Martial Arts, The Undead and You: Hand-to-Necrotized Flesh

Author:
Grifter

This is a very bad idea. Zombies transmit their virus by biting or scratching. The last thing you want to do is get close. On the other hand sometimes life puts you in weird situations. What if you're forced to retreat by a crowd of the walking dead and retreat into an empty room? Suddenly you realize that it isn't as empty as you think. There's one lone undead in there with you. He wants your brains, but what he's going to get is your fists. Welcome to a short guide for using martial arts on zombies. This article will cover a broad range of martial arts. I will be discussing them in two categories, with several subcategories in each main one. The first category will cover empty hand martial arts. These are styles of fighting where your only weapons are your body and your wits. The second category will discuss some of the more common weapon based martial arts. The weapons discussed cover a wide range, from swords and knives to staves and throwing stars.

Hand-to-Necrotized Flesh Fighting styles.

Any discussion of martial arts must be done in generalities. Everywhere in the world people have needed to defend themselves without weapons at one time or another. They developed empty hand fighting systems as a response to this need. These fighting systems never stay static. They develop with the influences of new masters and the addition of new cultural influences. This process continues today. The ancient art of Jiujitsu, as an example, has evolved heavily in just the last couple hundred years. It mutated into the form of Judo in the lat 1800s and then changed again into Brazilian Jiujitsu or BJJ in the 1900s.

The creation of a zombie horde will just be the newest influence on martial arts. Even as karate was created to give Okinawan peasants a means to resist their feudal lords, I will now examine some of the current styles of martial arts in an effort to give people a tool to fight the undead with their bare hands. I will examine three subcategories of fighting, and generally place martial arts school into each category. Some schools fall on the line somewhere in between but I have done the best I can to place them properly.

Remember: Going hand to hand is your very last choice when it comes to dueling with the undead. Only use these arts for combat if you cannot retreat and have no usable weapons. Mankind invented weapons for a reason - they're really good at killin' stuff.

Hard Hitting and High Flying: The Striking Arts
Examples: Tae Kwon Do, Karate, Muay Thai, Boxing, Capoeira, Krav Maga, Savate.

We all know the rules - The only way to dispatch a zombie is to break the neck or destroy the brain. Striking martial arts excel in this category. Striking, in this context, refers to martial arts that focus on standing apart from your opponent, trading blows. Some of these arts are better than others for the purposes of zombie dispatching.

Tae Kwon Do has come under some fire by the martial arts community lately. It is seen by some as being too big and showy to be effective as a self defense skill. The art focuses on strong kicks, and often its students are capable of some amazingly flashy high kicks. However, these kicks might lack effectiveness to a human opponent because of their large-scale nature. The bigger the move is, the easier it is for other people to block it. Fortunately, zombies are not well known for their blocking ability. A strong spinning axe kick could do real damage to the skull of an undead.

The same could be said of almost all of the other arts listed in this category. They all have giant kicks that are the best means of dispatching zombies. Capoeira especially has some very acrobatic moves in its repertoire. Savate is a good choice as well. Traditional Savate practitioners excel in this area as well. They wear a specialized kind of shoe with spikes in it that is designed to let them fire off tremendously powerful but unbalanced kicks.

A kick is a good thing because it keeps their deadly maws away from your precious brains. Be sure to wear good shoes. You don't want to end up bitten when you put your foot all the way through a zombie's head. Remember, even if you can kick straight from the teeth to the brain stem they might still bite your ankle. I suggest steel-toed boots. A strong kick can also shatter an arm or a leg, rendering the zombie less dangerous, if not out of the game altogether.

However, one of these martial arts is not like the others. Boxing suffers a huge drop in usefulness when you go from human to undead opponents. Humans suffer pain and they can be knocked unconscious. Boxing is great at causing both of those. Zombies experience neither. No matter how many powerful rights you lay along an undead's jaw they will just keep coming. Boxing is not the answer here.

Fighting Without Fighting: The Internal Martial Arts
Examples: Tai Chi, Wing Chun, Aikido

The striking arts tend to be offensive in their purpose. They lunge towards their opponent, seeking to damage them through raw power. The internal martial arts are different. They seek to harness internal energy and use that to reroute the energy of the opponents. As a general rule these martial arts have a strong focus on the concept of internal chi, or a person's energy.

There is little striking in these systems. Instead of punching an internal martial artist would route the momentum of an opponents punch around them, and strike only when their opponent was vulnerable. Often women use these arts as a means of self-defense. The problem is that they are almost useless against the walking dead.

Zombies do not strike. They grasp and bite. There is little momentum to reroute and often nowhere to go. The only defense is the power to crush a skull. This limits the application of the internal arts.

They do shine in one place - breaking holds. As self defense arts there is a strong focus on being able to free one's self from an opponent. Here internal arts are often better than striking arts. After all, your first goal as an unarmed fighter against zombies is to get away. To do that you must break their clammy grasp upon your extremities.

Aikido is very good at breaking and reversing holds. You may even be able to break a zombie wrist now and then, rendering them unable to grasp anyone. The training in breaking a hold should be standard for anyone who may be going up against the undead, no matter how well armed they are.

I'm Gonna Wrassle That Critter! - Grappling Martial Arts
Examples: Jiujitsu, Greco-Roman Wrestling, Sambo

Grappling is a catch all for a variety of arts that all involve little striking and focus on close contact wrestling with an opponent, both on the ground and standing. The goal is to incapacitate your opponent either through choking them unconscious or by breaking one (or more) joint(s). This is going to be a short section.

But Grifter, you ask, why should this be a short section? Jiu-Jitsu is awesome, people dominate with it in MMA competitions! That's great for you, but the problem here is that we aren't dealing with sweaty overdeveloped underdressed men. We've got zombies. The biggest danger from the undead is always the risk of a bite. All grappling martial arts expect you to get very close to your opponent in order to throw them, choke them, use a joint lock, whatever. Regardless they expect you to get close.

That is the worst thing you could do. The immediate result would be a deadly bite. Don't attempt to use these arts on the walking dead. It will not work out. Like the internal arts they have a saving grace in the way they give you knowledge of how to break your opponent's grip. Otherwise stay away.

Closing Words on Empty Hand

Zombies are best taken out from a long distance. Given no other choices striking arts are clearly the way to go because they maximize damage and distance in one stroke. Does this mean the other arts are useless? Not necessarily.

Martial arts serve more purposes than simply as self-defense tools. They build fitness and provide entertainment as well. Few things will make you stronger than wrestling with other people. You work every muscle while staying in a relatively safe environment. Sport has been a source of entertainment for man for countless centuries, I think it will continue to do so after the zombie apocalypse. It may even increase in popularity. We will need high quality entertainment to keep our minds off the deathly moans emanating from outside our makeshift protective structures.

 

Eliot - Site Admin wrote:

He's still working on that article.

Submitted by Eliot - Site Admin on Mon, 09/10/2007 - 12:52.
grimreaper013 wrote:

Ever hear about Akido? its the art of evasion. My buddy who is more expierienced than I am told me that the military teaches it, but teaches it in a way that can actualy kill a living being

Submitted by grimreaper013 on Mon, 09/10/2007 - 19:51.
Quitarias wrote:

Nice article.Although some martial art do include weapons training and hand to hand training.Although firstly I would take as much training as I can with a bokken.
Then I could use a pipe a stick and anything like that to beat zombies sensless.

Submitted by Quitarias on Tue, 09/11/2007 - 07:15.
Chilbert wrote:

ok sorry. I look forward to seeing your future work because it is a very well written article and I am interested to know what your thoughts on a few martial arts related weapons are.

Submitted by Chilbert on Tue, 10/02/2007 - 23:10.
Chilbert wrote:

Quitarias wrote:
Although firstly I would take as much training as I can with a bokken. Then I could use a pipe a stick and anything like that to beat zombies sensless.

If you are going to do some bow staff training, I would also look into such arts as the phillipines Arnis, Escrima, and the use of a rattan or a jo so that if or when the staff breaks from cracking it against a hard zed skull, you can instantly change from one style to the other quickly thus preventing panic in an already bad situation.

Submitted by Chilbert on Tue, 10/02/2007 - 23:16.
Mantisstrike wrote:

I have been anazlying different martial art styles that would work best as a last resort against zombies. The art I have found is Krav Maga. It was created and is used in Isreal. This art is based pure and simple on survival. It is a mixed martial art that steal what works and throws out what doesn't. Unlike a convential martial art you are trained to fight and repel multiple opponents, which will work great against zombies. There are no rules to krav maga so you can fight as dirty as you want. They teach you things like taking down your opponent in a couple hits. I believe that this will work against zombies by making them immobile or repeling the biters when they are attacking you.

Submitted by Mantisstrike on Sun, 10/21/2007 - 15:11.
WhiteRaven wrote:

Grifter wrote:
Tae Kwon Do has come under some fire by the martial arts community lately. It is seen by some as being too big and showy to be effective as a self defense skill. The art focuses on strong kicks, and often its students are capable of some amazingly flashy high kicks. However, these kicks might lack effectiveness to a human opponent because of their large-scale nature. The bigger the move is, the easier it is for other people to block it.

I'm afraid I beg to differ. Tae Kwon Do is a very fast and agressive martial art, knowing so because I've taken it for over 3 years. All techniques can be done relitively quickly if you know what you're doing. Although Tae Kwon Do is know for its flashy kicks that doesn't mean that every single kick is like that. Even a simple front kick, one of the first kicks taught to a martial artist, can generate immense amounts of energy, enough to send a man on his knees holding his stomach or send a zombie stagerring 7 feet back. Remember Tae Kwon Do means "way of the foot and hand" or something like that. That means that there are a number of hand techniques at a Tae Kwon Do practitioners disposal and that is often overlooked.

Submitted by WhiteRaven on Sun, 12/02/2007 - 19:46.
WhiteRaven wrote:

Grifter wrote:
[h1][I] Tae Kwon Do has come under some fire by the martial arts community lately. It is seen by some as being too big and showy to be effective as a self defense skill. The art focuses on strong kicks, and often its students are capable of some amazingly flashy high kicks. However, these kicks might lack effectiveness to a human opponent because of their large-scale nature. The bigger the move is, the easier it is for other people to block it.

I'm afraid I beg to differ. Tae Kwon Do is a very fast and agressive martial art, knowing so because I've taken it for over 3 years. All techniques can be done relitively quickly if you know what you're doing. Although Tae Kwon Do is know for its flashy kicks that doesn't mean that every single kick is like that. Even a simple front kick, one of the first kicks taught to a martial artist, can generate immense amounts of energy, enough to send a man on his knees holding his stomach or send a zombie stagerring 7 feet back. Remember Tae Kwon Do means "way of the foot and hand" or something like that. That means that there are a number of hand techniques at a Tae Kwon Do practitioners disposal and that is often overlooked.

Submitted by WhiteRaven on Sun, 12/02/2007 - 19:49.
Chilbert wrote:

WhiteRaven wrote:

I'm afraid I beg to differ. Tae Kwon Do is a very fast and agressive martial art, knowing so because I've taken it for over 3 years. All techniques can be done relitively quickly if you know what you're doing. Although Tae Kwon Do is know for its flashy kicks that doesn't mean that every single kick is like that. Even a simple front kick, one of the first kicks taught to a martial artist, can generate immense amounts of energy, enough to send a man on his knees holding his stomach or send a zombie stagerring 7 feet back. Remember Tae Kwon Do means "way of the foot and hand" or something like that. That means that there are a number of hand techniques at a Tae Kwon Do practitioners disposal and that is often overlooked.

I am afraid I beg to differ as well. If you look very closely at a number of different martial arts, you find that each ones movements, attacks, and defenses are the same. I know I covered this in another thread ( http://ww2.zombieinitiative.org/node/1126?page=3 ) In my personal opinion, Tae Kwon Do de-simplifies what could be such an easy art to understand. You are not going to use super jump air kicks against regular people or zombies as much as a simple front kick. They both do damage, but the air kicks tend to leave you more venerable. "There are only 4 types of kicks: front kicks, side kicks, round kicks, and arching kicks." (Dr. Haha Lung/The Nine Halls of Death: Ninja Secrets of Mind Mastery) Different martial arts call these kicks different things and label them something else, but when you break down into the fundamentals the kicks can be classified as one of the four. Your imagination (and what you can do with your body) should be your only limit. There is no need to label a "spinning hook kick" as such, if you hit your target, a kick is a kick is a kick. Simplicity saves time and helps with the process of learning and internalizing. I am by no means stating that you cannot label different moves, but it comes down to basics. A kick is a kick, a punch is a punch, a take down is a take down, and a block is a block. How you use it is up to you and your imagination. (Go read my article Brain Power for Survival when you get the oppurtunity, I touch on some other topics related to this one. Here is a link http://ww2.zombieinitiative.org/node/1391

Submitted by Chilbert on Sun, 12/02/2007 - 23:22.
WhiteRaven wrote:

Chilbert wrote:
Quote:

In my personal opinion, Tae Kwon Do de-simplifies what could be such an easy art to understand. You are not going to use super jump air kicks against regular people or zombies as much as a simple front kick. They both do damage, but the air kicks tend to leave you more venerable. "There are only 4 types of kicks: front kicks, side kicks, round kicks, and arching kicks."....

I disagree with your first statement but I fully support the second one that you made. I don't think that Tae Kwon Do "de-simplifies" what should be known by a martial artist. The first three types of kicks that you mentioned are the backbone of kicking techniques in this art. Its up to the Taekwondoist is to whether he should do a side kick or a flamboyant air kick worthy of Hollywood. And this judjment is taught to all martial artists as far as my research is concerned. At the institute that I attend at least, there are probably three flashy, air kicks that are taught. And even then, the instructors don't recommend using these in sparring or a self-defense situation but rather a simplier technique. The other kicking technuques that are taught are pretty basic, front kick, roundhouse kick, side kick, and back kick. I would include ax kick and wheel kick but I don't see many instances in which they can be used to their full potential.

Submitted by WhiteRaven on Tue, 12/04/2007 - 21:01.
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