Knowing You Suck is a Form of Progress

Dust Mop Jiu Jitsu: The Combat Base: Part Three

Great Falls Brazilian Jiu Jitsu-Great Falls, Montanna

 

-On devastating losses, licking your wounds and searching for proof that you suck…and how cool my wife is

This is the Eleventh article about my journey in Jiu Jitsu. If you want to know more about what this project is, you can read more about it in the first article here.

It’s also the third of 7 articles about my time as a member of Combat Fitness MMA. While I was there, I would learn to push myself beyond harder than I ever had. 

My wife Rachel is the most fascinating person I know. Her life and childhood have been beyond unusual. But since she has that midwest Nebraska modesty, she’ll never tell you the following facts:

 

  • Her parents received grants from National Geographic when she was in elementary school which meant that she was homeschooled while looking for rare birds in New Zealand and Australia 
  • She went to high school in a public school that allowed her to do her biology classes in a zoo
  • She’s been to more national parks than anyone I know
  • She’s more than comfortable operating as a ranch hand

Neither of her parents grew up in Nebraska. Her father was born in Chicago but moved to Great Falls, Montana as a child because his father had dreams of starting a farm. His father also, apparently, had dreams of leaving his wife and children leaving them to be raised by their mother. She kept that farm going and now it’s something of a summer home for everyone.

Great Falls is not a well-known place save for a weirdly well visited bar that has a mermaid tank behind the bottles. Other than that, it’s mostly big skies, flowing rivers and unbearable pollen counts.

Mermaids in Montana, 600 miles from the ocean, may have saved their motor  inn - The Boston Globe

Great Falls, MT | American Adventure

My first time going there was at the beginning of one of the darkest periods for my jiu jitsu that I can remember. 

In the last article, I wrote about trying my first local competition. It served as a wake up call to start training more seriously and I worked hard for my first real tournament. I had two brackets and lost them both badly. I got submitted by everyone and I couldn’t have been more dejected. What was worse was, I was leaving Combat Fitness to work in Boston for the summer. I had three months to consider my shame. 

But before Boston, I was on my way to Great Falls to spend a week with Rachel’s family. I looked up the only place that was nearby for a training session which is how I found Great Falls BJJ. A few years down the line, it would become a lifeline for me for the first COVID summer. By then I would have a much different self concept. But walking in there the first day, I had one thought on my mind: How much I sucked at Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.

Great Falls Maps | Montana, U.S. | Maps of Great Falls

The first real competition I went to was in Plattsburgh, New York. Plattsburgh is across the lake from Burlington, Vermont and just south of Quebec. Most American grapplers  have never heard of the place but I guarantee that you would know if you like strangling people and you happen to speak Quebecois. 

In a knee-jerk reaction to the UFC, the provincial Quebec government forced all of the different Martial Arts organizations to unionize in an attempt to crack down on prize fighting. It might be bizarre to think about the fact that Tri-Star gym, the home of Georges St. Pierre, has some of the most elite training in the world. But if you want to compete in a tournament, you have to leave the Province lest you break the law. 

So this middle of nowhere tournament in upstate New York was filled with Quebeckers looking to make the day count. If you’re European, maybe this wouldn’t phase you too much. But you get a weird olympic vibe competing in a place where the coaches of the other grapplers are shouting in a foreign language. 

That wouldn’t matter for my first bracket. I got demolished by two Americans in the gi division. I had never felt adrenaline like that ever before. I don’t honestly remember what happened but I remember not being able to breathe by the end of my second match and being called over to the no-gi section as soon as it was over. Aaron was there to coach me. Aside from him, the only other guy I knew there was Tyler Haylee from St. Albans who came to Combat every once in a while. 

Tyler was a stand up guy. The kind of person who would offer you encouragement even if you’re having the most shit day of your life, of course after he chokes you across your own jaw. He’s short and tough and I considered him an inspiration for a small stocky like me.

My no-gi bracket went even worse than the first ones. I remember Aaron suggesting that I not even do my final match. “Let’s just get out of here,” he said. Even though I knew I wasn’t going to win anything, a part of me knew that if I didn’t finish my bracket, it would be worse than losing. Sucking would be way less shameful than knowing I walked away a coward.

I don’t remember what happened in my last match. But the feeling afterward was horrible. Aaron and Tyler and I got beer and pizza afterward and I felt like I couldn’t focus. I couldn’t think of a single thing I did right that day and I had all this self-doubt creeping all over me. I felt like I was coming to grips with the fact that I was completely untalented in this sport. And I was about to leave Burlington for the summer with just my thoughts of how much I sucked to keep me going. 

Great Falls BJJ is at the mall. I had never been into a BJJ place that’s actually in a structure like that. But why not? It’s actually a good setting for the place.

There were mats that were black with pictures of submissions around the place. I wouldn’t get to see an actual class because it was just going to be an open mat. My self doubt and the world’s strongest pollen were still in my head and I felt like I could barely breathe. I remember taking the back of a big Montanan who seemed unamused as he shook me off just by nodding his head. 

The instructor, Preston Bludworth, was really nice. He was a freshly promoted brown belt. I told him I was White Belt and that I had been training for 2 years. I remember feeling kind of sheepish about that. But he told me he had been a White Belt for 7 years before getting promoted. “I’ve been to gyms where I wear my purple belt and everyone thinks I’m a god because I’m submitting everybody. But it’s not that I’m that good, it’s because they think I’ve been training for less time than I have!”

I’ve been trying to make sense of this phase of BJJ. A lot of folks that I’be rolled with have mentioned how important it is to have a “dark night of the soul” for your game. A time when you think that this entire project has been a foolish waste of time. Many people I’ve talked to seem to think it’s a badge of honor to go through that because it proves you’re mentally tough enough to get through.

Maybe.

There’s another perspective that I heard recently on the perfect named “I Suck at Jiu Jitsu” podcast. In a recent episode, he basically described this phase as progress in and of itself. 

He described four phases of BJJ that actually can be applied to almost everything. I actually learned it previously from my high school history teacher, Mark Rosenberg. Those phases are the following:

Unconscious Incompetence: Not knowing how much you suck

Conscious Incompetence: Knowing how much you suck

Conscious competence: Learning you don’t suck so much, at least for some things

Unconscious incompetence: Doing so well that you forget about everything and you just feel the progress.

Before the tournament in Plattsburgh, I was unconsciously incompetent. I didn’t realize how big the holes in my game were. But the losses taught me some pretty important lessons of what was missing in my game. That conscious phase is essential for progress. It IS progress. But entering into that phase is harder than any difficult round of sparring. It’s not over after five minutes. It can last months or even years. 

A few days ago I competed and took silver. I lost one match and I won the other. I’m proud of my win but I’m a lot more focused on the one I lost. Not in a way that puts me into phase one, but in a way where I’m able to see the lesson that it’s there to teach me. But I’m only able to do that because of how I felt after my first real tournament. 

But at the time I went to Great Falls BJJ, the funk I was in would last for months. Throughout the summer I would continue to train at Boston BJJ but it was only at the crazy early morning classes. Those guys are the hard core black belts that only helped hammer in the thought that I was just not cut out for that sport.

Nobody was putting these thoughts in my head. I was the only one looking for proof that I sucked. Lo and behold, I found it.

This wasn’t the lowest point. That comes in the next article when I quit Jiu Jitsu.

 

If you ever want me to visit yours and write about what it’s like to learn from you, feel free to reach out at [email protected]. You can also follow me @DustMop_JiuJitsu If you want to read my articles as soon as they’re published be sure to subscribe on my blog site!

BJJ Kills the Ego” and Other Lies We Tell

Dust Mop Jiu Jitsu: The Combat Base: Part Two

Limitless BJJ- Cincinnati Ohio

 

-On taking breaks, coming back fresh and the myth of ego death in jiu jitsu

This is the Tenth article about my journey in Jiu Jitsu. If you want to know more about what this project is, you can read more about it in the first article here.

It’s also the second of 7 articles about my time as a member of Combat Fitness MMA. While I was there, I would learn to push myself beyond harder than I ever had. 

In a previous article, I talked about going to Ohio for a grad school residency. The closest academy at that time was Fairborn Brazilian Jiu Jitsu but, due to the academy circle or life, they had merged with another academy all the way in Dayton. With no car, there was no way I was going that week. 

Going back to Yellowprings felt incredibly different from the time before. In December, I had been traveling for three months prior and was not doing anything in particular. By May of 2019, it had been quite the opposite. I had several part time jobs which were making me crazy.

Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays I was a full time French teacher. 

How did I get that job? Funny story:
Substitute teaching is honestly a pretty great way to learn about a new area. All you do is get registered and then, based on your location, you see what schools need a person. You can work five days a week or none, it’s all up to you.

One Middle School was looking for a gym teacher for a day. Those classes are huge so they honestly don’t even need a sub since one of the two normal gym teachers was still there. He was so burnt out that he didn’t introduce me to the kids or himself. I had fifty middle schoolers trying to figure out who I was. 

It was also crazy loud. Gyms echo, and middle schoolers like to shout. OSHA apparently has noise limits for its employees that should apply to gym teachers. That poor gym teacher was basically deaf after 20 years of enduring that kind of ear beating. 

After two of those classes, I wandered around the hallways just to get the layout of the school. I ran into a friendly woman in the hallway and we had a little chat.

Her: Hi, you look new

Me: I’m just subbing for the day

Her: Oh cool! I’m the in-building sub. They put me where they need me each day.

Me: Nice, I have gym. It’s kind of brutal.

Her: I love gym! I would so trade with you. You don’t speak any French do you?

Me: …I mean, a little, yeah.

So I ended up with the French class…For the rest of the school year.

I wasn’t lying. I do speak some French. I was in a relationship with someone from France for a few years and I got a bit carried away with the language. For the record, I never claimed to be fluent and still don’t. I’ll tell you exactly what I told the kids: “I know exactly what it’s like to go from knowing zero French to knowing some French. And that’s where you’re at.”

Thursdays I taught Hebrew at a synagogue in South Burlington. Everyday I had graduate work to do for my degree in mental health counseling including a class on group therapy culminating in a residency in Yellow Springs Ohio. 

In between, I had been finally convinced to start weight lifting, an endeavor that I seriously resisted in my attempts to hold on for dear life that size and strength didn’t matter in Jiu Jitsu. By the second week of January I had already become a member of Combat Fitness MMA. Under the tutelage of my good friend and coach, Aaron, I finally got to try a competition. It was super local, the kind of competition where everyone watches every single match because there’s only space for two grapplers. 

I remember going and feeling that adrenaline dump for the very first time. It felt like I couldn’t even move let alone defend myself. I was almost relieved to find myself in a triangle choke after 30 seconds. The second guy got me in an armbar and I still felt like I couldn’t breathe or do anything. That day, the myth of strengh-less jiu jitsu died. I knew I had to do something to improve my strength and my cardio if I was going to achieve a different result.

I didn’t know it then, but that would be the first of three competitions in a row where I didn’t win a single match. But since it was my first competition, I didn’t allow myself to get depressed. I still felt like there was something to do about it. 

Luckily I had someone at Combat who could help me in that department. Anthony Bambara is a boxing coach who is without a doubt one of the biggest draws to the gym. Whereas the BJJ class usually had up to 12 people on a good day, the Boxing classes filled the cavernous warehouse and were absolutely packed. It’s easy to see why, he’s just so freaking enthusiastic when you talk to him about martial arts and fitness. So much so that it feels like he’s almost shouting with excitement. 

Since I never took the boxing classes, I rarely interacted with him but always knew that he was a good strength and conditioning coach. I always saw him working with people of all shapes and sizes to get more fit. Yet there’s something funny that can prevent you from admitting that you want to be and feel stronger. Almost like wanting to be taller except you can actually do something about this. But those losses at the tournament got me past that timidness. Once I got back to the gym, I approached him right away and he made an appointment. 

From there I had a two day a week lifting regimen. I had done some weights in the past but never thought I would start squatting, deadlifting and swinging kettlebells. I did, and I still do. It revolutionized my game but it was still just another thing to squeeze into my busy week of work, grad school and jiu jitsu. 

So as I got back to Yellowsprings for the residency, aside from lifting, I did nothing but focus on my grad school week. I went to the classes, performed group therapy and participated in it as well. 

I don’t know if you’ve ever been in group therapy but it’s exhausting. Our University had a strict no role-playing rule when it came to practicing counseling. People who are told, “act depressed and see where it goes’ ‘ don’t know when to start cooperating with the therapist. Instead, we just talk about lives but try to discuss things we’ve already processed in the past. It keeps things from getting too intense but almost everyone breaks that rule by the end of the week.  

Facilitating group counseling is even more tiring. The skill is in learning to allow the group to naturally go in one direction but to use the members of the group to deliver therapy to the others instead of everything having to come from you. My professor said she always packs the extra strength deodorant for group sessions. So imagine doing that for eight hours every day. Nobody wanted to hang out at night, they all wanted to sleep or process their life. 

That was fine with me, I had a new season of Cobra Kai and I couldn’t believe how good it felt to have nothing to do in the evening. Oh and that schedule that I referenced before, it’s a pattern that I frequently get myself in. I do too much. In undergrad I had two majors and two minors. Even as I write this, I’m on my lunch break in between the morning Jiu Jitsu class, the kids class later tonight and an insight meditation group I attend on wednesday nights.

The first time I was in Yellowsprings, I couldn’t stand the fact that I wasn’t training Jiu Jitsu. This time, I was so relieved to have permission to do nothing. 

By the end of the week, however, I knew it was time to go back. Of course, I could have waited to get back to Combat Fitness, but my rested self was antsy to explore. I had one night in Cincinnati before going back to Vermont and my host would be a fantastic friend of mine from a camp I had worked at years before. Alicia was studying to be a Rabbi and was excited to host me, but she had some classes until the early evening. She asked if I would be okay waiting somewhere. So my classmate from the residency drove me straight to Limitless BJJ.

Limitless is in, what looks like, a hollowed out factory floor. The raw bricks combined with the shiny modern mats almost made it feel like a hip coworking space. A real rust belt chic vibe. I got the attention of a coach who was already in the middle of teaching the fundamentals class. He assured me that I could pay a drop-in fee later, borrow a gi and hop in right in the middle. 

A word about drop-in fees. As a member of BJJ globetrotters, I wholeheartedly subscribe to the idea of letting travelers drop-in free of charge. But I’m never offended by a gym that asks to pay a reasonable fee. I never know what a gym’s finances are but I’m sure a great deal of them struggle to keep the lights on. In writing this blog, I’ve learned that some of the gyms I’ve been to have permanently closed. According to a sociologist friend of mine, in bad economies gym memberships are often the first thing people get rid of. I’m fine paying 20 bucks so someone can keep their lights on. 

I was still reeling from my two major losses at that local tournament. Competition isn’t everything but it does give you a barometer of where you are in your Jiu Jitsu. So I had a little bit of a chip on my shoulder during that class. I wanted to see where my skill was at compared to the folks I would be training with. 

We did a bunch of rounds of positional sparring from the guard. These guys looked at me in my oversized smelly borrowed gi and figured it was my first day. When I threw their legs up in the air and landed in side-control, I felt pretty good about myself. After a week being away, I had really missed it. It felt good to be going in fresh. 

At the end of the class, the coach said he owed me a roll since I was visiting. I had never heard anybody say that before. What an interesting idea to roll with the newest person as a thank you for showing up. I had never been so honored to get submitted four times in a row. 

After that class I went upstairs to the office and met the head coach and owner Robby Malof. I saw he had a Jewish bumper sticker somewhere in his office and asked him about it. Turns out he’s competed in Israel, teaches Jiu Jitsu to a local Rabbi’s kids and his instagram name is the @HebrewHearthrob. That was kind of cool to see, I’ve met other Jews who do Jiu Jitsu but not a whole lot of them. Not everyone makes it as public as he does.

Peter Tanksley - Limitless BJJ Head Black Belt Instructor & Gym Founder

The fundamental class was over but he invited me to stay for the Intermediate No-Gi class that he was about to teach. I changed out of the rental as some of the fundamentals guys were putting on their civilian clothes.

“So, were you a wrestler or something?” I turned around and realized one of the guys was talking to me. I explained that I train in Vermont but am just in town for the night. But again, I was at a point where I was looking for something to feed my ego.

Jiu Jitsu guys will ask questions like this all the time. It’s not to gauge where you’re coming from, it’s for them to see where they’re at. Some other varieties of the same question are:
-How long have you been doing this?

-Is this your first class?

-You play any other sports before this one?

Sometimes it’s not even a question. I remember submitting a new guy at Combat Fitness one time and he did exactly what I did when I was new. He sat on the side to watch me get my ass kicked to see just how low he was in the pecking order. 

But there it was, my ego boost. It was the first time I had ever visited a gym and had people comment that I seemed like I had learned Jiu Jitsu before and wasn’t a complete beginner. 

The Intermediate class was a different story. Robby had all sorts of drills that I had never really seen before. I had never done shadow grappling and it was interesting to try and get into a flow. Then we did some two-man drills where we took turns carrying each other across the room and climbing around each other. 

I can’t honestly remember what ] technique Robby taught. But I remember the rolls being intense. Again, people didn’t know who I was or what I was going to do. Every gym has it’s own way of thinking about setups to submissions. In that way it becomes like their own dialect. Somebody new will either subject them to what they’re used to or vice versa. It’s always interesting to see. 

At the time I was working on what we at Combat Fitness called Amber’s throw. Named after our coach Amber Farr who liked teaching it to small people so they can use it on unsuspecting giants. I actually learned from her husband Rob.

Rob is a jiu jitsu coach with no interest in pure grappling. He only wanted to train it insofar as it would make him a better martial artist. If he can’t hold you in side-control without being able to hold a rubber knife at the same time, that technique does nothing for him. He wasn’t mean, but he wanted to be skilled in violence. Nothing fancy but everything painful. He was my first instructor to encourage me to force my elbows into peoples faces.  

Initially, I never saw him roll with anyone. He could usually be seen throwing elbows on the heavy bag or practicing wind sprints with a spear or another thai weapon. Aside from Muay Thai, his main passion in life was fighting with the dog brothers. If you don’t know what that is, enjoy your newest rabbit hole.

 Still, it’s Amber’s throw. You put your arm around a person’s head and step though so that you land in Gesa Ketame. From there, you put your leg over their forearm and, voila, instant armbar. 

I feel like I should pause for a second and reflect on the fact that I was being a little bit aggressive when I visited Limitless. I felt like I was going through a period where I maybe felt like I needed to improve myself and work toward a new self concept. On the one hand, I struggled with being non-competitive. But I was trying to think of myself as someone who could and deserved to win. 

I rolled with a guy that was much bigger and much stronger than I was. At that point, my proud moments came from making that person more out of breath than I was. A smaller dude who was my around the world partner was very wiry and very dynamic but I was working on my pressure. It ended up being a great match.

Robby offered me the same sign of respect as the previous instructor. I remember there was rap music playing in the background and he was almost dancing to it while advancing toward me at the same time. Eyes on me, focused for sure, but also loose and relaxed. I remember trying Ambers throw but eventually my back got slowly taken and the life squeezed out of me for the tap. I asked for anything he noticed about my rolling. It’s something I always ask higher belts for. 

He let me know that I turn my back a lot when I roll. That throw that Amber taught me, was effective. But the Gesa Ketame position had a downside, it put my back toward the other person. If they got their elbow out or if I stuck my head up too high, it was just asking for my back to be taken. His observation is exactly what I was looking for, direct feedback about something that I could be doing a lot better. 

My training partner for the day offered me a ride into downtown Cincinnati to my friends house. I love that I got to catch a favor from someone in the gym. BJJ guys can be crazy accommodating to outsiders.

I still see things that are going down at Limitless on instagram. The mats look as shiny as ever and Robby is still pushing himself to compete at really high levels. If you’re reading, thanks for the rolls and hope  to see you all on the mats again sometime.

Looking back, I thought the big myth that shattered for me during this time was that size and strength didn’t matter in BJJ. But I think another myth was beginning to disintegrate as well. BJJ, in no way gets rid of your ego. It can actually ramp it up.

Going to tournaments is what focuses a lot of people in BJJ. They also think of them as a barometer of their skill level and their academy. For me, visiting academies does the same thing. I get to see the holes in  my game and actually learn some alternatives to my flow. People are always welcoming but there’s still an idea that this visiting person is a chance to show off to their coach. It’s like a better tournament because there’s no adrenaline dumping and people actually try and use their skill instead of just muscling through.

Going to tournaments, you do see some beautiful technique. But there are times where you feel like none of it matters if the other person is bigger and stronger than you. It’s like the scene in the second book of Harry Potter where they’re learning how to duel. These cerebral spells that help them channel magic against each other go completely out the window and they just end up punching and headlocking each other. 

People in BJJ love to get super competitive, train for hours, do their best to strangle someone or destroy one of their joints and then say, “don’t compare yourself to other people.” I feel like that’s what happens in the cartoons and someone says “whatever you do, just don’t push the big red button.” We all know how that episode ends. 

Comparison to others is just a thing you have to learn how to live with. At that tournament, I was out of breath, gassed out and oddly euphoric afterwards. Aaron, a purple belt at the time, moved slowly and deliberately. While his opponents struggled to sweep him, his legs wouldn’t budge. There was one point where he gripped up with a guy, forced him to move to the center of the mat and then rolled into a picture perfect sacrifice throw landing in a soul crushing knee on belly. At that moment, the whole room actually clapped. 

I’m not advocating for constantly comparing yourself to others. That’s just a recipe for disaster. On the one hand, you can convince yourself that another person’s size, strength and experience doesn’t matter in a sport where your bracket is determined by all three of those things. The flipside is living a life filled with fear and creeping insecurity. Ignoring that mental tightrope is almost like refusing to learn the guard. 

After the tournament, I was down. The comparison game sent me on a wave that crested over at Limitless where I was telling myself I was awesome for passing a bunch of new white belts guards. Soon it was going to crash hard. But that’s for my next article. 

It would eventually be up to Aaron to help set me straight. After he had done a high level competition he said it was always important to take comparisons but really of yourself. “You today could beat the crap out of the person who first walked into Combat Fitness MMA a year ago. And it wouldn’t be a pretty fight either. That person would be begging for mercy by the end of it.” For Aaron, telling someone that you could inflict violence is always a compliment for Aaron. 

If you ever want me to visit yours and write about what it’s like to learn from you, feel free to reach out at [email protected]. You can also follow me @DustMop_JiuJitsu If you want to read my articles as soon as they’re published be sure to subscribe on my blog site!

Winter Camp 2023: Climb with your legs to submission with Liló Asensi

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Arizona Camp Nov 2022: Butt Judo: The satisfying art of throwing people while seated with Charles Harriott

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“Do Less!”

Dust Mop Jiu Jitsu: The Combat Base: Part One

Combat Fitness MMA-Winooski, Vermont

 

-On beginning competition, finding a coach and finally establishing myself at one gym for a year and a half.

This is the Ninth article about my journey in Jiu Jitsu. If you want to know more about what this project is, you can read more about it in the first article here.

It’s also the first of 7 articles about my time as a member of Combat Fitness MMA. While I was there, I would learn to push myself beyond harder than I ever had. 

 

Put yourself in my shoes. I spent all day in Tyngsboro, MA at a tournament. It’s the fourth tournament I’ve been to and it’s not going well. I had a long slog of a gi bracket earlier that day that left me ragged and medal-less. I’ve got one more no-gi bracket that will be best 2 out of three with another grappler There’s just two of us, and I have a feeling it’s not gonna be me. We already did the first round and he beat me with an arm bar where I definitely tapped too late. My coach, Amber Farr smirks as I ice my elbow. She knows I’m not sure if I should continue.  “…I mean, it’s gonna hurt tomorrow either way.” 

I drag myself back to the mat and slap hands. 

How did I get here?

The first time I went to Combat Fitness MMA, was in January of 2019. I had just moved to Burlington, Vermont after more than a year being out of the country. It hadn’t even been two weeks and I had already tried two other gyms in the area. I was dedicated to getting into a BJJ rhythm.

With two instruction areas, a boxing ring and a weight lifting spot, the warehouse feel of Combat is impressive. After registering at the front, I made my way through the weight lifting area to the open air changing room where people coming from work unbutton their shirts to reveal rashguards like superman reveals his red S. 

 The first lesson was taught by  a long haired purple belt named Aaron. he was apparently covering for the normal Monday night instructor. I remember coming home from that practice and Rachel asking me how it went. “It was fine, the instructor was good but goofy as hell.” Overtime, I would learn that those adjectives were an understatement. Little did I know that he would end up being a great coach and an even better friend. 

Within the first few weeks of me being there, Aaron and I became really good friends. Rachel and I didn’t know that many people in the area and it was in the dead of winter when most people weren’t making new acquaintances. He invited me and Rachel over for dinner. A wicked cook and a solid cocktail maker as well. Rachel still loves going over there whenever we visit Burlington. Our favorite game is to see where he’s got the knives hidden. I won’t tell you where they are, but I will say that if  you’re planning a home invasion…good luck.

He made the announcement that he would be hosting extra practices for people interested in competition. I was still debating it in my head. Competition is and was something I have a rocky relationship with. I don’t really think of myself as a competitive person. I remember that I was supposed to compete in Korea but had to pull out because of an injury. I knew it was something nagging at the back of my mind and I had to try it eventually. 

The normal Jiu Jitsu schedule was Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at combat but Aaron and I carved out our own time to prepare for an upcoming tournament in March. It was just us and it was so clear that I needed some individual attention to clear up some bad habits I had developed in Korea. Back then I couldn’t understand the instructions. It was clear I missed a lot of fine details. 

Our first roll, he just wanted to see what I would do. So I pulled guard. On a person who was 205 lbs to my 150. I don’t remember being submitted yet tapping just to the sheer pressure. Aaron’s the kind of guy that can kick your ass while leaving you wondering if he has a pulse. That’s how our first few one-on-ones went. Eventually I learned to stop pulling guard on folks that are bigger and stronger than me. 

Eventually we got to a major one of my core issues. I was doing too much. Just like the guys at Grind had pointed out, I was rolling harder than I needed to, which was gassing me out and signaling to my opponents that I had lost my will to live.

There was one time where he made it abundantly clear after I had somersaulted all around trying to impose at least some of my will on him. The best description would be how Nali, my childhood dog, dealt with puppies. The scamps would growl, roll around, jump up and circle around her. Nali would simply pin them with one paw without making a sound. “Was all that worth it?” he said, “all that moving around, was it worth it? Do less!”

It’s been almost five years since he said that and I still hear that sentence in my head. “Do less.” It didn’t sink in right away. I would hear him shout it at me from my corner in a few different tournaments. It took a while for me to get it. 

 

The Dust Mop Takeaway:

Thus far, this project has been dedicated to a challenge. I want to remember at least one thing from all the gyms where I’ve been to at least one lesson. But Combat Fitness MMA was the gym that I trained at the longest. If not for the pandemic and my wife getting her doctorate, it’s possible I would still be there. In fact, while I was at combat, I visited six gyms. Finding one takeaway to sum up a year and a half of training is a tall order. 

Instead, I want to take the next few six articles to explore how Combat influenced me as a grappler and a person. Each gym I visited at that time, helped me accomplish my goals of becoming a better martial artist. Although I was still a globetrotter, Combat was my solid base. Thus the name of this section of my journey.

Aaron was always telling me to do less and take my time. Amber helped me see patterns and become more efficient in competition. I received advice from coach Rob Farr with his no-bullshit Jiu Jitsu. Anthony Bambara, although not a BJJ coach, started me on a journey where I finally started lifting. Vincent Guy, our black belt, openness to me learning from everyone. Maybe it’s the joys of having teammates like Kyra, Christian and Mary and Miriam who made me feel like I was a part of a community. All of this made me better and I can’t distill it into one article. 

I began this article talking about my last competition with Combat Fitness. Before I can tell you how that story ended, I have to tell you about how close I came to quitting jiu jitsu for good. But that’s in the next chapters. 

If you ever want me to visit yours and write about what it’s like to learn from you, feel free to reach out at [email protected]. You can also follow me @DustMop_JiuJitsu If you want to read my articles as soon as they’re published be sure to subscribe on my blog site!

Arizona Camp Nov 2022: The guillotine of the leg with Joshua Janis

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Featured affiliated academy: Dahlonega BJJ, USA

Dahlonega BJJ, USA

Where is the gym located?
The gym is located in Dahlonega, GA (USA), a small town in the north Georgia mountains.

How many people train there?
We have about 25 students currently. We just opened two months ago.

Is the gym growing – if so by how many new members each month or year?
It is definitely growing. We are adding about 10-15 members a month.

What are the highest and lowest belt grades training?
We have white belts through brown belts.

When did Dahlonega BJJ, USA open?
March 6, 2023

Some facts about you:

Name: David Curtis
Age: 37
Belt: Brown
Profession: Jiu Jitsu Instructor/Gym Owner
Years in BJJ: 6 years
Other martial arts: No
Currently living in: Cumming, GA
Originally from: Pennsylvania

Please tell us the story of how your gym came into existence
After discovering my passion for Jiu Jitsu and truly falling in love with the art, it became apparent that not only did I love training Jiu Jitsu, I loved teaching and coaching Jiu Jitsu even more. I wanted to dedicate my life to it. After getting the opportunity to coach the no gi classes under my professor, Layton Wilcox at Canton BJJ, I felt that the next step of progression for me was to open my own gym.

Tell us about the people that train in the gym – who are they?
We have people from all walks of life. Dahlonega is home to one of the senior military colleges in the United States. It also houses one of the country’s Army Ranger training camps. So, we get a lot of members with a military background. We also have everyday people. Adults working your typical 9-5, moms, and other college students. Our kids program is starting to take off as well. Being a new, smaller school at the moment, we are excited with how things are progressing and the culture we are building. The gym is coming together better than I ever imagined that it would.

Why do they train in Dahlonega BJJ, USA?
The same reason that a lot of us train. They want something more in life. Something real. Many may want to feel empowered. Some come for exercise, self defence, or to sharpen their skills for their career. Ultimately, a lot of people come for that sense of camaraderie and community that comes with training at a good place.

What are some of the challenges of running a BJJ gym in general, and in your area specifically?
In general, the biggest challenge is learning the business side of running a gym. For instance, understanding marketing, advertising, and creating value for your members. Another big one seems to be just embracing the grind and responsibility. At the end of the day, the success of the gym hinges on you as an individual for a very long time and that feeling can be slightly daunting. Lastly, and maybe this is me specifically, but just trying to take care of my body while growing the gym. When there are a lot of people, you can pick and choose rounds, but when there are smaller classes you have to lead. You have to take the beating day in and day out.

The biggest challenge specific to our area is the rotating membership due to the college and military schedules.

How do you see the future for BJJ in your area?
Honestly, I see it growing quite a bit. We have seen a real desire for high level grappling in the north Georgia area. There are actually quite a few high level people who want to learn it not just for sport purposes, but for practical purposes as well. Be it for occupations and careers specific to this area, or to learn some self defence, or maybe just to get the kids off screens for a bit, it seems like north Georgia wants Jiu Jitsu in their lives.

What’s the best thing about Dahlonega BJJ, USA?
The people. Watching everybody go from strangers to each other to seeing them form friendships and bonds with one another. Watching them achieve their goals, not just with Jiu Jitsu, but with life. Seeing their confidence grow in different situations. Watching the growth of each individual. Those are the greatest moments.

If I had to pick just one though, it’s doing this with my wife and kids. One thing that hasn’t been discussed yet, is how much help you need along the way. If it weren’t for some very good friends, an incredible coach, a supportive family and an even more amazing life partner, I truly would not be given this opportunity. It is to them that this gym is, in many ways, dedicated to. We would be nothing without the help and support of those in our lives.

What would you recommend Globetrotters to see in your area apart from the inside of your gym?
The list could go on forever, really. From amazing local food to large community driven festivals, Dahlonega stands alone in its people and its beauty. You could get lost in the scenery forever. We did. That’s why Dahlonega BJJ exists and we truly hope to see you all on the mats.

To be more specific, you should definitely check out:

Gold rush (festival once a year)
Bear on the Square (festival once a year)
Amicalola Falls (state park)
Historic downtown
Winerys
Golf Course
River Rafting
This truly could go on forever…

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Thanks for sharing! If you’d like to visit Dahlonega BJJ, USA you can contact them here.

Featured Travellers: TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral – BJJ Globetrotters

TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral - BJJ Globetrotters

TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral – BJJ Globetrotters

Age: 34 & 25

Belt: Purple & blue

Profession: Online Strength and Fitness Consultant, rugby-muscle.com Admin Assistant.

How many years in BJJ: About 4 years (TJ) and 2 years (Beatriz)

Other martial arts: No martial arts as such, but we both played rugby to a decent level.

Where do you live: Kinda anywhere we want.

Where are you from: St Albans, UK (TJ) and Curitiba, Brazil (Beatriz)

Other fun or curious information you would like to share:
I always enjoy the fact that B got her blue belt before ever training in Brazil.

We also have a contractual obligation to state that we are vegan (which surprises most people we tell).

TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral – BJJ Globetrotters

Tell us what inspired you to travel and train?
In our hearts we’ve always been explorers, having both lived overseas to play rugby. We actually met when B was in Colorado to play for a season.

The tipping point for the life we live now was the you-know-what in 2020. B had to give up rugby and TJ went fully online with work. There were now no restrictions keeping us in any fixed location, so we sold most of out stuff that didnt fit into 2 suitcases + 2 carry-ons and booked a couple months in the remote beach town of Las Terrenas, Dominican Republic and from there haven’t really looked back.

Tell us about your most recent travel and your upcoming travel – where have you been and where are you going?
In the past year we’ve been to Bangkok, Phuket, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Italy, Colorado, St Albans, London, Leeds, Oslo, Curitiba, and Florianopolis. Typing it out seems like quite a lot but we usually keep a hub and develop a routine over a few months.
We’ve just sorted plans to head to Albania for the summer (maybe visiting a bit more of Europe, whilst we’re there) and then make our way to Australia via Bali at the end of 2023.

TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral – BJJ Globetrotters

 

What are the things you enjoy about travelling?
Ready for a cliché? Seeing the world and experiencing completely different cultures is what makes life worth living. In a way, it slows the passage of time because we get to have so many unique experiences in all of these new places.
Day-to-day we are actually ridiculously routined, but we get to spend our “off” time creating more memories in different places.

Add in BJJ training to the mix and wherever we go, we get to make friends for life… there’s something about the mindset and vulnerability of grappling that makes connections much easier and faster. These friends will also generously help us make each place feel like much more of a “home” than a tourist attraction to look at. The different ways people all go about life is fascinating.

There’s also an amazing sense of gratitude and appreciation for life, especially when seeing first-hand how the vast majority of the world are just really good people.

Oh, and actually the biggest thing is that we can basically avoid winter 😉

Can you give us some examples of experiences you had that makes it worth traveling and training?
Our first experience of travelling and training came about solely because of the help of the BJJ Globetrotters group. We had never heard of Las Terrenas, and would never have found it if it wasn’t for the recommendation. It was PARADISE.

Another cool experience was when we met Vara (#askvara) in Phuket, she gave us the inside scoop on local places and invited us to join her in Bangkok. We had an awesome weekend and took part in a fundraiser open mat for a lad that had been injured in Phuket.

What has so far been the most surprising experience for you when traveling?
Rather than say one particular thing, I think the experience as a whole has been surprising. Namely, how easy and “normal” this lifestyle feels to us

Are you a budget traveller – and if so how do you plan for a cheap trip?
We are absolutely “budget” travellers, in the literal sense that B keeps a running budget month-to-month. This means we can intentionally tighten up when we need to so that we can splurge on short-term trips and experiences that are really worth it (like Globetrotter camps!).

Living in places where our money goes much further is probably the most obvious money-save, but also, like, actually “living” in places helps too! Some AirBnB’s drop their prices over 50% for a monthly rental. We also rarely eat out more than, say, twice a week, but we can still experience local food in supermarkets!

Figuring out frequent flyer miles and points etc is a huge saver (if only we’d learned this earlier) and packing our gis in our hand-luggage always helps us to avoid paying overweight fees for our checked luggage. Actually, being restricted to two suitcases and two carry-on bags also forces you to restrict the “stuff” that you can buy and own (which is in reality very liberating), especially when a good chunk of which is training gear. We should also thank our sponsors @soultakerfightwear who support us with all the training gear we could possibly need.

A couple more practical tips – having a Wise or Schwab account also means you can deal in the local currency without paying fees and using the Airalo app to download eSim cards can give you data cheaply and conveniently wherever you are.

If you were to pass on travel advice to your fellow Globetrotters, what would it be?
I feel kinda preachy saying this but, because this goes out to the Globetrotters newsletter it should strike a chord with some of you. At the time of writing time travel doesn’t exist, that means every moment that passes is gone forever. There are always going to be reasons that “could” stop you from travelling, but they don’t necessarily need to.

One of the first things Christian ever said to me way that “it’s only scary until you get out the door, then it all becomes natural.” This is so true.

We often get comments from people saying they admire or envy our life, but to us it feels completely normal. I’d genuinely encourage everyone to travel as much as feasibly possible. How feasible that is will depend upon you, but it will be more than you think and probably more than you’re comfortable with…. It’s definitely worth it.

 

Thank you to TJ Jankowski & Beatriz Amaral – BJJ Globetrotters for making this interview!

Arizona Camp Nov 2022: Butterfly Half Guard! “The PB & J of Guards!” with Jay Pages

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