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The
Shredder

"The Shredder, when deployed as designed,
immediately creates the "defensive reflexive response"
in one's opponent. He has no choice but to defend and become the
prey! The body becomes a slave to it's own reactions... it avoids
punishment, it reacts to physical, psychological and visual stimulus.
The Shredder attacks all of the body's systemic weaknesses all at
once. Devastating and overwhelming the body and mind's capacity
to the advantage of the one skilled in deploying it."
- Aaron Sawabi
Unique
to Senshido, the Shredder was discovered through comparison between
real fights and how they were executed, through scenario replications
with no consent performed in real time/real speed and the examination
of performance in these situations by trained martial artists and
untrained people as well. Another factor of its development were
the instant reactions the Shredder had on those it was used on,
even at its development stage. The reaction was always the same,
instant panic with the inherent attempts at defensive disengagement.
Something occurred on a psychological level, it wasnt just
the reception of pain but a complete predator to prey shift.
Senshidos
physical retaliation principles dictated its path. We have 5 principles
of physical retaliation, they are (in no particular order)
1.
Economy of motion
2. Non telegraphic movement
3. Opportunity Striking
4. Tactile sensitivity
5. Primary target acquisition.
These
principles dictated that when striking, it was logical to make sure
that the time frame between strikes was as short as possible in
order to offer your opponent less of a chance to reflexively &
defensively react to the attack. Because the startle to flinch response
is a reliable physiological process that acts as an effective protective
mechanism (we, Senshido, utilize it in terms of a launching pad
off an ambush or surprise attack), I deemed it necessary to come
up with a retaliatory concept that bypassed this phenomenon.
As
I analyzed this process and realized its validity as a defense mechanism
which is not only quicker and much more reliable than any memorized
technique but also non perishable and impossible to bypass when
it overrides cognitive processing, I began to design a concept of
attack that bypassed this involuntary triggered response.
Real
violence will more often than not begin with an attack on the mind
which triggers an emotional response. Our survival mechanism is
connected to what is called the autonomic nervous system; this system
controls all voluntary and involuntary functions. It is also divided
into 2 systems, one being the parasympathetic nervous system and
the other being the sympathetic nervous system. The parasympathetic
nervous system is the one that controls our actions and thoughts
in non stressful environments. It controls fine motor skills, cognitive
processing and a host of other functions related; however when threat
is perceived, the sympathetic nervous system takes over which triggers
the survival mechanisms or 'fight or flight' response. The release
of adrenaline by the sympathetic nervous system increases blood
flow and arterial pressure causing a large amount of blood to be
pumped into the larger muscles resulting in gross motor functions
and applications.
The
sympathetic nervous system hinders the functional use of cognitive
processing, visual performance and fine motor skills. Modern scientific
research and studies have shown us that under the influence of the
sympathetic nervous system, only gross motor skills are performed
optimally. Consequently, the ambush or immediate threat introduced
quickly and with minimal or no prior warning will trigger the sympathetic
nervous system. Understanding that these physiological rules preside
during high stress situations, these scientific facts became the
corner stone for the concept of the Shredder.
For
starters, each tool used had to be based on gross motor applications
due to the very fact that the cognitive brains overriding
by the mid brain restricted access to finer motor skills found in
most martial arts. Therefore the tools had to be instinctual and
primal in nature but simply fine tuned in a way that allowed its
delivery to be more acute then if one were to just go berserk.
The beat in between the delivery of each strike had
to be shortened from the traditional half beat to a
quarter beat, meaning, the time frame in between each tool finding
its intended target was much shorter and therefore quicker then,
for example, the usual jab/cross combo in boxing.
Although
a real fight is arrhythmic in nature, it still functions in beats,
a frame of time between blows/strikes. The very nature of the retraction
of a tool (fist/foot/knee/elbow etc.) creates a beat as the time
frame between each strike triggers the victims
amygdala (a small almond shaped portion of the brain which triggers
the protective/defensive flinch) to kick into action creating a
defensive reflexive response. You see it in murder victims, defensive
wounds in the hands and arms. The reason being is there was a time
frame there regardless of the speed of the attack which permitted
the victims arms to reflexively come up and instinctively
protect the vitals (eyes, throat, facial area, head etc.)
This
primal regression to gross motor skills we speak of
and a lack of cognitive processing is a choice-less choice. We cannot
cognitively process this response and choose to adopt it. Much like
when driving a car, if a child or a dog all of a sudden jumped 5
to 10 feet in front of your moving vehicle, you do not have time
to process this information. Your brain and body takes care of that
for you, the stimulus is introduced to quickly and the startle to
flinch response kicks in causing you to swerve out of the way while
hitting the brakes as hard as you can hopefully missing the child
and not killing them. Only once the situation is over do we regain
access to cognitive thought process and realize what just happened
and we feel the sudden blood rushing into our feet, the heart palpitations
and the realization that we almost killed someone. We cannot choose
to regress to that state; it is an automatic hard wired process.
It
has been our experience that an untrained individual will pick up
on the Shredder concept and tool much quicker and with greater ease
than a trained fighter. The reason being is that the majority of
martial art systems and styles are based on muscle memory and technical
skills that are primarily launched by the frontal lobe of the brain
which is the cognitive control center if you will.
As
previously stated, we are already hard wired to survive and martial
arts in general work against this natural physiological and biological
process. A gap is created between what our bodies instinctually
want to do and the new information that was introduced to it through
our martial training. So an untrained individual adapts to the Shredder
concept much quicker than a trained person would because there is
no prior interference. A martial artist will try and use a fine
motor skill delivery system for a gross motor tool; modern research
shows that it simply cannot be done until the brain no longer perceives
threat or imminent danger and adopts a predatory mind set.
What
makes this approach so different to conventional striking or dirty
tactics such as the eye gouge or the throat strike etc. is
that striking requires three integral elements to make it functional:
1.
Distance
2. Grounding
3. Torque.
These
three elements requires proper positioning, strength & athleticism
to a certain degree, as well as clarity in the moment; a luxury,
as stated above, we do not possess when facing threat and danger.
The Shredder requires neither of these elements. It can be applied
in any close quarter position, whether lying down, while falling
(being taken down), at extreme close range etc. It's comprised of
tools that create maximum damage with minimal effort. Its uniqueness
is to be found in its delivery and the science that backs its success.
Conventional
methods of attack are all so common that through the media, the
martial arts, being exposed to real fights, entertainment etc. that
we have come to accept and expect a certain 'way' of fighting. We
are to a certain extent, desensitized and so our minds are somewhat
'prepared' for a certain assault, a certain beat in rhythm, etc.
Conventional methods are designed for distance tactics (kicks, punches,
elbows, knees, head butts etc.); or grappling tactics (clinch, takedowns,
submissions etc.) What makes a grappler so devastating is the fact
that a striker no longer has the range, torque or grounding to make
his strikes effective enough to intercept or hurt the grappler.
Therefore everyone figured, correctly might I add, that they needed
to learn to grapple as well. The Shredder however works best in
extreme close quarter situations, especially the dreaded clinch.
The closer to the opponent you are the better. The Shredder is the
equalizer, or as it has been referred to by most of those who have
been exposed to it including other self defense experts such as
Sammy Franco of Contemporary Founding Arts, The Missing Link
in Martial Arts/Self Defense Training.
The
advantage of the Shredder is that it is a concept and tool that
can be used by one and all regardless of age, gender, size or athletic
ability. Although this comes across as a marketing ploy,
I assure you, it isnt. The very nature of the Shredders
foundation is physiological, psychological and behavioral. It is
user friendly and requires no memorization of techniques,
no necessity of repetitive training, no need for high levels of
athleticism and is in accordance with the mind and bodies physiological
rules. This offers enormous value and is a tremendous asset to any
teaching and training curriculum as it can only pragmatically enhance
a persons survival skills. Hundreds of people world wide have
successfully used the Shredder to survive violent confrontations
and martial artists world wide have adopted this concept into their
training curriculums.
Richard
Dimitri / Senshido Inc. © 2004
References:
- Ray
Shelton, PhD, EMT, Emergency Stress Management
- Richard
H. Cox Sport Psychology Concepts and Applications Third Edition
- The
Athletes Guide to Sports Psychology: Mental Skills for Physical
People D.V. Harris Human Kinetics
- Ed
Lovette, Dave Spaulding: Defensive Living 2000
- A.T.
Wellford Stress and Performance Ergonomics 1973 Taylor
& Francis LTD.
The Shredder is Senshido's primary offensive arsenal and has been
used successfully every single time both in real life altercations
and scenario replications. For descriptive details and instrcution
on the Shredder, please refer to the Deluxe
Shredder Package.

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Shredder
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