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You are here: Home / Archives for Danelle

Posts and Articles by Danelle Marable

Burpee Challenge Check in–Week 2

02.14.11 By Danelle 1 Comment

2 weeks down, 2 to go! If you are keeping up, you’ve completed 105 burpees (with 301 to go).

It’s probably getting difficult to string together the burpees at this point. Try not to break them up. I know your arms are getting sore and your thighs can’t imagine doing another squat jump. Try to push through the discomfort. Slow down if you need to. Learn to breathe–in on the push up, out on the jump. Don’t give up!

Happy Valentine’s Day!!

Filed Under: Announcements & News, Krav Maga News Tagged With: burpees

Burpee Challenge Check in–Week 1

02.07.11 By Danelle 1 Comment

How’s it going folks? We are a week into the burpee challenge, with 3 more to go.

If you’ve been keeping up with your burpees, you’ve completed 28 so far, with 378 more to go (for a total of 406 burpees). Not too shabby!

Post in comments how you are doing.

Filed Under: Announcements & News, Krav Maga News Tagged With: burpees

My, aren’t we the popular ones?

01.19.11 By Danelle Leave a Comment

Look how cool we are!

Krav Maga is the Fastest Growing Self Defense System in the World…by Far!

Filed Under: Announcements & News, Krav Maga News

February Burpee Challenge

01.19.11 By Danelle 8 Comments

UPDATE: Just a reminder that this starts tomorrow. It’s gonna be a great February!

Ok, so I’ve promised you some challenges to get us ready for Spring.

We are going to work on doing burpees consecutively. We’ll build ourselves up to do 28 burpees in a row with no breaks. We’ll use February to do it.

Beginning February 1, we will begin our challenge. On Feb 1, we’ll do 1 burpee. Feb 2, 2 burpees. Feb 3? Yep, 3 burpees. We build until Feb 28th, when we will perform 28 burpees, unbroken. This is done on your own time, not in class. If you miss a day, you must make up those burpees. So, if you miss Feb 14th burpees because you are with your sweetie, on Feb 15th you are doing 15 burpees + 14 burpees. I suggest you don’t get behind because it sucks.

In case you are wondering, this is what a burpee looks like:

Who’s in? Post in the comments if you are joining us in the burpee challenge!

Filed Under: For Your Amusement, Krav Maga News, Krav Related, Strength & Conditioning, Training Tagged With: burpees

Some Reading

08.12.10 By Danelle 1 Comment

I suppose this post could also be called Augmenting Krav Maga Training, Part III: Mental Preparedness. It’s one thing to have your body trained to fight or flight, but what about your mind? When do we know we are in a bad situation? At what point do we act on instinct? How does our training in the school compare to the reality of self-defense on the street?

There are 2 books that, I believe, answer these questions and so many more. If you’re serious about self-defense, then you should read these.

The Gift of Fear and Other Survival Signals that Protect Us From Violence, by Gavin de Becker

The Gift of Fear could be considered a classic as far as self-defense literature goes. I’ve heard many people recommend this book, from Brian to social workers to domestic violence advocates to security officers to LEOs. Gavin de Beck owns a company that specializes in advising “clients on the assessment and management of situations that might escalate to violence, and develops systems and strategies for improving high-stakes predictions.” He knows what he is talking about.

The premise of de Becker’s book boils down to trusting one’s instinct. Too many people end up in violent situations by not listening to their own instinct and their own body’s natural reaction to a situation. They rationalize their fear away and end up assaulted or worse. We know when we are in the wrong situation. We know when something just doesn’t feel right. And yet, we dismiss those feelings because we simply can’t prove that something might be wrong, until it’s too late.

Making sure we listen to our own human instincts can save us from many violent situations. De Becker does a great job of giving real-life stories and how to use our natural reactions to get us out of bad situations.

Meditations on Violence: A Comparison of Martial Arts Training & Real World Violence by Rory Miller

Rory Miller’s book focuses on how training in traditional martial arts is very different from being in a fight. However, he doesn’t discount the training in martial arts; he simply points out some of the weakness in training and how to improve the training in order for it to apply to real conflict.

I’ve very much appreciated this book. Although Miller’s focus is on traditional martial arts (Krav is anything but), I do see many parallels in our Krav training. Although we attempt to be as realistic as possible in our Krav training, due to safety purposes, we lack some realism. Let’s face it—would you come back to class if you were punched in the face with a bare hand?? Miller makes a point that when training isn’t as realistic as possible, we are training flaws. And by training flaws, we train flawed techniques. Now, since we to have to remember safety in training, it’s important for instructors to point out the flaws in a drill or training exercise to the students. We need to explain those flaws and why we are training with the flaw.

In conclusion, although we certainly need to train our bodies to respond to an attack, we need to train our minds as well. Mentally, we must know where we are capable of going in terms of violence and defending ourselves. How do we know if a situation is going to turn from bad to worse? What is our best response? How do we avoid those situations in the first place?

I highly suggest picking up these 2 books (they should run you under $25) and reading them. Highlight them. Re-read them. You’ll not only learn about human behavior, but about yourself as well. In future posts I’ll explore some of the topics Miller and de Becker offer and how we should consider them in our training and in our lives.

Filed Under: General Info, Krav Maga News, Krav Related, Self-Defense, Training Tagged With: fundamentals, situational awareness

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