…it works because of injury.
(Or capitulation, but we’ll get to that in a minute.)
What happens if someone gets hit by a truck? Well, more often than not they get killed. The faster the truck is going, the more likely that outcome. The question is, why?
The truck has lots of kinetic energy. It has the structure to transfer that kE and the momentum
to push it all the way through. When this wallop exceeds the elasticity ratings of the tissues involved, we get a flying skinbag of broken bones and soup.
If we take the axe handle out of the equation we lose some of the things that make all three of these injury examples obvious:
- Supplied, ‘free’ structure (steel frame of the truck, hard pointy-metal bullet, solid oak)
- Supplied, ‘free’ acceleration (gasoline, gunpowder, leverage)
So what does this mean for ‘empty-hand’ violence? It means that if we pay attention to structure (by consciously supplying it) and throw our entire mass at the man (to up our kE) and get both of these to the point where they can exceed the rated elasticity of soft tissue, we can do the same thing a truck, bullet or axe handle does with our bare hands: cause injury.
The last little thing we need to concentrate on is targeting, for while the truck, the bullet and the axe handle will wreck whatever it hits (flesh and bone alike), we won’t. So we need a vulnerable target, like the throat, to make our efforts count.
Another reason these three examples are obvious to people is because they understand, unconsciously, that trucks, bullets and axe handles treat everyone the same–with utter dispassion. Asocially.
(It’s also interesting to note that all three are also operated by people who can be rendered nonfunctional…)
But somehow, folks believe that if you take any of those tools away, a magical transmogrification occurs–because it’s down to just you and me, the physical and physiological rules that govern the above interactions are null and void. The magnitude is gone (trucks hit a LOT harder and bullets go much, much faster than you can) but the basic rules are still in play. If I stomp on your neck as hard as I can, you die.
If we take the three examples (trucks, bullets and axe handles), the physical laws of the universe don’t care who is running them–an untrained person, a martial artist, a combat sports athlete or someone trained through TFT. It’s going to suck getting hit by the truck, or shot, or whacked no matter who’s doing it.
The same goes for ‘empty-hand.’ It doesn’t matter who gets it right..
it’s going to end in injury.
(Or capitulation, as I said above. In antisocial situations people sometimes quit when confronted with violence, whether it’s being done to them or just threatened. Expecting or hoping people will quit is a crapshoot–not something you want to bet your life on.)
So what’s my point?
But when they do work they work because of the base principles we outline for you every time you train with us. With TFT we get rid of the ‘potential’ and go for the concrete. We get you focused on doing the work of a bullet with your bare hands.
And that’s making injury a reality, then reverse-engineering everything backward from there.

