How to Defeat Your Enemies

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:15
In life, we develop friends but we can also develop enemies. Sometimes they're bullies and other times they turn out to be the people closest to you. By knowing how to interact and handle these people in your life, you can move on without...
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In life, we develop friends but we can also develop enemies. Sometimes they’re bullies and other times they turn out to be the people closest to you. By knowing how to interact and handle these people in your life, you can move on without living in fear.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Understanding Your Enemy

  1. Step 4 Find your enemy's weakness.
    Every enemy has a weakness, no matter how strong they seem when they're putting you on their heels. Finding that weakness will be essential to planning your revenge and getting your enemy humiliated. Some common enemy weaknesses are:
    • Hubris. Just like in the ancient Greek stories, excessive pride can lead to the downfall of many enemies. If you've got a braggy, boastful enemy, being put in a position of embarrassment will be devastating for this enemy. Good revenge might mean setting your enemy up for some public embarrassment or failure.
    • Confidence. Many bullies are really just big babies who have no self-confidence or belief in their own abilities. Lots of bullies are really just looking for companionship and friends, because they feel undervalued and unloved. These types of bullies might respond better to a kinder tactic.
    • Competitiveness. Many enemies are hyper-competitive jerks who've allowed their love of winning to overcome other considerations, like human decency and kindness. Learning to disengage and freeze these enemies out is the best way of handling them and disarming their ability to torment you. If you don't play, they can't win.
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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Getting Back at Your Enemy

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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Defending Yourself

  1. Step 2 Learn to throw...
    Learn to throw a punch. Fights don't work like in the movies, where both people throw a million hard right-hands right to the face until someone hits a KO. Most fights are over very quickly. Learning to properly form and throw a punch will make sure that you don't make a valuable movie mistake if the situation calls for it, so you'll be able to throw a high-probability punch accurately and end the fight sooner rather than later.[11]
    • Make a fist by wrapping your fingers into your hand firmly, but not so tight you cut off the circulation. Wrap your thumb around the bottom of your knuckles, not around your index finger and not inside your fingers.
    • Extend the middle knuckle of your middle finger slightly. This is where your fist should make contact, not your big knuckle, where your fingers connect to your hands.
    • Punch in a straight line, keeping your elbows in and throwing linear punches, not big circular haymakers. There's a lot more power in a straight jab than in a big swing.
    • Aim for the nose, the neck, or the stomach. Punching someone in the jaw, cheek, or forehead will end up hurting you more. Aim for soft spots and swing hard.
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Warnings

  • Don't let things resort to you losing. Avoid confrontations like this as much as possible.
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  • You're liable to get your enemy fired by having pornography sent to their workplace in their name, or even get yourself in trouble if you're found out. You may hate your enemy, but ask yourself if it's worth it to cost them their career.
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