Featured Traveller: Katharina Danielski – BJJ Globetrotters

Katharina Danielski BJJ

Katharina Danielski – BJJ Globetrotters

Age: 35

Belt: White

Profession: Field application scientist

How many years in BJJ: 1.5

Other martial arts: Two years of no-gi grappling before starting with BJJ in the gi

Where do you live: Landshut, Germany (Bavaria)

Where are you originally from: Poland

Other fun or curious information you would like to share: My special skills involve geeking out on science, Marvel, cars or fighting… at the same time. All the time.

Also, I’m particularly good at ignoring what my coaches tell me and ending up doing whatever I want in competition. I live for the moments when I see the mixture of rage and resignation on their faces after pulling side-control on top of me with Youtube
techniques I had reviewed one day before my fight.

Katharina Danielski BJJ

Tell us what inspired you to travel and train?
I never thought I’d be traveling a lot, but I kind of stumbled into this lifestyle due to the job I found. Working in support for American biotech companies allowed me to see a lot more of the world than I ever imagined possible. During the early years of
my grappling/BJJ journey, I used to focus only on work during my business trips, and trained only back home in my own gym. After a while though, I realized that I wanted to get better in BJJ a lot faster than by only training once a week. That’s when I started searching for BJJ schools at the locations of my business trips, and that’s also the reason why I found BJJ Globetrotters.

Tell us about your most recent trip and your upcoming trips – where have you been and where are you going?
My most recent trip was to Lisbon in Portugal, where I competed at the IBJJF European Championship on 20th of January 2020 and won the gold medal in my division. My next trip is coming up already on 24th of January; I’m heading over to Palm
Springs, California, where my company is having its annual global meeting. But I’m flying out a few days early with a couple of colleagues, and we’ll do a weekend road trip to Las Vegas first.

Katharina Danielski BJJ

What are the things you enjoy about traveling?
I guess the variety – not being stuck in the same place all the time. I did work for three years in an office before I switched to a field-based role. I can’t imagine going back to an office job. Working in the field and traveling for work gives me the (partial)
freedom I need. People in various countries can also be very different, and you learn a lot about the world and about yourself. Unfortunately, I am more of a nature girl rather than city, so after a while all cities look the same: airports, motorways, hotels. Also, since I travel a lot for work I tend to stay home when I actually have holidays, as I just want to relax in my garden and see
my own BJJ peeps for a change. Traveling to the BJJ Globetrotter camps is a big exception to this rule.

Can you give us some examples of experiences you had that makes it worth traveling and training?
Combining training with my business trips has its pros and cons. Pros: you get to train a whole lot more than if you only focus on training back home, especially if you are traveling ~70% of your working time. You can develop your game a whole lot faster this way. Cons: since you visit various gyms you are always thrown into their training structure, which you obviously don’t know. The various trainers have their agendas and training plans for their students, and you are only visiting for a day or two. That means you get to see loads of techniques taken out of context, and they all swirl together into a massive mix at the same time in your poor white belt head. However, eventually I will be able to control the chaos (where are the Witcher fans??). And it’s a very rewarding feeling when you have learned a new technique or just some small detail you had missed before on a business trip and then get to try it out back home and it actually works (sometimes).

What has so far been the most surprising experience for you when traveling?
Some countries surprise you in general due to the way how we are conditioned about them by the media. I don’t want to sound like a conspiracy theorist nut, I’m definitely not, but just to give you an example: I have once been to Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) for two weeks for work. Talking to the people – and especially the women – did open my eyes somewhat. Every story is strongly influenced by the perspective it’s being told from, and those scientific women I spoke to painted a whole different picture for me than what the media has taught me to think. I am very grateful for having been able to experience this. Unfortunately, this trip happened just before I started with Grappling/BJJ, so I didn’t have a chance to see if I would have been able to find a women-only BJJ class there. That would have been interesting to see.

Are you a budget traveller – and if so how do you plan for a cheap trip?
Not really. I would say I am somewhere in the centre: not too cheap and not too extravagant when looking at trips. But I do like to plan ahead, as I need to have structure of knowing where my next sleeping place is going to be.

If you were to pass on travel advice to your fellow Globetrotters, what would it be?
Training while traveling benefits not only yourself, but sometimes also the people you visit. Therefore, use every opportunity you can get to visit other BJJ gyms while traveling. It can be scary at first; it really was for me. But as with everything in life, you only grow outside of your comfort zone. Every gym always involves rolling as part of their training, and that means you get to roll with loads of various people. It’s kind of like a tiny tournament for you each time. Of course, you don’t treat these rolls as actual tournament rolls: check your ego! Don’t hurt your hosts and don’t be hurt. But what I meant is, every new partner brings a new set of skills and movement patterns. Rolling against the same people every time in your home gym means that you eventually get to learn their styles and can use that knowledge to anticipate their moves. Well, not as a white belt (lol), but later on this will matter for sure. I had a situation once where I was training in another country, I can’t remember where. But I was rolling against a guy and we were fairly evenly matched. At one point I managed to get him into a body triangle. I didn’t think too much of it, but after the roll he told me that none of his training buddies ever does that kind of move on him and he had no clue what to do about it. That was a very refreshing perspective I hadn’t considered before.

Thank you Katharina Danielski BJJ for doing this interview!