"I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks" once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times." Bruce Lee
@82drumhead5 жыл бұрын
Beat me to it lol.
@bryantherocker5 жыл бұрын
@Substance Me too
@fadepaladin54295 жыл бұрын
Bobby G Me Too.
@scottsmith51925 жыл бұрын
“I do not fear the man who quoted Bruce lee but the man who quoted first in the comment section!” Scott smith
@TheMartinBishop5 жыл бұрын
Nailed it.
@pastrie425 жыл бұрын
This really hit me hard. I'm just starting bjj this week, but this video made me realize why I'm where I am in life. I have exposed myself to all sort of ideas in life, but i haven't actually learned or worked those things. I have to change how I approach my learning.
@0fficer_friendly4 жыл бұрын
U still train?
@Techprone14 жыл бұрын
Amen 🙏
@tylershimek61673 жыл бұрын
I totally feel this.
@christophersbyers2 жыл бұрын
“The Practicing Mind” by Thomas Sterner is a great read for this approach :)
@ClickoZen2 жыл бұрын
Good synthesis of the video
@sliderx18975 жыл бұрын
I imagine the ppl that disliked this video are those black belts that dont know those escapes
@randyogue20325 жыл бұрын
28 down vs 1.4k up is really good ods. Down votes are usually 10% for all utube vid averages
@davidturov59475 жыл бұрын
There are two kinds of people that practice the basics. The very new and the very advanced,
@Fr4gg3r25 жыл бұрын
That was very well said.
@carloscalvo26885 жыл бұрын
I´m a wing Chun practitioner and always get back to basics with more knowledge when I learn something new. I love the BJJ philosophy.
@osamatahir11495 жыл бұрын
Man I’m blessed that I have watched this video as beginner
@jeremytracy92324 жыл бұрын
Same
@alejandroh25234 жыл бұрын
Jeremy Tracy bro I yust started one week ago, same as you, how are you going
@jeremytracy92324 жыл бұрын
@@alejandroh2523 I'm doing ok just hard for me to fjnd a training partner and theres nothing close to me. I'm doing online classes and putting in 1 hour plus per day though so I just have to find a place I can check to make sure I'm inn the right path every so often.
@danfitzpatrick85173 жыл бұрын
Same!! Started 3 months ago
@jamesoscar30833 жыл бұрын
yo how are you doing rn bro i’ve started recently
@ricksongracie6185 жыл бұрын
I like this sorts of videos that emphasize philosophy and techniques rather than just a bunch of different moves.
@arnonabuurs72975 жыл бұрын
imposter.....!
@joesphruggiero37073 жыл бұрын
Is this the real rickson
@coreychancelor2112 жыл бұрын
this man is fake, look at his channel loooooool!!
@falconde8528 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Have been to a few schools and haven’t found one that focuses on the beginner stuff and fundamentals. They just throw everyone together and try to learn the same thing. We’ll, I don’t know how to do shit, so how do you expect me to follow…
@ornge84233 жыл бұрын
Practice every move so much that people can see it coming and not be able to do anything about it.
@googlegmail98882 жыл бұрын
Just get strong for that
@JiuJitsuRealEstateFmlySB Жыл бұрын
This is a great point. I think it's awesome to have a string of techniques and do it over and over so everyone in the class knows it's coming and to eventually get it done everyone would mean you mastered every tech in that string.
@martialartsstudent421 Жыл бұрын
Khabib
@NM-tl6pe5 жыл бұрын
So this is exactly where I'm at right now. I'm a white belt and it's a new concept every class. I can't even remember the things I learned at the beginning of the week.
@Max-he6yc3 жыл бұрын
Learn what you can from the concept. Even if you can't remember everything you still will hold a little of what you learned. For the first 3-6 months of jiu jitsu you should be focused on learning the positions, how to keep dominant positions, and how to escape bad positions. Just keep rolling round after round and you will start to put the pieces together. Flying armbars will come later lol.
@berdan5563 жыл бұрын
Same. I've started using a notebook and it's helped immensely. Entry looks like Date / time / instructor / technique(s) taught. Name or description of how they worked. also included what worked / did not work during rolling sessions. IE: "Got smashed, need to work on escaping side control and guard."
@Dr_C_Smith2 жыл бұрын
@@berdan556 Keeping good notes is huge. It really forces you to think and consider what you learned. That said, if there is not some structure, it’s hard to really learn concepts.
@mofogie5 жыл бұрын
I hear this method of learning from many other sources. A music professor said don't move on to the next measure till you get the last one right. Obviously there's no room for mistakes in music as listeners will hear it. Chael sonnen said GSP takes five times longer to slowly drill a technique over and over again I suppose this is the level of discipline needed to get good
@gratificationgaming43145 жыл бұрын
I thought to myself "if this video isnt about drilling, this is wrong" Best video about why drilling so important. Very well explained.
@rackinfrackinvarmint5 жыл бұрын
100% i still can't find a place that teaches like this
@luiskranwinkel42965 жыл бұрын
Try an Aliance school
@michaelterrace86925 жыл бұрын
I'm a black belt in karate, blue belt in BJJ. I've had this same discussion with others in BJJ, that I'm frustrated with the way BJJ is taught. It's like everything is thrown at you and you hope something sticks. I like the structure of karate where you learn basics, drill, and repeat. Once you've become proficient, you move on to the next level (belt), but continue to drill the basics. Ryan is spot on, and the line graph is great! I'm going to share this with my friends.
@1234kingconan5 жыл бұрын
Michael Terrace yeah I often complain about how unstructured BJJ is taught. I learned judo in Japan and it’s like night and day. The way kodokan teaches judo is easy and simple to understand but it makes you legitimately good over time. Since they never teach you concepts beyond your reach. I’ve been doing BJJ since 2007 but I’d like to teach it in a structured way like Kodokan, but I’m still only a blue belt. Id have to really train more and get promoted before I could have the credentials to teach. But I fully agree with Ryan and with you about how BJJ is taught. I think the Torrance brothers get a lot of criticism for their “online belts” but they’re actually more right on in terms of focusing on structured curriculum that’s actually printed somewhere and understandable. Most schools pretend to have a curriculum but really it’s random and ambiguous.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
you're absolutely right. traditional GJJ has always had a curriculum from at least white to blue belt (the original 36 lessons).
@nasri5 жыл бұрын
This practice of teaching students something new and often unrelated to the previous lesson was quite mind-boggling to me when I started BJJ, especially for someone with many years of martial arts experience in other arts. I'm used to structure and gradings. We had a syllabus, and we were tested periodically to ensure we had a firm understanding of the concepts and techniques at each level. You don't run before you can crawl. And just because you were taught to crawl today, doesn't mean you're qualified to walk tomorrow. At the BJJ school I went to, which had world class BJJ champions/coaches, the training was never goal-oriented. Sure they had a syllabus specifically for belt ranges, but if I ever wanted to practice the same concept/technique, I would either need to attend another class that very day, or just keep coming to classes until that concept/technique found it's way back in turn, by which time a lot of what I was taught was forgotten anyway. Add to that the fact that lessons were frequently unrelated. One lesson it's mount. Next lesson it's spider guard. Next lesson it's back position. For a white belt like me? What on earth?? I had to stop training for a couple years due to injury, but now I'm at a loss deciding on a gym to join simply because I'm convinced majority of these gyms follow the exact same practice. I'm probably going to give up my lousy 2 stripe white and start afresh.. And that's IF I can find a decent gym. Truly frustrating.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
you're exactly right.
@frankygreen15725 жыл бұрын
This is the problem with most bjj gyms they dont spent enough time on one concepts instead every spent too much time learning too many concepts not proficient in any
@MansaMusa-v5q3 жыл бұрын
True but that’s why u have to study and drill on your own time....that’s like saying my teacher in English taught me a concept so I don’t need to study this concept on my free time to pass my exam
@robroy75433 жыл бұрын
It's absolute mastery of the basics to the point that they are second nature that makes someone truly great at any discipline.
@oldcrow67525 жыл бұрын
I trained for a year at a gi school. Was your basic, technique, technique, spar. Walked into a no-gi school with an actual curriculum. Realized I had learned very little the old way.
@89Kele5 жыл бұрын
Old Crow 10p?
@marcusweaver97285 жыл бұрын
John Danaher’s commercials are always so good and you end up watching the whole thing even though they are 2 minutes long.
@Refute-3 жыл бұрын
Just started BJJ one month ago. I always feel like we do something new in class but i never really understand what i'm doing. "You will get it after some time". All my life i have had a hard time to learn new things if i'm not doing that one thing 1000 times before jumping to the next one. To come across this video and realize that it's actually a good thing to do makes me happy! I'd rather be good at 10 things than 100 but not knowing half the time what i'm really doing. So i will keep go over the basics over and over again for myself between classes and hope that i can develop over time!
@KamaJiuJitsu3 жыл бұрын
www.kamajiujitsu.com/memberships/
@IrvinLep5 жыл бұрын
I think this is the best, most informative video you've put out so far! I quit my jiu jitsu school because they were just throwing random techniques with no order or concept behind it: one day we would learn kimura from half guard, the next would be a de la riva sweep, then an escape from turtle and so on. I have now moved to judo until I can move to a city with a better jiu jitsu school (I live in Italy so we don't really have many good academies, unfortunately)
@1234kingconan5 жыл бұрын
Irvin just FYI even the best BJJ schools teach this way.
@whatisthis62655 жыл бұрын
@@1234kingconan what do you mean? The whole video was about not learning this way.
@shyland205 жыл бұрын
you also need to invest time after class it's not just about the teacher it's also about what you do after i study bjj before entering school . i go dummy doll i got matter in my studio as well. so i will start study soon and after class have big factory about what you going to have as a result.
@victornissan735 жыл бұрын
Good choice Judo will make you stronger until you find a good bjj school, Judo helps me a lot with my bjj good luck.
@matthewmelange5 жыл бұрын
This is the exact reason why I left my first BJJ gym, every day was something different, 30 minutes of sprints/rolls/stretches, 30 minutes of training a new move a few times, 30 minutes of sparring. We might have had weeks where it's armbar week or back control week, but if you asked your partner during sparring time 'hey I know it's armbar week but I really want to practice triangle chokes, can we do that?' And the partner would say yes, then the teacher would butt in and say 'no, spar instead.' And it was a Sunday-Thursday night class with a lot of young guys who didn't know technique so we'd all just be trying to overpower eachother. And you'd just walk away everyday with a new bruise or cut, nothing serious but it'd be enough where you'd miss the next day of training. I ended up leaving because their teaching style of something new everyday was not conducive to my learning style of rote memorization. I can understand how an instructor may get bored of teaching the same thing in order everyday and they want to change it up to keep themselves entertained, but that would be like a history teacher wanting to teach a different year in history everyday.
@justinpodur5 жыл бұрын
this is 95% of gyms i have been to.
@shayneswenson4 жыл бұрын
Same. I left years ago because of that same scenario except I was injured by a dickhead college wrestler who wasn’t even practicing Jiu-jitsu, he was just being a prick. We would have all these seemingly random techniques thrown at us everyday and no focus on any foundational skills. Total chaos.
@brianfox80182 жыл бұрын
Hello, I am on day 2 of my BJJ journey and can see that my gym is like this. How do I as the new guy approach the instructor’s with respect & tell them learning too many skills in a short period of time isn’t helping me? I can only go a few times a week and don’t have a way to practice the skill at home, so I feel like I’m not retaining what I learned that day. I don’t want to be disrespectful but also want to learn! My gym is a smaller gym with about 6-10 people per class, so maybe that’s why? I understand I have to be uncomfortable before I can be comfortable. However, I have already rolled with like 12-16 people in two days from blue to black. Not really any instructions during these 1on1’s. They just tell me to try to pass guard or retain guard. Again I have no Prior BJJ or wrestling. I don’t know where to put my hands, feet, legs, etc. I’m just getting subbed over and over. I don’t really know what they are doing and also don’t know what I am supposed to be doing, or am doing wrong? Can you please help advise?
@alejandroojeda11292 жыл бұрын
@@brianfox8018 hey Brian im just starting too and it seems like a similar issue for me. We’re learning about 2 techniques/moves every day abt 5-10 min each and after about three to four days I can’t remember what they are at all or what the move was called. When I ask the instructor he says he has no idea and can’t remember either. Wanted to know if you spoke with yours and how it went
@chrisgreenwood2715 жыл бұрын
This is very on point for me at the moment, 18 months into training, some days I just can't remember some of the new concepts that we were shown only a few days previously, it's just too much to retain (plus I'm no spring chicken 😜) I just want to get good at the basics.
@tigerfanfanatic725 жыл бұрын
Chris Greenwood Looking back I think I totally should have focused on a few concepts at a time, drilling those concepts until I fully understood, rather than trying something new like every class. I never really developed a base for myself
@chrisgreenwood2715 жыл бұрын
Ryan Norton Absolutely, totally out of the blue during last nights class our instructor has completely turned around the way we train (for the better I might add) I think someone was reading my mind. 😁
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
or watching Kama Jiu-Jitsu videos...
@rightway98435 жыл бұрын
Same thing here, plus it seems harder to find a partner
@josuemartinez655 жыл бұрын
Same, I want to get good at the basics, I learned this in a tournament that I got killed in
@FitnessMonster835 жыл бұрын
Love this video ... Once upon a time, I hated doing fundamentals. Nowadays, I love em!
@jbruner174 жыл бұрын
When the music kicked in at 14:00 minutes, I started to cry.
@KamaJiuJitsu4 жыл бұрын
Why? I watched that part again... nothing. 😂
@tannerbrasuell48353 жыл бұрын
@@KamaJiuJitsu Because he knew the video was ending hahah
@co365 жыл бұрын
Told my instructor this years ago. They looked st me like I was crazy. Your so right
@cameronsnyder12464 жыл бұрын
I'm soo blessed my coach teaches VERY linear and my kinesthetic learning style works best through drilling.
@juanjbrieva51683 жыл бұрын
Probably one of the best BJJ philosophy videos I've ever watched. Thanks a lot!
@ECV13XPBC3 жыл бұрын
In my early to late teens, I studied a Kenpo variant. In my late teens, I was offered a role as one of the staff instructors, and I believe I earned my place. My personal training philosophy and my teaching philosophy was exactly what you describe here ... repeat, repeat, repeat until you KNOW as well as can DO. For that reason, my students often became dissatisfied because they "weren't advancing" fast enough. But, the students I had who "got" the message -- three of them in particular -- were more successful, more confident, and more readily able to defend themselves to the best of their abilities. When I left that school to move on to University (after multiple years in Junior College), I knew that those students would continue to progress without me on a self-determined path. And they continued on their own paths until the school changed ownership. If and when I am ever lucky enough to study with you, sir, know that if you show me only one technique, I will LEARN that technique.
@joeferguson26064 жыл бұрын
i always resisted these videos, id click on a kama video and say "aww man, this guy's talkin, i wanna see video/documentary type stuff" ....well, now these actually ended up being my favorite JJ videos, I appreciate the educational value. We learn over time. thank you for these, kama
@KamaJiuJitsu4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sticking with us and continuing to give us chances! We’d love to do more documentary type videos, but the research takes a lot of time none of us have at the moment. The instructional videos are up now (and continue to expand) on our website kamajiujitsuonline.thinkific.com/
@johnhall874 жыл бұрын
My gyms awesome for this, they have the fundamental class where you do escapes and guard retention and basics of submissions, and the advanced classes do one concept for a month like open guard, and then next month will be arm locks, then next month will be leg entanglements/locks etc. Long enough to learn and integrate things.
@jimreily75382 жыл бұрын
That's an excellent way of doing things
@alejandroojeda11292 жыл бұрын
@John Hall I know it’s been a year but I had a question on this video which is similar to what he’s saying. Does he mean concepts like you wrote so for example guard retention one month and a bunch of different techniques for it. Or just practicing a lot on solely one technique of guard Retention
@alejandroojeda11292 жыл бұрын
you’re
@awakenotwoke69305 жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I have been thinking about. My friend and I are building mats specifically to drill, drill, drill. I really like the idea of taking a whole month and drilling a concept. Take one technique and mastering is key to having an Arsenal in your tool belt. A master Builder masters his tools and creates art when builds. Excellent!
@TakedownBreakdown5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely right. Be exposed to many concepts and you may never have a command of any of them. Master the basics!
@SneepSnorpworm3 жыл бұрын
51 year old white belt no stripe, just started training and I truly thank you for sharing this 🙏
@MrNuKnight5 жыл бұрын
Thank you. This is a tremendous principle that more people that are serious about BJJ talk about.
@sebastianschmidt18604 жыл бұрын
tremendous!
@garethllewellyn2154 жыл бұрын
This video made so much sense, I was due to go back to training last week after 19 years with out doing any training, except for some weight training...family reasons mean I'm not going until the first week of January. I started trying to remember as many techniques as possible, remembering strategies from primary positions, then half guard and quickly thought, firstly I'm going to do nothing but a sweep or two and two escapes from being mounted and not even attempt to anything else buy do these repeatedly and if I end up in a guard I'll try passing the guard but until I get proficient at the initial escapes and a sweep or two , those few concepts will be my main priority. Thanks
@brotendo5 жыл бұрын
When I started BJJ 16 years ago, I trained for only 8 months. I was 22 years old and I was going 5-6x a week and in those 8 months I earned 3 stripes on my white belt. My instructor wasn't the type to promote fast, either (his name is Caique and he teaches in Southern California even now). Then I was in an accident and couldn't walk, so I stopped training. I never had the motivation to come back. Now, for some reason I decided to give BJJ a try again... and here's what's happening: I've been back to BJJ for 5 weeks now, and I can survive on the mats and mostly not get tapped by white belts and maybe half the blue belts. I went to open mat once (which I won't do again for a while because I'm older and I get more beat up and I still don't have a lot of endurance) and I was able to tap a few white belts. I even tapped a blue belt, but that's because I did something I didn't know we weren't allowed to do: ankle locks. Weird because back in the day straight ankle locks for white belts were ok. Anyway, how did I manage to do ok after having taking 16 years off of BJJ? It's because in those 8 months of training as a white belt, my instructor basically drilled a few basic concepts into our heads OVER AND OVER AND OVER AGAIN. Hip and elbow escapes. Upa escape/reversal. Closed guard, guard passing, back defense, side mount and mount control and defense. It was all this basic stuff day in and day out. I learned maybe a few submissions (armbar, triangle choke, cross collar choke, clock choke, kimura, rear naked choke and straight ankle lock).We also did self defense stuff and unfortunately I forgot some of it (punches and stuff like that which I think the Gracies still teach). During that time, I had ZERO IDEA what spider guard was, I didn't know rubber guard, berimbolo didn't even exist, I didn't know butterfly guard, etc. But I 100% knew had to escape mount and side mount without getting smashed too hard. I knew how to pass guard maybe 3-4 different ways. I knew how to defend my back and escape from back attacks. I knew like 3 submissions from closed guard and I knew 3 sweeps from closed guard. That was probably all I knew, but I knew them fairly well (or as well as anyone can going almost every single day for 8 months). Now, the school I'm in has a pretty well known world champion instructor under some legendary competitors with whom our school is affiliated. It's not that great. I mean, the advanced belts are pretty good and they're good competitors, but the instruction is how you described it: you learn a little bit of this and a little bit of that, but you're getting super random puzzle pieces that hopefully you'll put together yourself in a few years. It sucks. Like, one day we learn arm drags from spider guard, the next day we learn chokes and armbar from knee on belly. Then the next class we learn closed guard sweeps, and the day after that we learn single leg takedown and ouchi gari. Where is the structure in that? Where is the repetition and building of concepts? It sucks and I feel like most schools are like this now. I want to make it perfectly clear that I don't think I'm good. In fact, I'm terrible. I'm heavier now and more out of shape than when I was 22. I did forget a lot of stuff. BUT I remembered enough stuff to survive because I drilled a lot of really, really basic stuff thousands of times back when I did train.
@deputyjack14 жыл бұрын
At first I read the title and was like "what?" But he's absolutely on point! Having trained with Rickson and Royce, back in the day, this is very much the principle by which they teach. They're the best in my opinion! The things that I learned from them, not only in Jiu-Jitsu, but about life, I will never forget!
@jesusjones30145 жыл бұрын
I think this might be the best video on the channel and I liked how you applied it to not only beginners/intermeds but to black belts as well! Very true and Ive always thought this way. I would rather be exposed to a concept in class and drill the hell out of it for another hour after learning it and then try to work it in a few rolls after drilling and revisit it often. That way you are exposed, drill and try to use it in a real rolling situation and I believe your mind and body "remembers" the technique much better this way and when you revisit it you reinforce it until it becomes so natural its like breathing. Instead of exposed to a concept, drill for 10-15 minutes and then roll and use it if you like or just do whatever is avail and rarely if ever revisit it bc you already "know" it.
@steffenseward92875 жыл бұрын
Firstly, thank you for the video. I will keep this in mind when I'm able to get back into training. I noticed myself that without drilling techniques I learned in the same day, it felt like I was wasting time/not remembering the technique very well. So I began taking notes and imagining the steps for techniques I learned, and then would go back later using my imagination to retrace the steps. Unfortunately most schools don't exactly work on a linear timeline, or it is linear but whenever you show up to the school is where you're at on the line/beginning a specific curriculum such as offered by the Gracie academy.
@brandondiaz95765 жыл бұрын
I noticed at my jiu jitsu class they teach us new things everyday. Back in high school wrestling they would teach us new things everyday but our coach would have time where we drill takedowns that we like every day of practice.
@coffeedollsvp5 жыл бұрын
I'd like to add...perform every technique slowly and controlled and speed up as u get to know the technique better. Same as playing a musical instrument. You will get better learning this way!
@JiuJitsuRealEstateFmlySB Жыл бұрын
This is so true. BJJ needs this solution linear training.
@arnonabuurs72975 жыл бұрын
This video is what every BJJ practitioner should watch and understand. We would all be so much better!
@Truthseeker19615 жыл бұрын
A basic concept of success and bad-assery that almost nobody practices that can be used not only to master martial arts but to master in ANY area of your life.
@1234kingconan5 жыл бұрын
Damn that Rickson story is awesome. What a boss. I’d love to get anywhere near this level. Nice video and bg music too btw.
@vyndaio2 жыл бұрын
Finding this vid 3 years late but wow does it resonate with me. I can't tell you how many times we've briefly touched on a technique and at the end, my impression was simply, "well, I guess this will make sense the next time we cover it again in 6 months".
@chunksrodriquez71985 жыл бұрын
Wow! That’s some great information that’s not taught anywhere. Thank you for sharing some great wisdom!
@abrahamwolfe69164 жыл бұрын
Thank you, 2 classes in and this is a great foundation to follow. Keep you posted in 6 months.
@KamaJiuJitsu4 жыл бұрын
Please do!
@zeke1eod5 жыл бұрын
Awesome analogy, makes perfect sense. Thanks for sharing, God bless!
@ToddAtkinsShow5 жыл бұрын
So true. The majority of gyms I have trained in have been moves then rolling and people rarely do the moves that are taught in that particular moment.
@ashtonrichardson36675 жыл бұрын
Man this is true I used to do Muay Thai and boxing and I just learned as I went a long. The past year I strictly worked on footwork, maintaining my stance and balance, my jab and now I’m moving into setting up my right with footwork and the jab. I stripped down my boxing to three things and drilled it everyday, and when I spar with old partners they say I’m a lot harder to hit now.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
There you go!
@liamhopkins293 жыл бұрын
Just started doing jiu-jitsu during the quarantine and I think about it all day every day now. I'm so glad I saw this video so early on in my journey because I can already feel myself starting to search for that next technique to learn without hammering the fundamentals. Ultimately, it's pleasure-driven learning - that constant need for novelty through new moves. It's attractive, but if you want to be good like you're saying here, you need to drill tf out of every single piece. Appreciate this vid big time
@KamaJiuJitsu3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment!
@travissayre67835 жыл бұрын
I love the philosophy that you are teaching. I have sent this video to everyone I know.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing!
@karlitozwei4 жыл бұрын
I re-watched this again, and doing this very thing. I'm working on one concept, and my understanding of the position is getting better with each training session. It comes in either an angle, or an idea of not letting them get a grip, or whatever, but this method is so much better than jumping around. Thanks Professor Young for posting videos like this. Look forward to just staying the course and seeing how deep I can go.
@KamaJiuJitsu4 жыл бұрын
I’m glad it’s working out for you. Keep it up!
@WolframtheBlessed34995 жыл бұрын
This is still one of my favorite videos. I still refer to it. Professor Young here you literally gave away the secret to Rickson Gracie. Hugs, thank you. Keep posting.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
There’s another one on Patreon that.gives out the next part.
@TakedownBreakdown5 жыл бұрын
Rickson Gracie story is so deep
@gene81725 жыл бұрын
Practice makes permanent. Perfect practice makes perfect.
@pensfan7187663 жыл бұрын
The one-at-a-time concept make sense for private lessons but it doesn't really hold for larger group classes when you have a limited time to practice anything and have a different class every day.
@shyfly65602 жыл бұрын
I’ve be training for 21 days and I realized this, that’s why I google this. My only probably is getting someone to drill with me like this. To me it’s common sense to drill drill until u learn the concept.
@amrap68333 жыл бұрын
Just started BJJ last month. I wrestled folkstyle,freestyle,and greco since middle school. I am almost 40 and still help local schools train wrestlers. By the time I got to my peak I had 4 to 5 very reliable takedowns from both sides that flowed together usually in twos meaning if I missed one the other was right there. One bottom I had two and on top three. There were other moves I would hit since 10 moves were second nature to me I was very confident in my training and I loved scrambles. Remember fondly drilling over and over these 10 moves at home after practice during the summer etc. These were basic moves or concepts that help me and a friend go far. Now instead of shadow wrestling I am shadow jitting at home. Trying to take any move that seems basic and drilling at home or after practice. The real complex moves are cool and gives me an idea of what is possible but the basics refined are the cornerstone of complex moves and the basics mastered always seems way more reliable.
@thomasminter5 жыл бұрын
This is so damn obvious yet I can't understand why so many teachers miss this point; ego to show off their cool moves, I guess? It really bugs me when we're being taught a "rolling kneebar from the cage" (MMA class, obviously...) when 80% of the students can't even pass the guard or escape side control consistently and correctly.
@stephenwright18395 жыл бұрын
Great video. I really like this concept. I've been trying something like this for the past couple of months. I think why only a few will do this is because we are in a microwave generation. I imagine it's hard for professors to get great numbers without showing the "newest" move. Love your channel. Keep up the good work.
@lmk28695 жыл бұрын
Just about finished a Bachelor of Education and showed this to a breakaway discussion group in class. We all agreed that this concept can be applied to effectively learning curriculums etc in many different life situations. Knowing, understanding is different from being able to apply the knowledge in real life situations after OWNING it. Great video.
@lmk28695 жыл бұрын
P>S really liked the part in the video around the 8 minute mark. Great point!
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
Domo!
@bobbydabutcha3 жыл бұрын
Learn concepts and WHY things are working not just techniques without a deep understanding of them ie; most escapes from under a pin include frames and making space, bridging and shrimping, or Collar chokes have a pulling hand and a pushing hand, typically on the opposite side. Arm triangles, a head and an arm etc. Once I simplified things in my head, it made it easier to learn new techniques while also retaining and recalling much easier.
@rubenleavell5 жыл бұрын
I'm a simple man, I see an awesome Texas Shirt, a video about Jujitsu... I click
@arnonabuurs72975 жыл бұрын
And start to train BJJ after watching it?
@rubenleavell5 жыл бұрын
@@arnonabuurs7297 I mean I've been training in BJJ for over 5 years
@maggillaguerrilla8305 жыл бұрын
Tha k you for this video I am just getting into Jiu-Jitsu and this video is going into my saved videos so that I can go back and watch this video to remind myself how I should be learning Jiu-Jitsu. Once again thank you for making this video. Don’t worry about the ones who have this video a thumbs down they have big egos and cannot be taught.
@pocketchange60103 жыл бұрын
i heard dan inosanto say that it is better to train with your own color belts than to train with more advanced practitioners...it's an infinite journey
@conwaystearn58815 жыл бұрын
You answered the question neither of my professors could provide an answer for except, “it’s just time on the mat.” In my first month as a white belt I have learned no fundamentals but a lot of random advanced concepts, which no one trains afterward. I finally found a partner to drill fundamentals (basic positions and escapes) with me after class. Unfortunately, the best white belt knowledge I get is coming to KZbin. I wish this was the knowledge new members received when they first join their gym. With all the basic questions I see getting answered over and over online, there appears to be an issue with getting this introductory message across to beginners. This talk was one of the best introductory talks I’ve heard yet. Thank you.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
thank you for the feedback. i answer a lot of questions that "professors" can not or will not answer on "the KZbin." i hope you find our other videos as helpful.
@gene81725 жыл бұрын
Time to find another gym, me thinks. If the instructors aren’t teaching the basics to beginning students, that’s a problem.
@Lynzalycoop5 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with this video. It wasn’t until I stopped free rolling and winging it that I really improved. I developed a game built around pressure passing and certain submissions. That really took me to the next level. All of my rolling is me just developing and mastering the game. I still like to practice and drill other techniques of course but at the core I have gotten really good at a certain strategy. Also, great channel I really enjoy your videos.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@tzaeru5 жыл бұрын
Now I feel good about us having practiced mostly the open collar-sleeve guard for last two months. Drilled it on every lesson. Only finish we've covered so far is collar-sleeve to triangle. Otherwise it's just been pulling the collar-sleeve guard, moving in it, passing it, blocking passes in it. Usually we practice/drill about 30 minutes and then roll 30 minutes and use several weeks for every concept. As a white belt who's only been doing this for half a year, I'd be very hesitant about saying I understood anything very well, but, it does feel more effective this way than just trying going through everything at once.
@lisztvsthalberg5 жыл бұрын
Jalmari Ikävalko which school is this?
@tzaeru5 жыл бұрын
@@lisztvsthalberg It's just a smallish local gym in Finland, doing MMA and BJJ and boxing and kickboxing and stuff. The above was the way how our current primary instructor teaches, Aleksi Ruuskanen, who's one of the current top competitors in Finland. The other instructors usually have less structure; but then, they usually don't teach regularly anyway.
@lisztvsthalberg5 жыл бұрын
Jalmari Ikävalko sounds great! May I ask the name of this school? Been looking for a place like this to train in the Helsinki region...
@tzaeru5 жыл бұрын
@@lisztvsthalberg Espoon Kehähait. In addition to Ruuskanen, there's a few pro MMA guys teaching and the main kickboxer instructor is really high level too, in case that's relevant!
@lisztvsthalberg5 жыл бұрын
Jalmari Ikävalko cool, thx! Will definitely try it out!
@TheProdigy2605925 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video Ryan. Question, if you’re instructor doesn’t teach linearly, how do you then learn it yourself? Would you say learn and work the first concept - say armbar from guard ; and keep smashing that despite other techniques getting taught throughout that month? Cheers
@mattf.21423 жыл бұрын
My school teaches new concepts fairly quickly as a white belt. I knew I wasn't going to remember everything, so I got a grappling dummy for $20 on Amazon (unfilled), and started a journal of all the things I learned, so I keep the concepts fresh in mind, and practice them when I'm not at the gym.
@KamaJiuJitsu3 жыл бұрын
Do what it takes.
@AdobadoFantastico5 жыл бұрын
Learning methodology is super important and so easy to overlook in training. One thing I've found need to spend a lot of time on is finding the next concept. In my experience it often takes me weeks to figure out what is the next skill or nuance I need to practice. It's easy to find *something* new, but it can take a while to figure out what exactly is the *next* thing for me and my skillset. So for me the time frame is usually more like 6 weeks to add something new in a way that really sticks.
@piaugladstone46234 жыл бұрын
This is gold...so true. Remind me of bruce lee's saying
@patriciozaccari6795 жыл бұрын
So amazing how this philosophy applies to many areas of study, sports, art. As an engineering student, the same applies to the process of learning your basic concepts (math and physics), and then moving to more complex stuff (applied engineering), always coming back to the basics. Being exposed to isn't equivalen to learning or understanding. I'm about to start my jiu jitsu journey, and I'll treasure this thought process along the way.
@gladiator84045 жыл бұрын
I am so glad i saw this video. Definitley opened my eyes and gave me insight before I start looking for the right jiu jitsu school. Thank you sir
@prestigelawncare93895 жыл бұрын
Thank you, So how do i come to the instructor and explain to him that i only want to focus on 2 to 3 concepts a month. Don't want to offend instructor
@GLPitt14 жыл бұрын
The thing is, yoy might have to ask him if you can do some private sessions and just drill 2-3 things like crazy in those sessions, then in group classes focus on using those techniques/concepts in free practice.
@micaylapresley4 жыл бұрын
This is what open mats are for. And you can always drill something separately before or after class. The instructor can't tailor classes only for the white belts when there are more advanced students present, or it'll hinder everyone else's training. Though he may have fundamental classes you can take. You can take control of your own training though. Also, take notes and go over them when you're ready to focus on something, like a shopping list for Jiu-Jitsu. Upper belts love drilling things with lower belts, so take advantage of that.
@richardgonzales68022 жыл бұрын
You're such a good teacher bro. I literally subscribed just because of how you explained it.
@KamaJiuJitsu2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. You’ll love our content at www.kamajiujitsu.com/memberships/
@DomenicDatti5 жыл бұрын
Great talk! This is why I set mini goals for myself in training. By mini goals, I usually define my success for that day by them, so they have to be small enough goals to fit into one class. My goals for the last class were: "Attack the cross collar. WHEN that fails, and you get side mounted (this is usually what happens to me), get a knee in and try to reestablish guard." That was it... two mini goals, one offensive and one defensive. This is my goal until I feel like I can get a little farther and consistently hit the re-guard or sweep.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
Great thinking process!
@thelurker94725 жыл бұрын
Train and ask questions? Sometimes smaller class sizes are great because your coach will call out something you are doing wrong consistantly. I work on what he brings up.
@Blackwidow5623 жыл бұрын
Great advice! I’m stuck in a technique warehouse but I don’t conceptually understand any of them. I learn through this model
@MatrixJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
Many in the comments wonder how to train like that or find a school that trains like that. Drill what you want to work on before or after class, during rolling you can ask people if you want to do some positional sparring with you. If you have enough skill already and no ego you can also train the move during live rolling. Also watch videos on the topic, especially the best guys at that field off course. Analyzing matches is very good too, see how they really apply the move and how they time it, and the strategy they use to enter their game. There you have it, repeat that for as long as you think it makes sense for you and you´ll see large improvements. Literally everybody i know that is good at Jiu Jitsu trains like that. You feel the difference pretty quickly, especially if you find follow up topics that work together great with the current ones. For example you focus on closed guard for two weeks and then you pick butterfly guard as your first open guard and so on.
@1234kingconan5 жыл бұрын
Mat Tricks yes being self directed is a trait among higher level players. But it is also sad that BJJ pedagogy is so random and ill conceived that people have to do this just to learn the fundamentals.
@MatrixJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
@@1234kingconan Hmm, i think it´s evolving a lot. We do fundamental classes three times a week. Also there is always a week topic, so everybody gets a good understanding about the position, if they attend often enough ;). Then there will be only positional sparring, so they can really apply what they learned.
@GLPitt14 жыл бұрын
He makes a very good point. I have been messing around with BJJ for years but am not very good. I mean, I can choke out or submit inexperienced people no problem and have even done it to people in real life confrontations to great success. But I have not really mastered any techniques to great "depth" as he describes it. I think it is because most instructors keep showing new stuff and don't make students go over the basics enough. I need to find a place where I can drill basic stuff over and oved for weeks, months, even years and maybe every once in a while work on the higher level fancy stuff that you really only see used in grappling tournaments. That's the real way to get good at such a technical thing.
@Alejandro-hm8ox2 жыл бұрын
I have felt this. Thank you for articulating the idea so clearly. I only wrestled one year in highschool (3/4 months) but because its based on the season approach the skills are very linear. In comparison bjj is not based on a season and people come and go which makes the same linear approach difficult to emulate in my opinion. I have done bjj around 6 months now but do feel like my wrestling skills and bjj skills are around the same level lol. Still fun nonetheless!
@ScottyUnit693 жыл бұрын
I've been doing bjj for 7 weeks and today all the good ppl came in and man, I've never felt so useless in my life hahah. They were all very nice and helpful though and it's made me want to become the best
@TheDe3th2 жыл бұрын
So many get taught techniques with never applying them, I try to focus on my basics
@Skubae2 жыл бұрын
This opened my eyes, thanks brotha , wish we could roll one day, god bless bro
@artemthetrain145 жыл бұрын
I'm wondering, how would you go about applying this for someone who can go 2-3 times a week? We have a beginners class that covers a position every week basically, sometimes two weeks, (guard, mount) but each class is a different concept or multiple concepts/techniques. I find it hard to remember all of them or even have time to just focus on since each class is different
@MatszCoder4 жыл бұрын
WOW! Never thought about this method of learning. Can be applied to so much more than just BJJ. Thank you so much, Kama for opening my eyes
@RedSplinter363 жыл бұрын
Love love love this information professor!!! Oss!!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
@jnkoa332 жыл бұрын
Love it bro. I'm starting BJJ next week and this gives me the right mind set. Thank you very much
@CiGambino3 жыл бұрын
I see the point, but I also think sometimes its good to see how things are connected earlier. You get that tree or possible moves from any given situation coming into view earlier.
@hattorihanzo90975 жыл бұрын
Great subject and priceless wisdom. You're awesome Mr Ryan Young. Thank you for the excellent videos and smooth delivery of valuable/historical wisdom. Thank you for your contribution to the martial arts.
@KamaJiuJitsu5 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@jesseblaha10252 жыл бұрын
I was a math major and this is very parallel to how math majors and professors study.
@Runejitsu4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing! This made me humbled and happy with the way my professors promote and make their decisions. I have a profound respect for then and for you. Godbless
@KamaJiuJitsu4 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@andytraditio29833 жыл бұрын
49yr old white belt, no stripe here….thank you for this video. Excellent last 4min. Time is a concern for me since I expect to get my bb when I’m 60.
@IgnizJosh4 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate these videos. They are very enlighting. I'm starting my first class next week and I feel these videos will help me have the right mindset moving forward. Thank you!
@PrOxExplosiive2 жыл бұрын
I love this, it all makes sense. However only downside you do not have control over what is taught at classes, I know what I want to work on and practice but I go to a class and it’s a new technique and being exposed to that. I’m really hammering home now these concepts, as I’m trying to find my own game.
@tyronefrieson4195 жыл бұрын
excellent video I do jui-jitsu and u are totally correct every one want be a concept guru but we are not retaining info I also boxed and played high level basketball and we did the same rountine every day and I became good but with juijistu it's taken longer because we don't rep and continue so focus on 10 technique but 100
@badassoptic2 жыл бұрын
This also relate to business. Scattered learning makes certain business strategies fail, and competitors can quickly re dominate you.
@PabloHernandez-po5tu5 жыл бұрын
Great video. I totally agree with this method. Do you have a list of techniques/ concepts that you suggest learning and in what particular order?