Wednesday 30 April 2014

Fix

It was back to Jiu-Jitsu last night after a couple of weeks off on holiday.

I was planning on using the break in continuity to change something.
 
Usually, during the Blue Belt class I work with whoever indicates they want me as their partner. For whatever reason I am never without a partner. Although I'm one of the bigger people in the class it seems the smaller people want to train with me. I don't exactly know why. Maybe I'm gentle, or maybe I focus on what my partner needs. Maybe more so than the other big people. I really have no idea why.

The only down side for me is that I almost always work with the smaller folks. I only very rarely get to work with the big guys. I need to work with them more than I do.
 
So I was planning to start preemptive partner picking; to sometimes grab a big guy before a small person can get me. Not always. I like working with everybody, but need both sides of the size spectrum.
 
Didn't get to carry out my plan last night. At the very first partnering opportunity, Rob immediately grabbed my shoulder. He's not a little guy, and is bloody strong. At the second partnering, Ryan quickly fired a full-arm point at me. He's the biggest strongest guy we've got. It was for a strength-and-size-dependant move. Perfect.

This was already more big-guy work in one night than I'd been gotten in a long time. After that, I ended up getting grabbed by Elizabeth, and then snatched by Tahwa. They were the two smallest present in the group.
A perfect mix.
 
I didn't have to do anything different.



Wednesday 23 April 2014

Restart

About a year ago we started up a Jiu-Jitsu club at the local high school.

The response was impressive, and there are a great bunch of kids involved. The only problem has been my retired-guy travelling.

The club shut down at Christmas, and stayed down while I was in LA during January and February. After that, the school's spring break got in the way, as did my current couple of weeks out of town.

We're re-starting the club on April 30th.

What else could go wrong? It will have to shut down near the end of the year; likely in early June. I also have two more weeks of travel scheduled before then. There is also a looming teacher strike.

Wonder if the kids will want the club back in the new year?

Saturday 19 April 2014

Weird Guy

At training, there is this one weird guy.

He gets to class early, and does all these weird warm-up exercises. During class he is never still.

Even when demonstrations are being done, he keeps bending and twisting. He is clearly paying attention, but never stops his perpetual motion.

That guy is me.

My back has been a problem lately, as has one knee. Together they have severely limited my ability to move.

The good news is that my warm up gets everything loosened up nicely. The constant bending and flexing keeps things bendy. If I stop at all, I seize up right up.

This week and next I'm off training. We are visiting with good friends.

After a week of relaxation things are feeling fine. This morning, I actually managed a short run. My knee didn't mind at all, and the run made my already-mending back feel great. I've pencilled in another run for tomorrow.

It looks as if I'll be back to 100% by the time I'm back on the mat.

The old carcass isn't done yet.

Friday 18 April 2014

Balance

I have always been a defensive Jiu-Jitsu fighter. I'm pretty good at it.

Shutting down the other guy's attacks tends to cause frustration. They then  make mistakes I can exploit.

Some people find it uncomfortable having an opponent crushing down from  above them. I'm content to be there.

I have always been far less effective in the offensive role. It doesn't come naturally to me, and I usually revert to defence.

The Gracie Academy changed me.

When sparring there, I remained my usual defensive self when paired with other Blue Belts.

Facing higher belts, I couldn't do so. They usually go defensive when with a lower-level opponent. I had to get comfortable dictating the pace and trying to force submissions. It didn't work against higher-level partners, but there was no other option.

I am home now, and am a changed fighter. Against my peers, I am much more aggressive. I find My skills to be much better balanced. This makes me a much less predictable opponent.

Having learned a mess of technique hasn't hurt, either.

Friday 11 April 2014

Games

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is well along the road towards becoming a competitive sport. It started as a method of real fighting, and is evolving into an activity that wants to be included in the Olympics.

I don't think turning into a competitive sport is a good thing.
 
Judo did the exact same thing long ago. It became an Olympic sport in 1964. Prior to this, Judo was a martial art that had a sports aspect. After this, many schools shifted towards the sports aspect.
 
What is the difference? In a martial art, the focus is life-long training. One trains in the most effective real-world techniques possible. One also trains within one's own physical limitation.
 
In a combat sport, there have to be rules for safety, and rules to make a measurable contest. Real-world combat does not.
 
Consider wrestling. The ultimate win happens when the opponent is held on his back. Short of that, points are awarded for execution of particular movements. This is the exact opposite of what would be desireable in real combat. Turning someone from belly-down to back-down is to take someone out of a weak combat position and force him into a superior one.
 
Judo awards points for throws. Landing an opponent on his back scores instant victory. It is also barely possible to defeat someone after both competitors are on the ground, but as the years have gone by this has gradually been eroded away to a mere afterthought. I dare you to watch a Judo world championship and try and understand what you see. It won't look like combat.
 
How is this bad? Many Judo clubs require tournament participation in order to progress in rank. Most stress training within the narrow parameters of tournament rules. All else is ignored. There are Judo Black Belts out there who've never worked on what to do if somebody tries to punch them. No punching in Judo competition.
 
How many boxers know what to do if somebody tackles them? How will a wrestler respond to facing a striker?
 
A lot of Jiu-Jitsu groups already work exclusivly on sport training.
 
My kind of Jiu-Jitsu does not do this. Most practitioners never get involved in tournaments at all.
 
One starts as a White Belt, and stays that way for roughly a year. In that time, everything that is learned is street-combative applicable. Most of this would be useless in a tournament. Students don't free roll at all.
 
After that year is over, and a Blue Belt is earned, the student starts training in the advanced class. Tons of free rolling here. The technique here is a mix of real-world and sport. We always stress which venue it's appropriate for. Some work well in both.
 
Some days we do a sort of self-defense free rolling. One partner wears padded gloves and assumes the role of a punching non-Jiu-Jitsu attacker. The other partner wears no gloves, as they do not punch. They have to try and handle their buddy's attacks.
 
You have to get past their swinging fists, and get them to the ground. Once there you have to control them and find a submission, all while still getting swung at. Leave an exploitable hole and a fist will quickly find its way in. It's a reality check.

I personally far prefer regular rolling, but do understand the value of the punching game.
 
If martial arts were all aimed towards competition, I would have no interest at all. They would be just another game, just the same as tennis, or golf, or soccer. Those have never interested me. I wouldn't sign up for boxing or wrestling either.

All of those are just games.

Thursday 3 April 2014

Twenty

In my real life, I don't think I'm old. I'm a mere 57 years of age. Running is no problem, nor is bike riding.

Martial arts are another matter. Don't get me wrong, there are plenty of older folks involved in these activities, but generally they have been doing so for a very long time. They are the revered experts.

Trying to get involved in such things late in life are not easy. Unlike long-time practitioners, neither the bodies nor the neural pathways are prepared.

This is true of younger beginners, too, but very, very different. Their bodies and brains adapt rapidly to the new movements. They also get injured much less than older beginners, and heal a hell of a lot faster.

This is especially true of grappling arts.

So here I am at 57. I started Gracie Jiu-Jitsu at 54. The average age of my fellow Blue Belts at the local academy is about 25. They are much more flexible than I, and faster. They shake off injuries that would lay me up for weeks.
 
My only advantage is that I am an old guy, and retired, and can do as much training as I want to and that my body will allow.

On a typical week I attend all three White Belt classes, as well as all three Blue Belt classes. Other than Elizabeth, I'm the only one to regularly do so. I also attend both open-mat sessions to get in extra drill. Even Elizabeth doesn't do that.

I also trained at the Gracie headquarters academy in Los Angeles for two months recently. Retirement is quite sweet.

What I'm saying is that I keep up to my peers with hard work and extra training.

But I'm still very, very old for Jiu-Jitsu.

Right now, my old body doesn't want to play. My back is giving me problems, as is one of my stupid knees. For the last couple of weeks I've had to do a lot of limbering up exercises just to be able to train.

So here I am all crippled up, rolling around with the young folks.

And then after class, Scott gave me a great complement. He described me as, “moving like a twenty-year-old.”

Not precisely accurate, but I'll take it.