Simulator Training Every soldier who has ever been part of an Abrams tank crew trained on a simulator before he went to war for real. Those soldiers, who had never fought a war in a tank in real life, DECIMATED their enemies in Desert Storm. Commercial airline pilots train in simulators, too. They must re-qualify periodically on such simulators to remain licensed to fly. In each case, the soldiers and the pilots know what they're doing isn't real. 33 www.BulletproofDefenseDVD.com When they train in a simulator that looks and feels like the cockpit of a plain or the interior of a tank, it's like they're playing a giant, immersive video game. Yet the training they acquire under simulation is REAL. It is valid. It teaches them. The adrenal stress of trying to operate that simulator while experiencing threats ― the threat of being shot down by an enemy tank, the threat of losing control of the plane — is ALSO real. Simulated adrenaline is still adrenaline. Your body reacts to stress and pressure, even simulated stress and pressure, in the same way it does to real-life scenarios. Placing your body under adrenal stress through a contrived scenario, then, is the best way to learn to defend yourself while experiencing the adrenaline of a real self-defense altercation. Your reaction to adrenal stress, how you handle adrenaline, is the most decisive factor to your survival in any combat situation. Learning to handle the adrenaline means you won't be overcome by it.
Report - Stopping Power
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