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"Secrets" of Effective Offense: Survival Strategies for Self-Defense, Martial Arts, and Law Enforcement [Hardcover]

Marc MacYoung (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, October 1, 2005 --  

Book Description

October 1, 2005
An intense martial arts primer with a concentration on techniques of offense, strategy, and preemption, rather than defense and reaction.


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

There are many self-defense books on the market that stress reaction to an attack. Most of their suggestions are based on misconceptions and assumptions from sports martial arts. These books overwhelmingly emphasize reactive techniques, rather than teaching you how to develop an effective-and proactive-strategy. But, as any football fan knows, most often the best defense is a strong, unpredictable offense. With a slavish dedication to the wrong training paradigm and unrealistic goals and attitudes, a fighter who suddenly faces the fight of his life has to make a complete shift, or fail.
The truth is, when you see the fist coming at you it's usually too late to make this shift-on the street, in particular, but also in the ring. Reaction time is seldom as fast as the time it takes to attack, which is why technique-based training so often fails. All the dedication and hard training in the world can't alter or overcome this unpleasant fact. But taking a proactive and strategic approach puts you back in control. This book will teach you how to develop that control.
In Secrets of Effective Offense, Marc MacYoung, in the grand tradition of Sun Tzu and Clausewitz, draws on his long experience to teach the strategy and tactical skills necessary to: 1) avoid dangerous situations, 2) defuse unavoidable dangerous situations, and 3) take charge of dangerous situations by switching from defense to the necessary level of effective offense. With black-and-white photographs and straightforward descriptions, MacYoung provides an indispensable handbook for those who are willing to take charge.

About the Author

Marc MacYoung was introduced to the martial arts at the age of ten. After more than thirty years, he has undergone formal training in karate, wing chun, tai chi, silat, bagua, hsing-i, boxing, Western swordsmanship, and kali. His emphasis has always been to take traditional martial arts and apply them in a modern context, both tactically and legally. He teaches martial artists, and also teaches close-quarter combat to police and military personnel around the world. He is the author of several books on these subjects. A Los Angeles native, he currently lives in Castle Rock, Colorado.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: The Lyons Press; 1st edition (October 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1592283691
  • ISBN-13: 978-1592283699
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #786,021 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

If you're looking for a simple category to put Marc MacYoung into, don't waste your time.

Yes, he was a pioneer in the self-defense world. (www.nononsenseselfdefense.com) Yes, he developed the Five Stages of Violent Crime and is a court recognized expert witness. Yes he developed Conflict Communications, a de-escalation and conflict resolution program with Rory Miller(www.conflictcommunciations.com) Yes, he teaches police, military and martial arts around the world. Yes he was a thug with the street name "Animal." And yes, he's also the author of fiction.

You'll also find him working the cattle shoot at his in-laws ranch. Shoveling out feces one day and being consulted by Ph.Ds, lawyers and millionaires the next day. One day he'll be talking to a bum in an alley and the next he'll be lecturing at universities or on TV the next.

At the time of this writing it's been fourteen years since he's last been shot at (a new record for him). He's been married for ten and is pretty durned happy that the 'excitement' of his old life style is a thing of the past.




 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MacYoung's best book yet, October 7, 2005
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This review is from: "Secrets" of Effective Offense: Survival Strategies for Self-Defense, Martial Arts, and Law Enforcement (Hardcover)
This outstanding tome is really not so much a "how to" book of techniques as it is a set of strategic principles that you can incorporate into any martial style to develop a more effective offense. Written by one of the nation's leading experts on aggression and real-life fighting, it is a clear and comprehensive approach to refining your ability to survive a violent encounter.

Before describing the content of this book it is worthwhile pointing out what an effective offense is and why you ought to care about it: If you get beat down on the street you will be totally at the mercy of your attacker for your continued well-being. You could just as easily wake up in the hospital as you could end up in a box. At a time when an 85-year-old Alzheimer's patient was raped and murdered less than an hour after wandering away from her residence, a father was beaten to death by three teenagers in front of his son, and thousands of other murders, muggings, and beatings took place around the country this very week, there might not be all that much mercy out there for you if you lose a street encounter to the wrong person. Don't get me wrong, this book certainly does not advocate picking fights, but it does show a comprehensive methodology for turning the tables on your attacker if you are assaulted and cannot get away.

As a 30+ year martial artist I did not find a whole lot that I did not already know but I did discover a new lens for viewing the knowledge, one that is quite enlightening. The author's writing style is refreshing and clear, devoid of the cynical platitudes and four letter witticisms that fill many of his previous works. You get all of Animal's experience without his attitude, something that has turned off traditional martial artists from MacYoung's works in the past. It's not that the previous works did not have great content just that they were somewhat hard to read for many folks. That's definitely not a problem here. It's packed with vital information and pleasant to read.

Contents include components of effective power, understanding range, body movement, structure, blocking and deflecting, parrying and countering, pulling, twisting, and takedowns among other subjects. The pictures and illustrations truly complement the excellent text. The book really helps you understand what works and why, set priorities, and develop a mindset that can really work. And it's easy to integrate into what you already know (in fact the author encourages just that). It helps you get your priorities straight and be sure that you can accomplish them. I really believe that this is MacYoung's best book yet. Wholeheartedly recommended!

Lawrence Kane
Author of Surviving Armed Assaults, The Way of Kata, and Martial Arts Instruction
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars mature, thoughtful book about martial arts technique for application in the real world, November 1, 2008
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This review is from: "Secrets" of Effective Offense: Survival Strategies for Self-Defense, Martial Arts, and Law Enforcement (Hardcover)
This is a magnificent book. I kept thinking of Musashi's Book of Five Rings as I read it (although Marc Mac Young doesn't think as much of Musashi as some do).

This is written by a short, pudgy, poorly conditioned guy who can turn you into a pretzel and roll you down the hill.

He's done a lot of fighting (like Musashi) and has in his mature years given it up (like Musashi). In this book, he assumes that his last ten books about fighting have told the world that NOT GETTING INTO FIGHTS is a good idea, so he doesn't belabor that idea.

Instead, he thoughtfully and systematically discusses ways to end fights quickly, and reasonably safely, and with little danger to the defender. He appears to have focus on talking to LEOs, but the book is useful to anybody who would just as soon avoid being on the losing end of a spirited discussion involving left hooks.

THIS IS NOT A BOOK FOR BEGINNERS OR MARTIAL PERFORMANCE ARTISTS, OR TEENAGERS WHO ARE BEING BULLIED AT HIGH SCHOOL (It's not for beginners because it's post-graduate stuff; it's not for performance artists because...well, this guy doesn't even wear a karate gi in his pictures. and it's not for bullied teenagers in high school because that's what boxing, wrestling, weightlifting and Tegner books are for.)

There are not a lot of big pretty pictures. There is a lot of text, all of it working to explain ways to wrap up fights without crushing throats. There is a lot of discussion of balance, the physics of fistic interactions, and the multiple ways that people react to being attacked (including a discussion of "freezing", which is pretty common).

The photos in the book are small, crummy quality, and illustrate the text admirably.

Mr. Mac Young suggests reading the book in chunks, and rereading it, because he says he put a lot of experience into it.

And that shows. He has a strong intellectual understanding of fighting, and he both steals from the best, and attributes generously. He gave Jack Dempsey an appendix, which made perfect sense to me; Jack's
"Championship Boxing" is one of the the all-time best books on hitting, boxing and fistfighting, and Mark has read and understood and incorporated Dempsey's lessons in his book.

While he didn't beat it to death in this book, Marc "Animal" Mac Young also spent a lot of time actually fighting before he woke up and figured out that he'd die a lot sooner if he kept it up. So he's not a supermarket shopper teaching farming.

What makes this such a good book is that he didn't simply rely on what kept he alive when he was a street punk. He analyzed the fights and ambushes and sucker punches he'd given and gotten, and incorporated that experience with insights from areas as diverse as Dempsey, Tai Chi, and the SCA.

This is a brilliant and insightful masterwork, and comparing it to Musashi's masterwork is not too strong. I may be wrong, of course, but at least I'm certain!

You'll want to read this more than once, and practice and experiment.

And if you get a chance, take a class with Animal; I know that after I've read this book, I'm going to try to schedule one.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A 'no nonsense' meaty manual of martial strategy, September 10, 2009
This review is from: "Secrets" of Effective Offense: Survival Strategies for Self-Defense, Martial Arts, and Law Enforcement (Hardcover)
After reading countless books from the local Dojo Library, which I help maintain and stock, I must rate this one at the top, number 1 on my "best books" list! This author has filled a much needed gaping hole in the common sense department of martial arts instruction. Until now, this area has been ignored/avoided/discounted by the martial arts authors.

This is no garnish heavy, infomercial, esoteric, mcdojo fodder in "secrets". What you get is a flintstones-sized slab of meat and potatos. Very little, if any, fluff, the rest is your meal, which you will have to take hom and chew on later, and then again, and again.

What I liked the best about the author's writing style is that he uses story and personal examples to illustrate his points. He has actually lived through real life violence and knows and understands the perilous and nightmarish aftermath of an assault. Unlike the swaggering peacock, with his 5 time super chump logo across his gi top, the author doesn't come across as bragging when he does share these stories.

In my opinion, he seems to write for both beginner and expert. He addresses some interesting teaching strategies in the later half of the book. In the former half, he addresses common sense street smart strategies. I highly recommend his work to both men and women, novice and teacher. His work offers something for everyone. This work is one of those reference books that you might read, then read again after a year, and again after five years and each time you pick up this tect you will discover something profound, that speaks to your training, that you didn't see before.

I too, would have willingly, happily paid much more for this valuable reference. His honesty, genuine tone and clean simplicity are a breath of fresh air in this wasteland and innundation of so called martial arts experts!

If I were building another martial arts library this book would be my first one on the shelf for personal and student use!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In this book I will give you "building codes" for offense. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
coherent body movement, unlimited offense, effective offense, correct body movement, puppy brain, submission fighting, compression attack, incoming force, incoming blow, sparring ring, wrong range, hip twist, fence position, weight transfer, sports context, extra movement, drop step, lost aspects, total offense
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