When Zombies Attack...

 That’s rough—and sadly common. Here’s a practical, low-drama playbook that protects you legally and physically if someone (female or male) gets violent:

  • Get out first. Distance is king. Say clearly (so witnesses/cameras pick it up): “I don’t want trouble. I’m leaving.” In many states, retreating when safe strengthens a self-defense claim.

  • If contact happens, use proportional, non-striking controls to break free (frame with forearms, peel the grip, step off-line), then disengage. Don’t chase, don’t punish, don’t escalate.

  • Call 911 first. Short, factual: “I was assaulted; I’m at [location]; I’m safe now; I’ll wait for officers.” Early caller often frames the record.

  • Document everything: photos of injuries (including the bite) with timestamps, names of witnesses, save texts/voicemails, store any video.

  • See a clinic for the bite (infection/tetanus risk). Ask for notes that state “assault-related injury.”

  • If this is ongoing, consult a local attorney about a restraining/protective order and how your state handles duty-to-retreat vs. stand-your-ground. (Rules vary; gender doesn’t change your right to defend yourself—proportionality and reasonableness do.)

  • Consider training focused on escape/control, not “fighting.” It’s easier to explain “I freed myself and left” than “I struck back.”

Bottom line: you’re allowed to stop an attack; the safest move—legally and physically—is to disengage fast, call it in, and let your evidence do the talking.


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@1TheBrutalTruth1 Sept 2025 Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976: Allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research.

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