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    Default Fear of punches

    Hey, recently during spars I've started flinching or closing my eyes when a punch is coming, my coach noticed this and immediatly pulled me from sparring and matches and told me to get rid of it fast if I want to keep boxing. So I need your advice guys, how can I get over this? I don't even know how it started, I didn't do it until just a week ago.

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    This is a fairly common reaction, and especially when new. And while the trainer pulled you, probably because he figured you might get hurt reacting this way, the best and near only way to overcome it is to get more experience with getting hit. Now that you are aware of it, you will just have to buckle down.

    It is also fairly common for people to move their head too far back in their stance, an instinctual reaction from the brain trying to keep one's head furthest from incoming punches. The prob is it often leaves the chin up in the air, and further away from the hands and reaction time to defend punches. I see more people getting nailed like this then anything.

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    Figured as much, guess it's time to brace myself to getting hit a while now until it stops. Thanks Youngblood.

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    Try this, before sparring. Put your Thumb over one nostril and a finger over the other, I say this because you only have two . Now breive in as far as you can through one nostril while closing the other with finger or thumb. When you have inhaled as much as you can blocking the nostril its gone up blow gently down the other, then vice versa. Its an old meditation technique and it works. try it for 3 minutes.
    Pain lasts a only a minute, but the memory will last forever....

    boxingbournemouth - Cornelius Carrs private boxing tuition and personal fitness training

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    Hey Mate

    Bit of a shame that your coach hasn't identified specific elements for you to work on. Generally, this 'fear of punches' comes from a slight lack of confidence in certain aspects of your boxing technique. This is very often the case when throwing a right cross for instance, as this shot carries slightly more risk than throwing a jab, and if the shot has faults then it's very easy to be countered by your opponent. Another common reason is having limited defensive tools at your disposal (again it's the coaches job to help instil these in you). Seek to work on things like:

    1. Using more feints to put the pressure back on your sparring partner/opponent.
    2. Practice your basic hand defenses i.e. rear-hand blocks and parries and the double arm block (cover up). Do this even during shadow boxing and bagwork to help develop 'mind maps' of sparring passages.
    3. When you do block or parry a shot, throw a shot back instantly (as your opponent's glove is still in your hand). Again this applies pressure back on your opponent.
    4. Work on combining foot movement (in/out/left/right) with slips, ducks and rolls, always seeking to keep your eyes on your opponent. Openings for your shots will come.
    Confidence comes with knowledge. Ask your coach if he/she noticed any pattern or has any tips on what you can work on.

    Hope this helps mate, and don't worry, confidence will come!!!!

    Fran

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    In Systema (Russian Martial Arts) we frequently get many people who are gun shy of being punched, and some of the following methods work for all of them who stay around a few weeks.

    You are however beyond their level so please don't think that I am equating you with those newcomers, but rather just explaining that these methods work -- together or separately.

    (First, everything that you were offered above sounds good too so I am just adding more choices and exercises...)

    Get with a friend (or friends) who you can trust -- this must be someone whose only goal is to help you reorganize your neurology to react correctly and usefully.

    1. Start light and very slow.
    2. Have your partner just touch your face or anywhere else that tends to cause a flinch. GENTLY. Accept the touch.
    3. Continue moving slowly and SLOWLY move appropriately and sometimes just purposely 'take the hit' (which is just a touch).
    4. As your partner SLOWLY increase the speed or power (and this might be over minutes or even over days) NO FASTER than you can continue to make good movements and react open eyed and effectively, you might want to have the touches/taps be directed somewhat away from the 'sensitive' areas and moved back only as quickly as you can continue to deal with them and improve your reaction.
      By this latter I mean you might be comfortable with a medium tap on the cheekbone but still not be quite ready for that if it comes at your eye or perhaps your nose.
    5. The goal here is to NEVER get "hurt" or be "macho" but rather to retrain your neurology.
    6. With many people we don't even start with the face or head but initially send solid touches, then taps, then solid punches to the big muscles of the upper chest where the padding makes even a bare fist fairly comfortable.
    7. At all times, remember and think the goal is to move correctly and so go as slow and light as necessary.
    8. Take some hits at levels that are PERFECTLY acceptable TO YOU. No one else, except perhaps a very careful partner will know what this is so don't go macho and if your partner sees the slightest flinch then he much slow down, reduce power, move the punch to a different area, whatever it takes.
    Flinching is not a bad thing, if you have no other response, but it is less than useful if you can use good body movements, blocking, slipping, catching, etc to better protect yourself.

    You want to convince your neurology (it's not a conscious thing or it wouldn't be a flinch) that you have those other more effective choices -- and it will (usually) only be convinced by a couple of things:

    1. Success in dealing with a punch
    2. Effectively surviving those that do get through
    Concentrate the large majority of your practice on the former (success) rather than the latter (taking a hit except at very manageable speeds/levels), because ONE failure (i.e., 1 flinch) is likely going to take TEN SUCCESSES (or many more in severe cases) to re-wire.

    This also comes up in pistol shooting -- and the principles are similar except of course your reduce the caliber and noise levels (not just smaller caliber but also using ear plugs with ear muffs to reduce the sound level) until the flinch disappears and until new good reactions take precedence.

    --
    HerbM

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    I liked what everyone had to say.

    One thing that I'd recommend is a round or two of you and your sparring partner shadow boxing against each other. There are a few ways to go about it, one way is that you and your partner stand in front of the other at a close distance, but not too close as to hit each other. Practice footwork and maneuverability while becoming aware of where you are in the ring in relationship to each other. Realize where the punches are coming from. Try to get yourself at an angle to where you're able to hit them and not get hit in return. Get other things right, your stance, your balance, coordinating your punches with your footwork, and work on getting some feints down pat. This way you're developing your depth perception and exercising important skills instead trying dominate your sparring partner.

    As you get more comfortable, the shadowboxing rounds can transition into controlled sparring. Perhaps a jab/lead-arm-only round, working on distance, angles, and dealing with your opponent's leads. So you and your opponent only have to concerned with one arm, and with time this will grow into confidence and you can gradually introduce the right/rear arm into the mix and then you'll be boxing! You have to walk before you can run, and ideally you'd want to work on this regularly for a few weeks for the benefits to sink in. The hardest part is probably getting your trainer to accept it.

    If your trainer can help, talk him into putting on some pads or sparring gloves and work on some default defensive moves. If not, talk to some of the guys there and see if they can help, and in return you can help them work on some moves as well. Say for instance, work on avoiding/defending against the jab, slip, parry, catch, etc. and don't stay in one place. Do this for the other punches. If there's anything that you are unsure of, ask around for help, or you refer to a boxing manual such as Edwin Haislet's Boxing (provided in boxing ebooks thread, see Kirk Lawson's storefront).

    Try to reinforce what you learn into your shadowboxing and bag work. Boxing is give and take, so you should constantly train with an opponent in mind. Work on your defense and counters (fundamentals first). When hitting the bags, don't stay in one place, or in range the whole time.

    As for nerves, one things that I'd while driving to the gym is repeat some positive affirmations to myself. I'd talk in first person and in the present tense. Read: The Amazing Power Of Affirmations It helped clear up some apprehension that I had.

    You just got to be disciplined and relaxed and train continuously.
    If you hear a voice within you saying that I am not a painter, then by all means paint and that voice will be silenced.

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    Hi there,

    I havnt ever ventured onto this board before but after seeing this thread it brought me in. I have been boxing for about forteen years on and off and moved from being a boxer/mover as a junior to a bit of a tear up artist in recent years, but the thing i noticed is every time i start again i flinch really badle and keep shutting my eye's.

    There have been some really good replys (which i have only skim read as im at work and skiving!) but for me the only way is to just get rounds under your belt and it goes away - weird thing is the more you flinch the more it hurts, by keeping your eyes open and chin down you dont take the blow as solidly.

    Im still doing it now after recently having another crack at the sport but i know it will soon pass and ill be having some wars again soon (yes in sparring i enjoy it!! )

    Hope your the same!!!

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    Default Re: Fear of punches

    Never had the problem myself. Id imagine your anticipating a far greater pain than you`ll actually receive. Surely by now you have actually been properly decked and will know how it feels.

    If its just a reflex issue i really dont see the problem if it makes you more apt in escaping a punch
    one dangerous horrible bloke

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