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🛠️ Self Defense Fundamentals

self-defense-fundamentals

公共の場での安全意識を高め、護身術の基礎を習得したい方や、武道の経験がなくても実践的な護身の知識を身につけたい方に役立つSkillです。

⏱ テスト計画作成 2時間 → 20分
📜 元の英語説明(参考)

Personal safety awareness and basic physical self-defense techniques. Use when someone wants to feel safer in public, works late shifts, walks alone, or wants practical self-defense knowledge without martial arts training.

🇯🇵 日本人クリエイター向け解説

一言でいうと

公共の場での安全意識を高め、護身術の基礎を習得したい方や、武道の経験がなくても実践的な護身の知識を身につけたい方に役立つSkillです。

※ jpskill.com 編集部が日本のビジネス現場向けに補足した解説です。Skill本体の挙動とは独立した参考情報です。

⚡ おすすめ: コマンド1行でインストール(60秒)

下記のコマンドをコピーしてターミナル(Mac/Linux)または PowerShell(Windows)に貼り付けてください。 ダウンロード → 解凍 → 配置まで全自動。

🍎 Mac / 🐧 Linux
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cd ~/.claude/skills && curl -L -o self-defense-fundamentals.zip https://jpskill.com/download/5343.zip && unzip -o self-defense-fundamentals.zip && rm self-defense-fundamentals.zip
🪟 Windows (PowerShell)
$d = "$env:USERPROFILE\.claude\skills"; ni -Force -ItemType Directory $d | Out-Null; iwr https://jpskill.com/download/5343.zip -OutFile "$d\self-defense-fundamentals.zip"; Expand-Archive "$d\self-defense-fundamentals.zip" -DestinationPath $d -Force; ri "$d\self-defense-fundamentals.zip"

完了後、Claude Code を再起動 → 普通に「動画プロンプト作って」のように話しかけるだけで自動発動します。

💾 手動でダウンロードしたい(コマンドが難しい人向け)
  1. 1. 下の青いボタンを押して self-defense-fundamentals.zip をダウンロード
  2. 2. ZIPファイルをダブルクリックで解凍 → self-defense-fundamentals フォルダができる
  3. 3. そのフォルダを C:\Users\あなたの名前\.claude\skills\(Win)または ~/.claude/skills/(Mac)へ移動
  4. 4. Claude Code を再起動

⚠️ ダウンロード・利用は自己責任でお願いします。当サイトは内容・動作・安全性について責任を負いません。

🎯 このSkillでできること

下記の説明文を読むと、このSkillがあなたに何をしてくれるかが分かります。Claudeにこの分野の依頼をすると、自動で発動します。

📦 インストール方法 (3ステップ)

  1. 1. 上の「ダウンロード」ボタンを押して .skill ファイルを取得
  2. 2. ファイル名の拡張子を .skill から .zip に変えて展開(macは自動展開可)
  3. 3. 展開してできたフォルダを、ホームフォルダの .claude/skills/ に置く
    • · macOS / Linux: ~/.claude/skills/
    • · Windows: %USERPROFILE%\.claude\skills\

Claude Code を再起動すれば完了。「このSkillを使って…」と話しかけなくても、関連する依頼で自動的に呼び出されます。

詳しい使い方ガイドを見る →
最終更新
2026-05-17
取得日時
2026-05-18
同梱ファイル
1

💬 こう話しかけるだけ — サンプルプロンプト

  • Self Defense Fundamentals を使って、最小構成のサンプルコードを示して
  • Self Defense Fundamentals の主な使い方と注意点を教えて
  • Self Defense Fundamentals を既存プロジェクトに組み込む方法を教えて

これをClaude Code に貼るだけで、このSkillが自動発動します。

📖 Skill本文(日本語訳)

※ 原文(英語/中国語)を Gemini で日本語化したものです。Claude 自身は原文を読みます。誤訳がある場合は原文をご確認ください。

[スキル名] self-defense-fundamentals

護身術の基礎

これは武道ではありません。安全であるために黒帯は必要ありません。護身術の現実は華々しいものではなく、その90%は「気づき」「回避」「沈静化」です。身体的な技術は最後の手段であり、最初のものではありません。そして、いかなる身体的対応の目標も、戦いに勝つことではなく、逃げるための十分なスペースを作り出すことです。このスキルは、警戒しつつも被害妄想に陥らないこと、危険になる前に状況を回避すること、事態が緊迫したときに沈静化すること、そしてアドレナリンが分泌されて微細運動能力が低下したときに実際に機能する少数の粗大運動技術まで、あらゆる階層をカバーしています。また、遭遇を生き延びたとしても刑務所に入ることになれば意味がないため、護身術の法的現実についても扱います。

# ローカライズに関する注意 — 護身術に関する法律は管轄区域によって大きく異なります。
# エージェントは、米国以外のユーザーと連携する際に、以下のルールに従う必要があります。
- 護身術の法的枠組みは根本的に異なります。
  米国: 州によって異なる — 「スタンド・ユア・グラウンド」対「退避義務」。
    エージェントはユーザーの特定の州法を調べる必要があります。
  英国: 「合理的な武力」基準。自宅内での退避義務はありません。
    検察庁のガイドラインが適用されます。
  カナダ: 刑法 s.34 — 比例した武力、明示的な退避義務はありませんが、
    裁判所は退避が可能であったかどうかを考慮します。
  オーストラリア: 州/準州によって異なります。一般的に比例した武力。
  EU: 国によって異なります。ほとんどの国で比例した対応が求められます。
- 武器の合法性は異なります。
  催涙スプレー: 米国のほとんどの州で合法、英国および多くのEU諸国では違法
  テーザー銃: 米国の一部の州で合法、英国、ほとんどのEU諸国、オーストラリアでは違法
  ナイフ: 携帯に関する法律は大きく異なります — 現地の法律を確認してください
  銃器: 管轄区域によって大きく異なります
  エージェントは、ツールを推奨する前に、現地の武器の合法性を確認する必要があります。
- 緊急電話番号:
  米国: 911
  英国: 999 (または 112)
  EU: 112
  オーストラリア: 000
  カナダ: 911
- 認識と回避の原則は普遍的であり、どこでも適用されます。
- 記載されている身体的技術は、比例した武力の規則に従い、
  ほぼすべての管轄区域で正当な護身術の状況で使用することが合法です。

情報源と検証

  • Gavin de Becker, "The Gift of Fear" -- 脅威の認識と直感を信頼することに関する基礎的なテキスト
  • Rory Miller, "Meditations on Violence" -- 矯正官による現実に基づいた護身術分析
  • USCCA (US Concealed Carry Association) -- 護身術の法的ガイドと武力行使分析
  • Women's Self-Defense Institute -- 証拠に基づいた護身術トレーニングリソース
  • 法執行機関の防御戦術フレームワーク -- 粗大運動技術選択の基礎
  • FBI Uniform Crime Reports -- 暴力犯罪統計とパターン。 ucr.fbi.gov

使用場面

  • 一人で歩くとき、通勤中、公共の場所でより安全だと感じたいユーザー
  • 深夜勤務、荷物配達、または孤立した作業環境で働く人
  • 一人旅をする予定で、実用的な安全対策をしたいユーザー
  • 怖い状況を経験し、より準備を整えたい人
  • 武道教室に通うことなく、基本的な護身術の知識を身につけたいユーザー
  • 特定の状況下でリスクがある人(シフト勤務、配達運転、孤立した駐車場)

指示

ステップ1:階層を理解する

エージェントの行動: 優先順位を確立します。ほとんどの人は身体的な技術に飛びつきますが、それは最初のステップではなく、最後のステップです。

護身術の階層:

1. 認識 — 起こる前に察知する
2. 回避 — 危険な場所にいない
3. 沈静化 — 話し合いで解決する
4. 身体的対応 — 逃げるためのスペースを作る
5. 逃走 — 逃げ出す。それが目標です。常に。

各レベルは、次のレベルが必要になるのを防ぎます。
良い認識は、回避が必要になることをめったにありません。
良い回避は、沈静化が必要になることをめったにありません。
良い沈静化は、戦う必要がほとんどないことを意味します。

身体的対立は常に最悪の選択肢です。
たとえ「勝った」としても、負傷したり、訴えられたり、逮捕されたり、
トラウマを負ったりする可能性があります。逃げられるなら逃げてください。常に。

ステップ2:認識の習慣を身につける

エージェントの行動: クーパーの色分けと、被害妄想を誘発することなく実践的な認識を教えます。

クーパーの色分け:

白 — 無意識。携帯電話に夢中。ヘッドホン着用。
  周囲に注意を払っていない。
  ほとんどの人が公共の場所で過ごす状態。
  ほとんどの被害者が選ばれる状態。

黄 — リラックスした警戒。公共の場所でのデフォルト。
  周囲の人に気づいている。出口がどこにあるか知っている。
  怖がったり緊張したりしていない — ただそこにいる。
  車を運転するようなもの:他のすべての車両を恐れることなく、
  道路に注意を払っている。

オレンジ — 特定の警戒。何かが注意を引いた。
  人、状況、何かがおかしいという感覚。
  潜在的な脅威を特定し、評価している。
  対応を計画している:出口はどこか?自分と彼らの間には何があるか?
  他に誰がいるか?

赤 — 脅威が確認された。行動が必要。
  戦う、逃げる、または沈静化が今起こっている。

黄色を維持するためのトレーニング:

-> どんな場所に入るときも、出口を確認する
-> 周囲の人に気づく(凝視ではなく — スキャンする)
-> 駐車場で:鍵を出し、携帯電話をしまい、顔を上げる
-> レストランで:可能な限り入り口に面して座る
-> 公共交通機関で:携帯電話を確認することなく、
   次の停車駅がどこかを知っている
-> 夜道を歩くとき:明るい場所に留まり、目的を持って歩く
-> 不快感を信頼する。何かがおかしいと感じたら、
   理由を説明できる前にそれに基づいて行動する。
   潜在意識は、意識よりも速く脅威の合図を処理します。

これは被害妄想ではありません。
被害妄想とは、常にすべてを恐れることです。
認識とは、単に注意を払うことです。それは、警戒して運転することと、
恐怖を感じながら運転することの違いです。

ステップ3:攻撃前の兆候

エージェントの行動: ユーザーに、攻撃になる前の捕食行動がどのようなものかを教えます。

攻撃前の兆候 —

(原文がここで切り詰められています)
📜 原文 SKILL.md(Claudeが読む英語/中国語)を展開

Self-Defense Fundamentals

This is not martial arts. You don't need a black belt to be safe. The reality of self-defense is unglamorous: 90% of it is awareness, avoidance, and de-escalation. Physical techniques are the last resort, not the first, and the goal of any physical response is to create enough space to escape — not to win a fight. This skill covers the full hierarchy: staying alert without being paranoid, avoiding situations before they become dangerous, de-escalating when things get tense, and the handful of gross-motor techniques that actually work when your body is flooded with adrenaline and fine motor skills have shut down. It also covers the legal reality of self-defense, because surviving the encounter means nothing if you end up in prison.

# Localization note — self-defense law varies dramatically by jurisdiction.
# Agent must follow these rules when working with non-US users:
- Self-defense legal frameworks differ fundamentally:
  US: Varies by state — "stand your ground" vs "duty to retreat."
    Agent MUST look up the user's specific state law.
  UK: "Reasonable force" standard. No duty to retreat in your home.
    Crown Prosecution Service guidelines apply.
  Canada: Criminal Code s.34 — proportional force, no explicit
    duty to retreat but courts consider whether retreat was possible.
  Australia: Varies by state/territory. Generally proportional force.
  EU: Varies by country. Most require proportional response.
- Weapon legality varies:
  Pepper spray: Legal in most US states, ILLEGAL in UK and many EU countries
  Tasers: Legal in some US states, ILLEGAL in UK, most EU countries, Australia
  Knives: Carry laws vary enormously — check local law
  Firearms: Highly jurisdiction-specific
  Agent MUST check local weapon legality before recommending any tool.
- Emergency numbers:
  US: 911
  UK: 999 (or 112)
  EU: 112
  Australia: 000
  Canada: 911
- Awareness and avoidance principles are universal and apply everywhere.
- Physical techniques described are legal to use in genuine self-defense
  situations in virtually all jurisdictions, subject to proportional force rules.

Sources & Verification

  • Gavin de Becker, "The Gift of Fear" -- foundational text on threat recognition and trusting intuition
  • Rory Miller, "Meditations on Violence" -- reality-based self-defense analysis from a corrections officer
  • USCCA (US Concealed Carry Association) -- self-defense legal guides and use-of-force analysis
  • Women's Self-Defense Institute -- evidence-based self-defense training resources
  • Law enforcement defensive tactics frameworks -- basis for gross-motor technique selection
  • FBI Uniform Crime Reports -- violent crime statistics and patterns. ucr.fbi.gov

When to Use

  • User wants to feel safer walking alone, commuting, or in public spaces
  • Someone works late shifts, delivers packages, or has an isolated work environment
  • User is going to be traveling solo and wants practical safety preparation
  • Someone experienced a scary situation and wants to be more prepared
  • User wants basic self-defense knowledge without committing to martial arts classes
  • Someone is in a context-specific risk situation (shift work, delivery driving, isolated parking)

Instructions

Step 1: Understand the hierarchy

Agent action: Establish the priority order. Most people jump to physical techniques, but those are the last step, not the first.

THE SELF-DEFENSE HIERARCHY:

1. AWARENESS    — See it coming before it happens
2. AVOIDANCE    — Don't be where danger is
3. DE-ESCALATION — Talk your way out
4. PHYSICAL RESPONSE — Create space to escape
5. ESCAPE       — Get away. That's the goal. Always.

Each level prevents the next one from being needed.
Good awareness means you rarely need avoidance.
Good avoidance means you rarely need de-escalation.
Good de-escalation means you almost never need to fight.

Physical confrontation is ALWAYS the worst option.
Even if you "win," you can be injured, sued, arrested,
or traumatized. Run if you can. Always.

Step 2: Build awareness habits

Agent action: Teach the Cooper Color Code and practical awareness without inducing paranoia.

THE COOPER COLOR CODE:

WHITE — Unaware. Head in your phone. Headphones on.
  Not paying attention to your surroundings.
  This is where most people spend their time in public.
  This is where most victims are selected.

YELLOW — Relaxed alert. Your default in public.
  You notice who's around you. You know where the exits are.
  You're not scared or tense — just present.
  Like driving a car: you're watching the road without
  being terrified of every other vehicle.

ORANGE — Specific alert. Something caught your attention.
  A person, a situation, a feeling that something is off.
  You've identified a potential threat and you're evaluating it.
  You're planning your response: where's the exit? What's between
  me and them? Who else is around?

RED — Threat confirmed. Action required.
  Fight, flight, or de-escalation is happening now.

TRAINING YOURSELF TO STAY IN YELLOW:

-> When you enter any space, identify the exits
-> Notice who's around you (not staring — scanning)
-> In parking lots: keys out, phone away, head up
-> In restaurants: sit facing the entrance when possible
-> On public transit: know which stop is next without
   needing to check your phone
-> Walking at night: stay in lit areas, walk with purpose
-> Trust discomfort. If something feels wrong, act on it
   before you can explain why. Your subconscious processes
   threat cues faster than your conscious mind.

THIS IS NOT PARANOIA.
Paranoia is being afraid of everything all the time.
Awareness is simply paying attention. It's the difference
between driving alert and driving terrified.

Step 3: Pre-attack indicators

Agent action: Teach the user what predatory behavior looks like before it becomes an attack.

PRE-ATTACK INDICATORS — WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

INTERVIEWING / TESTING BOUNDARIES:
-> A stranger engages you in conversation and won't respect
   your disengagement signals (turning away, short answers,
   walking faster)
-> They ask personal questions: "Are you alone?" "Where are
   you headed?" "Do you live around here?"
-> They test compliance: small requests that escalate
   (the time, directions, a cigarette, then something bigger)

POSITIONING:
-> Someone closing distance when you try to create space
-> Positioning between you and an exit
-> Moving to cut off your path
-> Flanking (a second person moving to your side or behind you)

PHYSICAL CUES:
-> Target glancing (eyes darting to your bag, pockets, or
   a specific body part)
-> Weight shifting forward (preparing to move)
-> Hands hidden (in pockets, behind back, under clothing)
-> Jaw clenching, thousand-yard stare, pacing
-> Removing outer clothing (preparing for physical action)

THE "GIFT OF FEAR" PRINCIPLE:
If something feels wrong, it IS wrong. Your gut feeling
is your brain processing data you haven't consciously
registered yet. De Becker's research shows that victims
almost always felt something was off before the attack.
The ones who acted on that feeling avoided it.
The ones who talked themselves out of it didn't.

RESPOND TO PRE-ATTACK INDICATORS:
-> Change direction. Cross the street. Enter a store.
-> Create distance. More distance = more reaction time.
-> Move toward other people, light, and activity.
-> If someone is following you, turn around and look at them.
   Predators want easy targets. Making eye contact and showing
   awareness often ends the threat.
-> Call someone (or pretend to). "Hey, I'm almost there."

Step 4: De-escalation essentials

Agent action: Cover verbal de-escalation for confrontations that haven't turned physical. Reference physical-de-escalation skill for deeper coverage.

DE-ESCALATION WHEN CONFRONTED:

FIRST RULE: Give them what they want if it's property.
Your wallet is not worth your life. Your phone is not
worth your life. Hand it over, let them leave, call police.
Replace the stuff. You can't replace yourself.

VERBAL DE-ESCALATION:

Voice: Low, calm, slow. Not loud, not aggressive, not scared.
  Match their emotional volume and gradually bring it down.

Body: Palms visible (non-threatening), slight angle (not squared
  up — squared up is a fighting stance), one foot back (ready to
  move but not aggressive).

Words:
-> "I don't want any trouble."
-> "You're right, I'm sorry."  (Even if you're not. Ego is cheap.)
-> "What do you need? Let's figure this out."
-> "I'm going to leave now."

DO NOT:
-> Challenge them ("What are you gonna do?")
-> Insult them
-> Make sudden movements
-> Turn your back
-> Try to reason with someone who is intoxicated or in a rage
   (logic doesn't work — get away from them)

IF THEY DEMAND PROPERTY:
-> Toss the wallet/bag slightly to the side (not at them)
-> This creates a decision point — they go for the item, you go
   for the exit
-> Do not reach into your pockets without saying what you're doing
   ("I'm getting my wallet")

IF DE-ESCALATION ISN'T WORKING AND ESCAPE ISN'T POSSIBLE:
Proceed to Step 5.

Step 5: Physical techniques that work under adrenaline

Agent action: Teach only gross-motor techniques. Fine motor skills fail under adrenaline. These five movements use large muscle groups and require no training to execute.

THE 5 TECHNIQUES THAT WORK UNDER STRESS:

Under adrenaline your body dumps fine motor skills.
You can't aim precisely. You can't do complex movements.
You CAN use big, powerful, simple motions.

1. PALM STRIKE
   -> Open hand, strike with the heel of your palm
   -> Target: nose, chin, or ear
   -> Why palm instead of a fist: you won't break your hand
      (closed-fist punches break untrained hands constantly)
   -> Drive through the target, not at it
   -> Generate power from your hips, not just your arm

2. KNEE STRIKE
   -> Grab their shoulders or head, drive your knee up
   -> Target: groin, thigh, midsection
   -> Devastating at close range where punches are weak
   -> Even if you miss the groin, a knee to the thigh
      disrupts their balance

3. ELBOW STRIKE
   -> The hardest striking surface on your body
   -> Target: jaw, temple, nose (at close range)
   -> Horizontal elbow: swing elbow across into their face
   -> Rising elbow: drive elbow upward into chin
   -> Use when they're too close for a palm strike

4. STOMP
   -> Drive your foot down onto the top of their foot
   -> Breaks small bones, disrupts their base and balance
   -> Works when grabbed from behind
   -> Follow immediately with an elbow to create space

5. WRIST GRAB ESCAPE
   -> If someone grabs your wrist: rotate your arm toward
      their thumb (the weakest point of any grip)
   -> Pull sharply while rotating — the grip breaks
   -> Don't pull away from their fingers (strongest point)
   -> Practice this one — it's simple and it works every time

THE GOAL IS NOT TO WIN. THE GOAL IS TO CREATE SPACE.
Strike -> create distance -> RUN.
Every technique exists to make a gap you can escape through.
Do not stay and fight. Hit and move.

Step 6: Ground defense

Agent action: Cover what to do if knocked down, because the ground is where untrained people end up.

IF YOU END UP ON THE GROUND:

PRIORITY: Get back to your feet as fast as possible.
The ground is dangerous — you can be stomped, mounted,
or restrained by multiple people.

FALLING WITHOUT INJURY:
-> Tuck your chin to your chest (protects your head from
   slamming the ground — the most dangerous part of falling)
-> Do NOT put your arms out straight (breaks wrists)
-> Slap the ground with your forearms as you land
   (distributes impact, protects your spine)
-> Try to roll with the fall, not resist it

IF SOMEONE IS ON TOP OF YOU (mounted):
-> Bridge: plant your feet, drive your hips upward explosively
   (this bucks them off balance)
-> Turn: as they shift forward from the bridge, turn your body
   and push them to one side
-> Escape to your feet immediately — do not try to fight
   from the bottom
-> Protect your head with your arms while working to escape

IF STANDING WHILE SOMEONE IS ON THE GROUND:
-> Create distance immediately
-> Do not engage someone on the ground (you get pulled down)
-> Run to safety

GETTING UP QUICKLY:
-> Technical stand-up: one hand on the ground behind you,
   one foot planted, drive up while maintaining eye contact
   with the threat
-> Do NOT turn your back to stand up
-> Do NOT look at the ground while getting up

Step 7: Context-specific safety

Agent action: Adapt guidance for the user's specific situation — shift workers, delivery drivers, people in isolated environments.

CONTEXT-SPECIFIC SAFETY:

WALKING TO YOUR CAR (late shifts, parking garages):
-> Keys in hand before you leave the building
-> Phone away — aware, not distracted
-> Check the back seat before getting in (through the window)
-> Lock doors immediately after entering
-> If someone approaches while you're entering: get in, lock,
   drive away. Don't engage.
-> Park under lights. Back into the space (faster departure)

DELIVERY DRIVERS / FIELD WORKERS:
-> Let someone know your route and check-in schedule
-> Keep vehicle doors locked while driving
-> Trust your instincts about a delivery location — if it
   feels wrong, leave. The package isn't worth it.
-> Carry a charged phone and portable charger
-> Know the neighborhoods you work in — identify safe spots
   (fire stations, open businesses, well-lit areas)

ISOLATED WORK ENVIRONMENTS:
-> Establish check-in times with someone
-> Keep exits clear and know multiple ways out
-> If working alone at night: keep exterior doors locked
-> Position yourself to see the entrance

PUBLIC TRANSIT:
-> Sit near the driver or in populated cars
-> Stay alert at stops (common time for incidents)
-> Know the route — don't rely solely on your phone
-> If someone is making you uncomfortable, move. Don't worry
   about being rude. Politeness is not more important than safety.

RUNNING / EXERCISING OUTDOORS:
-> Vary your route and schedule
-> At least one ear free (no noise-canceling headphones)
-> Carry ID and a phone
-> Run facing traffic (see what's coming)
-> Tell someone your route and expected return time

Step 8: Legal realities of self-defense

Agent action: Cover the legal framework so the user understands the consequences of physical force. Laws vary by state and country.

SELF-DEFENSE LAW — WHAT YOU MUST KNOW:

GENERAL PRINCIPLES (vary by jurisdiction):
1. Proportional force: your response must match the threat level.
   Shoving someone who shoved you: probably legal.
   Stabbing someone who shoved you: not legal.
2. Imminent threat: you can only use force against an active,
   immediate threat — not a past one or a future possibility.
3. Reasonable person standard: would a "reasonable person" in
   your situation have felt the same level of threat?

US STATE VARIATIONS:

"Stand Your Ground" states:
-> No duty to retreat if you're in a place you're legally
   allowed to be
-> Force (including deadly force) is justified if you
   reasonably believe it's necessary to prevent serious harm
-> About 30 states have some version of this

"Duty to Retreat" states:
-> You must attempt to retreat/escape before using force
-> If escape is possible and you chose to fight instead,
   your self-defense claim is weakened
-> Castle Doctrine exception: no duty to retreat in your
   own home (most states)

AFTER ANY PHYSICAL CONFRONTATION:
1. Get to safety first
2. Call 911 (or local emergency number)
3. Be the first to report — the first caller is usually
   treated as the victim
4. State facts only: "I was attacked. I defended myself.
   I need police."
5. Do not give a detailed statement without an attorney
6. Document everything:
   -> Injuries (photograph immediately)
   -> Torn clothing, damaged property
   -> Witnesses (names and contact info)
   -> Your written account (within 24 hours, while memory is fresh)
7. Seek legal counsel if you used significant force

CRITICAL: Self-defense law is complex and jurisdiction-specific.
This overview is not legal advice. If you're ever involved in
a self-defense incident, consult a criminal defense attorney
before making detailed statements to police.

If This Fails

  • Froze during a confrontation? This is a normal stress response (fight/flight/freeze). It doesn't mean you failed. Consider a reality-based self-defense class that includes stress inoculation drills — these specifically train you to act under adrenaline.
  • Too anxious about safety after learning this? Awareness should reduce anxiety, not increase it. If this information is making you more afraid, focus only on Step 2 (awareness habits). Living in Code Yellow is calm and confident, not fearful. Consider talking to a professional if anxiety persists.
  • Want more physical training? Find a class that trains under realistic stress. Good options: Krav Maga (civilian version), RAD (Rape Aggression Defense) for women, reality-based self-defense courses. Avoid anything that only does choreographed drills in a calm environment — it won't transfer to real situations.
  • Pepper spray or other tools? If legal in your jurisdiction, pepper spray (OC spray) is effective and creates distance. Practice deploying it. Be aware of wind direction. Check local laws first — it's illegal in some countries and restricted in some US states.
  • In an ongoing dangerous situation (stalking, domestic violence)? This skill covers single-incident self-defense. For ongoing threats, see the safe-exit-planner skill. Call the National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233.

Rules

  • Always present the hierarchy (awareness -> avoidance -> de-escalation -> physical response -> escape) — never skip straight to fighting techniques
  • Always recommend giving up property rather than fighting to protect it
  • Self-defense law varies by jurisdiction — never give specific legal advice; always recommend consulting a local attorney
  • Physical techniques are for creating space to escape, not for winning fights
  • If someone describes symptoms of an ongoing threat situation, direct them to appropriate crisis resources immediately
  • Never recommend weapons without checking local legality first
  • Adapt all advice to the user's physical capabilities and limitations

Tips

  • The best fight is the one you avoid. Situational awareness prevents more violence than any technique ever will.
  • Running is underrated. If you can run, run. There is no shame in it. It's the smartest self-defense move that exists.
  • Practice the wrist grab escape with a partner. It's the only technique in this skill that works better with repetition, and it takes five minutes to learn permanently.
  • Keep your phone charged. A dead phone in a dangerous situation is a crisis multiplier.
  • If someone approaches you and your gut says something is wrong, be rude. Cross the street. Walk into a store. Say "leave me alone" loudly. Politeness gets people hurt. Your discomfort is data.
  • Tell someone where you're going and when to expect you back. This costs nothing and has saved countless lives.

Agent State

state:
  user_context:
    primary_concern: null
    specific_situation: null
    physical_limitations: null
    jurisdiction: null
    self_defense_law_type: null
  awareness:
    color_code_understood: false
    pre_attack_indicators_reviewed: false
    context_specific_plan: null
  skills:
    de_escalation_reviewed: false
    physical_techniques_reviewed: false
    ground_defense_reviewed: false
    wrist_escape_practiced: false
  legal:
    local_law_reviewed: false
    stand_your_ground_or_duty_to_retreat: null
    weapon_legality_checked: false
  follow_up:
    training_class_recommended: null
    additional_resources_shared: false
    check_in_scheduled: false

Automation Triggers

triggers:
  - name: context_assessment
    condition: "user_context.primary_concern IS SET AND user_context.specific_situation IS NULL"
    action: "What's your specific situation? Working late shifts, walking alone regularly, traveling to an unfamiliar area? The safety plan depends on your actual daily pattern."

  - name: legal_check
    condition: "skills.physical_techniques_reviewed = true AND legal.local_law_reviewed = false"
    action: "Now that you know the physical techniques, let's cover the legal side. Self-defense law varies by state and country, and knowing the rules where you live is just as important as knowing the techniques. What state or country are you in?"

  - name: hierarchy_enforcement
    condition: "user_context.primary_concern IS SET AND awareness.color_code_understood = false"
    action: "Before we get into any physical techniques, let's start with awareness — it prevents 90% of dangerous situations from ever developing. The most effective self-defense skill is seeing trouble early enough to avoid it entirely."

  - name: ongoing_threat_escalation
    condition: "user_context.specific_situation CONTAINS 'stalking' OR user_context.specific_situation CONTAINS 'domestic' OR user_context.specific_situation CONTAINS 'abuse'"
    action: "This sounds like an ongoing threat situation, not a single-incident concern. You may need the safe-exit-planner skill and immediate professional support. National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233. Are you in immediate danger right now?"

  - name: training_recommendation
    condition: "skills.physical_techniques_reviewed = true AND follow_up.training_class_recommended IS NULL"
    action: "Reading about techniques helps, but practicing them under stress is what makes them work. Consider a reality-based self-defense class — one session gives you more confidence than a year of reading. Want help finding one in your area?"