Yeah, you do it right about the time they are telling you who they are, or giving you that, "you don't know who I am" line.
As batman would say, POW!!!!!!!
Then, without hesitation, you drop his friend just for being too close.
If they're close enough to touch you then they are part of the problem, too.
This brings to light my reason for this original post.
I have been in those situations - as many others here have.
In the streets you will often be outnumbered and have only enough time for 1 or 2 cracks per person.
That being said, you had better hit first, hit fast and hard, then find another target and repeat
We have been taught that and we all know it, but I feel that we, as martial artist, are losing the killer instinct.
I hear about how the training was in the 40's & 50's, so Kajukenbo has the reputation of being very rough and tumble.
The founders built that reputation, but today many are living on a reputation they don't themselves hold up to.
I do my best to teach the way I was taught and to pass on, as Sijo asked me many times to do. He always said to give 'em hard style, rough and tumble, no pity-pat kine.
That being said, I have seen those who say they train hard and that they like to bang. That good - that's Kajukenbo.
But when I watch, I don't see it. I see hints of it in there sometimes, but it's a distant relative of what it used to be.
I don't want to see Kajukenbo get watered down, so I am speaking up.
We were at a seminar a few years ago and one of my black belts had no one to train with, so I told him to work on me.
He was hitting me, but I could tell he was holding back. I gave him my little look and said HIT ME.
He did and we continued.
Then G M Reyes came by and said, "man you guys bang."
I looked back at him and said, "isn't that what were supposed to do?"
He gave me a grin and walked on to continue teaching.
I have complete faith in Kajukenbo. I am just trying to get everyone to take reality check on how we actually train in Kajukenbo and how we should train.
The bullring, or as Sijo called it just a few years before he left us, The Emperado circle, is where you will see my point and is the perfect example.
In the bullring, people are coming at you quickly, from all angles, and in a rapid motion. You don't have much time to think or react - you just have to react.
When you do the bullring, do it with a new attacker coming in every 2 to 3 seconds and see how long you can go without breaking from the technique.
It will be a mess in no time, and that's real.