@chuyenthangthanh: Trả lời @Nào đậu B2 đổi tên 😇 trước khi xịt body mist hay nước hoa thì nhất định phải đảm bảo ng không còn mùi cơ thể đã nha, như mình đang dùng chai này này, sau 2 tuần ra vấn đề luôn 👍 #chuyenthangthanh #xuhuong #dcgr #shipper #xeomcongnghe #xitkhumuinach

chuyenthangthanh
chuyenthangthanh
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Thursday 24 October 2024 02:06:11 GMT
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phungthien206
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Có dứt điểm k ah
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Fighting Skills Are Important. Self-Defense Is Bigger. One of the biggest misconceptions in martial arts is believing that being a good fighter automatically makes you good at self-defense. They're related. But they're not the same thing. BJJ, MMA, boxing, wrestling, Muay Thai, and other combat sports can develop tremendous fighting skills. But violence outside the gym doesn't happen under agreed-upon rules. There's no referee. No weight classes. No gloves. No rounds. No warm-up. No guarantee it's one attacker. And no guarantee the other person is unarmed. Then there's another factor many people never consider: The legal aftermath. Winning the physical encounter but making a poor legal decision can still have life-changing consequences. That's why real-world self-defense has to include more than fighting. It includes: ✅ Awareness ✅ Threat recognition ✅ Verbal de-escalation ✅ Decision-making under stress ✅ Understanding self-defense law ✅ Protecting family members ✅ Escape and avoidance ✅ Knowing when to fight—and when not to The goal of self-defense isn't to win a fight. The goal is to go home safely and stay out of jail. That's a much bigger conversation than who has the better jab, takedown, or armbar. We don't train for sport. We train for life. Read or listen to the full episode: clearsky DOT training/why-bjj-mma-training-alone-is-not-complete-self-defense/ #SelfDefense #KravMaga #PersonalProtection #SituationalAwareness #ViolencePrevention #MMA #BJJ #MartialArts
Fighting Skills Are Important. Self-Defense Is Bigger. One of the biggest misconceptions in martial arts is believing that being a good fighter automatically makes you good at self-defense. They're related. But they're not the same thing. BJJ, MMA, boxing, wrestling, Muay Thai, and other combat sports can develop tremendous fighting skills. But violence outside the gym doesn't happen under agreed-upon rules. There's no referee. No weight classes. No gloves. No rounds. No warm-up. No guarantee it's one attacker. And no guarantee the other person is unarmed. Then there's another factor many people never consider: The legal aftermath. Winning the physical encounter but making a poor legal decision can still have life-changing consequences. That's why real-world self-defense has to include more than fighting. It includes: ✅ Awareness ✅ Threat recognition ✅ Verbal de-escalation ✅ Decision-making under stress ✅ Understanding self-defense law ✅ Protecting family members ✅ Escape and avoidance ✅ Knowing when to fight—and when not to The goal of self-defense isn't to win a fight. The goal is to go home safely and stay out of jail. That's a much bigger conversation than who has the better jab, takedown, or armbar. We don't train for sport. We train for life. Read or listen to the full episode: clearsky DOT training/why-bjj-mma-training-alone-is-not-complete-self-defense/ #SelfDefense #KravMaga #PersonalProtection #SituationalAwareness #ViolencePrevention #MMA #BJJ #MartialArts

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