Keeping the option of peace open
when forced to fight back
By Professor Don Cross, M.Ed.
If confronted by an aggressive person who wants to cause you physical harm,
there are essentially four responses available to you. One, you can do nothing
and simply be a victim. This option is extremely risky, to say the least. Two,
you can immediately react without thought, get violent, and punch and kick
the aggressor into submission. This option is not without its hazards. Choosing
this option could lead to your own arrest and incarceration (even if you didn't
throw the first punch), or worse, serious injury or death. Three, you can simply
stand your ground and make it clear to the brute, through your body language
and what you say, that to be assaulted and having to fight back is not okay
with you, and you leave (if you can). And fourth, you can learn to use non-violent
self-defense Jujitsu skills that are assertive and proactive, which allow you
to immobilize your attacker, de-escalate the violence, and allow you to escape.
Fighting back should always be your last option after you decide that you
must do something and you cannot withdraw from the conflict through talk or
simple escaping techniques. You must learn to resist the reactive impulse to
thoughtlessly strike out at a potential attacker. There are numerous cases
where people have fought a mugger and lost their lives. Had they chosen another
option, they might still be alive.
My Jujitsu Sensei taught me not to fight back unless it is a question of
life or death (mine or someone else's), and when I have no other options open
to me. He taught me to stand up for what I believe, to be assertive, but to
maintain my self-discipline and keep a level head when confronted by aggressive
or violent people. He taught me to use the 'power of the voice' to neutralize
a potentially violent situation, and to use escaping techniques if grabbed.
And then, if necessary, employ joint immobilization techniques to control the
aggressive person and de-escalate the violence.
If it should become a question of survival, life gives you the right to fight
back. But the law makes it clear that our response to violence must be appropriate
and not an over-reaction. By law you are allowed to do what is necessary to
escape from a violent situation. But you have broken the law if your response
causes undue injury to another that is not justified by the circumstances.
Therefore, you've got to think first about your options before lashing out
wildly at an attacker.
It is clearly not always possible to stand by idly checking out your options
when you're in physical jeopardy. But, your reactions to violence need to be
proactive, intelligent, and informed responses, rather than reactive and violent
ones. Your reactions to violence are an indication of the nature and depth
of the training you have received on the subject from parents, peers, and teachers
throughout your life.
Metaphorically speaking, the Samurai warriors carried two swords in their
belts -- one of discrimination, and the other of detachment. They were taught
to discriminate between what is real and what is imagined, and then detach
their minds and emotions from that which is false before taking the appropriate
action. For the Samurai, and modern day martial artists, fighting is a matter
of intelligently considering strategies and properly choosing of available
options. If you are confronted by an aggressive person who wants to do you
some harm, you must make your decisions on how to respond with all the objectivity
of which you are capable.
First, you have to keep in mind the relationship you have with the person
attacking you, and what the consequences of your reaction will be. Secondly,
you need to quickly assess whether this is the best place to engage in a fight,
and where your escape routes are located. Thirdly, you need to determine if
the timing is right for you to fight back, withdraw, talk fast, or run. Fourthly,
you have to be clear about your intentions in the conflict, as well as the
nature of your energy and that of the attacker. You must know that you are
following the truth, that it is not your inflated or inflamed ego that is reacting,
and that you are consciously entering into the conflict to protect and preserve
life: your own, the attacker, and everyone else who will be affected by the
outcome of the fight. To fight back in any other way is contrary to the life
principle, and ultimately self-defeating.
We don't need any more aggressive people in this world. We need people who
are skilled at waging thoughtful peace, who make peace the primary option in
every conflict. As Alexander Pope once said: "Conflict should always be
so managed as to remember that the only true end of it is peace."
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