Introduction

What follows are my observations from nearly a decade of hard fight training in Core JKD as a female.
Now, the bad-ass part of me wants this guide to be essentially gender neutral. That bad-ass would pretend women are just smaller versions of men, and I would address issues of fighting and technique.
But let’s face it; we are not the same.
We live in a society with different expectations for female bodies—especially when it comes to appearance.
These are my experiences with cauliflower ear, broken teeth, clothing that hindered training, insecurities regarding my body, and false perceptions about what I do and why I do it.
I want to help you avoid some of that pain, worry, and misunderstanding.

Training Partners and Gender Roles
There seem to be some typical gender roles people can fall into during fight training. Sometimes these happen without our knowing or when we think we are being courteous to our training partners. Try to recognize them in yourself and others, and get rid of them. You will train yourself AND your partners much more effectively.
Men vs Men

This often turns into two bulls locking horns.
One guy keeps trying to out-muscle the other guy; then the other guy ups the muscle on the original guy; the situation keeps escalating until they are both exhausted.
While this can be fun and it can be good to test yourself this way, most times, I see very little technique happening in this situation.
It’s just pure dumb muscle vs pure dumb muscle.
Nobody is getting better in their skills.
Relax, step back, and remember that you have leverage and momentum tools too.
They’ll keep you in the fight much longer than muscle can.
Men vs Women
Many men have been taught from a very early age that it’s wrong to hit a woman.
While that’s certainly admirable in everyday life, in the training environment, this mentality is doing your female training partners a huge disservice.
They are there to learn how to defend themselves realistically.
In order to do that, they need to be realistically attacked during training.
She may be smaller, but in a real fight, she’ll probably be smaller than her attacker too.
Better she learns to deal with that problem in training than in a real situation.
Now, you can certainly get feedback from your partner and have her tell you “more” or “less” power (we all have to start somewhere), but please don’t feel bad about giving her a mechanically realistic attack.
You are helping her get better.
Women vs Men

Many of us are smaller than the men we train against.
A lot of times we forget this and start trying to match muscle with them. It’s a losing battle.
Or we mentally fall into a trap of thinking: I’m smaller and weaker, this can’t possibly work.
Being smaller doesn’t have to be a disadvantage.
You have tools they don’t, like speed, agility, and tiny arms that seal a choke ohhhhh so tightly.
Use leverage, and capitalize on their momentum. Don’t be afraid to train against big guys. You won’t have a choice on the size of your attacker in the street.
Testing a technique against a big guy in training will show you immediately what you need to fix to make it work.
We don’t have the luxury of adding a little touch of muscle at the end of a technique to fudge it like some guys do.
It feels like we have to train 3x harder than they do lots of times.
But when you nail the mechanics of a technique, you will be 3x the better fighter.
Women vs Women
I’ve seen women training with other women be too gentle with each other.
They don’t want to hurt each other, and they don’t want to seem too aggressive.
But, just like with men training women, you are doing your training partner a disservice by not giving her a realistic attack.
Don’t worry about hurting her feelings or her body. She’s there to learn how to fight.
Give her a realistic attack, and let her learn how to deal with it.
You’ll both be better for it.