
What Is the Infinite Variable?
Violence is not a fixed event.
It is a constantly changing series of unpredictable variables that no instructor, no syllabus, and no technique library can ever fully anticipate.
I call this The Infinite Variable.
Fixed Scenario Based Techniques
For decades, self-defense training has largely been built around one concept: Fixed scenario-based techniques.
“What do you do if someone grabs your wrist?”
“What is the defense against a front choke?”
“How do you counter a haymaker punch?”
“What is the defense against a knife attack?”
Students are taught a specific response to a specific attack. While this approach may help beginners understand basic movements, it no longer reflects the reality of violence today.
The world has changed.
The Problem with FIXED Scenario-Based Training
Real violence is unpredictable.
No two assaults are ever identical. An attacker may throw a punch, grab your shirt halfway through, push you against a wall, pull out a weapon, or be joined by another attacker within seconds.
Every encounter contains an almost infinite number of variables.
- Different attackers.
- Different body sizes.
- Different environments.
- Different emotional states.
- Different speeds.
- Different intentions.
- Different combinations of attacks.
No instructor can realistically prepare a student for every possible scenario.
If your training depends on remembering a different technique for every attack, eventually reality will present you with a situation you’ve never practised before.
That is where many traditional training methods begin to fail.
The Infinite Variable Principle
Instead of asking:
“What technique should I use against this attack?”
We should instead ask:
“What principles work regardless of the attack?”
Violence changes.
Human biomechanics do not.
Under stress, the body loses fine motor skills. Decision-making becomes slower. Tunnel vision develops. Adrenaline takes over.
Complex techniques become difficult to execute.
Simple principles survive.
Stop Memorising. Start Responding.
A punch is not the problem.
A choke is not the problem.
A grab is not the problem.
The real problem is managing chaos in the first critical seconds.
Instead of creating hundreds of techniques, self-defense should develop a student’s ability to instantly:
- Protect vital targets.
- Create structure.
- Control distance.
- Disrupt the attacker’s balance or intent.
- Regain initiative.
- Escape whenever possible.
These responses remain effective regardless of whether the attacker punches, pushes, grabs, tackles, or suddenly changes tactics.
The response adapts because it is based on principles, not memorised sequences.
Reality Doesn’t Pause
- Real assaults do not happen one technique at a time.
- The attacker doesn’t wait while you identify the attack, recall Lesson 27, and execute the correct defence.
- Violence is continuous.
- A shove becomes a punch.
- A punch becomes a tackle.
- A tackle becomes a choke.
- A choke becomes a weapon assault.
- Everything changes within seconds.
Your response must therefore be instantaneous, adaptable, and simple enough to function under extreme stress.
The Future of Self-Defense
The future does not belong to schools with the largest collection of techniques.
It belongs to schools that produce students who can adapt.
Students who understand timing.
Students who understand positioning.
Students who understand pressure.
Students who can solve problems rather than recall techniques.
This is the direction modern self-defense must move toward.
A Reminder to the Martial Arts Community
This is not a criticism of tradition. Traditional martial arts have contributed enormously to discipline, fitness, culture, and character development.
However, if the objective is real-world personal protection, we must continually evaluate whether our training reflects today’s reality.
The violence we face today is faster, more unpredictable, and more chaotic than the scripted attacks often seen in training halls.
As instructors, we have a responsibility to prepare our students for reality—not for rehearsed demonstrations.
Perhaps it is time to ask ourselves:
Are we teaching students to memorise techniques…
…or are we teaching them to survive the infinite variables of real violence?
The answer to that question may determine whether our students can perform when it matters most.
The world has changed.
Our training should change with it.