Nerve Strikes that Work - Core JKD

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • Ming demonstrates nerve strike and locations that actually work to inflict pain and will change an attacker's functioning or will cause them to move because of the pain during resisting self-defense encounters.
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    Everyone seems to enjoy the thought of the nerve strikes and controls under and around the neck and jaw. This will be addressed in a future video.
    The Medial nerve strike (inside bicep near elbow) is shown not specifically for blunt trauma strikes-as it is not the most efficient path for blunt trauma access-but because of its effectiveness with edged weapons.
    The techniques of Core Jeet Kune Do are battle-tested under harsh conditions. What you see here is the cleaned version containing all tactical accuracy and effectiveness required when you have to put your self-defense on the line. All our pain is for your benefit.
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    #nervestrike #nerve #pressurepoint #selfdefense #corejkdnerve

Komentáře • 274

  • @Iconhulk
    @Iconhulk Před 3 lety +282

    "If an enemy insists on war, then you take away their ability to wage it." - Chozen

  • @1121conan
    @1121conan Před 2 lety +57

    I am speaking as a 68 year old USMC veteran. I hold black belts in karate, judo, aikijitsu, and a 1st kyu in aikido and as a teen was an undefeated amateur boxer(16-0). I studied karate in Okinawa for over a year and was told that there are nerve strikes, pressure points, vital points etc, but my instructor who survived WWII and the battle of Okinawa fighting for the losing side told me to never try to hit one. If you try you will miss 90% of the time and leave yourself open to counterattack. He told me to strike first, strike hard and if you hit one of those points consider it a bonus.
    I was a police officer and corrections supervisor for 20 years and for 11 of those years I was the prison's self-defense instructor. I attended too many self-defense seminars than I can count, constantly refining my skills to pass on that knowledge to my fellow officers. In those 20 years I had to use force/defend myself 48 times. 6 of those times was against a bladed weapon. So, I know of what I speak from experience. These points are easy to exploit on a compliant person allowing you to perform them but it is an entirely different scenario against an active opponent full of adrenaline and tensed muscles and anger. I know because myself and the other self-defense instructor used to try these on each other in full contact training sessions. We, also in training staff members would secretly try these points on them to gauge their reactions and we found many felt nothing, some felt something, and some were affected greatly. So, these points vary greatly individually person to person. Interesting we both observed that redheads had the highest resistance to these techniques, many showing no effect whatsoever. My last piece of advice as an old man is this. Stick to the basics, they will come through for you every time.

  • @ronaldthepeculiar1111
    @ronaldthepeculiar1111 Před 4 lety +90

    that poor guy getting all the pain to show all of us.. you are a hero

  • @compifreak4929
    @compifreak4929 Před 6 lety +369

    he just looks so scared. i feel for you bro

  • @setxapart5505
    @setxapart5505 Před 6 lety +384

    I've learned a few pressure points just by having kids. How many times one of my son's elbows hit the exact spot on my thigh when they would climb to get up in my lap, or dug an elbow in my chest when they climbed up into the bed to wake me up on Saturday morning. One time, while holding an infant, I was walking out of a building and made a sharp right turn. Because I was holding my son in my right arm, I wasn't able to see the concrete decorative planter - at just the right height, on the other side of my obstructed view. One of the "tips" of the planter connected with a quarter sized spot by my knee, and I went DOWN. I felt virtually no pain, but I lost all feeling from my knee down, and took a bow. My wife almost didn't believe me, when I was like "Take the baby! Take the baby - I struck a nerve!" It took about a good, solid 10 seconds to get the feeling back.
    Ahh. The "art" of fatherhood.

  • @johnnyk617
    @johnnyk617 Před 4 lety +102

    “You’ll feel that”
    Dude I even felt that through the video

  • @FatSamEIE
    @FatSamEIE Před 4 lety +231

    "Hey jason, you turn up late one more time you're gonna be the Guinea pig in my next video..."
    *turns up late again*
    "Let's look at nerve strikes..."

  • @shythawks9549
    @shythawks9549 Před 5 lety +29

    3:48 now I was taught this in Marine Ops that, that nerve is a never fail haha. Anymore we trained we would use that on each other and your hand goes NUMB. It’s unbelievable the small amount of pressure you would have to use to really hurt someone. My favorite pressure point. Just take the bottom of your palm and wack that spot. Not hard but enough and your hand will tingle immediately

  • @johnbravo7542
    @johnbravo7542 Před 6 lety +186

    Thank you,I got a lot from that,feel sorry for your training partner,you can tell it hurts,big thumbs up to him :-)

  • @hoorashraf9316
    @hoorashraf9316 Před 4 lety +88

    did I actually just use these on myself and get small bruises

  • @joelalexander7328
    @joelalexander7328 Před 6 lety +1

    I've been involved in Okinawan Karate since 10 years old. I'm now turning 46 tomorrow. I watch your videos and it covers so much that was missing in my many years. It's really refreshing, what you are doing. You are eliminating so much time. I'm discovering the economy of movement that I was not familiar with before.

  • @anthonyrowell3122
    @anthonyrowell3122 Před 6 lety +3

    Loved the video! I am prior military and now work in law enforcement and these techniques brought up some good memories! In law enforcement we have to be aware of how we handle people due to legal reasons so this was a good refresher for me! Thank you!

  • @resinanzz3100
    @resinanzz3100 Před 5 lety +29

    This reminds me of chakra points

  • @mikeclarke4523
    @mikeclarke4523 Před 6 lety +69

    that poor man was suffering, but it goes to show that it was working.

  • @FFLL2112
    @FFLL2112 Před 3 lety +23

    Very informative, especially the groundwork… Would love to see a pressure point offensive strike attack video 💯

  • @Sithikus
    @Sithikus Před 5 lety +1

    Most people don't understand that the training partner / guinea pig is actually training the person who is doing the drill by letting the person know when it is done effectively and properly... I've had more than my fair share of being the guinea pig as it were.. But in being the training partner who is having the moves done to them... It's my responsibility to let my training partner know when it is ineffective or doesn't work right

  • @mdixongross
    @mdixongross Před 4 lety +31

    Kid’s been through a lot

  • @kevinkott9853
    @kevinkott9853 Před 4 lety +2

    3:42 i like how his fist is ready to punch your face while you punching his nerve

  • @StingerSecSol
    @StingerSecSol Před 2 lety +2

    He's a real trooper. Thank you for being part of this video. Great information.

  • @louiselincoln
    @louiselincoln Před 3 lety +1

    Massive credit to your sparring buddy here. Brave man!

  • @zafinaseldom3127
    @zafinaseldom3127 Před 5 lety +2

    I like the way you train-getting used to the pain and knowing what kind it is. 👍

  • @stevieburlison1901
    @stevieburlison1901 Před 6 lety +1

    While watching this video I did a few of the things on myself and there really isn't much you can do when you've got a thumb, knuckle, elbow or whatever in those certain spots. Very helpful video!

  • @kirill2525
    @kirill2525 Před 5 lety +32

    took me to the end of the vid to realize that crunching sound was just the mat and not stuff breaking internally

  • @edspencer7121
    @edspencer7121 Před 7 lety +3

    You Tube suggested this video, glad I clicked and subbed.👍 Most informative. I can tell the instructor likes his job.

  • @gabrielherrerahighlights8961

    Who else came here after watching cobra Kai

  • @joshuahamm7404
    @joshuahamm7404 Před 7 lety +2

    Much easier to understand. Thank you for the self defense videos!

  • @VTSifuSteve
    @VTSifuSteve Před 5 lety +1

    You use these nerve points and the pain they cause to augment good technique as part of an overall strategy to win. Not as "pain compliance" by itself. This is a really good point that can't be overemphasized. Good video.

  • @1vigorousdragon
    @1vigorousdragon Před 4 lety

    Learnt my pressure point by pure accident. By Finger and Central knuckle strikes initially to just "poke" a person away, but saw that after the initial strike the pain and impact seemed to reverberate thru them. Best described as a ripple effect, the initial "poke" hit, us followed by a nerve pain that tends to go deeper and deeper and after 10-15 seconds is still intensifying. Its where my initial interest was expanded, purely by accident.

  • @georgescerbovic8520
    @georgescerbovic8520 Před 6 lety +5

    An outstanding demo and explanation. Thank you!

  • @dreagan9368
    @dreagan9368 Před 5 lety +43

    Partner: "Jesus, save me!"

  • @emb9271
    @emb9271 Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for this! 😉 it really helps with my research. I havent found a description/ step by step guide to each action as clearly demonstrated until now. So im really grateful for this! My first time watching one of your vids so im gonna check out some more. Thanks again! 😁

  • @dylan4652
    @dylan4652 Před 5 lety +1

    When I was just a rug rat I use to wrestle in competition and my dad taught me the chest nerve spot, as well as under the nose pressing up with your fingers, and the ribs. I would have a guy down and dig my chin into the chest nerve spot and dig my knuckles along the ribs. No one ever wanted to wrestle me after he taught me. My parents would go to the defeated kids parents and apologize. My dad was a hand to hand combat instructor for law enforcement organizations for 30 years. They were very big into pressure points to cause a person to drop a weapon or give up resisting. If you get good at using them with submission holds they are very effective. Great video you made it easy to follow and not to the point.

  • @l3tsuchtilpu757
    @l3tsuchtilpu757 Před 6 lety +5

    Yo thanks, especially to the one dude taking all the pain. F.

  • @charlesqueener9201
    @charlesqueener9201 Před 6 lety +63

    Question, when the adrenaline is really rushing, does nerve points work as well?

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 6 lety +100

      Adrenalin, shock, and fear can mask pain quite well to where you don't feel it at all. But when you strike or cut certain nerve lines, you actually cause a reduction or prevention of function of the limb-regardless of whether or not they feel the pain. Thank you for the question.

  • @jakobw135
    @jakobw135 Před 6 lety +48

    Your IMPRESSIVE video really got on my NERVES! :-)

  • @emmcatherine1460
    @emmcatherine1460 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you and I only hope that can remember that if ever needed.

  • @J2897Tutorials
    @J2897Tutorials Před 7 lety +2

    I think nunchakus (or any other club like instrument) are typically good against small-stiff and weak muscles (trapezius, deltoids, back, forearms) and exposed bones (head, face, clavicle, chest-centre, shoulders, fists, wrists, elbows, spine, hips, knees, shins, ankles, feet).

  • @sugewhitejacoby8654
    @sugewhitejacoby8654 Před 5 lety +4

    I've taught some of these nerve shots in some my private classes. My classes were just SELF DEFENSE Classes not a Belt driven Jitz or Judo classes. The younger guys, HS ages always wanted to learn an Arm Bar or Rear Naked. I would always tell them I am teaching Self Defence not how to hurt someone!

  • @corejkd
    @corejkd  Před 6 lety +123

    Some people have a question regarding who would ever grab both hands like that. Short answer: fight a wrester, and you'll find out.

  • @cornemouton2740
    @cornemouton2740 Před rokem

    So glad i discovered this channel, so much helpful info, thank you!

  • @staciechandler1919
    @staciechandler1919 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you so much for posting this video. Bless him for helping you.

  • @lifeishealinghealthwellnes1979

    Great functional pressure points to apply standing and on the ground. Love your explanations

  • @AbdullahArRafi
    @AbdullahArRafi Před 4 lety

    The radial nerve can be used as an extremely versatile pain point since it can be used to block a lot of the grapplings as well as strikes!

  • @ChristianMartinez-fv7br
    @ChristianMartinez-fv7br Před 3 lety +1

    Damn, this guy is really taking hits.... great video

  • @Kuypre
    @Kuypre Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing your martial art techniques.

  • @GiC7
    @GiC7 Před 5 lety +2

    You are a great teacher and explain it super. Thanks

  • @Ben-qm9zq
    @Ben-qm9zq Před 4 lety +2

    Good friends are very hard to find and even harder to keep.

  • @pascal0868
    @pascal0868 Před 6 lety

    Two athletes I admire the most are Wrestlers and Muai Thai pros. It’s their mental toughness and ability to handle pain. I recently watched a video of Bukaw, he has taking punishment like it was a walk on Sunday, after a bit of abuse he unleashed his weapons. Done. Wrestlers are scary too.

  • @mseifried5
    @mseifried5 Před 5 lety +3

    Super Information by an incredible instructor!

  • @kalleklp7291
    @kalleklp7291 Před 6 lety

    To add on this...these things work really good, and even better if you have a simple common thing in your hand, like a lighter, keys, or even better a pencil/ballpen.

  • @codereddefense
    @codereddefense Před 6 lety +11

    Good video... Thanks

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 6 lety

      You're welcome, and thank you.

  • @chriscrawford7240
    @chriscrawford7240 Před 5 lety +1

    Great illustration on nerve point strikes!

  • @eazyrider6122
    @eazyrider6122 Před 4 lety +5

    Give your partner credit for this as he was a good sport. You need to rub pressure points after attacking them in training don't just repeat strike them.

  • @iwillknifeya
    @iwillknifeya Před 6 lety +66

    Just hit that arm nerve to see if it works...it definitely works 😣

  • @keithober5278
    @keithober5278 Před 3 lety

    Fighting is a lot like cooking, everyone can do it but only a few can do it well enough to please everyone. Some will use pre-packaged ingredients designed for ease of use and churn out a good meal. But when you truly understand what your trying to make then you start from scratch and build something marvelous.
    Martial arts isn't so different, you are given so many different pieces to make what you want to, how you do that is up to you. Expecting kata to take down a street fighter is like expecting store bought pasta sauce to impress a real chef, very unlikely unless you understand the peices your working with and how to use them.
    Nerve strikes are like seasoning a good fight. The right strikes at the right time yeild the results you want, but like cooking using a random seasoning and expecting it to fix anything is un realistic. Unless you know how to make it fit into the whole picture, spices or strikes, you may find something good for you but likely wont please everyone you share it with.

  • @dninja6657
    @dninja6657 Před 10 měsíci +2

    1. Cant see.
    2. Cant breathe.
    3. Can't walk.
    R = Can't Fight... ☯️

  • @StainlessTIG2
    @StainlessTIG2 Před 2 lety

    think quickly and clearly size up your assailant on stopping points too protect yourself. Take the first punch if your life is in danger. Don’t hesitate!

  • @johnbravo7542
    @johnbravo7542 Před 4 lety +21

    I feel for his poor assistant,even in demos geez it must hurt ;)

  • @Friocker1
    @Friocker1 Před 6 lety +4

    Excellent video thanks for taking the time to share.

  • @nadalynravoi2788
    @nadalynravoi2788 Před 4 lety +1

    At 4:42 is my current mood right now

  • @johanlillebk1071
    @johanlillebk1071 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks guys! Grandpa had no chance

  • @dcfan1107
    @dcfan1107 Před 7 lety +132

    Guinea pigs neck was red before they started. Poor guy.

  • @yourbestlifebrandi
    @yourbestlifebrandi Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent. Lot of good tricks! Thanks.

  • @gypsymanjeff2184
    @gypsymanjeff2184 Před 5 lety +1

    Learned this as a kid..thanks for the reminder..gr8 vids

  • @swordfish80709
    @swordfish80709 Před 4 lety +1

    Great advice , and demonstration.
    Thank you .

  • @pattygalvanrmz5513
    @pattygalvanrmz5513 Před 3 měsíci

    This saved my life

  • @andrewstambaugh240
    @andrewstambaugh240 Před 2 lety

    We used to do tapouts when I was in community college. *An elbow in the chest like you did is an immediate full reaction.*
    But we could resist and *get used to handling the "side grinds"* as we called them.
    I like the arm nerve stuff you did.
    There is a similar thing on the inside of the leg near the knee. If someone is trying to kick you, getting that 5 or 6 times is enough that most martial artists that aren't something tougher like mma will probably stop tying to kick with that leg and definitely slow down like you described with the arms.
    And if they are trying to squeeze you with their legs, pressing an elbow into that leg spot is excruciating. If I was actually fighting though, I'd elbow strike it in rapid succession rather than pressing in.
    Hansi Mack always taught that your blocks should be strikes. If you are touching your opponent, it should cost them something.

  • @Boomerz13
    @Boomerz13 Před 5 lety +2

    needed this to focus !! Thank You !

  • @gerrystevens9041
    @gerrystevens9041 Před 4 lety +1

    you have a brave assistant..

  • @danielgron8954
    @danielgron8954 Před 7 lety +4

    Great video! After seeing your manipulation of nerves, I'd love to see a video on effective Bil Jee strikes. Thank you.

  • @salesbossclosingboss1228

    Excellent video

  • @dickzombi
    @dickzombi Před 2 lety

    Love this guy. So good

  • @traditionalmartialartist950

    I discovered, myself, where that nerve is when I accidentally hit my forearm on a table.
    Yeah...that was uncomfortable.

  • @johnhunt9882
    @johnhunt9882 Před 3 lety

    Great video with easy to use technique

  • @orgorg239
    @orgorg239 Před 4 lety

    I like the socks. It helps stop athelete's foot infections from spreading.

  • @fh8769
    @fh8769 Před 5 lety +6

    Great stuff! Very informative!

  • @ntellei
    @ntellei Před 5 lety +5

    Poor Matt! Thank you for your sacrificial pain :)

  • @stephencavuoti9325
    @stephencavuoti9325 Před 5 lety

    Yes I see were the instructor is really given him some presser he a great guy !

  • @jasonandrews9058
    @jasonandrews9058 Před 4 lety +7

    What if grey T-shirt guy laughed hysterically each time you tried to poke him.

  • @damienabdul9121
    @damienabdul9121 Před 6 lety +35

    Why u gotta hit him so hard lol

  • @ivelisseescribano9729
    @ivelisseescribano9729 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your cooperation dude. Looks painful.

  • @arattactician5697
    @arattactician5697 Před 4 lety

    These are pretty good tips, don't seem too hard to utilize either.

  • @mikemullins3761
    @mikemullins3761 Před 5 lety +6

    blocking rarely works -especially against a boxer

  • @andrewrhodes8842
    @andrewrhodes8842 Před 5 lety +1

    If you are fighting to cause pain- you will lose against someone who's goal is to do permanent damage. Katas and nerve points go out the window when you start spitting out teeth.

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 5 lety

      Couldn’t agree more. Thanks for commenting.

  • @titaniumman_22
    @titaniumman_22 Před 4 lety +1

    This was some sweet knowledge gained, thank you!

  • @howardnichols6816
    @howardnichols6816 Před 7 lety +66

    poor guy

  • @MrButts6954
    @MrButts6954 Před 6 lety +3

    Excellent lesson(s)! Thank you!

  • @ROMANEMPIRE69
    @ROMANEMPIRE69 Před 2 lety

    Lol! I’ve hit my own nerve points by accident. So I know the feeling. It’s like a shock wake that temporarily impairs you.

  • @WellStudied
    @WellStudied Před 4 lety

    😎😎😎😎😎😎 I USED THE ONE BY THE LATS AS A BAR TRICK, BETTING GUYS I COULD PUT THEM ON THE FLOOR USING ONE FINGER... NEVER FAILED ME.

  • @movxmentyt6449
    @movxmentyt6449 Před 2 lety

    I’ve always messed around and poked into the side of my friends or just close people I call it a tase lol like a little pressure point it’s like a painful tickle in a way but I use 2 fingers lol and it’s right under the rib cage

  • @WindsorHornIII
    @WindsorHornIII Před 3 lety +1

    4 "basic" ones I would say are solar plexus punch, liver shot, brachial stun and calf kick

  • @kevinshasteen5682
    @kevinshasteen5682 Před 4 lety +1

    How about the 5 point palm exploding heart technique. How am I suppose to learn this one if no body ever lets me practice it on them

  • @sham5280
    @sham5280 Před 4 lety

    Your training partner is a good sport.

  • @crabbyluigi751
    @crabbyluigi751 Před 5 lety +3

    Very informative....thank you

  • @tmkim
    @tmkim Před 4 lety

    correction Ulnar nerve not median nerve on the medial aspect of the elbow @3:42. Median nerve is in the antecubital fossa adjacent to the biceps tendon distal attachment

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 4 lety

      Thank you for the correction.

  • @dannycurtis2591
    @dannycurtis2591 Před 6 lety +6

    Cool! Great style for us "Clydesdales"!! Gravity is my friend. Correct me if i'm wrong, but I see these techniques as distraction moves, breaking an opponent's concentration by way of painful stimuli. And, after the initial strike, keeps him busy attempting to avoid repeated attempts. Is this correct? PS Just found this channel, subscribed! Keep 'em coming!!!

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 6 lety +3

      Thank you for your question and for subscribing. Yes, these are more a pain distraction-which can do wonders on some people who don't train for pain. It definitely has a way of breaking concentration on some people and causing them to go on the defensive.

    • @dannycurtis2591
      @dannycurtis2591 Před 6 lety

      corejkd ✔

  • @craffte
    @craffte Před 2 lety

    Never underestimate the power of a well placed poke. My sisters taught me that at a very young age.😒

  • @iofthestorm
    @iofthestorm Před 6 lety +2

    Great videos. Subbed and thank you!

    • @corejkd
      @corejkd  Před 6 lety

      You're welcome, thanks for the sub

  • @nathanwrigley304
    @nathanwrigley304 Před 6 lety +10

    I damaged my radial nerve from swinging a pickaxe. My whole arm was zinging and numb for a week

  • @nitinkmaisuriya4838
    @nitinkmaisuriya4838 Před 4 lety

    🙏 respected sir this exactly I needed thank you ✊