Being Choked From the Front
This Aware360 Pro technique page breaks down a common high-risk assault: a two-hand front choke. You’ll learn the priorities (airway first), how to break the grip using structure not strength, how to create space, and what to do if the attacker surges and ends up behind you. The aim is always escape, not fighting.
🎥 Technique Video
Watch the demonstration, then use the step cards below. Use the voice button to hear each step read aloud.
🧠 Interactive Step Breakdown
Chin down, hands inside, base your stance
A front choke is time-critical. Your first job is not “winning” — it’s buying oxygen and stopping panic.
- Chin down: protect the airway and reduce direct pressure on the throat.
- Hands inside: get your forearms between their arms and your neck (don’t swat outside).
- Base: knees soft, feet under hips. Don’t lean back and feed the choke.
Why “hands inside” matters
Use a fast knee to create a flinch
In your demo, the knee forces a reaction, disrupts posture, and helps reduce the squeeze.
- Sharp, not big: quick knee to groin/hip line (depending on range and legality).
- Head protected: keep chin down while striking.
- Purpose: make them bend, blink, or loosen — not “score points”.
Common mistake
Forearms frame + elbows in + hips forward
You’re building a wedge between their arms and your neck, then driving with body structure.
- Frame: forearms inside, palms to wrists/forearms.
- Elbows tight: stops your frame collapsing.
- Small hip drive: helps break their alignment and weakens the grip.
Key coaching cue
Short clearing strike / smash across the arms
In the clip, you clear their arms off line. This is about opening the exit lane, not trading punches.
- Short and explosive: avoid looping, keep balance.
- Angle: don’t stay square in front of them.
- Immediate follow-up: as soon as pressure reduces, move.
Safety note
Trap an arm and turn to their side
Real attackers often surge forward, re-grab, or chase. Your answer is control + angle, not panic.
- Trap: catch one of their arms (two-on-one style control) to reduce re-grab risk.
- Turn your whole body: hips and feet turn, not just shoulders.
- Base: prevent being lifted or dragged.
Why trapping matters
Short elbow / strike to make the gap… then escape
You add a tight elbow while keeping control. The purpose is to create an exit moment.
- Keep it tight: short elbow while maintaining the arm trap.
- Disengage: once they loosen, separate immediately.
- Exit plan: move to safety, shout, get help.
Reality check
🧩 Mini Quiz (Fast Learning Check)
Answer to test recall. This is not legal advice — always act within reasonable force and escape when safe.
📌 Page Summary
This page teaches a practical response to a front choke: protect the airway, break posture, and escape. The interactive steps mirror the technique in the video, including what to do if the attacker surges and ends up behind you. Train slowly, then add resistance — because technique must work under adrenaline.

