Learning this will make you safer
Are you a good driver?
[skills/situational awareness]
What kind of car do you drive?
[bodytype/strength/stamina/endurance]
Ever been in a car accident?
During a real car accident, ‘situational awareness’ and defensive driving skills are negated.
Otherwise, you would've avoided the accident!
If it was a dangerous & violent accident, your airbag deployed, and that helped prevent even more damage to you.
What improves your odds of surviving a violent car crash is YOUR AIRBAG.
During a sudden attack, like the car accident, situational awareness is compromised…
The SPEAR System® is YOUR biological airbag.
Learning it will make you safer.
Learning to teach it will make your students safer.
VIOLENCE DOESN'T CARE WHAT MARTIAL ART YOU PRACTICE - SCIENCE CAN MAKE YOU SAFER
Join us in our fight against violent attacks by bringing the SPEAR System® to your city!
DO YOU TEACH SELF-DEFENSE, CCW, OR DEFENSIVE TACTICS?
DON'T MISS THIS ⬇
On Feb 4 at 10 AM PST, I am running an INSTRUCTORS ONLY webinar where I'll be showing videos of our system in action as well as discussing the various courses we offer for marital artists, self-defense trainers, DT & combatives instructors, and even CCW trainers.
Again, this is open to ANY instructor. And you DO NOT need to teach SPEAR to learn our scenario training system. ==> Join here
Coach B
==> If you’re on my newsletter and you don't teach but WANT TO LEARN our system, the BEST PLACE TO START is here
USING SCIENCE TO MAKE YOU SAFER JUST MAKES SENSE.
If you missed the data listed below, you can read it here
“The blink of the eye which is the reflex of the orbicularis oculi muscle was found to have a latency of about 20 to 40 milliseconds. Out of larger body parts, the head is quickest in a movement latency in a range from 60 to 120 milliseconds. The neck then moves almost simultaneously with a latency of 75 to 121 milliseconds. Next, the shoulder jerks at 100 to 121 milliseconds along with the arms at 125 to 195 milliseconds. Lastly the legs respond with a latency of 145 to 395 milliseconds. This type of cascading response correlates to how the synapses travel from the brain and down the spinal cord to activate each motor neuron.[8]” WIKI Startle Response