A little background, I’m a Marine with almost ten years of experience. I’m also a retired Physical Security Specialist (GS-11) from a Naval Weapons Facility. I also worked in the Special Weapons program that included what we called a, “black box program.” Don’t ask!
In addition, I also retired from a major university as a Program Analyst/QA testor 3.
This is enough to set the stage and as I’m writing under the heading of karate for self-defense it may help to know I began studying martial disciplines at an early age, i.e., boxing at a local club; judo in my first couple of years on active duty as a Marine; I also practiced privately with a Hawaiian Somoan Marine who used me as a punching bag but I learned a lot; I continued my practice of karate while stationed at Camp LeJeune, RS Chicago, Camp Hansen Okinawa (1979 where I began my journey in Isshinryu), back at LeJeune; privately after leaving active duty in my “backyard dojo”; at both home and at an Isshinryu dojo as an assistant instructor In Berkeley; then I broke off into a more solitary practice and study of the reality of violence and fense (i.e., self defense/offense) because I began to find gaping holes in my karate for self-defense.
Back to PhySec, I feel that with a bit of creativity one can use the discipline to set boundaries that will foster all three facets of fense as explained here:
Boundaries and Layers are best in creating a wholehearted, comprehensive and complete security posture for yourself and those you love; so you can remove or mitigate repercussions or consequences if you are forced to protect and defend.
Think about this; mull this over during mokuso and build you security in a complete and comprehensive way!
Read more here: https://tinyurl.com/45ky7by3
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