Canonical entry: Strangles Require Compression on Both Sides of the Neck Simultaneously

Invariant of the week · Jan 25 – January 31, 2027

Strangles Require Compression on Both Sides of the Neck Simultaneously

Submissions

All strangles require compression on both sides of the neck simultaneously. Compression on one side only creates discomfort; compression on both sides interrupts blood flow.

Bilateral neck compression is the mechanical requirement for a functional strangle. One-sided pressure produces pain; two-sided pressure occludes the…

What This Means

A strangle works by interrupting blood flow to the brain. The carotid arteries run on both sides of the neck, and both must be compressed simultaneously for unconsciousness to result. One-sided pressure — pressing against only the left carotid or only the right — does not interrupt brain blood supply. The brain continues receiving oxygenated blood through the unaffected side. The result is discomfort and a pain response, not a vascular shutdown.

This distinction is mechanically significant. A strangle that compresses both carotids produces unconsciousness in a matter of seconds regardless of the opponent’s pain tolerance. A one-sided choke can be resisted through toughness — it hurts, but it does not cause blackout. The opponent who understands this knows they can survive one-sided pressure by simply enduring it. The practitioner who understands this knows that any choke attempt must create bilateral compression or it will not finish.

The two sides of compression do not have to come from the same source. A rear naked choke compresses one carotid with the forearm bone and the other with the bicep. A triangle compresses one carotid with the thigh and the other indirectly through the opponent’s own shoulder being driven into the neck. A guillotine compresses one side with the forearm and the other with the neck-spine contact. In every case, the mechanism is bilateral — two pressure points, two sides, simultaneous engagement.

How This Applies in Practice

Across the system, this principle expresses most cleanly in the following techniques:

Rear naked choke: The choking arm’s forearm bone presses into one side of the neck while the bicep on the same arm presses into the other side. The squeeze brings both sides toward the spine simultaneously. A choke that closes only the bone-on-windpipe line without the bicep loading produces air discomfort but no blood interruption.

Triangle: One thigh compresses the carotid on its side; the trapped shoulder is driven across the body to compress the carotid on the other side. The finish is bilateral — without the head pull and angle change that loads the trapped shoulder into the second side, the lock holds the head but does not strangle.

Guillotine: The forearm cuts into one side of the neck while the chest pulls the back of the neck up against the spine, closing the second side indirectly. A guillotine that pulls without the chest-and-elbow line completing the wrap is a neck crank, not a choke.

D’arce: The biceps and forearm of the choking arm wrap one side of the neck; the opponent’s own shoulder is pressed into the other side. The lock finishes when both pressure points engage at once. A loose D’arce that loads only the front line produces no submission until the shoulder side is also driven in.

Arm triangle (kata gatame finish): The opponent’s own arm presses into one carotid while the attacker’s bicep or shoulder loads the other. The squeeze drives both sides toward each other. Without the chest-and-shoulder closure on the attacker’s side, the trapped arm alone does not strangle.

Where This Appears

The rear naked choke is the clearest demonstration. The finishing position — arm across the throat, hand behind the head, elbow below the chin — produces bilateral compression by design. The forearm presses one carotid; the bicep, when the arm cinches tight, presses the other. A rear naked choke where the arm is across the throat but the elbow is too high produces a windpipe choke — painful, slower, and resistable. The correction is always repositioning to achieve the bilateral carotid compression, not squeezing harder.

The triangle choke demonstrates the invariant in a different configuration. The leg across the throat compresses one side; the opponent’s own shoulder, forced into the neck by the angle of the triangle, compresses the other. A triangle that does not include the shoulder — where the opponent manages to keep their shoulder clear of the neck — produces only one-sided compression. The practitioner cutting the angle, breaking posture, and ensuring the shoulder is seated against the neck is directly correcting for bilateral compression failure. This is why angle matters: the correct angle drives the shoulder into position.

Arm-in guillotines and loop chokes follow the same logic. An arm-in guillotine includes the opponent’s arm in the choke configuration — the arm is positioned so that it contributes to bilateral compression rather than relieving it. The mechanics are less direct than an arm-free guillotine, which is why arm-in variations require tighter positioning and more deliberate angle to achieve the same bilateral compression effect.

How It Fails

The failure mode is a strangle attempt where only one side is engaged. This manifests most often as a windpipe choke — the arm or forearm pressing directly into the trachea rather than against both carotids. Tracheal chokes are painful and can produce a tap from pain or panic, but they are slower and unreliable against experienced opponents who understand the difference. An opponent who recognizes a one-sided or windpipe choke knows they can gut through it; an opponent caught in bilateral carotid compression has no such option.

The other common failure is compression that reaches both sides but does so loosely — one side firmly engaged, the other barely contacting. Even partial relief on one side substantially reduces the strangle’s effectiveness. The opponent’s body compensates through the less-compressed carotid, prolonging the finish. Adjusting the grip, deepening the bite, or changing the angle to ensure firm bilateral compression is always the correct response to a strangle that is “almost there” but not finishing.

The Test

Apply a rear naked choke grip on a cooperative partner and deliberately set it as a windpipe choke — arm across the throat, elbow high, no bicep contact on either carotid. Have the partner note the sensation: discomfort and pressure on the airway, but tolerable. Then reposition: drop the elbow, sink the forearm to carotid depth, and squeeze to bring the bicep into contact with the opposite carotid. The difference in sensation is immediate and unambiguous. The partner will report the shift from airway pressure to the distinct head- heaviness of vascular compression. That shift confirms bilateral compression has been achieved and demonstrates exactly what the invariant describes.

Drill Prescription

The windpipe-versus-carotid distinction drill runs with a cooperative partner in back control. The feeder applies a rear naked choke in the windpipe configuration — elbow high, arm crossing the throat — and holds at five percent pressure for ten seconds. The partner reports the sensation: location of pressure, type of discomfort, whether they feel the urge to tap. The feeder then repositions to the bilateral carotid configuration — elbow dropped below the chin, forearm bone against one carotid, bicep against the other — at the same five percent pressure. The partner reports again. No additional pressure is applied beyond the five percent baseline.

The drill makes the mechanical difference between a windpipe choke and a vascular strangle immediately experiential. Partners will consistently report a qualitatively different sensation between the two configurations at identical pressure levels — airway discomfort in the first, the characteristic head-heaviness of carotid compression in the second. Practitioners who cannot feel a difference between the two configurations have a positioning problem: they are not achieving bilateral carotid contact in the second configuration, which means their “correct” rear naked choke is still a windpipe variation.

The complementary drill is triangle shoulder-seating verification: from a triangle lock, the partner is asked whether they feel bilateral pressure or pressure on one side only. If one-sided, the practitioner cuts the angle further, adjusts head position, or pulls the arm deeper until the partner reports bilateral engagement. This applies the same bilateral-compression standard to a triangle context, training the practitioner to use the partner’s sensory report as real-time positioning feedback rather than relying on visual confirmation of the locked position.

Techniques that express this invariant 42

Related belief corrections

These pages correct common misconceptions that relate to this invariant.

Drills that develop this invariant

Drill pages are coming. The drill collection will surface closed-loop motor primitives — timed, partner, or solo — that isolate and develop this invariant specifically.

Further reading