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Jiu-jitsu Month 25

(2023-07-30 07:54:37) 下一個

Elli came to visit from Australia and we drilled and rolled. A slender girl in

her 30s, she was wiry and strong. Like Amy, she was a purple belt, agile, and

aggressive. She caught me in rear naked chokes a couple of times and I had a lot

of fun defending and escaping.

 

From Rickson's online courses, I learned one effective butterfly-killer and had

been enjoying passing my opponents' guards ever since. I also drilled his

four-point position reverse when my partner pushed from the side. I had a few

successes and was determined to make it, like the trap and roll from turtle, my

weapon. The move has some nuances, e.g., raising the hips a bit before swinging

the leg through, but is not complicated. One key is to understand when not to

use it. When my partner is not pushing from the side, I need to be smarter and

bait him.

 

Bad news cropped up on Facebook that master Rickson, 64, was diagnosed of

Parkinson's disease two years ago. It felt like a punch in the stomach. I have

idolized him, listening to his stories and subscribing to his classes. I

couldn't imagine someone so disciplined with his health falling in the clutch of

the devil.

 

I didn't know what to think and I didn't read through the June 23 BJJ News post

until a week later. The article attributed the disease to his 1000 vale tudo

fights. "I don't see it as a surprise, but as another gift from God to see what

I'm going to do about it" the master said. I'll keep a close eye.

 

After three months, 65-year-old professor Brenda King came back from hip surgery

(not a replacement) on Jul 10. Still recovering and on crutches, she taught

guard-passing and attacking the turtle. I pulled turtle a lot, it was my go-to

move when I was on the bottom, and I especially loved the hip-bump and

guard-recovery from that position.

 

I could feel my progress, especially in learning to use my legs to defend and

attack. The idea came from John Danaher (and Wei-chi explained it to me, too, in

his way) and was planted in my mind. For months, I had been doing 10 reps of

toes-to-the-bar every morning after yoga and focused on elbow-knee connection

when sparring. Not only I defended better, I also caught people in triangles

more. I realized that transitioning to the fetus by curling up would be an

alternative to turtle.

 

Anthony found a good way to trap one arm with his leg which made attacking from

the back so much easier. I got caught several times and he explained what he

did. He controlled my arms with his hands grabbing the wrists and extended his

arm to expose a hole at my elbow to insert his heel. Very impressive.

 

I revisited a few Danaher videos on BJJ Fanatics and intuitively realized the

importance of shadow-grappling. I think what some call visualization is the same

idea. It is a great concept and I should practice.

 

Toward the end of the month, I decided to take a break from the Redwood City

gym. Tim and I have been coming here for about five years and we made friends

and felt comfortable. But Tim has stopped and for a long time, I would like to

explore a standing martial art, e.g., kickboxing, while keeping doing BJJ. One

local gym offers both and one big plus is that it takes only 10min by bike.

Let's see.

 

Our brown belt coach Matt was leaving, too, to open a dojo in Truckee. In the

past year, he showed many ingenious attacks on the turtle. To me, he was very

patient. I loved his teaching and wished him good luck.

 

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7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 回複 '暖冬cool夏' 的評論 : I wish :-)

Bruce Lee's death felt distant past. It's sad that Rickson's discipline and
family diet hadn't saved him from the disease. We'll see how he deals with it.

Thanks for your thoughts.
暖冬cool夏 回複 悄悄話 Is Amy here the same Amy? :))
The bad news of Rickson reminded me of Bruce Lee, who passed away 50 years now, as I heard over the radio almost two weeks ago. It's good to try some other new martial art.
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