Sooooooo , in my country we use other things,. our language and body language is more threatening, our streetfighting skills are a little more honed..................now I don't expect you to believe all this ..but that's the way it is
You need not convince me of anything Ray _so not to fret.
‘Honed’ street - fighting is part of a continuum in America…including the language and body language…weaponless physical violence and violence with weapons_ legal and illegal.
Playing the ‘mucho macho’ part of the ‘street fighter’ will get anyone killed, in a wheel chair, or in prison and financially destitute…in England_ Wales_ or Timbuktu_
And ‘Honed’ street fighting, a great fantasy to indulge in by all who care to, is what buries the people who have trouble understanding the meaning of ‘street fight’ _which still needs to be defined.
Rory’s book is on target when it states that some martial artists _ [this is not directed at you Ray] _ want to believe in the magic and secrets of styles…convinced that what they do is sufficient to exist in a world of the reality of violence_ without the clear understanding, or even a perception of conflict in general_relying on assumptions as fed by their style.
Rory
You have certain assumptions what conflict is like …if you are interested in self defense, you will choose a martial art based on its similarity to your assumptions. The first major assumption is what a fight is and what it looks like.
Violence is a very broad category of human interaction.