Postby Jay Vail » Sat May 31, 2003 4:25 am
I am thin, light, and weak. When I was a kid, I was built like a stop sign, big head, spindly body, and I’m not much different now. Tim S probably has 40 pounds on me.
Since I appeared to be physically weak (and I was), I was often the target for bullies, who, not surprisingly, were bigger and stronger. When we went to the ground, they tied me in knots until I learned not to wrestle. That’s right. NOT to wrestle. Wrestling on the ground is for suckers and people who want to lose, and for play. It is not for combat.
Here is what I learned. I have used this lesson for real, and it worked every time.
Once when I was about 14, I used a hip throw to toss a guy who swung at me. We ended up on the ground, me in a head lock getting choked out. Before I passed out, I remembered a trick my judo instructor had taught for essentially the same attack, only we were standing in the dojo: reach around the guy’s shoulder and press your finger into the hollow of his throat just above the sternum. So, I did this, and he let go, whereupon I was able to assume the top mount and exact my revenge.
The next time a bully attacked me and we went to the ground, I stuck my finger in his eye. That was the end of that.
Over my HS years, I had a number of other encounters that went to the ground, and every time, I went for the eyes or the throat or the fingers (interesting, the Codex Wallerstein advises bending the fingers if you can’t get some other hold), and the fight was over.
Here is another example from WW2 of the same thing:
“‘Before Company K moved out, I went down the road to the next company to see what had happened during the night. I learned that those blood-chilling screams had come from the Japanese. He had jumped into a foxhole where he met an alert Marine. In the ensuing struggle, he [the Marine] had lost his knife. The desperate Marine had jammed his forefinger into his enemy’s eye socket and killed him.’” From Hochheim, Military Knife Combat, p. 64, quoting E.B. Sledge’s With the Old Breed.