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Two Months of Jiu Jitsu

(2021-08-29 22:46:08) 下一個

The Chinese term for Jiu Jitsu, 柔術, is often translated to "the gentle art,"

stressing technique and leverage over strength. Indeed, when Helio Gracie in the

1930s started to adapt what a Japanese Judoka taught the family, he was the

least athletic among the brothers. The style he eventually created was for the

weak to defend themselves against the strong, a tenet forever ringing true.

 

Some therefore think one should approach the art by mastering the techniques

first. "I knew if I need the strength, it'll be there." Kron Gracie said once.

My own experience, however, proved slightly different: to stay in the game, I 

had to be strong first.

 

I joined a Jiu-Jitsu school early 2018. The gym put a great emphasis on

conditioning and I soon discovered what pitiful assets I had brought on the mat.

At the entry level, size and power trumped technique. A 145lb beginner with 

average strength didn't pose much threat to anyone. I sparred about 20 times in

that school and every session was a survival test.

 

Three years and a lot of running and weight-lifting later, I came back on the

mat 10lbs heavier and feeling much more confident. After one month, my neck and

shoulders got used to the new activities. I enjoyed training more in August and

felt that I had been making progress. The highlights of the past two months

included

- I successfully executed the push-and-pull choke to tap people or just to get

  out of their guards.

- I was able to defend the bow-and-arrow choke, or just the back-taken position,

  from a few guys.

- I learned a few cross-side escapes and made a breakthrough in a mount escape.

- I learned to escape from the flattened belly-down position, the worst of all

  positions.

- I was able to defend the ezekiel and cross-collar chokes a few times.

 

I still had a hard time against higher-belts and tried only to survive. I was 

happy, however, to be able to dominate and submit a few guys who joined after

me. It was vain, I know, but sometimes these small victories could brighten my

day. They proved that I had improved from the me two months ago.

 

I learned most of the moves from Henry online. It was a secret weapon that kept

me going. Moves from the coaches were largely forgotten as I only drilled them

a few times in class. Lessons circle back down the road and that's the

traditional way of teaching. So far, I have found watching videos very effective.

 

Off the mat, I have switched to the Gracie diet, having two or three meals a day

and allowing four and a half hours before the next meal. My pasta, beans, and

jjigae do not conform to the food combining protocol and I plan to have smaller

portions before I find alternatives. Juicing has become a daily acitivity and

so far I have enjoyed watermelon, mango, and cantaloupe juices. My weight has

dropped back to 155 lbs. Since reading Rickson's book, I have tried, again, to

gave up coffee and have been caffeine-free for two weeks.

 

Thank You!

 
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7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 回複 '暖冬cool夏' 的評論 : Thanks for explaining and it's good to know about the athlete In exercises I try to push myself to experience hormesis where the amount of stress is just enough to trigger a growth response from the body but no more. For health, I learnt long ago not to reach for the medal.
暖冬cool夏 回複 悄悄話 回複 '7grizzly' 的評論 : Milkha Singh is an Indian athlete who won numerous international medals for the country, and just recently died at the age of 90 or 91. As the paragraph copied above shows, in the training, he took his body to the limit. What I am trying to say here is never to strain ourselves in any practice, and I know you are aware of that, as you are learning, adapting and correcting all the ways along.
7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 回複 '暖冬cool夏' 的評論 : Thank you, 暖冬, for reading and your comments.

> Whatever suits you is always the best
It is true. But more often, I don't know what exactly suits me and therefore all these trial-and-errors.

> until he urinated blood or collapsed with exhaustion and had to go to the hospital.
What for? Did he have a cause or something?

For me, health is always the top priority, whatever I do.
暖冬cool夏 回複 悄悄話 "My pasta, beans, and jjigae do not conform to the food combining protocol"--
+1, Whatever suits you is always the best, as every individual is different and so might be each day:))
The moment I checked your blog, I happened to be reading the last page of The economist (July 3rd), an obituary of Milkha Singh, an Indian runner. To me, any successful person is not an ordinary person. "He ran until he filled a bucket with his sweat, until he urinated blood or collapsed with exhaustion and had to go to the hospital." This is too much for me. Don't follow suit:)))
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