At FightFast.com and trsdirect.com we specialize in teaching no-nonsense self defense and survival skills taught by instructors who have real world combat and street fighting experience.
Our mission is simple: equip you with the knowledge and techniques needed to stay safe and secure in an ever-changing world. Explore our vast library of easy-to-learn, battle-tested self-defense methods, honed over years of experience by our team of seasoned martial arts experts.
From essential hand-to-hand combat strategies to situational awareness and personal security tips, FightFast offers you the tools to navigate life's challenges with confidence and peace of mind. Whether you're a beginner or an experienced martial artist, our resources cater to all skill levels.
Join the FightFast community and take control of your personal safety today. Empower yourself with the skills you need to protect what matters most.
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FightFast

Party to Parking: The “Friendly Arm” Escort That Wasn’t

After a downtown birthday, she stepped outside for air. A guy she’d chatted with offered to walk her to the corner—seemed kind, knew names from the group. But halfway down the block his hand drifted from elbow to forearm to wrist—a subtle control. He tried the turn toward a darker side street: “It’s faster.”

She used a simple frame: elbow glued to ribs, palm posted against his chest, hips bladed, feet wide. “No—back to the door,” she said loud enough for the line to hear. Then she peeled his hand off on his thumb side (weakest point), stepped across his lead foot to block pursuit, and moved straight to the bouncer like she’d rehearsed it a hundred times. Because she had—at home in her hallway.

Tactics to steal (social setting boundary defense):

Name the route: “We’re going this way under that light.” Predators hate losing steering.

Wrist-release rule: Always peel toward the thumb, not against the whole hand.

Frame > fight: Elbow tight, hand posted = distance without escalation.

Use the crowd: Say the boundary for the audience; witnesses deter and document.

Micro-reps: Practice wrist releases + step-behind blocks in your hallway. Muscle memory beats panic.

Poll: If a “friendly” escort starts steering you off-route, what’s best?
a) Loud boundary + frame + steer back to crowd
b) Immediate wrist release + return to venue
c) Pepper gel in hand, verbal warning
d) Walk away silently to avoid conflict

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#NightOutSafety #BoundarySetting #WristGrabEscape #WomenSelfDefense #BystanderAwareness #FightFast

1 month ago | [YT] | 12

FightFast

Fake Fender-Bender: “Let’s Exchange Info” Becomes a Box-In

A tap on the bumper at a slow light—no big deal. Both cars pulled to the shoulder. As he stepped out, a third car slid in tight behind, boxing him and his vehicle. The original driver approached without insurance in hand, hands hidden, eyes scanning. The third driver stayed near the rear quarter, angle set for a blind-side rush.

He pivoted to the passenger side of his own car, keeping hood and roof between them, phone up and sideways for wide-angle filming. Loud, crisp: “Show your insurance from there. I’m filming this crash.” When they insisted he “come closer,” he replied, “Police are already on the way,” (and dialed). The second car left. The first driver bailed.

Tactics to steal (roadside safety + staged-accident scams):

Don’t rush out: Windows up, doors locked, assess mirrors for secondary vehicles.

Control the terrain: Move to your car’s passenger side; use your vehicle as a mobile wall.

Document at distance: Exchange photos without closing; plates, VIN, driver, damage.

Call first: Announce you’re calling police/insurance; scammers hate official records.

If boxed: Angle your wheels out; leave space to drive out if they rush.

Poll: After a “tap,” what’s your safest first move?
a) Film from inside; signal to pull into a well-lit lot
b) Exit immediately to check damage
c) Exchange info at the shoulder right away
d) Call 911 first; keep doors locked

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#RoadRage #StagedAccident #VehicleSelfDefense #PersonalSafety #UrbanSurvival #FightFast

1 month ago | [YT] | 22

FightFast

Trailhead Smash-and-Grab—Then the Owner Returns

He jogged back to the trailhead and saw glass glittering by his SUV. A man was still there, half-in the passenger door, grabbing a bag. Adrenaline surge—the instinct to charge was real. He didn’t. He used distance + angle. He stepped to the front quarter panel (engine block cover) and announced: “Leave the bag and walk.” The thief squared up, hand in pocket, blading—a possible weapon.

He moved to 45 degrees off the front bumper, using the hood line as cover and presentment. Hands up, loud commands, license plate filmed. The thief dropped the bag and bolted. He didn’t pursue—he pivoted to scan for a second man and then called 911 with clear description + direction.

Tactics to steal (outdoor parking + trail safety):

Stow smart: No visible bags. If you must, place items before arrival, not at the trailhead.

Cover cues: Engine block > door panels; use angled positions to reduce exposure.

Hands-eye triangle: Watch hips/shoulders for pre-attack cues; hands lie, hips don’t.

No hero chases: Film plates, describe shoes/hair/gait—details that stick.

Buddy protocols: Stagger arrivals/departures; maintain eyes-on as people approach cars.

Poll: You return mid-smash-and-grab. Best move?
a) Use engine cover + announce + film plates
b) Close distance to recover property
c) Remain hidden and call 911
d) Pepper gel in hand, command compliance

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#TrailSafety #CarBreakIn #ParkingLotSafety #OutdoorSecurity #SelfDefenseTraining #FightFast

1 month ago | [YT] | 22

FightFast

Hotel Hallway “Maintenance” Check: When the Clipboard Is a Cover

She was traveling solo for work. A knock at 10:56 p.m.: “Hotel maintenance—quick water pressure check.” Clipboard, polo shirt, confident tone. She looked through the peephole: no name badge, no secondary person, and he stood too close to the door frame—classic concealment for a second man.

She didn’t open. She called the front desk from her cell (not the hall phone), confirmed no work order, and moved to her offset position beside the dresser she had pre-placed as a cover column. Lights on, video recording, “Security is on the way.” Footsteps retreated. Ten minutes later, hotel security verified two non-guests loitering near her floor.

Tactics to steal (hotel + travel self-defense):

Verify through the desk—never through the door. Ask for names and call-back confirmation.

Door wedge + latch even when you’re inside; add a portable door jammer when traveling.

Furniture cover: Pre-stage a tall, dense item (dresser/bookcase) near your offset.

Elevator strategy: Choose a room near stairs you can access downward, not just up.

Hallway control: If you must open, do a chain-length crack with your foot behind the door and cell filming—better yet, don’t open.

Poll: Late-night “maintenance” knock—you:
a) Call front desk to verify—do not open
b) Turn on lights, record, and announce security
c) Ask for ID under the door camera
d) Crack door with latch to check (risky)

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#HotelSafety #SoloTravel #WomenSelfDefense #TravelSecurity #RoomSecurity #FightFast

1 month ago | [YT] | 15

FightFast

Gas Pump Distraction: The “Overflow” Scam That Turns Into a Grab

He pulled into a busy station—bright lights, plenty of people, seemed safe. As he started fueling, a stranger waved frantically: “Bro—your tank is overflowing!” Reflex kicked in—he turned to check—and a second guy slid between the open door and grabbed his phone off the seat. When he lunged, the first man stepped in close, asking fast questions to keep him locked in the pocket. Classic two-man distraction theft with latent aggression.

He didn’t chase. He changed his geometry. He pivoted so the pump handled the “front,” the car blocked one side, and he used the fuel hose as a flexible barrier/whip—a deterrent that bought space. Loud command: “BACK UP—POLICE ARE ON THE WAY!” The “helper” stalled; the grabber tossed the phone and walked away fast. Game over.

Tactics to steal (gas station self-defense + theft prevention):

Kill the triangle: Keep doors closed and windows up while fueling; keys and phone on your body, not the seat.

Pump-side stance: Stand where the hose + car create natural barriers; attackers hate obstacles.

Voice + posture: Palms up, elbows in, hips bladed—non-threatening but ready.

License-first reflex: If theft occurs, capture plate + direction; don’t sprint into unknowns.

Choose your pump: Prefer pumps nearest the storefront and cameras, not far corners.

Poll: Best first move when you spot a two-person distraction at the pump?
a) Close doors, pocket keys/phone, create barriers
b) Yell for staff and hit the car alarm
c) Film plates and disengage to the store
d) Pepper gel in hand, verbal boundary

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques to stop any threat:

The single-knuckle strike that neutralizes attackers instantly

The “human pliers” move to dominate any fight

How to use random items as powerful weapons

A devastating blow that ends threats immediately
🚨 Limited-time offer: Get the 100-minute “Brutal Fight-Enders” video package (worth $97) for FREE!
Claim yours: fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#GasStationSafety #SituationalAwareness #DistractionTheft #UrbanSurvival #SelfDefenseTips #FightFast

1 month ago | [YT] | 28

FightFast

The “Neighbor” at 2:14 A.M.: Doorbell Deception

The knock was polite. The hour wasn’t. “Hi—sorry—it’s your neighbor, I think a pipe burst in my place, can I come in and check the wall?” The peephole showed a hoodie, head low; voice too rehearsed. He didn’t open. He spoke through the door: “Name and unit?”—silence, then a different voice off-camera, “Just open up, man.”

He turned on the porch light and camera, stepped to his preplanned offset (not in front of the door), and called 911 on speaker. He announced, “Police are on the way; I’m recording.” The pair moved out of frame. He waited, light on, call active, studying the window angles and standing behind a tall bookcase he had placed months ago as a ballistic backer for this exact scenario.

Tactics to steal (home defense + deception):

No blind opens—ever. Verify name/unit; call the landlord or building security if needed.

Offset stance: Don’t stand in front of doors or windows; pick your “safe box” now, not later.

Lighting + lens: Flood your side with light; record their side.

Announce reality: “I’m recording. Police are en route.” Predators hate time + attention.

Furniture as cover: Bookcases + dense shelving create better-than-nothing protection in your ensconce point.

Poll: 2 A.M. “neighbor” at the door—what’s your protocol?
a) Verify through door; no open
b) Call 911; record; lights on
c) Announce you’re armed; don’t open
d) Crack door with chain/guard to talk

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques to stop any threat:

Single-knuckle strike

Human pliers

Everyday objects → weapons

Devastating blow
🚨 Limited-time offer: Get the 100-minute “Brutal Fight-Enders” video package (worth $97) for FREE!
Claim yours: fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#HomeDefense #DoorbellDeception #UseOfForceContinuum #SafeRoom #NightSecurity #FightFast

2 months ago | [YT] | 24

FightFast

Subway Platform Stare-Down: From Menace to Movement

The platform was packed; trains delayed. He felt the stare first—hard eyes, chin up, lip curled. The man moved closer, shoulder brushing, then toe-tap edging into his space.

He shifted to a wall pillar—back protected, field of view widened. Hands visible at chest height (“interview stance”), keys tucked away, backpack looped on both shoulders (harder to snatch). He said, “Back up,” loud, measured—not mad. When the man mimed a feint, he didn’t flinch; he changed positions down-platform with a calm walk, never turning his back, always angling his feet for sprint or shove-and-move if needed. The feinter lost interest; a camera and MTA staff were now in his frame.

Tactics to steal (public transit survival):

Pillar/railing anchor: Protect your back; deny blind-side entries.

Hands up, palms out: Non-threatening visibility + faster reaction time.

Bag management: Two straps on in crowds; one strap when you’re moving fast and want a quick drop.

Feint filter: Don’t overreact to micro-flinches; keep eyes on hips/shoulders, not hands alone.

Position > pride: Relocate under cameras/staff; you’re not ceding ego, you’re controlling terrain.

Poll: Someone tests your space on a platform—best move?
a) Anchor to pillar + commands + reposition
b) Stare back (predators hate confidence)
c) Leave platform for the next train
d) Non-lethal ready + warn loudly

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#SubwaySafety #CrowdSurvival #TransitSecurity #UrbanCombatives #SituationalAwareness #FightFast

2 months ago | [YT] | 15

FightFast

Have you checked out our other channel yet?
We just put a new video up. Green Beret DESTROYS Hollywood Gunfight Myths – “There Is NO High-Speed, Low-Drag Shooting!”
https://youtu.be/5CwJFPZbxZg?si=_9KRw...


Joe Teti and Dale Comstock pause their shooting session to discuss essential firearms knowledge, specifically the seven fundamentals of shooting. They emphasize the importance of handgun basics, including proper aiming and trigger control. This firearm training session provides key insights to improve your pistol skills. Are you chasing “tactical” shooting techniques you saw in movies, video games, or flashy Instagram videos? STOP. According to Green Beret and Black Ops Combat Veteran Dale Comstock, the idea of “high-speed, low-drag” gunfighting is not just overhyped—it’s dangerous. In this no-nonsense breakdown, Dale exposes the REAL secrets behind surviving a gunfight… and it’s not what you’ve been sold by the “tacti cool” crowd. The deadly lie behind speed shooting and fancy reloads Why mindset and simplicity beat “operator theatrics” every time What Dale actually used in real combat… and what he threw out The one “high-speed” move that could get you killed in a real fight The DIRTY secret Special Forces use to survive and dominate This is raw, real, and ruthlessly effective advice from a man who’s fought in wars, trained Tier 1 units, and lived to tell the tale. If you want Instagram tactics — swipe away. But if you want the truth about gunfighting, hit play. Green Beret shooting myths, Dale Comstock shooting tips, high-speed low-drag debunked, real-world gunfight tactics, combat shooting advice, how to survive a gunfight, special forces gunfight truth, tactical shooting lies, TRS survival training, elite operator mindset, self-defense vs combat training #DaleComstock #GreenBeret #CombatTruth #GunfightTactics #SelfDefenseTraining #FightFast #TRSSurvival #ShootingMyths #OperatorMindset #RealCombatSkills

2 months ago | [YT] | 20

FightFast

Most people freeze when violence happens — but a real Green Beret doesn’t.
In this video, a U.S. Army Green Beret reveals the most dangerous self-defense trick ever developed, designed to instantly stop any attacker, no matter their size, strength, or aggression.
This is not sport fighting.
This is a battlefield-tested move, used by Special Forces operators when there’s no time, no backup, and no second chances.
You’ll see how this one brutal technique ends real street fights in seconds — before your attacker even knows what happened.

2 months ago | [YT] | 73

FightFast

Rideshare Wrong Turn: When the Driver Locks the Doors

He ordered a rideshare after midnight—crowded district, closing bars, too far to walk. Two minutes in, the car missed the obvious left. “Shortcut,” the driver said, clicking the doors locked. The route app now showed gray side streets, no traffic, fewer lights.

He didn’t argue. He changed the game. “Hey—my buddy’s tracking my trip and is calling the police if I’m off-route” (true: he hit live share). He slid his backpack off and wedged it by his shin—a spacer if he had to kick the door, and a tool if he needed a barrier. He quietly opened his camera, flipped it front-facing, and narrated two details: plate and cross street.

At the next light he said calmly, “I need to get out here,” and bailed diagonally to the sidewalk between cars, never re-engaging at the window. The driver sped off.

Tactics to steal (vehicle-bound self-defense):

Live-share every ride; narrate plate + location on camera. Deterrence is half the win.

Diagonal exit: If you must bail, exit toward traffic/observers, not into dark curb lanes.

Spacer object at your shins (bag, jacket) to stop sudden knee-pin or door trap.

Language that lands: “You’re off-route. I’m getting out. People are tracking me.” Calm, factual, non-negotiable.

Never argue through glass; change terrain (more eyes, more light).

Poll: When a rideshare deviates and locks doors, your move?
a) Live-share + film + request immediate stop
b) Call 911 while in motion
c) Wait for a stop, then exit to observers
d) Pepper gel at the ready and command compliance

Think you’d walk away unharmed? Think again.

Discover 15 life-saving techniques…
🚨 FREE Brutal Fight-Enders → fightfast.com/yt/bfe

#RideshareSafety #UrbanSelfDefense #TravelSecurity #NightSafety #StreetAwareness #FightFast

2 months ago | [YT] | 32