first of all, plz no pressure point is bull answers. ive seen many pain real effect from pressure points.
has any1 ever even have someone passed out by pressure points?
has an opponent ever been injured somehow?
where did u hit?
did u use a fist ot a single knuckle?
2007-07-27
18:25:27
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6 answers
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asked by
cs313
3
in
Sports
➔ Martial Arts
im not looking into any martial art... just curious
2007-07-27
18:53:53 ·
update #1
I have never been hurt permanately or knocked out by it, but I have had it used teaching self defense and showed them how to grab behind your ear lobes with your finger tips and squeeze. this causes intense cranial and jaw pain usually causing you to stop doing what ever you are doing to releive that pain.
i also have used it positively by just meditating an as much of an electronically based items for they emitt negative energey bad for you and this way i am in a mostly YIN or positive environment and can feel the energy replenishing me.
i lastly have used it to relieve the tension of headaches using shiatsi
Hope that helps
2007-07-27 18:33:17
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answer #1
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answered by Legend Gates Shotokan Karate 7
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The closest thing to a pressure point technique that I have learned and experienced being at the receiving end of is the Yonkyo or 4th teaching in Aikido, where one applies pressure on the nerve point in the uke's lower forearm to pin him to the mat. Other than that, most pressure points that I heard about from my Grandfather had nothing to do with fighting, but more to do with healing and stimulating the internal organs to promote better health. Granted such a technique exists, hitting a pressure point to disrupt the flow of chi to certain organs wouldn't have any immediate effect on an opponent, perhaps there might be if accumulated in the long run resulting in serious illness which may or may not lead to d3ath, but it would be like trying to k1ll someone by injecting him with an HIV virus. It would take years before it would have any effect and it might still be cured. What would be the point then? Better to just shoot him on the spot with a .45. Unless you are taking about fatal spots in the human body like the throat, carotid artery, the temple or solar plexus, which even then would be difficult to hit with any consistent accuracy during a free for all or melee against a moving opponent, methinks those pressure point strikes probably only exists in movies. Sorry.
2007-07-28 01:17:58
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answer #2
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answered by Shienaran 7
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People who don't believe will not, those who do, will. I, for one, not only believe I know for a fact that this is real and effective. My brother and I decided that we were going to learn to use pressure points/ Dim Mak. we got a few video and began to experiment. After some trial and error we figured it out. I have a dvd that we made of our attempts. I can say with 100% effectiveness that they are real. There are two or three things that make them really effective, without one of them they may work but not as well. Anyway email me at cagedraptor@yahoo.com and we can talk more.
2007-07-28 05:17:46
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answer #3
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answered by Zenshin Academy 3
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1) Just under the collar bone. I have seen big tough men bend over in pain from this. It hurts, I promise.
2)The knee cap. I have seen the same tough men jerk their knees and become reduced almost to tears from this.
3)The elbow. Same thing.
4) All the others.
They all hurt, it's why they are called pressure points.
We tested them once, one guy came close to fainting.
2007-07-27 18:34:26
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answer #4
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answered by tracingmarshmellows 2
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maximum all martial arts have been initially in line with tension factors. Any martial paintings that has varieties/kata has them simply by fact they kata have been initially designed to incorporate the strain element purposes, besides simply by fact the footwork, ...etc. The kata additionally served to make it complicated for others to verify what the actual purposes have been. regrettably, maximum martial artists, and their instructors are no longer taught this element of their paintings.
2016-10-12 23:51:09
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answer #5
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answered by koltay 4
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look into ninjitsu if you're that serious about pressure points
2007-07-27 18:29:20
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answer #6
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answered by Larry G 3
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