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How to Hold Your Keys (And What Actually Works)

Everyone's heard the "keys between fingers" advice. Here's why it's wrong — and what your keys are actually good for.

2 min read

You've probably been told to put your keys between your fingers when walking alone. It feels proactive. It feels like protection.

It's also bad advice that could hurt you more than it helps.

The Myth

"Hold your keys between your fingers like a weapon."

This advice is everywhere — from parents to self-defense articles. The problem? It doesn't work the way people think.

Why This Doesn't Work

The Truth

Keys are for leaving, not fighting.

Your keys have one real safety function: getting you into your car or home faster. Less time standing outside = less time vulnerable.

What Actually Works

The Ready Position

Hold your keys normally — the way you'd hold them to unlock a door. Key between thumb and forefinger, ready to use. This lets you unlock your car in one smooth motion instead of fumbling at the door.

The goal: Minimum time between arriving at your car and being locked inside it.

The Noise Maker

If you're grabbed or threatened, throw your keys. The sound draws attention. Witnesses are your best protection. You can get new keys — you can't get a new you.

Bonus: Many key fobs have a panic button that triggers your car alarm. Know where yours is.

The Upgrade

Add a personal alarm to your keychain. A $15 device that creates 120+ decibels of sound is more effective than any improvised weapon. One pull of a pin, and everyone within earshot knows something's wrong.

The Bottom Line

Your keys are a tool for rapid exit — nothing more. The fantasy of fighting off an attacker with a key is just that: a fantasy. Real protection comes from awareness, speed, and making noise.

Stop preparing to fight your way out. Start preparing to never be in that situation in the first place.

Learn What Actually Protects You

Fierana teaches practical protection skills — not Hollywood fantasies. Evidence-based strategies designed for real women in real situations.

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