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anyone scenario train?

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  • anyone scenario train?

    ive seen stuff about using scenario training(movie type shit with a script and all) does anyone really use this? i could see something like boxing only or one draws a weapon as a surprise but not the stuff some kooks talk about like with props makeup and costumes seems kinda wasteful. to me its not realistic unless you have a big budget and a lot of time

  • #2
    Keep it real...istic

    Originally posted by TylerJamesMead View Post
    ive seen stuff about using scenario training(movie type shit with a script and all) does anyone really use this? i could see something like boxing only or one draws a weapon as a surprise but not the stuff some kooks talk about like with props makeup and costumes seems kinda wasteful. to me its not realistic unless you have a big budget and a lot of time
    One of my E-buddies is fairly a pioneer in the scenario based adrenal response training methods.

    I don't think you need a movie script or a huge budget to employ basic adrenal response drills.

    It can be as simple as having a "thug" approach to bum a cigarette or moving things into a parking lot for a forceful "carjacking"

    The scenario training methods used at RMCAT and others seem to have had good results.

    Realism components and unexpected "NON THREATS" add a certain unknown element so it's not exactly scripted...

    NuWiki :: Display :: PEYTON QUINN

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    • #3
      Quinn

      Wow, Tyler, that seems sort of bizarre.

      All that just to train?

      Peyton's courses were seminal concepts that have spread through out the sd world using scenarios

      Richard Dimitri (Senshido, Montreal) also uses a strong scenario style.

      Neither one gos to this length to get realism.

      If the adrenaline flows, the scenario is a success, not how good it looks on youtube.

      Ted

      Real Crimes, Real Criminals Interviews by Peyton Quinn with criminals about victim selection...

      Why you should talk to a lawyer before talking to the police... A review of the effects of high stress due to violence (called either critical incident stress, CIS or Sympathetic Nervous System Stress, SNS) and how stress impacts on witness statements to police.

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