The John Hallett Podcast
WHY BJJ & MMA TRAINING ALONE IS NOT COMPLETE SELF-DEFENSE BJJ works. MMA works. Boxing works. Combat sports create tough, capable athletes who can fight under pressure. But self-defense is bigger than fighting. In this episode, John and Josh discuss the critical differences between fighting ability and complete self-defense preparedness. They break down why pressure-tested combat sports training is incredibly valuable while also explaining the missing layers that many gyms never address: * Awareness * De-escalation * Legal use of force * Multiple attackers * Weapons * Family protection * Post-incident decision making Because real-world violence doesn't happen inside a cage. There are no referees. No weight classes. No agreed-upon rules. And no guarantee you'll be fighting only one person. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Fighting and self-defense are not automatically the same thing. * MMA and BJJ develop valuable real-world fighting attributes. * Pressure testing is one of the most important components of effective training. * De-escalation is a self-defense skill, not a weakness. * Legal consequences matter just as much as physical outcomes. * Weapons and multiple attackers completely change the problem. * Awareness and decision-making often prevent violence before it begins. * A great fighter can still make poor self-defense decisions. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * BJJ practitioners * MMA athletes * Boxing students * Krav Maga students * Self-defense instructors * Martial arts school owners * Concealed carriers * Parents responsible for family protection * Anyone interested in real-world violence prevention THREE TRAINING PRINCIPLES > Pressure reveals the truth about your training. > Self-defense is bigger than fighting ability. > The goal isn't to win the fight. The goal is to go home safely.
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