Blog Article/Post Caveat (Read First Please: Click the Link)
What you know, what you practice, how you train and what you understand along with experiences accumulated all contribute to both, "Good Self-protection and Bad Self-protection." In knowing what you know humans sometimes forget about that which sits just below the surface and tends to fall into the cracks that make up what you know and one professional calls this the, "unk-unk," or what you don't know you don't know syndrome.
Did you KNOW that what you know, how you express that and how it was taught, trained, practiced and applied makes the difference in self-defense defense? Did you KNOW that how you label certain methods and methodologies matters when you have protected and defended through the dangerous mine-field of the "legal system?"
Did you know that it is very probable that if you have training and expertise that it and how you gained that skill, knowledge and understanding matters in defending within the legal system. Did you know that your perceived expertise dependent on those in the legal profession/system can put your protection defense off kilter and into the you broke the law side?
Have you developed your articulable vocabulary to a point that it truly and correctly reflects your adherence in the self-defense defense to the legal system? Does your self-protection program address vocabulary toward honoring and articulating to the legal system and its representatives or is it the ‘tacti-cool’ stuff that triggers the ego and provides one the ability to impress the girls when out on a date type stuff?
What you know directly correlates to what is perceived by those who deal in the legal system from the first responder, the prosecutor, the jurors and the others all sitting and waiting their chance to take you to task after the judge and prosecutor get done with you.
How does your training and practice compare to that of the entertainment industry because those sitting in judgement of your actions will be influenced to see what you did in such a light it is used to suggest that your skills are such that only a criminal would use them.
What you know…
Example: Do you know about the legal term, “Preclusion?”
For reference and sources and professionals go here: Bibliography (Click the link)
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