers
that I don’t read or speak Japanese and am not a samurai or any sort of
combat god, I want to talk a bit about Bushido, the "way of the
warrior" in traditional Japanese martial arts. Bushido got a bad rap
during World War II when it was corrupted by the military leaders of Japan
to become the kamikaze cult which led thousands of young men to senseless
deaths. In reality, Bushido is an ancient philosophy and warrior ethic based
in the non-attachment principles of Zen Buddhism. Bushido is not unlike the
chivalric code of the European knights but it is not the same. It puts
emphasis on loyalty, self sacrifice, justice, a sense of shame, refined
manners, purity, modesty, frugality, martial spirit, honor and affection.
There are a lot of cool
and nifty things about Bushido that are worth studying in their own right
but which are totally irrelevant to the discussion of concealed carry and
self defense. The points of connection are in the paradoxical nature of the
Bushido ethic and the practice of armed self defense. The Bushido warrior
practices detachment from life and death, and from wealth and personal ego.
At the same time, the Bushido warrior has a fanatical devotion to the
development of his craft, to duty, honor, family and country. The Bushido
warrior strives to achieve a profound respect for justice, life, and fellow
human beings. He is detached, free and fluid, adaptable and relaxed, while
being totally focused, ready to die, and a master of his martial craft. The
spiritual quest of the Bushido warrior is to resolve these paradoxes into a
unified personal balance. He empties himself and becomes the weapon.
The armed civilian
faces analogous paradoxes. He or she must exert a high level of self
control. Petty offenses and insults cannot be allowed to goad one into an
armed confrontation. A high level of skill must be attained in the use of
the firearm. If one must shoot, the shots must be expertly placed. It would
be better to endure a mugging than to shoot three innocent bystanders in the
process of stopping a mugging. The armed civilian must imagine and rehearse
endless possible scenarios in order to be adequately prepared. What if I am
attacked in a crowd? What if I am injured? What if my gun jams? Part of this
process is fantasy and imagination, and we must do some serious
soul-searching to make sure that we aren’t seduced by the fantasies into
desiring or seeking an armed confrontation. We must be detached and yet
devoted to the craft. We must be free from macho and blood lust and yet
ready to apply lethal force without hesitation if necessary.
The warrior is prepared
for combat wherever he is. It is said that one samurai, who was so poor as
to earn his living by working in a small field, always carried a sword and
wore leggings even in the field. He therefore did not need to go home first
if he was called up. A samurai is a warrior first, whenever and wherever he
is. He doesn’t sleep with his left arm under his body. If he is attacked
when he is in bed, he can prevent the first blow with his left arm, and can
reach for his sword with his dominant arm. He remembers to find an emergency
exit before he sleeps when he stays in an inn or hotel.
Like the samurai in the
story, the best practice for the CCW holder is to be armed at all times.
There are several reasons for this. If your gun is on you, it isn’t laying
around unsupervised somewhere and it is available to you in case you need
it. If you get into the practice of wearing your gun every day, you will
wear it more naturally and adjust your wardrobe for adequate concealment.
When you wear the gun at all times, the muscles and unconscious learn where
the gun is, making for a faster and more certain draw. This practice of
wearing the gun at all times reinforces the "warrior spirit" and
is the safest mode of storage for a personal defense weapon.
But this article is
about making sure that your don’t have only a hammer. Samurai military
training (Bu) included at least the six martial arts of sword
fighting, spear throwing, shooting bow and arrow, riding, Karate and also
the use of firearms. The samurai didn’t think very highly of firearms,
considering them a dishonorable way to fight, but that’s another story.
Apart from the six martial arts listed above, others were taught, such as
swimming, fighting with clubs (Jitte) and spikes, star-dagger
throwing (Shuriken), fighting with halberd (Naginata),
climbing ropes, and spying and concealment (Ninjitsu).
The samurai schooled in
Bushido could employ a wide range of martial tools along the complete force
continuum in order to deal with a problem. He was in no way limited
to his sword. In the same way, the armed civilian is best served by
equipping himself or herself with a range of tools, both weapons and
"empty hand" techniques. (Karate means "empty hand").
The Force Continuum
The legendary governor
of Louisiana, Huey P. Long, when discussing the political risks inherent in
communications, once said, "Never write what you can phone; never phone
what you can say in person; never say what you can wink." The governor
was describing a continuum of risk and security in communications. For the
armed civilian, we could come up with a parallel list: "Never shoot
what you can baton; never baton what you can spray; never spray what you can
punch; never punch what you can walk away from." Less is best.
The advantage of having
a range of self defense tools is obvious. If you can subdue an attacker
without using a deadly weapon, you eliminate the possibility of being
charged with assault with a deadly weapon or facing a lawsuit for shooting
someone. You also eliminate the possibility of emotional repercussions in
yourself that might result from a shooting. There are a number of
situations, especially involving close-in surprise attacks, in which the
assailant may already be too close to draw a gun. In these situations, your
hand-to-hand capabilities will be life savers. It has been shown that an
attacker armed with a knife who is within 21’ distance can wound or kill a
person before they can draw a gun.
Which items you add to
your personal defense tool box is an individual decision based on your own
appraisal of your capabilities. Some people add pepper spray, ASP
collapsible batons, or kubotans. The kubotan is a miniature baton developed
by Takayuki Kubota for use by the female officers of the Los Angeles Police
Department as an aid in controlling unruly suspects. It was so successful
that law enforcement agencies nationwide have adopted the kubotan for their
officers. The kubotan can be used for stabilizing your fist, applying
pressure to sensitive parts of an assailant's body, or gaining leverage on
an assailant's wrist or fingers.
You will notice that I
haven’t mentioned knives as a gun alternative. The reason for this is
simple: knives are deadly weapons and the legal penalties for misapplying
them are nearly as rough as with guns. Additionally, anyone who has ever
been in a knife fight will tell you that they are nasty, brutal affairs and
should be avoided whenever possible. Do I carry a fighting knife? Yes, I do.
Do I want to use it? No, not at all.
The point is that if
you can "air out" an opponent with a single well placed punch,
immobilize him with a kubotan, or disarm him with your hands, you are that
much ahead of the legal and emotional game.
Empty Hand
"Karate"
literally means "empty hand." I talk about Karate because of the
symbolism of its name and it happens to be the martial art that I study.
There is a bewildering array of martial arts schools and disciplines. In
fact, probably the hardest part of it is in finding the right school and
discipline. This part is harder than going to the store and buying a gun. It
requires some research, talking to people, and perhaps trying out several
schools before you hit on the right thing for you. I wish I could tell you
it was easy to find the right trainer and school, but it isn't. However, if
you are able to find the right empty hand discipline, you will find it
richly rewarding. My personal favorite discipline is Karate, but most of the
other schools – Tae-Kwon-Do, Aikido, Kempo, Kung Fu, Ju-Jitsu, or the
western military hand-to-hand disciplines – will serve you well if you
develop them
The obvious benefits of
acquiring an empty hand technique include having an effective mode of self
defense for those times and places in which you absolutely cannot carry a
gun, and it provides you with an alternative to lethal force in situations
where a lower level of force would be sufficient to handle the situation.
Additionally, the regular practice of an empty hand technique significantly
improves your physical condition – improving muscle tone and quickening
reaction time, and thus improving your overall health and appearance.
There are also benefits
which are less obvious. After a few months of Karate training, I began to
notice that I was moving better and had better control of my pistol at IDPA
matches. My upper body strength and footwork had improved. There is also a
subtle psychological change which comes over you when you know that you are
in good condition and are capable of handling a physical confrontation. This
is largely unconscious, but you project an aura of self confidence and
ability. Predators sense this and tend to move on to more vulnerable
targets. They want any easy kill, not a fight.
Like IDPA in the world
of defensive pistolcraft, an empty hand technique teaches you to perform
under pressure. Nothing simulates real combat, but the testing for belts,
sparring, and performing your moves in the presence of others creates stress
and acclimates you to acting under pressure. The simple practice and
repetition of moves programs them into your muscles and nerves so that when
you need to employ these skills in a crisis, they are there, automatic and
reflexive.
But aren’t guns
"the great equalizer?" Of course they are. That’s why I work so
hard as an advocate for concealed carry and RKBA. I’m not Bruce Lee and
never will be, and if I get cornered by a gang of thugs, I probably won’t
try to duke it out with them using Karate moves. Some people simply aren’t
capable of practicing a martial art due to physical disabilities or other
impediments. However, if you are in reasonably good health and martial arts
training is available to you, I believe you will find it highly rewarding in
a variety of ways, whether you ever use it in a fight or not. You’ll have
another tool in the box and every problem won’t look like a nail.
Situational Awareness
– Zanshin
At the top and bottom
of the force continuum is situational awareness. The Karate term for this is
zanshin. Literally, "zanshin" means something like
"remaining mind," or "continuing awareness." Zanshin
applies to your awareness of the world around you. You notice the people
around you – how they stand, how they carry themselves, what is in their
eyes – because you need to be prepared to interact with them. You are
present in the moment. The greatest self defense tool you have is between
your ears. When you are aware of the world around you, you can head off and
avoid 99.44% of the situations which might force you to deploy a weapon.
Even Gichin Funakoshi, the "father of modern Karate" said
avoidance was the best strategy, and, if confronted by an armed [with a
knife] opponent, run if you can. In the same way, if you are planning on
going somewhere that you think you’ll need your battle rifle, two backup
pistols and a kevlar vest, just don’t go there. If you find yourself
somewhere that doesn’t "feel right," leave. A little bit of
common sense can spare you of a lot of grief and lawyer bills. If you can’t
avoid the situation, your zanshin will prepare you to respond effectively
and appropriately.
The Warrior’s Way
You have decided not to
be a victim. You have embarked on the warrior’s way. It is my hope for you
that this will all remain a fascinating but academic exercise, and that you
will never have to face a mugging, attempted rape or home invasion. Yet, in
arming yourself and making the decision not to be food, you have, in fact,
adopted a way of life that makes particular spiritual, physical,
philosophical and legal demands upon you. These rules and demands are
non-negotiable. Misuse lethal force and you may win the battle but lose the
war. By understanding and mastering the force continuum you can win the
battle and win the war.
To summarize, the
warrior
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Learns
the laws under which he or she operates,
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Develops
"fighting spirit,"
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Acquires
mastery of the weapons he or she chooses to employ,
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Develops
self control, good manners, and respect for others,
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Acquires
a range of tools along the force continuum,
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Develops
a continuing situational awareness.
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