Last, but certainly not least, you will learn how to use your martial arts when your mind and body are in a stressful situation. This is without a doubt the best way to test the efficacy of your martial arts. A student can train every day, roll hard in BJJ class, or spar hard in Boxing or Muay Thai, but there is no way to simulate what really happens to your physiology in a situation where you will have to use your martial arts to defend yourself.
Imagine this, someone has approached you with bad intentions in real life… This person wants to harm you or your family and there is no possibility of talking your way out of it, so there is going to be a fight. Your body begins to react to the threat, your heart begins to pound, and your breathing becomes rapid. It doesn’t matter how proficient you are in Jiu-Jitsu, Boxing or Muay Thai, these hardwired reactions will happen when you are facing an imminent threat.
This physiological reaction, commonly referred to as the “Fight or Flight” response, is a completely normal response to the acute stress of the threat that you are now facing. Your sympathetic nervous system is activated due to the sudden release of hormones, like adrenaline, allowing your body to send more oxygenated blood to the brain and muscles preparing you for action.
Everything has suddenly changed! If you are not prepared for this response and have not experienced it firsthand all of your training could become completely useless. Avoiding the fight or flight response in your body is not possible, as I mentioned earlier, it’s hardwired. Knowing what will happen to your mind and body and being ready for the physiological response will make the difference when you need it most.
This situation is difficult to reproduce with your friends and training partners. You know them, you know their game, and you know that they probably don’t want to hurt you. However, when you are standing in front of a stranger in a tournament that person wants to win. Maybe they are a nice person, a fellow martial artist and they don’t really want to hurt you, but they still want to win!
Knowing that you are facing a stranger, not one of you training buddies, changes the dynamic of your match. It is as close as we can get to a real-life confrontation that will affect your physiology and show you how you will react when you are in danger. You will begin to understand how your body is reacting and how to control yourself in a potentially dangerous situation so that you can perform with confidence.
So, get out there and compete, do it at least once! Build the confidence, face your fear, train your mind, and you will win, or you will learn. At the end of the day, you will be better for it!